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The I- phone is exclusive to AT&T. When you get the I-phone it has to be activated through a computer. You will also get a new sim card with it...you need to use the new sim card as it has much more memory on it. Also with the I-phone you have to get an I-phone data package (usually 30.00 per month) this is in addition to your monthly price plan. AT&T has kiosks in most Wal-Marts so they can help you with the purchase and set up.
1. Which Three Should I Buy? Apple iPad, Apple iPhone 3GS, Nintendo DSi XL, PSP GO, PSP 3000, and Xbox 360 Elite?
Iphone 3gs, Xbox 360 Elite and PSP 3000
2. I am an Android phone user. How would you convince me to get an Apple iPhone?
You've already made up your mind. I won't be able to convince you to get an iPhone.I have no skin in the game. I'm not an iPhone user and don't see myself becoming one. However, I have had and continue to have extensive experience supporting iPhone users. BTW check out Steve Seidel's answer to I am an Android phone user. How would you convince me to get an Apple iPhone?It nicely sums up the difference between Android and iPhone. Make sure you upvote his answer because it's collapsed for some bizarre reason :). As for the why do people or why should people consider an iPhone instead of an Android phone? There are many reasons.In no particular order:Software Support. Unlike Android you will be able to use your fully supported iPhone for at least 5 years. In Android land that's usually 1 to 2 years, even for flagships that cost just as much as an iPhoneBackup. Apple's iCloud is one step beyond what you get with Androids. I still don't understand why Google won't automatically backup my SMS messages to and restore them from the cloud! It's such a pain switching between Android phones because I'm constantly losing my SMS or MMS message history.Hardware Support. In the markets where Apple is dominant Apple has built an extensive network of physical stores. Need a new battery for your four year old iPhone 6s that's still working great? Walk into any Apple store and they'll hook you up with an authentic battery. If they make a mistake you walk out the store with a replacement 6s on the spot. Samsung doesn't do that with the S6 because they don't even have the physical presence to do so!Third Party Support. Sure you pay more for an iPhone, but, it costs you less to operate. Third party items typically work better with iPhones. Why? Because there are so many iPhones compared to any other brand of phone, there are very few hardware differences among models and they're all premium devices. Until recently many third party manufacturers completely ignored Android because there simply wasn't enough money to be made servicing Android-the costs of troubleshooting the dozens of flagships (i.e. handful of Android users with money to spend on quality accessories***) did not justify the ROI (return on investment). I recently noticed that Disney's Circle only supported iOS on release and I've always found that my FitBit and Mi Band played much nicer with my wife's iPhone than with my many Android phones. ***In 2018 Apple sold 4 out of every 5 flagship phones globally. The market share of flagship quality Android phones is absolutely tiny (and highly fragmented) compared to Apple's market share with Apple selling over 80% of all phones valued at $800 USD or more.Total Cost of Ownership. If you're the type of person who is willing to buy an S10 or an iPhone yet you're also concerned about how much you spend or whether you're getting good value for money then the iPhone is a good bet. You can resell iPhones for much more than you can Androids (in other words, you lose less money by owning an iPhone). Over the past year I've compared the iPhone 5s to the S4, the iPhone 6 to the S5 and the iPhone 7 to the Pixel. In all cases the iPhone was worth 50% to 100% more on the used market after two to four years despite selling at the same price when first released. Speed. Do you like a fast phone? Who doesn't? iPhones destroy the competition with their A-series of SoCs (System on a Chip). The iPhone 7 from 2016 is beat by precisely one Android phone in 2019 on single core benchmarks, Samsung's S10. 2016 == 2019!?! Apple's latest crop of iPhones are unbeatable by a wide margin. It'll be a number of years before flagship Androids catch up to today's iPhones.Theft protection. You can't steal an iPhone. As soon as the owner locks it the only thing you can do is chop an iPhone up and sell it for parts. That's not particularly lucrative.Security. There are no unlocked or unlockable bootloaders. Once that phone is locked it's locked. Even good criminals can't get into your phone.Personally, I'm cheap. I happily buy used tech.I'm middle-aged and have bought precisely one computer new over the nearly three decades I've been buying computers (and, I've bought well over a dozen primary computers) and I've always had good experiences with my used computer purchases. Of course, I've always bought premium used Apple computers and now buy only premium used Android phones.Android is one big compromise.I regularly find that third party devices don't play great with my Android devices. The fact that my phones often run outdated versions of Android is frustrating (my latest, the original Pixel, runs the latest OS but sadly Android Pie is nowhere near as good as Apple's iOS 12. 4). And, the lack of decent cloud backup is disappointing.I have the technical skill to find work-arounds for all these problems but most people don't.For those people I recommend an iPhone if they're prepared to spend at least 60% of the value of a new iPhone on a phone. The additional expense to buy an iPhone will pay for itself in terms of increased usability and the fact that the iPhone will retain its resale value relative to Android phones.If you were to spend any more on a phone and don't need Android (99% of us don't need Android) then 75% is close to your break-even point if you were to sell your phone on the used market after two years. IOW if you're planning to buy a $600 USD Android then you can compare it with an $800 USD iPhone in terms of TCO for two years. If you're going to spend only half of what a new iPhone would cost you then the value proposition of a new iPhone becomes less clear to me.PS when I re-read my final few paragraphs I think I've successfully summarized how people approach their iPhone purchase decision and is why Apple manages to capture over 80% of the premium smart phone market.I am an Android phone user. How would you convince me to get an Apple iPhone?.
3. Nokia N95 or Apple Iphone?
N95 GB], Andrew showed you why. But then again, it is a matter of taste and use case. Do you need a smartphone or do you need just a touch enabled basic phone? So, think of what you need and then shop around. Nokia has so many phone models, with all kind of feature sets that I bet it is impossible not to find the right one for you, both in terms of design and features. Any of those phones is smarter than iPhone. From Apple on the other end ... well, there's just iPhone, locked and jailed and lame.