Best Smartphone OS?


What is the Best Smartphone Operating System?  

121 members have voted

  1. 1. What is the Best Smartphone Operating System?

    • iPhone OS
      35
    • Android
      33
    • Symbian
      10
    • Other (Please Specify)
      12
    • BlackBerry OS
      7
    • webOS
      8
    • Windows Mobile
      16


Recommended Posts

My only Smartphone I used is my iPhone 3GS.

The OS is impressive, as long it is jailbroken ??

The good thing is the Appstore and cheap games and apps support, making this the easiest to use and the most featured.

It is really easy to have hundread of apps and games on this device, and to my knowledge, it is the only OS that work well with so much apps.

Unfortunately, the lack (mostly limited by Apple) of official fully working mobile Office suite and third party replacement (Browsers, media player) hurt it a lot.

Android have a good future, specially when HTC enter in it with the Zense UI. But it still lack lot of stuff like games...

Windows Mobile would be good somehow if the stability would be in the talk. Also, the UI is complettly outdated, even the 6.5 still not good with only a nice home screen but the same old gut slightly tweaked.

Symbian derivatives are awesome in stability as far I heard, but just like WinMo, it's getting old and the UI isn't built either for touch screen witch killed one of the best phone I saw: The Omnia HD.

BlackBerry OS look good, but it FAR from being a customer choice so far. It is too "business oriented" for lot of users.

Also, it's not Touchscreen, and the Storm's touch derivative look more like a failure to me, hope that the Storm 2 will reset this.

WebOS look cool, but I didn't saw a Pre so I can't tell anything but I don't like the feeling it have in videos I saw...

I know what is custom roms, but to me it's the same thing as Jailbreaking the iPhone in risks, if not worst actually.

It's unsupported, you never know if the new rom will really works better, it will mostly void your warranty if the device break before you can restore it, and you may always screw up your phone.

I almost got an HTC Diamond Touch last year and I surfed on websites like XDA for months.

None of the OSes meet my requirements anyway.

I know what is custom roms, but to me it's the same thing as Jailbreaking the iPhone in risks, if not worst actually.

It's unsupported, you never know if the new rom will really works better, it will mostly void your warranty if the device break before you can restore it, and you may always screw up your phone.

I almost got an HTC Diamond Touch last year and I surfed on websites like XDA for months.

None of the OSes meet my requirements anyway.

jailbreaking and custom roms arn't close to the type of stuff you can do.

using custom roms i go to choose ALL of the applications with my phone, along with extra settings.

the roms boosted my performance, stability, and customization.

i prefer the iphone OS in terms of user friendlyness, but they like to have full control over everything.

the point of jailbreak is to give you partial control over it.

jailbreaking and custom roms arn't close to the type of stuff you can do.

[...]

the roms boosted my performance, stability, and customization.

Nah, I was talking about the risks, the JB and custom Roms shares the same risks.

But I know that the JB stuff will NEVER improve performance and stability lol...

I seriously hope that WinMo 7, next Android and the next Symbian rumored to break compatibility with current apps (Because of new UI I hope) will change the game.

The iPhone isn't a revolutionary phone as Apple says, specially not in hardware, but it clearly bring innovation anywhere, specially from HTC and their custom UI.

I've used Symbian UIQ, PalmOS, WinMo and Symbian S60 and I have to say Symbian S60 by far outdoes the other three with PalmOS on my Palm TX coming in second place.

I have used Symbian S60 in three Nokia phones and my experience with was not good. It felt like using a slow Linux distro for a phone.

I have used Symbian S60 in three Nokia phones and my experience with was not good. It felt like using a slow Linux distro for a phone.

Until two years ago, I would have had to agree... ever since the generation of the E51 and E66 though, there is no lag whatsoever... and it simply flies on my N86

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I hope this encodes in to AV1 or AV2 as currently tiktok uses h265 and h264.
    • Qualcomm reportedly in talks to build custom video chips for TikTok parent ByteDance by Karthik Mudaliar Qualcomm is reportedly in advanced discussions to provide custom chip-design services to Chinese tech giant ByteDance, the same company behind TikTok. According to a report from Reuters, Qualcomm could be involved in designing custom silicon tailored for ByteDance's massive data-center workloads. If it goes through, the deal would make ByteDance one of Qualcomm's early anchor customers for its fastly growing custom chip-design division, For years, Qualcomm was the king of making smartphone processors and modems. The company has also been moving into the PC ecosystem and other formats such as on-device AI for Android XR headsets. However, this particular deal is about Qualcomm's custom Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs). For a platform like TikTok, ByteDance needs hardware that can help it ingest, process, and serve billions of short-form videos daily. Generalised hardware is no longer the most cost-effective and efficient route, which is why ByteDance is trying to develop custom Video Processing Units (VPUs). VPUs designed specifically for ByteDance’s algorithmic needs could drastically reduce data-center power consumption and improve encoding speeds at an unprecedented scale. The underlying tech behind these processors is actually from Qualcomm's recent acquisition of AlphaWave Semi, a high-speed connectivity specialist company. By combining AlphaWave’s high-bandwidth IP with Qualcomm’s architectural expertise, the company could begin mass production by the end of 2026, if the talks go through. All this also comes at a time when U.S.-China tech relations have dwindled. Escalating trade frictions between Washington and Beijing have severely impacted the export of high-end AI chips from U.S. firms like Nvidia, AMD, and Lam Research. Yet, the Qualcomm-ByteDance discussions show that U.S. tech companies are still actively seeking growth avenues and are open to doing business with China, where regulators still permit. Reuters notes that the outcome of this deal could be uncertain, and ByteDance might also seek partners other than Qualcomm. via Reuters | Image via DepositPhotos.com
    • Look who's back!
    • I wonder how driving laws around the world will change. No way to really tell if people are using phone. Same with smart watches i guess even now and those silly built in tablets for controlling the car instead of buttons.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      454
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      161
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      111
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      83
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!