the foreflight app for Android is not anywhere near as nice as it is for the iPad. I am not aware of ANY Android app that even comes close to Foreflight for the iPad.
the foreflight app for Android is not anywhere near as nice as it is for the iPad. I am not aware of ANY Android app that even comes close to Foreflight for the iPad.
Let me know when that is. While I have an iPad2 with Foreflight I can get a really sweet deal on a galaxy with an unlimited data plan.Naviator is VERY close. Once a few more bugs get worked out, it will surpass it, both in price and features.
That is a very bold statement NIck.Naviator is VERY close. Once a few more bugs get worked out, it will surpass it, both in price and features.
We should call him "Mr. Bold"!That is a very bold statement NIck.
That is a very bold statement NIck.
Not sure I'd agree with dominance, but I'd probably go for parity. And I think that competition here is a good thing, as long as we don't fragment the market too much.Get on the Android train, Jesse. Its departing in 5 minutes.
Its not bold when its a sure thing. I wouldn't tell the man that says "The sun will rise in the eastern sky tomorrow" that he's bold.
And its a sure thing because the pricing model is already MUCH cheaper, and the lacking features are very minimal at this point. Seriously, we're really close to having an app for either Android or iOS that fits the bill perfectly (Naviator for Android, ForeFlight for iOS).
Except that Android is nearing market dominance. That is truth.
I knew about these plance since Samsung cancelled the Wifi-only Galaxy Tab, ostensibly to concentrate on this new device. But I am quite concerned that iPad-mania would cloud their judgement and make them switch to the 10" format. But the smaller size of Galaxy Tab was what made it attractive to me. Oh well, there's always Archos.New Galaxy 10.1 coming out next month with hardware comparable to iPad2 and running latest Android (3.01).
I never understood the desire to stick with whatever tech was playing catchup.
Why not use the best tech available today and if it surpasses that tech, switch later?
Everyone switches tech out every so often. I just buy what actually works best at the time of purchase and don't have to "hope" that any manufacturer will catch-up to another.
I do hope for new features and changes to the things I'm already using, but if something surpasses it, I just consider it in the next round of tech purchases.
Thus, Foreflight and iPad today, and if folks say something beats it in the future, buy that then.
Is it the love of the "underdog" that keeps you guys waiting for Android to catch up? I'm just askin', 'cause I'm curious. I don't have enough lifespan to waste waiting on tech companies. I used to do enough waiting on my own company's engineers to fix something blatantly stupid in our product(s) while customers stated and re-stated the obvious, "That's a really stupid bug!"
Plain and simple: Picking a device because of the apps is the most retarded argument for technology ever.
The argument that the iPad/iPhone is better because of the apps is the last strand of the rope being gripped by the man falling off the mountain, because everything else about their beloved device has been surpassed in both cost and features.
In this specific instance, supporting Naviator in the hopes that it will soon beat out ForeFlight is a no-brainer because without support, the app will dry up and disappear. As more features come along, more people will use it, and that brings more money to the developer. That is what will take the Android devices to the point where pilots will no longer have that "I pick iPhone/iPad because of this one excellent app that you can't have on Android."
Look to the many dead threads on here about aviation apps for Android. Until recently, there were none, because everyone and their brother was using iOS.
And when that day comes, the cartoonish and childish applications that are left behind on iOS won't be enough for pilots to stay with a dying operating system.
So its not "Support the Underdog," its "Support the guys that are bringing good apps to the best devices."
Wow Nick....People have picked platforms because of the applications on them since pretty much day one. That isn't going to change anytime soon. The majority of the market-share doesn't give a **** about the platform, the community, etc. They just want a device to do a task.Plain and simple: Picking a device because of the apps is the most retarded argument for technology ever. The argument that the iPad/iPhone is better because of the apps is the last strand of the rope being gripped by the man falling off the mountain, because everything else about their beloved device has been surpassed in both cost and features.
