| >What about the underlying architecture of the OS though? Linux with a Java runtime and a new windowing layer that stops "normal" Linux apps running? What's impressive about that? Tons of companies did something similar. Heck, OS X/iOS is Mach+BSD based hybrid kernel with a UNIX (FreeBSD/GNU) userland and a new windowing layer that "stops normal UNIX apps running". >iOS didn't have multitasking until a lot later Actually it did. It just wasn't enabled for third party apps because Apple is not the company to give users some non-essential feature by sacrificing something more precious at the time (battery life). Android just went for the "whatever" option, and let users deal with that. >What about access to the filesystem in a "normal" way? What about it? If anything its worse that it being something copied from iOS: it is the standard way of doing things carried over from 40+ years of computing. >Sure, the superficial layer on top (look! icons! rows of icons!) that children in a sweet shop would notice may look familiar, but underneath it is not anything alike is it? No, underneeth it's worse. More battery draining, worse responsiveness, a Java runtime they had to axe, audio latency issues, 2-3 releases to get a anywhere near decent UI, bad malware issues, etc. |
But I was mainly pointing out the comment that stated that Android was a rip-off entirely of iOS at the time; it wasn't - the ability to have (battery-draining) multitasking for 'common' apps was missing on iOS. Android also introduced features not found on iOS (intents, notifications at the top, stuttering scrolling haha etc.) so it wasn't a "coat-tail-riding" exercise entirely.
I do recall the bad UI from early on; even 2.3 was pretty ugly, and every release said "now with smooth scrolling!" which sadly was lacking. The Java runtime axing is the funny one. One day Java will be as fast as C, right?
I am aware that many of the features could probably be found on Windows Mobile 6.3 or 5.0 or whatever was available at the time, but Android appears to have displaced the Windows phone market to a large extent.