I'm not entirely sure that's the case any more. My housemate works as a Samsung rep and our house is literally full of gizmos that can be used with Android... I don't really know of anything that iOS does or apps it has that Android doesn't have something to compete with.
Well one of the things I realized when considering the move from an iPad to a Windows tablet is that only iOS seems to support those three-button in-line remotes; neither Windows nor Android seem to support anything more than one-button remotes.
It sounds like a small thing, but that remote means I get Vol +−, Play/Pause, Skip/Seek controls without pulling out the device.
Because my headphones have a removable cord with a 3.5mm jack, I can just buy any third-party cable and use that with any Apple device.
While touchscreens have brought a number of improvements, the lack of physical controls for media playback has always bothered me, and the three-button remote solves this.
And while I am personally inclined to buy hardware which is as open/universal as possible, we have some devices around the house with AirPlay or dock connectors that wouldn't work with an Android device - and so do friends and family. It's a shame that Bluetooth still only supports compressed audio.
The problem is not that Android doesn't have equivalent accessories, it's that it doesn't work with the accessories we already own.
There is something in what you say here. I'd love to see more competition maybe from Ubuntu or Firefox or dare I say it MS.
Firefox appeals to me, but they seem to be focused on low-end right now. Windows Phone starts to get interesting once they unite Windows Phone and Windows RT - it's stupid that they don't run the same apps.
I like Ubuntu's idea of combining a desktop computer and phone OS onto one device.
I think that's the future we're headed towards eventually.
That said my personal interest is equally somewhat limited. I don't normally carry the smartphone with me outside work. I have a dumb phone and I consider even that too intrusive sometimes!
Agreed. While combining the devices is more convenient, I'd be more inclined to buy a separate iPod (or similar device) and not carry a phone around with me.