In this specific instance, supporting Naviator in the hopes that it will soon beat out ForeFlight is a no-brainer because without support, the app will dry up and disappear. As more features come along, more people will use it, and that brings more money to the developer. That is what will take the Android devices to the point where pilots will no longer have that "I pick iPhone/iPad because of this one excellent app that you can't have on Android."
Look to the many dead threads on here about aviation apps for Android. Until recently, there were none, because everyone and their brother was using iOS. Now that iOS is dying a slow and miserable death, there are more pilots using Android, and hence, more support for an upcoming app that has every chance of beating out the "king of the mountain." And when that day comes, the cartoonish and childish applications that are left behind on iOS won't be enough for pilots to stay with a dying operating system.
So its not "Support the Underdog," its "Support the guys that are bringing good apps to the best devices."
I was asking a serious question, but since you went straight to trolling mode... Not sure if this isn't an OSI Model Layer 8 & 9 thing... Layer 8 is Religion and Layer 9 is Politics.
Wow Nick....People have picked platforms because of the applications on them since pretty much day one. That isn't going to change anytime soon. The majority of the market-share doesn't give a **** about the platform, the community, etc. They just want a device to do a task.
The unstated assumtion above is that a common set of criteria exists for platform selection across all users, and that is plainly wrong. I used a Linux desktop exclusively since 2001, and you know that application set on Linux is narrower than on Windows. I did that because I do not care for applications that are useless for me. In the same way iPhone or Android users may choose the platform while ignoring the current or projected market share. I can even give you an example within the context of PoA: imagine a pilot who thinks that 10" iPad is too big and iPhone is too small, he has no choice but to use a 7" Android device, even though ForeFlight for Android is crap!Its like picking OSX because it has a better Calculator than Windows. The usability of OSX beats Windows in every way, but if I applied your logic, I'd never go with OSX because there are more games on Windows, and a lot of apps that just don't exist in OSX.
It was a serious answer. Not a trolling answer. That is all. Thanks for the rest of the beating.
Its not bold when its a sure thing.
Except that Android is nearing market dominance. That is truth.
Plain and simple: Picking a device because of the apps is the most retarded argument for technology ever.
Now that iOS is dying a slow and miserable death
there are more pilots using Android
And when that day comes, the cartoonish and childish applications that are left behind on iOS won't be enough for pilots to stay with a dying operating system.
I'm trying to figure out which "cartoonish and childish" apps I'm supposedly running on my iPad. Hmm.
Angry Birds, YES! I found the "cartoonish and childish" App! Oh and Flight Control!
I kinda expected a price commentary more than a bunch of un-based claims. Apple stuff ain't cheap.
I can even give you an example within the context of PoA: imagine a pilot who thinks that 10" iPad is too big and iPhone is too small, he has no choice but to use a 7" Android device, even though ForeFlight for Android is crap!
In tablets? Hardly. They've barely started.
No, it's the ONLY argument for technology. I don't buy technology because it's technology, I buy technology to get a job done.
I bought an iPad on day one not because I like Apple. I bought an iPad on day one because it can do a job that I'd been looking for a device to fill for five years. That is, display approach plates electronically in a usable way.
I'd been looking for something, anything that would do it well every year at Oshkosh, and it just wasn't there. Battery-hungry, expensive Windows tablets. E-ink devices up the wazoo that weren't able to display a plate at a readable size all at once, and the screen took approximately forever to update when trying to switch between different parts of the plate in a readable size. Just not workable.
I had ForeFlight on the iPhone mostly as a reference for "Hey, what airport is that?" when I was driving, and occasional in-cockpit use for grabbing a frequency or something. I could look at plates, but not in a usable size (though the screen was a lot faster than those e-ink devices).
When the iPad was introduced, I thought, "This is going to be HUGE for pilots." Having met Tyson at Oshkosh a couple of years earlier, I pinged him to ask what their plans were. Based on that, I actually stood in line for Apple gear, something I've never done before.
