Cuộc so kè giữa Smartphone: 15 năm Android vs iPhone

Giới thiệu Smartphone Showdown: 15 Years of Android vs. iPhone

Cuộc chiến điện thoại thông minh: 15 năm của Android và iPhone

#SmartphoneShowdown: 15 năm của Android so với iPhone

Trong suốt 15 năm qua, cuộc chiến giữa Android và iPhone đã được xem là cuộc đua không có điểm dừng. Cả hai hệ điều hành di động này đã tạo ra một sự cạnh tranh khốc liệt trên thị trường điện thoại di động, tạo ra sức ép cho sự phát triển liên tục của cả hai hãng sản xuất thiết bị.

Android, hệ điều hành di động của Google, ra mắt lần đầu tiên vào năm 2005. Kể từ đó, Android đã trở thành hệ điều hành phổ biến nhất trên thế giới, với hàng tỷ người dùng trên toàn cầu. Với tính linh hoạt và tùy chỉnh cao, Android cung cấp cho người dùng sự lựa chọn đa dạng về thiết bị và tính năng.

Trái ngược với Android, iPhone là sản phẩm của Apple và ra mắt lần đầu vào năm 2007. Với thiết kế tinh tế và hệ sinh thái mạnh mẽ, iPhone đã trở thành một biểu tượng của sự sang trọng và đẳng cấp. Mặc dù hệ điều hành iOS của iPhone không linh hoạt như Android, nhưng nó được đánh giá cao về tính ổn định và sự tương thích với các ứng dụng và dịch vụ của Apple.

Mỗi công ty đều có những điểm mạnh riêng và đội ngũ người hâm mộ cuồng nhiệt của mình. Tuy nhiên, quyết định chọn mua một sản phẩm di động không phải luôn dễ dàng. Bạn cần xem xét các yếu tố như giá cả, tính năng, thiết kế và hiệu năng trước khi đưa ra quyết định cuối cùng.

Queen Mobile, một cửa hàng điện thoại di động uy tín, đang mang đến cho bạn cơ hội để đánh giá và so sánh các sản phẩm Android và iPhone. Với một loạt các sản phẩm từ các nhà sản xuất hàng đầu như Samsung, Xiaomi, Apple và nhiều hãng khác, Queen Mobile đảm bảo mang đến cho bạn sự lựa chọn tốt nhất.

#QueenMobile – Địa chỉ tin cậy để mua sắm điện thoại di động

Queen Mobile không chỉ mở cửa để bạn tham quan và chọn mua sản phẩm mà còn mang đến cho bạn sự tư vấn chuyên nghiệp. Đội ngũ nhân viên tại Queen Mobile sẽ giúp bạn hiểu rõ hơn về các tính năng của các sản phẩm và tìm ra điện thoại di động lý tưởng phù hợp với nhu cầu của bạn.

Ngoài ra, Queen Mobile còn đảm bảo cho bạn sự bảo hành và sau bán hàng tốt nhất. Với chế độ bảo hành dài hạn và dịch vụ chăm sóc khách hàng tận tâm, Queen Mobile cam kết mang đến cho bạn trải nghiệm mua sắm điện thoại di động tốt nhất.

#Đến Queen Mobile và mua ngay sản phẩm yêu thích của bạn

Với Queen Mobile, bạn có thể trải nghiệm và so sánh các sản phẩm Android và iPhone trước khi quyết định mua hàng. Queen Mobile đảm bảo cung cấp cho bạn các thiết bị chất lượng, từ điện thoại thông minh cho đến phụ kiện điện thoại. Với Queen Mobile, mua sắm điện thoại di động chưa bao giờ dễ dàng và thoải mái đến thế.

