The 5S is 64-bit, which is cool. The display of the Note III is a considerably higher resolution, as I mentioned before, despite the larger screen, it has a higher pixel density. The camera on the Note III is 13 MP, vs. the 8 MP iPhone. Their video call cameras are about the same, 2 MP on the Note, 1.2 on the iPhone. Siri is about the same as S voice, except Siri knows all about Pokemon, and that's awesome. The iPhone and Note both have sensors for anything you can think of: motion, angle, radiation, etc. The Note runs Android, which is frequently updated and has better support for apps, due to the lower levels of processing uploaded apps. The Note comes with Chrome, which is very nice. The iPhone can get chrome. The Note, however, cannot get Siri.
I've been on Apple's site, and they don't provide any legitimate information about the A7 chip, which is worrying. They say it has a motion coprocessor, which means nothing to me, but I couldn't care less about unless it's used for calculating physics in games.
The Note has expandable storage and replaceable batteries, whereas the iPhone is outrageously priced based on storage. I don't care what type of storage it is, 8 extra GB is definitely not $100.
The Note has a quad-core processor, which is highly respectable. It runs at 1.7 GHz, which isn't too shabby for a phone. It also has 3GB of RAM, which is incredible. The Snapdragons have really nice integrated graphics, as do the iPhone processors. They both have shared memory, which is a good idea.
Now here's the problem: Apple's "tech-specs" are nothing but garbage. I'm sure the hardware is nice, but they don't tell you anything. Seriously: here is the information about the processor on their site (this is seriously all they have): A7 Chip with 64-Bit Architecture.
Things that tells you:
- It's 64-Bit
- It's got a name that makes it sound like a reject AMD APU
Things it doesn't:
- Speed
- Number of cores
- Any actual information besides the fact that it's 64-bit.
I just think Apple is a bit more concerned with the way they market their products vs. actually giving me reason to believe that they would outperform the competition. I realize that I could find this information somewhere else, but they should be forthcoming about what they're putting into their electronics.
In short, iPhones are nice, but more locked down than a high-security prison. The Note III is nice, and I don't think there's a reason to automatically say it will be a broken, useless thing just because it's not made by Apple.
Honestly, Apple hasn't been doing a whole lot of good lately (besides Mavericks, that's awesome). I liked Apple back in the days of colorful laptops with handles and Steve Jobs. Maybe there was just something magical about the way he could sell you things, but it just doesn't feel like Apple is special anymore. Their operating system is great, and their computers are nice, but in the end, are they anything more than a computer company? No. Just think about what happened when Steve Jobs left the company in the 90s.
I don't know whether I still even like Apple.
Oh, and jail-breaking? It voids the warranty, and the company doesn't want you to do it, so it's not a legitimate argument. Plus there's no way you're going to be able to think of a way to draw on an iPhone like that. For the sheer artistic use of it, there's definitely a solid place for the Note in the cell phone market.
Connors: I don't know. Based entirely on specs, one would assume that the Note would be the more efficient machine, but Android is weighted down with features, and I wouldn't be surprised if the iPhone is better in practice because of it's proprietary operating system. I think that's why Apple's computers are so good in the first place. Because Windows has to work with every machine, it's not designed to work a specific piece of hardware it's used on, but Macs are designed for Mac OS and vice versa.