Apple leaving out Starbucks? I highly doubt it. While what you said about the tech may be true, watch Starbucks amend their charging tech to suit iPhone users. I seriously doubt you'll ever hear something along the lines of "oh, you have iPhone? Yeah we don't support that here" when it comes to places like Starbucks. Restaurants and stores that attract the same crowd as the Starbucks crowd will ditch whatever tech isn't supported by the iPhone before they say the don't support the iPhone.
I didn't know Apple's tech was exactly the same as the one used in the Surface. Can't even say I knew the Surface had that feature. I think the memes that came out after yesterday's keynote about face recognition and women not being able to unlock their phones because of makeup still get the point across that people won't pay attention to a feature unless Apple does it. I get that it pisses some people off but a big part of Apple's success is its marketing and ability to grab headlines. Prior to yesterday if you walked up to someone on the street and asked what device had face recognition, most wouldn't be able to tell you. So when I said Apple "improved on it" I chose my words incorrectly. Whatever it is that makes tech sites make "faceID" a part of the headline, whatever generates buzz in the form of memes and discussion on forums or social media, that's what Apple "improved" on. Not making it accessible to the layman, but an attractive option and something worth getting excited about. If I'm wrong, I still bring up the point I made above that Android had it, then took it out. And now apparently the Surface had it, but not many people not interesting in tech news knew about it. That has to be worth something.
I do notice a difference in battery drain between my iPad and my phone. My iPad I always on WiFi but can go weeks before being used because I use it for very specific studying stuff. But when I do use it, including a question bank that uses the internet 100% of the time in order to work, I can get a week's usage on it. I know phones are very different in that they have a smaller battery, always have a cell signal, etc. But no way could I get 10+ hours of usage on my phone even if it was on airplane mode and just WiFi. That's not even a fraction of what I get on my iPad Air. My sister's iPhone 7+ can easily go 36 hours without needing a charge and my sister is always on LTE and she is very much into Instagram and Snapchat as well as Facebook. I've had to disable the latter because it is a known battery hog, even though I'm not logged in to Facebook. Android doesn't know what the fuck to do with it unless its disabled. Same for many other Samsung bloat apps I've had to disable because they go rogue and start using data in the background. Samsung Plus app once used a few hundred MBs of data in the background and drained the battery in the process. This was early on in to owning the phone and before I began disabling apps. Plenty of other users on the S7 forums have reported the same thing, except they weren't on unlimited data like I was.
Apple has its own issues of being overbearing on devs and even screwing them over. But the pros of that are devs are scared of their apps causing problems for the users because Apple will give them the boot out the App Store if they're suspected of being malignant apps. If you use an iOS app next an Android app, it's obvious iOS devs take more care with their apps than they do Android. iOS gets the preference and priority over Android. And that in turn affects the user experience.
Your experiences are anecdotal as are mine. But in all honestly, aside from a nice screen and camera, my S7 is not all that much better than my S3 was, and they both suffer from the same problems in regards to battery life. I've used BetterBatteryStats and GSam to track wake locks and tried to plug holes but still don't see big enough improvements. I don't think someone should have to go through all this work to figure it out. I'm sure having the battery degraded to a capacity that's 66% of original less than a year in to ownership is a big culprit of it.
We'll see the reviews of the iPhone X and what the drawbacks are. Also what real life usage is like. But with a macOS and iOS device that I use daily and heavily, it might be time to close the circle and go the iPhone route. Even with Apple's dragging of its feet to implement new tech that others have had for a while, I find Apple makes it much easier to set up and use a device and have them all connected between each other. They're not perfect, but whatever they suck at, Google picks up the slack with their iOS offerings. And funny thing is, Google usually prioritizes iOS over Android too in their app development. Hangouts is much cleaner and wasn't All/Duo iOS first, too? Maybe it was another app or feature but I remember the outrage at Google bee-lining straight to iOS before Android. I know Nintendo prioritized iOS before Android with that Mario game, too. Those aren't two small companies that don't mean much; they mean a lot in terms of what apps/games people want and they clearly cater to someone else before Android.
I don't have a personal issue with Samsung but it could be the OEM that's driving me away from Android. I will still consider the Pixel 2 because I see a phone from Google being the appropriate rival phone to a phone from Apple, but I'm not holding my breath. The Android subreddit has various complaints too about the same battery drain and other issues and that just sheds the light on the fact that all Android devices suffer from it, not just Samsung. And it's frustrating enough that I'd leave Android for iOS after 8 years, as many others have done in recent years as well. I'll give up "customizability" of Android in the name of Big Brother Apple not only having my devices well-connected to each other but also seemingly taking a harder stance on privacy and security as well.
