He got the Droid Turbo.I really love my 6 plus, I've had it since last release day.
I really love android as an OS, but I haven't been happy with the experience I've gotten on most of the android phones I've had, except for the Moto X and Nexus 5, and both of them had drawbacks, too.
Nexus 5 glass smudged to hell all the time, and the camera and battery sucked, but I liked the handfeel of the device and android ran fantastically on it. loved it without a case and that might be my perfect device if the camera and battery were good, it really just felt great to hold. my 6+ is too big, really.
Moto X I had the same camera and battery problems with, but I LOVED active notifications and, again, the handfeel. It's almost insultingly thick by 2015's (ridiculous) standards, technologically I see the worth in making devices thinner but it doesn't do much for the consumer. Ergonomics are more important than having a 6.9mm thin device, and I'd much rather hold a Moto X for 2 hours than an iPhone 6.
iOS has some exclusive apps that I can't abandon, and if Android had functionally equal (or superior) replacement apps I'd definitely switch, because why not tinker if you can? There's so many more things you can do with an android.
iOS just consistently nails ease of use and champions user experience, so that's what I'm happy with for now. Excited to see changes, though.
but for you Uncle, if you want to try android there are plenty of inexpensive choices for you to make that give you an honest representation of what android can be, like the excellent Moto G/E phones. stock android, decent hardware, focusing on the user experience. Motorola gets it. There's also the OnePlus phones, powerhouses at cheap price points, but those are hard to get. If you go searching online, there's plenty of android phones with good specs you can get online for less than 300 bucks, some of them 200. There's a lot of options.
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