For once you have tasted flight you will walk the earth with your eyes turned skywards, for there you have been and there you will long to return. -Leonardo da Vinci

iPhone 4 vs. EVO 4G

Posted: July 12th, 2010 | Filed under: Tech Talk

Other things that I didn’t really touch base on:

Depending on how you use your device, results do vary… however in my case, the EVO’s battery life depleted pretty fast. I would use the device just as I did on the iPhone 1st gen and 3G… I do understand that the battery is removable (and therefore you could possible buy another battery for a second charge) and there are such things as task killers/managers, but one shouldn’t have to take these measures to get a full day’s worth of use. It also comes with the territory of having a large screen to power…however, I believe that there is still room for power management improvement! The touted “true multitasking” is probably the biggest contributor to battery depletion.  It is fluid and does a really good job at juggling all your running apps…BUT,  this is the very reason why Apple didn’t employ multi-tasking until they came up with a better way of multitasking.

“Apple claims their multitasking will save battery life and resources, unlike the competition. But how?

The reason is simple: This is not 100% true multitasking. Not in the sense that developers define it: All system resources are available to all applications, with the system assuming the role of a traffic controller, giving preference to some tasks and less preference to others as needed.

Free-for-all multitasking will consume way too many resources, especially memory. This will make the system choke, given the limited memory available in these devices. The CPU would also be taxed, and it would deplete the battery life quicker while slowing down applications running on the foreground.

Apple’s method, however, is quite clever: Basically, it allows you to pause applications—like you can pause them in any UNIX-based operating system, while enabling some special services to allow some types of tasks—like receiving calls or playing music—to run on the background.”

Click here to read Gizmodo’s well put explanation in full.

Flash:  Having had a phone (iPhone) that didn’t support Flash and then owning one that did (Evo), I now see why Apple thinks it’s unnecessary.  a) Flash, at best, loaded very slowly b) When it came to ads, side-bar Advertisements loaded well (how annoying) c) touch interface and Flash… not very applicable.

Apple: Better battery performance, the battery is about two-thirds of the phone’s innards.  Just the perfect size, not too small, not enormously big in your hand.  The OS seems consistent across the board. Retina Display. SUPER CLEAR.

Small things on the EVO: No native screen capture, no native notepad, only the power button wakes the screen. Volume rocker does not wake the screen…and lastly, for such a large screen, the spacebar in the keypad was very small. My sentences would.look.like.this.,hitting.the.period.instead. of spacebar.

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2 Comments on “iPhone 4 vs. EVO 4G”

  1. 1 Tweets that mention mvytem.com » Blog Archive » iPhone 4 vs. EVO 4G -- Topsy.com said at 12:53 am on July 13th, 2010:

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  2. 2 CNA Certification said at 2:55 am on July 21st, 2010:

    nice post. thanks.


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