
Till now, the screen size was one of the biggest factors stopping an Android user from considering an iPhone. Are the feature sets in 6 and 6 Plus finally enough to convince an Android user to jump ship? Let’s find out.
1. Larger 4.7 and 5.5 Inch Screen:
2. Awesome Camera And Slo-Mo
The cherry on top is the slow motion mode. Up from 120 frames per second to 240 for iPhone 6. I’ve watched some footage that was taken in this mode and it is surreal.
3. Apple Pay
Apple Pay uses a tokenized system so the merchant has none of your personal information like your card number or CVV. This can drastically reduce credit card fraud. And unlike Google Wallet, your credit card credentials are stored on your device and are not uploaded to the cloud at all. The only way to authenticate a transaction is by scanning your fingerprint using Touch ID. That means even if you lose your phone that’s filled with all your credit card details, no one could steal your information.
4. Widgets, Extensions And Openness With iOS 8
This has been the biggest argument between iOS and Android. Closed vs open control over your device. While Apple isn’t completely taking the open source route, it is opening up certain aspects of the OS, and it’s doing so securely. Apps will continue to run in a sandbox mode but now they’ll be able to communicate to one another in the sandboxed environment itself.iOS 8 is also adding widgets to the Notification Center. These are interactive and have live updates, just like Android widgets. Only they’ll be accessible from anywhere, not just the home screen.
Extensions are going to bring apps closer and make it easy to share data from one app to another, something Android has been good at since day one.
5. Health And Fitness Tracking
While Android is catching up, iPhone is still at the forefront of fitness and health tracking. The M8 motion co-processor on the iPhone 6/6Plus is always running in the background, keeping track of how many steps you walked and more.The new M8 chip has a built-in Barometer that will track elevation and the steps you climb. It can also distinguish between walking, jogging, and cycling all on its own.
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