It's a 100$ phone, at least it works! That's literally the price of a potato feature-phone a few years ago.
The iPhone SE costs over four times as much and is priced like an upper mid-range Android phone, and there's plenty of very decent Android phones in that price range.
Android is infinitely more open to Indie Developers. You know, those who really love the craft and do a lot of things just for the cause. iOS is where the money's at for the big devs who actually want to sell their apps for profit. Apple is also a big nazi enforcing gazillions of rules on the devs before their app can go live or become featured. That sometimes requires substantial investment just to make it to the App store. At the same time, a lot of bullshit apps from shitty devs using generic app-makers go through because they pass a generic Apple check-list and don't do anything important, so they are not scrutinized as much as more advanced apps.
At Google everything goes, and the Play Store regulates itself. The apps are auto-verified for security, while their efficiency and stability affect how they rank at the store, but all apps are welcome.
Personally, I much prefer Google's approach, but I wish the penalties for lower quality were larger though. Something is happening in that direction, as last year Google significantly increased the importance of stability and performance in relation to how the app ranks at the Play Store. It's still not where it should be though, as you can overcome that with sheer amounts of downloads and marketing budgets to rank higher anyway, so I hope things will improve.
The iPhone SE costs over four times as much and is priced like an upper mid-range Android phone, and there's plenty of very decent Android phones in that price range.
Android is infinitely more open to Indie Developers. You know, those who really love the craft and do a lot of things just for the cause. iOS is where the money's at for the big devs who actually want to sell their apps for profit. Apple is also a big nazi enforcing gazillions of rules on the devs before their app can go live or become featured. That sometimes requires substantial investment just to make it to the App store. At the same time, a lot of bullshit apps from shitty devs using generic app-makers go through because they pass a generic Apple check-list and don't do anything important, so they are not scrutinized as much as more advanced apps.
At Google everything goes, and the Play Store regulates itself. The apps are auto-verified for security, while their efficiency and stability affect how they rank at the store, but all apps are welcome.
Personally, I much prefer Google's approach, but I wish the penalties for lower quality were larger though. Something is happening in that direction, as last year Google significantly increased the importance of stability and performance in relation to how the app ranks at the Play Store. It's still not where it should be though, as you can overcome that with sheer amounts of downloads and marketing budgets to rank higher anyway, so I hope things will improve.
Switching gears to CPUs, did you hear about the i9 in the MBPs throttling after just five minutes of a heavy load? It struggles to even hit its base 2.9 Ghz speed and has been benchmarked as slower than its 2017 counterparts.
So far it has been one YouTuber with one unit that got these results. I'm not sure if there are others but it is concerning if it's not just a one-off. https://appleinsider.com/articles/1...p-up-with-intel-core-i9-chips-thermal-demands
Also, it shows Adobe hasn't been optimized for macOS as a Windows machine did a render in 7 minutes compared to 35 mins.
I didn't buy in to Apple's drop in quality until recently but it seems like every new product the past few years has had some glaring issues. 2016/17 MacBooks having the keyboard issue, the iPhone 6 issue, the rare iPhone 7 speaker blow out, the iMac Pro screen fucking up and requiring a whole new system because the screen is so fragile and integrated that you can't replace it easily, or at all.
I love macOS and I hope my 2017 lasts me at least another 3-4 years but I'm not sure Apple will have its reputation in-tact by then if things keep going the way they are.