Hãy đến Queen Mobile ngay hôm nay và tìm hiểu sự khác biệt giữa Android và iPhone. Sự lựa chọn cuối cùng nằm trong tay bạn! #QueenMobile #Android #iPhone #Smartphone #MuaNgay #DienThoaiDiDong

Mua ngay sản phẩm tại Việt Nam:
QUEEN MOBILE chuyên cung cấp điện thoại Iphone, máy tính bảng Ipad, đồng hồ Smartwatch và các phụ kiện APPLE và các giải pháp điện tử và nhà thông minh. Queen Mobile rất hân hạnh được phục vụ quý khách….
_____________________________________________________
Mua #Điện_thoại #iphone #ipad #macbook #samsung #xiaomi #poco #oppo #snapdragon giá tốt, hãy ghé [𝑸𝑼𝑬𝑬𝑵 𝑴𝑶𝑩𝑰𝑳𝑬] ✿ 149 Hòa Bình, phường Hiệp Tân, quận Tân Phú, TP HCM
✿ 402B, Hai Bà Trưng, P Tân Định, Q 1, HCM
✿ 287 đường 3/2 P 10, Q 10, HCM
Hotline (miễn phí) 19003190
Thu cũ đổi mới
Rẻ hơn hoàn tiền
Góp 0%

Thời gian làm việc: 9h – 21h.

KẾT LUẬN

“Bài viết “Smartphone Showdown: 15 Years of Android vs. iPhone” so sánh sự phát triển của hai hệ điều hành di động Android và iPhone trong suốt 15 năm qua, và đề xuất lựa chọn hợp lý cho người mua.

Bài viết bắt đầu bằng việc điểm qua các nền tảng Android và iPhone từ khi ra mắt. Android, với tính mở và sự phong phú về lựa chọn thiết bị, đã đạt được sự phổ biến lớn và trở thành lực lượng cạnh tranh chính trên thị trường điện thoại di động. iPhone, với giao diện người dùng thân thiện và sự tập trung vào trải nghiệm người dùng, đã định hình lại cách chúng ta sử dụng điện thoại.

Tiếp theo, bài viết so sánh các yếu tố quan trọng của hai hệ điều hành, bao gồm hiệu suất, tính năng, cộng đồng phát triển ứng dụng, và tính tương thích với các dịch vụ và thiết bị khác. Những điểm mạnh và điểm yếu của cả hai được đánh giá cẩn thận để người mua có cái nhìn toàn diện.

Sau đó, bài viết đề xuất lựa chọn hợp lý cho người mua dựa trên nhu cầu và sở thích cá nhân. Nếu bạn muốn sự linh hoạt và sự đa dạng trong lựa chọn thiết bị, Android là lựa chọn tốt với nhiều phiên bản và nhà sản xuất khác nhau. Trong khi đó, nếu bạn ưa thích trải nghiệm người dùng thân thiện và tính ổn định, iPhone có thể là một lựa chọn tuyệt vời.

Cuối cùng, bài viết khuyên người mua nên tham khảo ý kiến của người dùng khác, xem xét sự hỗ trợ và cập nhật từ nhà sản xuất, và thử nghiệm trước khi mua để đảm bảo sự thích nghi và hài lòng.

Tóm lại, bài viết “Smartphone Showdown: 15 Years of Android vs. iPhone” cung cấp một cái nhìn tổng quan về sự phát triển của hai hệ điều hành di động hàng đầu và đề xuất cách lựa chọn phù hợp cho người mua.”

“I’m going to destroy Android, because it’s a stolen product,” Steve Jobs says in author Walter Isaacson’s 2011 biography of the late Apple co-founder.

Jobs’ fury around Google and its smartphone software is well documented, and the many lawsuits involving Apple and various Android partners showed that Jobs was serious about his allegations of theft. But the reality is that both Apple and Google have taken inspiration from each other for years and that neither company would be where it is today without the work of the other.

So as Android celebrates its 15th birthday (since the launch of the first Android-based phone, the T-Mobile G1), let’s take a look back at the journey the companies have taken to becoming the most dominant forces in the tech world — and how their competition pushed them to innovate. 

The T-Mobile G1 phone, with its keyboard exposed

The T-Mobile G1, back in 2008.

