Virtually every security hole has some connection to the underlying operating system.
- There is no "back" button. Instead, it allows you to swipe right from the left side of the screen to access the menu. But despite this, a gesture can indicate something entirely different depending on the data application, and sometimes you will still need to reach for the top left side of the screen.
- Limited choices for customizing the desktop and the absence of a standard menu for accessing applications. Every icon is making its way upward. Only a maximum of four icons are allowed at the bottom.
- No file manager.
- The regular calculator gave me several occasions for hilarity. It merely shows the number that I enter into it rather than displaying the entire statement. I can hardly make out what it is that I'm putting together. Are you inviting me to bear in mind such formulations, example, that include ten or more operations? Well, fine, you can say normal
- There is no option to adjust the volume of the alarm independently; rather, the loudness of the alert is always the same as the volume of the call. Pain. It would be more helpful if it also displayed how long the alarm would continue to go off; I like to count how many more hours of sleep I have left before I have to get up.
- Via the app store in its entirety. You cannot download an.apk file and then install it like you would on an Android device. Amazon, goodbye.
Windows does not allow users to just snap pictures and videos and then transfer them to a computer. You will require iTunes, and you will need to transfer your photos via the Photos program on your Windows computer. It is fairly unusual for the connection to become lost when downloading something.
- Charging is a "special" process, as is the wire itself. It does not appear that the wire can be trusted. Three years, if all goes well.
- Unable to access previously saved wifi passwords
It is not possible to close all applications at once; instead, you will need to swipe away each one individually.
- Heavier than expected - No fingerprint scanner present. On S10E, it worked pretty well for me.
It sticks out quite a bit from the background of "ordinary" smartphones, particularly due to the enormous camera block that it has. When people see you, they automatically assume that you have money. Those things related to status. People that are more reserved won't be able to relax.
In general, the operating system has less features than Android has. Even on my very first smartphone, which ran Android on a Galaxy S3, there were more choices for personalization. Apple portrays this as a philosophy of simplicity and "nothing more," suggesting that there is nothing else that could go wrong.