I was posed a question this morning by a co-worker. What's your take on the Sony tablet?
Here's my take. I've purchased many Sony computers. I've purchased several Sony phones and cameras. I'm a big fan of Sony. I went to the Sony Store, played with and almost purchased the Sony tablet. Here's the catch. It runs Android.
Don't get me wrong. I'm also a big fan of Android and Google. I'll discuss Google more in a moment. Also realize, this co-worker, like myself, spends a ton of time traveling and is on the road constantly.
So, I'll try to answer more than just the question asked.
I have switched my whole digital world back to an iOS-centric, Google Driven experience.
I personally have owned several Android devices, both phones and a tablet. I've spent many hours pouring through articles and reviews both before and after purchasing. The main problem I find with Android is the fragmentation in the marketplace. This has been discussed for many years, and supposed to be somewhat fixed with the new 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich OS.
I finally had to spend more time working my day job, and stop trying to make my "digital world" work on several different devices and OS's.
I went and purchased the iPhone 4S. I already had an iPad2. I use an iMac at the house and a PC at the office. I mentioned Google. I sent my first Gmail in March of 2007. I just went and looked it up. It was a test email to my son. Over the past 6 months I've migrated my entire world over to Google. Mail and Docs and Calendars, Oh my!
My IT guy called to make sure I was still alive. He'd not heard from me in awhile. I've moved all my information off the exchange server. When I said iOS-centric and Google Driven, let me explain. All my devices pull their information from Google. Google, the free version, hosts all my data. I do back everything up on a weekly basis, but in all honestly over the past many years, I've never had any problems. It's just a ritual I can't break.
My phone pulls from Google. My iPad pulls from Google. At the office, I use the web version of the Google Apps. At home, my iCal and Address Book pull from Google. I mainly use a Chrome browser, even at home.
Bottom line. Remember the travel part? I travel with one cable and one charger. My iPhone and my iPad work in perfect harmony. If I want to change settings on one, it's virtually the same to change it on the other. Most of the apps I use, work on both the phone and the pad and pull from the cloud anyway.
I hope this helps. Please feel free to comment or ask questions if I've left anything out or unanswered.
Thanks for following and sharing!
David
Thanks for the info David. You made a valid point with regards to carrying multiple charges during travel! That was definitely a "selling" point as I already have an iPhone and a Mac laptop.
ReplyDeleteA few questions:
1. Speed: Android vs. iOS
2. Google Docs: when creating in Google and then opening in Microsoft Office, do you find the format to be different?
Good Questions.
ReplyDelete1. Speed. I've not really noticed a speed difference. With every new device seems to come faster processors and more speed. I would say it really depends on the device and apps you use, but both are good.
2. Google Docs. The formatting in Google Docs is somewhat limited. I create a ton of docs in Google, both docs and spreadsheets. I rarely open them in another program. I typically use them online.
I have found that google is so vast and you (I) can most anything I need from something some where in google. Having access from all of this from my iPhone, heck I am responding from my iPhone, google has brought my world into a nice simple little package that I can access from the palm of my hand. Nice blog Dave really enjoy it.
ReplyDelete