Well, I like iOS. I'm writing this from my iPad, BTW.
However, I made the inverse switch from the iPhone to the N1 last year. It was supposed to be temporary. I was going to Japan and wanted an unlocked phone to rent a 3G sim with data for my trip. It was also a good excuse to try out Android.
I haven't moved back. Contrarily to the author, the reason was because of mail, calendar and contacts. It's the main reason I haven't changed back since then.
The author's first mistake is to not use Google services with Android. I run my own mail servers, but integrate with GMail as a backup and UI. I can tell I can rapidly fetch any of my 40K+ emails that sit in Google servers. On iOS, which I still use, impossible. I also love my portable wi-fi hotspot which I often use with my non 3G iPad and even my old iPhone to try out apps without switch the sim card.
I may switch back to the iPhone in the future, but unless I get a mail search that works as efficiently, better calendar integration (with guests support) and useful batch email management features as useful than Android, I doubt it will be enough to switch.
My old iPhone still serves as an iPod and as a standalone GPS with the Navigon app. The music integration is what I miss the most.
However, I made the inverse switch from the iPhone to the N1 last year. It was supposed to be temporary. I was going to Japan and wanted an unlocked phone to rent a 3G sim with data for my trip. It was also a good excuse to try out Android.
I haven't moved back. Contrarily to the author, the reason was because of mail, calendar and contacts. It's the main reason I haven't changed back since then.
The author's first mistake is to not use Google services with Android. I run my own mail servers, but integrate with GMail as a backup and UI. I can tell I can rapidly fetch any of my 40K+ emails that sit in Google servers. On iOS, which I still use, impossible. I also love my portable wi-fi hotspot which I often use with my non 3G iPad and even my old iPhone to try out apps without switch the sim card.
I may switch back to the iPhone in the future, but unless I get a mail search that works as efficiently, better calendar integration (with guests support) and useful batch email management features as useful than Android, I doubt it will be enough to switch.
My old iPhone still serves as an iPod and as a standalone GPS with the Navigon app. The music integration is what I miss the most.