So the apps DO mean something. Does "We have 300,000 apps and the other guys only have 200,000" mean anything? Not for most things (seriously, how many tip calculators do you need?) but there is a better chance that the one with more total apps will have the one specialized app that does what you need it to do. But really, it's not about the total number of apps, it's about whether or not it has the one to do the job you want - Or more likely, the several to do several jobs.
You really are good for comic relief sometimes, Nick.
Any evidence for that claim?
Cartoonish and childish? Riiiiiiiiiiight. Sure, there are some - But they're meant for kids and/or gamers. And I don't think ForeFlight is just going to pack up and quit.
Nick, I've been listening to people say "The Mac is dead" for 25 years. In reality, Apple's doing quite well with Macs, to the point that they're near 10% market share, something that was almost completely unfathomable even 10 years ago.
iOS will be here for a LONG time. It's not "dying" and it's not going to in the foreseeable future. Neither is Android.
This is all just Mac vs. Windows all over again, only (ironically) Apple is the big guy so far.
Well, good thing all those "cartoonish" apps aren't available on Android!!!! (oh wait, those two are. )
There aren't any Android tablets actually shipping yet that are significantly cheaper than the iPad, though.
There is no ForeFlight for Android. There is a different program called "ForeFlight Weather" for Android. I'm sure it does what it was designed to do just fine... But it is not ForeFlight. That's like saying ForeFlight Checklist is crap because it won't show me approach plates.
Gosh, I figured the exact opposite. Pick something that does something I need it to do. Must be some new trend out there where the OS something runs on is more important than the software to do something.
There are a number of different tablets shipping right now, and all but 1 have better specs and performance than the iPad, and all can do everything the iPad can do except ForeFlight (although, there is a very good alternative around now). Google != Apple, so the "official" device is less important, because its generally intended to be a developer's phone, not a consumer device.Wow that's delusional. The first Samsung Galaxy was pulled from the market to make it at least as good as iPad 2, wasn't it? Is the next version released yet? Is Android's official tablet release done yet? Google must have announced that while I wasn't looking.
Okay that explains why to support it if you already have Android, but my question was why pick Android before it can even do the job? Makes sense for the Android owners who are already on the platform, yes. I was talking about those in this thread who seem to be waiting not only to purchase Android tablets, but who've waited through many iterations. Wouldn't it make more sense to have been flying with something else in the meantime?
No. My point was that the big missing element was pilot apps. People were asking for them, and the threads dead ended because there were none (or at least, no good ones). That is no longer true, as there are quite a few starting to pop up now.They were using what was available and worked at the time. You seem troubled by that?
http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/?p=27418 among other sourcesCite your sources on "slow and miserable death" and "more pilots using Android" please. As far as "beating the king of the mountain", hell...
ChartCase still kicks Foreflight, WingX, and obviously this Android newcomer's asses up and down the block on raw feature-set...
But their company got lazy, didn't get off of Windows tablets and/or couldn't port their code easily or quickly, and then lost the support of huge swaths of the aviation community overnight by suing over patents.
Bingo.So I guess I'm answering my own question by stating that you can be "King of the mountain" one day and if the user-base isn't happy, they're gone the next.
So I get what you're saying about supporting the software on the device you want to use, I guess.
But I didn't arrive at iPad because it was an iPad. I went iPad for Foreflight. The rest of the things the iPad does for me are nice, but not all that necessary since I was already an iPhone/Mac user. In fact I'm posting this from Tapatalk on the iPhone while the iPad sits ten feet away because I can't thumb-type one-handed on the iPad.
I'm trying to figure out which "cartoonish and childish" apps I'm supposedly running on my iPad. Hmm.
Not written by AppleForeflight, no.
Yes. It feels like Microsoft Bob's implementation of Mail.Mail, no.
Exactly the same, except it doesn't support Flash, so no industry standard website will run.Browser, same as any other, so no. Seesmic, no.
I don't remember the Photo viewer, because I never used the POS camera that came with the iPhone I had.Photo viewer, no.