I didn't know Apple's tech was exactly the same as the one used in the Surface. Can't even say I knew the Surface had that feature. I think the memes that came out after yesterday's keynote about face recognition and women not being able to unlock their phones because of makeup still get the point across that people won't pay attention to a feature unless Apple does it. I get that it pisses some people off but a big part of Apple's success is its marketing and ability to grab headlines. Prior to yesterday if you walked up to someone on the street and asked what device had face recognition, most wouldn't be able to tell you. So when I said Apple "improved on it" I chose my words incorrectly. Whatever it is that makes tech sites make "faceID" a part of the headline, whatever generates buzz in the form of memes and discussion on forums or social media, that's what Apple "improved" on. Not making it accessible to the layman, but an attractive option and something worth getting excited about. If I'm wrong, I still bring up the point I made above that Android had it, then took it out. And now apparently the Surface had it, but not many people not interesting in tech news knew about it. That has to be worth something.
I do notice a difference in battery drain between my iPad and my phone. My iPad I always on WiFi but can go weeks before being used because I use it for very specific studying stuff. But when I do use it, including a question bank that uses the internet 100% of the time in order to work, I can get a week's usage on it. I know phones are very different in that they have a smaller battery, always have a cell signal, etc. But no way could I get 10+ hours of usage on my phone even if it was on airplane mode and just WiFi. That's not even a fraction of what I get on my iPad Air. My sister's iPhone 7+ can easily go 36 hours without needing a charge and my sister is always on LTE and she is very much into Instagram and Snapchat as well as Facebook. I've had to disable the latter because it is a known battery hog, even though I'm not logged in to Facebook. Android doesn't know what the fuck to do with it unless its disabled. Same for many other Samsung bloat apps I've had to disable because they go rogue and start using data in the background. Samsung Plus app once used a few hundred MBs of data in the background and drained the battery in the process. This was early on in to owning the phone and before I began disabling apps. Plenty of other users on the S7 forums have reported the same thing, except they weren't on unlimited data like I was.
Apple has its own issues of being overbearing on devs and even screwing them over. But the pros of that are devs are scared of their apps causing problems for the users because Apple will give them the boot out the App Store if they're suspected of being malignant apps. If you use an iOS app next an Android app, it's obvious iOS devs take more care with their apps than they do Android. iOS gets the preference and priority over Android. And that in turn affects the user experience.
Your experiences are anecdotal as are mine. But in all honestly, aside from a nice screen and camera, my S7 is not all that much better than my S3 was, and they both suffer from the same problems in regards to battery life. I've used BetterBatteryStats and GSam to track wake locks and tried to plug holes but still don't see big enough improvements. I don't think someone should have to go through all this work to figure it out. I'm sure having the battery degraded to a capacity that's 66% of original less than a year in to ownership is a big culprit of it.
We'll see the reviews of the iPhone X and what the drawbacks are. Also what real life usage is like. But with a macOS and iOS device that I use daily and heavily, it might be time to close the circle and go the iPhone route. Even with Apple's dragging of its feet to implement new tech that others have had for a while, I find Apple makes it much easier to set up and use a device and have them all connected between each other. They're not perfect, but whatever they suck at, Google picks up the slack with their iOS offerings. And funny thing is, Google usually prioritizes iOS over Android too in their app development. Hangouts is much cleaner and wasn't All/Duo iOS first, too? Maybe it was another app or feature but I remember the outrage at Google bee-lining straight to iOS before Android. I know Nintendo prioritized iOS before Android with that Mario game, too. Those aren't two small companies that don't mean much; they mean a lot in terms of what apps/games people want and they clearly cater to someone else before Android.
I don't have a personal issue with Samsung but it could be the OEM that's driving me away from Android. I will still consider the Pixel 2 because I see a phone from Google being the appropriate rival phone to a phone from Apple, but I'm not holding my breath. The Android subreddit has various complaints too about the same battery drain and other issues and that just sheds the light on the fact that all Android devices suffer from it, not just Samsung. And it's frustrating enough that I'd leave Android for iOS after 8 years, as many others have done in recent years as well. I'll give up "customizability" of Android in the name of Big Brother Apple not only having my devices well-connected to each other but also seemingly taking a harder stance on privacy and security as well.