Quote:
Originally Posted by QuadCityImages
As far as the iPhone playing catch up, there is quite a bit of evidence for this. Prior to the iPhone 4, the display was falling a long way behind practically every Android phone. They've now "caught up", and slightly passed the competition, but before the iPhone 5 comes out I'd suggest they'll be behind again. They just "caught up" when it comes to folders, customizable backgrounds, front-facing cameras and multitasking. Someday maybe they will "catch up" in offering access to apps outside the store, or more than one form factor, such as a larger screen or hardware keyboard.
If you look at the pace of innovation, I would agree that the iPhone is no longer the leading edge of mobile technology.
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Most of what you’ve listed, with the exception of the screens, is hardly what I’d call innovative or at the leading edge of anything in the mobile space. Every feature you’ve listed, except for the screen and the front facing camera, has been in existence since the very first Windows Mobile phones, and even Windows CE before that.
There hasn’t been much innovation in the mobile space at all recently, in my opinion. Tons of feature parity at the macro level, and lots of iterative design improvements have characterized the last several years, iPhone, Android, and BB included.