I was a long time iPhone 4 user and got the itch for something new. I purchased the iPhone 5 but had wifi issues with it so I returned it within my 30 day window. Got the HTC One in May and just switched back to the iPhone 5s today. After one day, I can say it's a keeper.
The main reason I switched was battery life. When I first got the HTC One, the battery drained fairly quickly and I had to install apps to slow battery drainage, go into the settings and tweak things, something I never had to do with the iPhone. I kept gps off most of the time, it's on all the time on my iPhone. After the tweaking, I was making it through the day without any problems. But lately I was dropping to 10-20% at the end of the day with light usage. This had me concerned for the next time I traveled and would be using the phone heavily. It would have been less of a concern if it was easy to top the phone off, but it charged very slowly. The other day it was down to to 13% at the end of the day, 8 hours and 15 minutes later the next morning, it still wasn't fully charged (close at 98%).
After one day with the 5s, I know I'm back to stay. The things I like about the 5s better than the One:
-The home button, especially the fingerprint reader. It really speeds up access to the phone.
-Phone and voicemail functions are more straightforward
-A ringer switch
-Being able to use the phone one handed
-The screen is better on the 5s. I know this goes against what you might think, it's smaller and lower resolution. However it's easier to read for me. The whites are brighter, so black text is easier to pick up. Also, you can fit more apps on the iPhone home screen than you can on the larger HTC One screen. One of the big attractions for me of the One was the larger screen, but why bother with a larger phone if the view isn't markedly better?
-Better apps. There are exceptions, but for the most part the apps for the iPhone are better than the equivalent apps in Android.
The things I'm going to miss from the HTC One:
-The back button. Apple could address this by moving the menu bar in apps to the bottom of the screen. The equivalent of the back button in most iPhone apps is in the upper left hand corner, a stretch for your thumb when you're holding the phone in your right hand.
-Tight google apps integration. I use gmail for my personal email and we run google apps at work. Google does at good job of porting their apps to the iPhone, but you just don't have the seamless integration like you do on android.
-notification LED
-I liked Google Play better than iTunes, but not significantly so.
-Widgets. While not as awesome as the Android crowd claims, there are a few that are nice. Definitely not must haves though. The control center in iOS 7 negates the advantage of one of the most popular Android widgets, Power Toggles.
-Google voice works better for web searches and general questions than Siri does
-being able set Chrome and Google Maps as defaults
Overall the iPhone is smoother in a smaller, easier to hold package
The main reason I switched was battery life. When I first got the HTC One, the battery drained fairly quickly and I had to install apps to slow battery drainage, go into the settings and tweak things, something I never had to do with the iPhone. I kept gps off most of the time, it's on all the time on my iPhone. After the tweaking, I was making it through the day without any problems. But lately I was dropping to 10-20% at the end of the day with light usage. This had me concerned for the next time I traveled and would be using the phone heavily. It would have been less of a concern if it was easy to top the phone off, but it charged very slowly. The other day it was down to to 13% at the end of the day, 8 hours and 15 minutes later the next morning, it still wasn't fully charged (close at 98%).
After one day with the 5s, I know I'm back to stay. The things I like about the 5s better than the One:
-The home button, especially the fingerprint reader. It really speeds up access to the phone.
-Phone and voicemail functions are more straightforward
-A ringer switch
-Being able to use the phone one handed
-The screen is better on the 5s. I know this goes against what you might think, it's smaller and lower resolution. However it's easier to read for me. The whites are brighter, so black text is easier to pick up. Also, you can fit more apps on the iPhone home screen than you can on the larger HTC One screen. One of the big attractions for me of the One was the larger screen, but why bother with a larger phone if the view isn't markedly better?
-Better apps. There are exceptions, but for the most part the apps for the iPhone are better than the equivalent apps in Android.
The things I'm going to miss from the HTC One:
-The back button. Apple could address this by moving the menu bar in apps to the bottom of the screen. The equivalent of the back button in most iPhone apps is in the upper left hand corner, a stretch for your thumb when you're holding the phone in your right hand.
-Tight google apps integration. I use gmail for my personal email and we run google apps at work. Google does at good job of porting their apps to the iPhone, but you just don't have the seamless integration like you do on android.
-notification LED
-I liked Google Play better than iTunes, but not significantly so.
-Widgets. While not as awesome as the Android crowd claims, there are a few that are nice. Definitely not must haves though. The control center in iOS 7 negates the advantage of one of the most popular Android widgets, Power Toggles.
-Google voice works better for web searches and general questions than Siri does
-being able set Chrome and Google Maps as defaults
Overall the iPhone is smoother in a smaller, easier to hold package
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