Sarah Tew/CNET

Smartphones have arguably changed the world more than any other invention in human history, from radically altering how we interact with one another to creating a whole new category of companies that deal in various mobile technologies. And though Jobs may have been outspokenly vitriolic about Android in the early days, it’s clear that ideas and inspiration have echoed back and forth between Apple and Google in the years since.

The last 15 years of competition between the two companies have often felt like siblings bickering at playtime, falling out over who had which toy first or crying to the parents when the other one took something that wasn’t theirs. Most siblings will argue to some extent throughout their lives, but history is also rife with pairings that, through spirited competition, pushed each sibling to succeed. 

“When we play against each other, we always raise each other’s game,” global tennis star Venus Williams once said, referring to her competition with sister Serena, who, like Venus, was a dominant Grand Slam player during her time in the sport. 

Serena and Venus Williams on the tennis court

By competing head-to-head, tennis stars Serena and Venus Williams helped each other raise their game.

Getty Images

The Williams sisters grew up with competition in their blood, challenging each other on the court and learning to read each other’s movements so precisely that they could respond with the exact play needed to counter — and win. Competing against the best helped Venus and Serena reach the top of their game, learning how to beat not just each other but also other rivals in the sport, in much the same way Apple and Google have done. 

The two companies’ volleying back and forth pushed them ahead in the game, and allowed them to fight off other challengers, like the once-dominant BlackBerry, as well as Nokia and its short-lived Symbian platform. Even tech giant Microsoft and its Windows Phone failed to thrive in the face of the heated competition from Apple and Google.

But though the relationship today between the iPhone maker and the Android purveyor hardly matches the Williams’ friendly, familial rivalry, that wasn’t always the case. Let’s take a look back.

Beginnings

Android began as its own company (Android Inc.) back in 2003, and it wasn’t acquired by Google until 2005. Meanwhile, Apple already had success with mobile products in the form of the iPod, the iPhone began development in secret in 2004 and Jobs was reportedly approached to become Google CEO. 

Jobs didn’t take the role, but Google found a CEO in Eric Schmidt, who in 2006 became part of Apple’s board of directors. “There was so much overlap that it was almost as if Apple and Google were a single company,” journalist Steven Levy wrote in his 2011 book In the Plex: How Google Thinks, Works, and Shapes Our Lives. Things didn’t stay as cozy, however. 

Steve Jobs on stage introducing iOS 3.1

Steve Jobs announces iPhone OS 3.1.

Stephen Shankland/CNET

In January 2007 Apple unveiled the first iPhone, and in November 2007 Google showed off two prototypes. One, a Blackberry-esque phone that made use of hardware buttons and scroll wheels, had been in the prototype phase for some time. The more recent prototype was dominated by a large touchscreen and appeared to be much more like the iPhone.

That didn’t go down well with Jobs, who threatened the destruction of Android using “every penny of Apple’s $40 billion in the bank.” The first Android phone, the T-Mobile G1, combined elements of both those prototypes, with a touchscreen that slid out to reveal a physical keyboard. Schmidt left Apple’s board of directors in 2009 due to potential conflicts of interest, and so began a series of lawsuits involving Apple and various Google partners over alleged infringement of phone-related patents. 

The most notable of the Google partners was Samsung, which Apple accused of infringing a number of patents, including patents related to basic functions like tap to zoom and slide to unlock. These legal battles raged for years, with Apple claiming that “it is a fact that Samsung blatantly copied our design” and Samsung pushing back. The long dispute finally came to an end in 2018, when both sides agreed to settle out of court.

Despite the competing claims made during those long courtroom struggles, if we look at the development not just of the software but of the phones that run it, it seems clear both sides continued to liberally borrow ideas from each other. 

Samsung's Galaxy S phone

Samsung’s Galaxy S, launched in June 2010

Features like picture-in-picture, live voicemail, lock screen customization and live translation were all found on the Android operating system before eventually making their way to iOS. And though the use of widgets to customize your home screen was long held as a differentiator for Android, that feature too eventually found its way to iOS

On the other hand, Android’s Nearby Share feature is remarkably similar to Apple’s AirDrop, and Android phones didn’t get features like “do not disturb” or the ability to take screenshots until some time after the iPhone had them. 

