Skip to main content

Google needs to get back to basics with Android. Why? Take a look at iOS 14

For the last few weeks, I’ve been bouncing between an iPhone and an Android phone to explore what their new software updates have to offer. Similar to how it goes every year, the experience largely involves me poking around in all the latest features Google and Apple have baked into Android 11 and iOS 14 — except this year brought one conspicuous and pivotal difference.

This time, the whole process left me yearning. As a longtime Android user, this time I was more partial to (and tempted by) iOS than ever before. I’m not picking sides, nor have I ever done that in the past. However, iOS 14 hammered home what I’ve been suspecting for years now: Google’s relentless quest to build a “smarter” mobile operating system has riddled the Android experience with gaping, glaring holes.

Let me explain.

Since the last couple of versions, there’s been a stark difference between the approaches Apple and Google have taken with iOS and Android updates. While Apple has stuck to evolutionary releases focusing equally on bringing in the new and fixing the old, Google has been more ambitious, seemingly attempting to revolutionize Android each year while overlooking its long-standing flaws.

Focusing on what matters

Of late, Apple’s annual updates have been primarily about buttressing the areas where iOS has always lagged behind. On iOS 12, Apple breathed new life into outdated iPhones with significant performance upgrades, while iOS 13 brought with it key improvements to the notification system and handy features such as optimized battery charging. With its 14th installment, Apple made iOS more flexible and added long-requested abilities such as an app drawer and third-party defaults.

In contrast, Google’s updates to Android have been the complete opposite. Instead of patching what has fundamentally ailed Android, Google has tried to build and integrate more advanced functions.

Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Android 9 ushered in a host of A.I.-powered features like predicting when you’d need a particular app and learning your brightness level habits. However, most of these either don’t work as intended or never made it to people’s phones. Two of Android 9’s headline features, called Actions and Slices, still haven’t broadly rolled out.

Android 10 built upon this with even more features that took advantage of Google’s industry-leading machine learning algorithms. One of them, dubbed Smart Reply, adds three automated replies you’d want to respond with to an incoming message, but given the limited space, the replies are typically vague and not more than two words, making them irrelevant for personal chats. The most recent Android 11 release yet again tries to rethink and supercharge your mobile notification experience.

Android refuses to grow up

While some of Android’s newer features are useful, they’re not remotely what Android needs today. There’s a laundry list of essentials that are still absent from Android. The backup and restore tool is broken, there’s no universal search, the desktop file transfer app hasn’t been updated in ages, and the new full-screen navigation gestures don’t take into account the side menu drawers found on thousands of apps.

Google’s design language is also inconsistent, and its own apps often take months to adapt. Despite announcing a dark mode a year ago, Google apps such as Docs are just now being updated for it.

“iOS, thanks to Apple’s latest suite of updates, feels like a much better and practical smartphone platform than Android.”

Even the advanced features Google does spend time on are usually forgotten and not well-executed. Take Google Assistant’s automation skills, for instance. The options are tucked away deep in menus. Apple, in comparison, has designed a simple app where you can set up a series of actions into one Siri command and instantly have them up and running. Similarly, Google’s fitness app dramatically lags behind Apple Health and is updated only sporadically, forcing users to rely on a third-party solution.

More importantly, Apple’s evolutionary theme has effectively allowed it to close the deficit that has historically prevented Android users from switching to iOS. If you hand an Android phone to an iOS user today, they’ll despise it no less than they would have a few years ago. But turn the tables around and hand an iPhone to an Android user like me, and there’s a much higher likelihood that they might like it after all.

Android 10 Assistant Navigation
Android 10 Google Assistant navigation. Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

Of course, not all of Google’s Android efforts have gone in vain. Android has come a long way in offering a more private experience and now allows you to minutely adjust the data permissions that apps constantly pester you about. Google has also made impressive progress to tackle the one criticism Android has never been able to escape: Fragmentation. Earlier this month, Google claimed Android 10 was running on a record 100 million devices in its first five months, 30% faster than any previous version.

Apple impresses

Android is more mature than ever, but it’s far from the complete operating system it could potentially be. And that gap will only expand if Google continues to ignore the flaws that truly matter to users. Thanks to Apple’s latest suite of updates, iOS feels like a much better and practical smartphone platform than Android. Pair that with Google’s struggling Pixel lineup and, suddenly, investing in an iPhone for my next phone would be a no-brainer for me. No longer do I have second thoughts about leaving Android.

Editors' Recommendations

Shubham Agarwal
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
We now know when Apple is adding RCS to the iPhone
The iPhone 14 Plus held in a man's hand.

Last November, Apple made a surprise announcement when it confirmed that RCS was coming to the iPhone in 2024. It's something iPhone and Android phone users alike have been waiting years for, but there was just one small problem: Apple never said when in 2024 RCS was coming. Thanks to Google, of all companies, we now have a better idea of when RCS is heading to the iPhone.

As spotted by 9to5Google, the Android website was recently updated with a new page dedicated to Google Messages. If you click on the "See more features" button for the section talking about RCS, there's a section titled "Better messaging for all" with the following text: "Apple has announced it will be adopting RCS in the fall of 2024. Once that happens, it will mean a better messaging experience for everyone."

Read more
iOS 18 could make my iPhone look like Android, and I hate it
The Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max and the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra's rear panels.

If rumors are to be believed, iOS 18 will allow you to customize the home screen on your iPhone more substantially than ever before. This feature will be familiar to Android phone owners, but I don’t want my iPhone to look like an Android phone.

It’s a weird double-edged sword, as by giving you more freedom to make the home screen look unique, iOS may also lose what makes it unique compared to the less constrained world of Android.
iOS 18 and your iPhone home screen

Read more
iOS 18 could add a customization feature I’ve waited years for
iOS 17 interactive widgets on an iPhone 15 Pro Max.

iOS 18 is coming later this year, and all signs point to it being a dramatic iPhone update. Now, thanks to one new report, it looks like iOS 18 could add a customization feature I've been waiting years and years and years for: better home screen customization.

According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, iOS 18 will introduce a "more customizable" home screen. More specifically, iOS 18 will allow you to place app icons and widgets anywhere you want. If you want a space or break between an app icon or your widget, welcome to the future: iOS 18 may finally let you do that. MacRumors corroborated this report with its own sources, too.

Read more