I love LogTen Pro, but it is riddled with the childish little spinner things I was talking about earlier. The OSX version is amazing, and it does the job quite well, and I put up with LogTen Mobile Lite for that reason. Now that its gone, I see no redeeming quality about the mobile app.LogTen Pro, no.
Never seen it, not written by Apple.182P Checklist... Sparse UI, but not cartoonish or childish, no.
Pilot FAR/AIM, no.
LiveATC, no.
E6B Pro, no.
Various SSH and RDP clients, no.
iPhone's calendar isn't bad. I liked it better than the original Android calendar, but that has grown into a much better implementation of a calendar now.Calendar, with shared Home/Work, spouse, and Airplane calendars, no.
Never used 'em. Not written by Apple.GoodRreader, no.
MyRADAR, no.
ETrade, Fidelity, eBay, Amazon, USPS, Craigsphone, Bloomberg... No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Games? Intended to be childish. And they are on Android too. And they're free on Android. They're not free on iOS.Angry Birds, YES! I found the "cartoonish and childish" App! Oh and Flight Control!
Okay so you're saying there's no "good apps" on iOS. I got that. Best devices? Ok. They seem pretty similar to me. Tablet, meet tablet.
Price is too easy. Apple is always more expensive because of the religious element associated with their success. People will pay more because there is a piece of fruit on the back of the device.I kinda expected a price commentary more than a bunch of un-based claims. Apple stuff ain't cheap.
<snip>
Price is too easy. Apple is always more expensive because of the religious element associated with their success. People will pay more because there is a piece of fruit on the back of the device.
That's called perception, and Apple has a reputation worthy of envy. Whether they deserve it or not is irrelevant. They've got it. People place a higher value on their products because they perceive them to be better.
Personally, I think Apple's good rep is deserved. They've made some stupid stuff, but they've stepped on their crank less frequently than nearly everybody else in the biz. And they've brought some truly innovative products to the masses.
As for cartoonish apps, let me refer you to the following two stock screenshots. Tell me which one feels more professional, and less "childish."
That's called perception, and Apple has a reputation worthy of envy. Whether they deserve it or not is irrelevant. They've got it. People place a higher value on their products because they perceive them to be better.
Personally, I think Apple's good rep is deserved. They've made some stupid stuff, but they've stepped on their crank less frequently than nearly everybody else in the biz. And they've brought some truly innovative products to the masses.
Exactly the same reason that people will buy Hamburger Helper instead of Panburger Partner, even though Panburger Partner is more delicious and cheaper. Name recognition.
How about buying Malt-o-meal cereal?
Its all the same, its nothing more than brand-name recognition. Its not a better product, its a more recognizable name, and is not much different than the 8 year old girl that has to have the pink jelly bracelet because all of her friends have one.
See every claim ever about OSX.
If Apple designed the apps, I would agree 100%. But using the "Apps is god" argument is akin to saying "No one should ever use OSX because there are more programs on Windows," and you and I both know that is crap.
The market dominance is based upon the following numbers:http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/?p=27418
In another study I'm trying to find, it showed that in a specified timeframe, Android use grew by 10% while iOS grew by .02%. That is pretty damning.
But lets say for a second that "Apps are god." Besides ForeFlight, which now has a decent competitor coming along, what can you do on your iPhone/Apple Tablet, that I can't do on my Android Phone/Android Tablet.
As for cartoonish apps, let me refer you to the following two stock screenshots. Tell me which one feels more professional, and less "childish."
or
And uh, since you refuse to use any technology unless it can already do the job you want it to do, and not the job you know it has the potential to do, why did you buy an iPhone early in its life when it didn't support MMS, didn't support Exchange, didn't support 3G (all three of which were industry standard and commonly used by most all users at that time), and didn't have ForeFlight or something similar on it.
Moreover, why buy it now when it won't use the industry standard for web technology...after all, if its all about the apps, then it couldn't have done the job you needed on day 1, right?
Any stock app that comes with the iPad. Remember, Apple didn't write any of the apps you are quoting below (hell, even the calculator built into iOS sucks.