Apple removed the 3.5mm headphone jack from the iPhone in September 2016, and I distinctly remember that at Google’s launch event for the Pixel the following month, chuckles went round the room when the exec on stage proclaimed, “Yes, it has a headphone jack.” Still, Google itself went on to ditch the headphone jack, with the Pixel 2

Google Pixel 2 phone

Google’s Pixel 2 followed the iPhone’s lead in removing the headphone jack.

James Martin/CNET

Sometimes it’s difficult, if not impossible, to say whether these companies are copying each other’s ideas or simply coming up with the same conclusions after paying attention to consumer trends, rumors in the press and the general evolution of supporting technologies. 

Rumors that Apple would remove the physical home button on the iPhone X were circling long before the phone was officially unveiled in September 2017. Are they the same rumors Samsung responded to when it “beat Apple to the punch” and removed the home button from its Galaxy S8 earlier that same year? Or did both sides simply arrive at such a big design decision independently? 

It’s impossible to pick a side in this argument — and somewhat reductive to even try. And regardless, you wind up with the same thing: Phones and software from different manufacturers that seem to evolve in unison. 

Today

In 2023, Android is by far the dominant smartphone platform, with 70.8% market share globally against Apple’s 28.4% (according to information from Statista). But Google’s focus has always been on getting the Android operating system onto as many devices as possible, from phones costing less than $50 to those costing over $1,500. Apple, meanwhile, offers iOS only on its own devices, and those devices come at a hefty premium, so it’s fair to expect that iOS won’t be as widespread. 

Lots of phones laid out flat.

Android is found on a huge variety of devices, at all prices.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

Google’s business model is primarily one of a service provider, though, and not a hardware manufacturer. It makes its money chiefly from selling advertisements across all its platforms, and so it typically benefits from a mass market approach. Android itself is free for companies to use — hence the large number of installs. But to use Google services (Gmail, YouTube, Chrome and so on, along with access to the Google Play Store) companies must pay license fees to Google. Still, the free use of Android is why you’ll find the operating system on phones from Samsung, Motorola, OnePlus, Oppo, Nothing and a huge variety of other brands — and yes, on Google’s own Pixel phones. 

Apple, however, is a closed shop. Only iPhones can run iOS, and Apple has every intention of keeping it that way. It has full control over how that software works on its phones (and charges developers accordingly for apps sold in its own App Store) and how it can be best optimized for the hardware. That’s why Apple phones typically perform better than many high-end Android phones, despite the hardware often being less high-spec on paper. Android by its nature has to take more of a “one size fits all” approach, where each new version has to run well on a huge variety of devices, with different screen sizes and under-the-hood components. 

Android struggled with the arrival of tablets, as software designed for 4-inch phones suddenly had to stretch to fit screens much larger in size. Android 3.0 Honeycomb was primarily designed for tablets, but various issues meant it didn’t hang around for long, and some of its features were simply absorbed into future versions. Apple takes a different approach: Though at first it used iOS for both devices, now it keeps iOS solely for its phones, optimizing for the smaller screen sizes, with the newer iPadOS as the software for its tablets. 

The Pixel 7 Pro phone

The Pixel 7 Pro offers one of the best Android experiences around.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

Yet it’s still clear to see the ways the two operating systems have converged over the years. Though Android was always the more customizable of the two, Apple eventually introduced home-screen widgets, customizable lock screens and even the ability to create icon themes to transform the look of your device. 

Meanwhile, Google worked hard to limit the problems caused by fragmentation and has arguably taken more of an “Apple” approach in its own line of devices. Like Apple’s iPhones, the phones in the more recent Pixel range — including the excellent Pixel 7 Pro — were designed to show off “the best of Google,” with processors produced in house (as Apple does with the chips for its iPhones) and software optimized for the Pixel phone it’ll run on. 

