| Switched from Android to iOS 2 years ago. I'll try to keep this limited to where iOS features is specifically ahead of Android. Password API works with third-party password managers. Not perfect, but LastPass works pretty well this way. Security Code autofill is also great for 2FA SMS things. Device performance/reliability, mostly related to launching the camera, although this probably applies all-round. There's nothing worse than trying to take pictures for a group and your camera app just... won't work. Feature polish (although limited). There are a lot of features that I wish existed, and features that I wish I had more control over, but the overall polish on a feature's functionality and feel is great. Airdrop. Supposedly Android has a good competitor coming? Share Wi-Fi password with contacts. Sign in with Apple + Auto-hide your email. :( Shortcuts. This is great, except writing them sucks for anyone even slightly code-proficient. Next to impossible to set up on phones. But again, polished but limited vs Android. Facetime. I really wish Duo was better integrated into Android and marketed. I'm sure I'm missing some, and I'm purposely not listing the things I miss from Android. There are other Apple-specific reasons that I've decided to stick with iOS for the time being that are also good to consider. |
- Camera is usually device-specific, but my Pixel/OnePlus devices have usually been very good at this
- Google released the "Nearby Share" feature a couple weeks ago
- Wi-Fi sharing can be done with standard QR codes, but I don't know if this OS-specific
- Tasker is different from Shortcuts, but a viable option. Very powerful, but more complex too
- I agree with the Duo point. It's a great service, but not well known. Google being Google I guess.
(To be clear, not disagreeing with you, just adding to the conversation)