The wheelie thing to pick from drop downs is childish,
and everything else about the device is childish (including the "My child's first camera" that will give you excellent pictures for the 1990s).
Yes. It feels like Microsoft Bob's implementation of Mail.
Exactly the same, except it doesn't support Flash, so no industry standard website will run.
When Flash for Android is good, it’s great, but when it’s bad, it can make even the harshest Apple critic want to e-mail Steve Jobs an apology video playing in HTML 5.
Note that I still have my nomad. It works, years later.
My iPod Touch? Had it for a little over a year before it crapped out.
I bought an iPad on day one not because I like Apple.
Hahahahahahahahahahahahainfinity
Dude, there was stuff that was out that would do what you wanted before the iPad (display approach plates), it just wasn't made by Apple. I know, because I have one, and they were out for a while before I got it. But *gasp* it ran on a Viliv!
This reminds me how one guy overheard a talk of two IBMers at a conference about Cray-1. One asked "what the hell is Cray"... Other said: "dunno, a big mini apparently" "think it's faster than 3033?" "doubt it".What the hell is a Viliv?
Dude, there was stuff that was out that would do what you wanted before the iPad (display approach plates), it just wasn't made by Apple. I know, because I have one, and they were out for a while before I got it. But *gasp* it ran on a Viliv!
What the hell is a Viliv?
I *never* saw anything when I was looking that was even usable until the Garmin 696, and that was just too damn expensive for a one-trick pony.
Yup - And I agree that the total number of apps available, on the scales that both Android and iOS are now, is irrelevant. They're both well into the hundreds of thousands, and it sounds like Android will pass iOS in another several months. Whooptee freakin' doo, who really cares as long as the apps you need and want are there.
Now, when it comes to the Palm Pre OS and their under-5000-apps selection, the total number becomes somewhat more relevant simply due to the much lower likelihood of being able to do anything you want with it.
That doesn't show market dominance at all. It mostly shows parity. The major exception to that is the "phones bought in the last 6 months," those being Oct-Dec and Jan-Mar. The vast majority of iPhone sales come in the June-August time frame when the new ones come out. So, those numbers don't surprise me in the least. They simply show that there are two big players who are pretty much kicking everyone else's butt right now.
Not really. iOS has been around a lot longer, so there's a lot more growth potential for Android.
I dunno what you can do. But FlipBoard isn't available on Android either. How about VitalSource Bookshelf? I had two primary uses in mind for the iPad when I bought it, flying and textbooks. ForeFlight handles the former, VitalSource Bookshelf was required last semester for the latter. How about the ABC Player app, for ABC TV shows? It's pretty impressive, I wish other networks would follow suit.
Frankly, as I'm googling these, none of them are showing up as available on Android. Those are just the first few I thought of, I'm not gonna go through all of my apps.
The ability to have widgets which display useful information on the homescreen makes all the difference in the world. Want to see your email? Use the email widget. Calendar? Calendar Widget. Both at the same time? Hey, they're both there. Takes 4 taps or even more to get even close to that on iOS.I don't think either looks "cartoonish" but it must be a preference thing, I think the iOS one is much better looking AND more functional - I've noticed that I am able to find apps on my screen fastest by their "cartoonish" icons. There's too much different crap floating around on that Android screen too.
You never sent picture messages? You still don't? Really?? I (and, from my time at T-Mobile at the time of the iPhone launch, about 90% of people I talked to) used Picture Messaging all the time when the iPhone launched. When the iPhone first started getting jailbroken, do you know what the number one tech support call I got was? "How can I get SquirrelyMMS to work with T-Mobile?" Yep....most people got an iPhone and within minutes of ownership needed to find a solution for MMS.The iPhone was my first smartphone. I never had used MMS (hell, I still haven't), I never used exchange until my current job, which I started 2 months ago, and something like ForeFlight was completely unheard of on any platform at the time I bought the iPhone.