Though Android may be ahead in terms of numbers of users, Google has clearly seen that Apple is leading the way in terms of a more premium, refined hardware experience, and the Pixel series is Google’s answer. Having reviewed both the Pixel 6 Pro and Pixel 7 Pro myself, I can say with certainty that they’re the most Apple-like experience you can get from an Android phone. 

The future 

“We are at an interesting crossroads for Android,” says Ben Woods, industry analyst at CCS Insight. “Although its success in volume terms is undisputed, it is increasingly losing share to Apple in the premium smartphone space.” Google’s Pixel phones are some of the best Android phones around, but sales of the devices are a fraction of what Apple sees with the iPhone. 

A half-dozen of Samsung's phones

Samsung’s phone range includes budget models through to futuristic and high-priced folding designs.

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

It’s a different story when you look at Android partners, chiefly Samsung, which is jostling with Apple for the position of No. 1 phone manufacturer in the world — a title that seems to frequently slip from one of the companies to the other. But Samsung has a much wider catalog of products, with unit sales being bolstered by a larger number of phones at lower price points. In the premium segment, Apple still rules, and that’s showing no sign of slowing down. 

But Android is increasingly betting on longer-term success from its innovation with foldable phones. Samsung is now multiple generations into its Galaxy Z Flip and Z Fold devices, with Google’s own Pixel Fold joining the party earlier this year, along with foldables from the likes of Oppo, Motorola and soon OnePlus. Apple has yet to launch a foldable device, and it remains to be seen whether that’s simply because its take on the genre isn’t ready, or because it believes foldables are a fad that’ll pass (like 3D displays or curving designs). 

iPhone 15 Pro Max

The iPhone 15 Pro isn’t a huge departure from previous models, but it offers a big range of refinements.

James Martin/CNET

Rather than looking toward more-experimental innovations like foldable displays, Apple has instead continued to refine its existing hardware, equipping its latest iPhone 15 Pro series with titanium designs and improved cameras. And Apple’s approach also includes pulling people into the wider Apple ecosystem, with iPhones syncing seamlessly with other Apple products, including Apple Watches, iPads, Macs, HomePods and Apple TV. 

With each new iPhone customer comes an opportunity for Apple to sell additional products from its own catalog, along with services like iCloud storage, Apple Music, Apple Fitness or subscriptions to its Apple TV streaming service. Though Google offers products like this to some extent, it has yet to offer the sort of cohesive package Apple does, which could make Google’s offerings less enticing for new customers and tempt Android users to jump ship to Apple. 

Still, Android’s proliferation across devices at lower price points will continue to make it a popular choice for people on tighter  budgets. And its presence on a huge number of devices from third-party manufacturers means it’s where we’ll see more innovation that seeks to answer the question of what role the smartphone plays in our lives. 

A Fairphone opened up to show its components

Apple’s iPhone 15 launch event featured a lot of sustainability improvements. Other companies, like Fairphone, already use repairability and recycled materials as key selling points. 

Andrew Lanxon/CNET

With smartphone shipments expected to hit their lowest point in a decade, more companies will be looking for ways to use new, exciting technologies to capture an audience’s attention and present a product that serves up new ways of doing things. We’ll see this from Android and its partners and from Apple with the iPhone, its software and its peripheral devices, including new tech like Apple’s Vision Pro headset. 

We’ll also see a bigger focus from all sides on sustainability: Apple, for instance, went to great lengths during its iPhone 15 launch event in September to flex its green credentials. While Samsung is making larger efforts in sustainability and smaller companies like Fairphone are using planet-friendly features as primary selling points, other manufacturers have yet to make sustainability a key part of their business model. It’s likely, then, that as consumers increasingly look toward sustainable options, the next major competition in the smartphone industry could be who can make the greenest product.

There’s no question that the development of both the software and hardware side of iOS and Android smartphones has at times happened almost in tandem, with one side launching a feature and the other responding in “me too!” fashion. And like the Williams sisters using their sporting rivalry to reach stratospheric new heights in tennis, Apple and Android will need to continue to embrace that spirit of competition to find new ways to succeed in an increasingly difficult market.