You wanted a cell phone that didn't suck and you got a Smart Phone, when all Smart Phones, iPhone included, took about 30 steps backwards in mobile voice clarity and battery life? I'll have you know that most people did not "hate" their mobile phones back then, people were actually quite happy with crap like the RAZR. However most people hated their Smart Phones back then because they were stuck with Windows Mobile or if they were business people, Blackberries. The true changer toward Smart Phones people liked was not the iPhone as you suspect, but the BlackBerry Pearl 8100. That phone was a PITA to use, but had so many features people loved them. I hated it because it broke every rule about phones, but not in a good way.When I bought the iPhone, what I really wanted was a cell phone that didn't suck. Go look on YouTube at the iPhone intro, and see how much excitement there was. Cell phones used to always be a royal pain in the ass. Nokia's UI's tended to be usable at least, but Motorola's were absolute crap. Everyone HATED their cell phones back then. When the iPhone rumors started, they spread like wildfire because Apple people loved their Apple devices (Macs and iPods at that point) but HATED their cell phones.
Again, except that it didn't do half of the stuff a "dumb phone" could do, and was using technology that was at least 5 years behind. Note that the same design model exists in today's Verizon iPhone: Rather than use the standard that Verizon has in all of their new phones, they chose not to go 4G. But people still bought them.So, who better to make a cell phone than Apple? We knew that they would get it right, and my first iPhone was far and away a better phone than any cell phone I'd ever had - Plus, it could get my email, surf the web, be my iPod, and a few other useful things. I didn't even care about 3rd-party apps at that point, because the iPhone was WAY better than anything I'd had previously.
Ummmm... It does HTML, which is "the industry standard for web technology" just fine, always has.
iOS's native browser doesn't handle Flash. In fact, no Apple App does.I'll assume you mean Flash. And it does do Flash, just not on Safari.
It's all about the user experience. I don't miss Flash, and I'm glad Apple is putting the pressure on web designers to use things like HTML5 that don't suck like Flash does. I'm currently doing some online training for my job, and the system they use is Flash-based. Yesterday, in the course of going through three videos of under 10 minutes apiece, Flash crashed repeatedly. In fact, during the 2nd video it crashed THREE TIMES. What utter crap!
If I really need it, I can get it. I just haven't needed it that bad yet.
I looked at those. I balked at the price tag and the fear that it wouldn't have very good support from the manufacturer after seeing their hokey website (back then, haven't looked lately).
And I built my own ChartCase machine out of a Panasonic ToughBook long before ForeFlight was available...
So I might understand you giving Kent a hard time, but there were folks out here who had those "other things" and decided the iPad looked a lot more useful. If the iPad hadn't come along, the Android tablet would have also looked more useful than lugging around a full-blown tablet PC.
MSFT was also really screwing up their support for tablets inbetween XP and Win 7 with Vista... it was a really awful experience to try to actually run those things.
What was obvious was that a device that was designed to be a tablet and not a full-blown computer, but had enough horsepower to run real applications, was needed. The "OLPC" project PC market had a number of players come and go without catching on, as well as the tiny handheld PCs and folks like Motion Computing, because reloading Windows on a machine with no keyboard pretty much sucks.
Netbooks are another niche that came out with processors that weren't powerful enough during a time when hardware prices were falling so fast that a month after you bought a netbook you could almost buy a full laptop for the same price. Now you can get them with graphics processors that can keep up with HD video content, but not at first. They were slooooow.
So... iPad hit the market timing pretty well, had a big manufacturer's name behind it for support, and made a new market niche for itself. Android has copied it. Both will be around until we all figure out what it is we want in our next form-factor for "computing everywhere", which is really where this is all headed -- and would be further along if it weren't for the physics of RF being what they are, and the politics.
Getting mobile bandwidth "everywhere" is tough. 802.11 has been an amazing shift in this, now it's time for the next system... something better than riding on the backs of the cellular carriers, but they're the ones with all the cash to pull it off. Interesting to watch.