Some missing features may be introduced in future versions of iOS while others many never arrive, thanks mainly to Apple’s strict guidelines that developers must follow. I’m fortunate (or unfortunate, depending on your viewpoint) in that I carry an iPhone 5s as well as an Android phone with me all the time, but most iPhone users simply don’t have access to all of this great functionality.
So, what awesome stuff are iPhone users missing?
There’s plenty out there — in
fact, feel free to share some of your favorites in the comments below —
but here are five great Android apps designed to add terrific
functionality to Android devices that the iPhone and iPad just can’t
have.
Cover
Created by Apps & Zerts,
Inc., Cover Lock Screen is a fantastic app that completely replaces the
lock screen on your Android smartphone. The app learns which apps you
use most in various locations you frequent, and it makes them easily
accessible with no user intervention.
“No more fumbling through screens
of apps to find the one you’re looking for,” the app’s website
explains. “Cover learns when and where you use different apps and puts
them on your lockscreen for easy access.”
The app uses location and motion
data to determine if a user is at home, at work or even driving in a
car, and rearranges the apps available on the lock screen to meet the
needs of each situation. For example, mapping and navigation apps might
be presented to the user while driving, and then email, calendar and
other productivity apps will take center stage at work.
Simply put, this great app just isn’t possible to make for iOS devices.
“Cover is built exclusively for
Android – it couldn’t have been built on any other mobile platform,”
Cover’s creators explained. “Android’s openness allows Cover to rethink
how a phone should behave and improve core features.”
Cover is free and can be downloaded here.
Swype
Swype by Nuance almost doesn’t
even need an introduction. This revolutionary keyboard has been around
for quite some time on Android and other platforms, and it has been
licensed or imitated by countless other companies.
In a nutshell, Swype completely
changes the way users type on virtual keyboards. Instead of tapping
around on tiny little virtual buttons, Swype allows users to drag a
single finger around the screen from key to key, and the app’s magic
does the rest. It also features advanced prediction and correction
technologies that minimizes mistakes.
Countless Android users out there could never dream of switching to a
new phone and losing the ability to type by swiping around the screen,
but if they switched to the iPhone they would have to.Actually, that’s not entirely true.
Swype’s competitor SwiftKey just recently launched its first iOS app,
thus bringing its popular keyboard to the iOS platform. Sort of. Since
third-party developers can’t replace the iOS keyboard across the entire
system, SwiftKey’s keyboard is only available in its own note-taking
app.
In other words, it’s just enough to give you a taste, get you used to
having an awesome Swype-style keyboard, and then angering you to no end
since you can’t use it in any other apps.Swype for Android costs $4, but a free trial of Swype can be downloaded here.
Profile Scheduler
Anyone who switched from Windows
Mobile, BlackBerry OS or Symbian to the iPhone back in the day will
undoubtedly recall the pain and anguish they felt when they realized
they no longer had access to profile manager apps. These apps would
automatically change a smartphone’s profile (ringtone, sound volumes,
vibration) based on criteria configured by the user.
Fast forward to modern smartphones, and profile management utilities have been given a huge shot of adrenaline.
My favorite example is the aptly
named Profile Scheduler, which allows users to have just about every
setting on their smartphones tweaked based on time, location, battery
status or a wide range of other criteria.
Some examples of how I use the app:
At night around the time I go to
sleep, my phone automatically switches to silent, disables vibrate
alerts, cuts out background data synchronization to save battery,
disables Bluetooth and dims the display to 10%. Of course anyone
important who needs to get in touch with me still can, since family
members are all added to a white list.
Also, since I generally go to sleep later on the weekends than I do
during the week, the schedule can be adjusted by day (I’m looking at
you, iOS Do Not Disturb).Each morning when I wake up, the phone automatically switches back to my “Normal” profile.
Then, when I get to my office and
Profile Scheduler sees the phone connect to my work Wi-Fi network, the
“Work” profile is enabled. Audio alerts are disabled, vibrate alerts are
enabled and auto-synchronization for my email is disabled to save
battery life, since I obviously receive all of my emails on my computer.
Exactly none of this is possible on my iPhone 5s.
Profile Scheduler is free in the Google Play app store, while a premium “Profile Scheduler+” version costs $3.49 and adds position-based location awareness and more great functionality.
Android Stocks Tape Widget
Will iOS ever support widgets? No, seriously… will it? Ever?
Widgets add a huge new layer of
functionality to mobile platforms, giving users access to a seemingly
infinite range of zero-touch information in real time. Want to know the
weather forecast? Just glance at your home screen. Want to know if your
team won or lost last night? Boom, the latest scores are right there as
soon as you unlock your phone. Email and SMS message previews? Covered.
Instant access to new popular YouTube videos? Done.
There are tons of great widgets
out there, but one of my favorites is a simple one called Android Stocks
Tape Widget by Wavestock.
As the name might
suggest, Android Stocks Tape Widget creates a ticker that scrolls across
your Android home screen and displays current quotes for all the stocks
and indexes you follow. Scroll speed, colors and refresh rate can all
be configured in the app, and format settings can be adjusted as well.
Sadly, my iPhone won’t display real-time stock quotes on my home screen no matter how much I yell at Siri.
Android Stocks Tape Widget is free as a trial and the full version costs $3.89.
Smart Launcher
Last but certainly not least is Smart Launcher, which completely changes the way you interact with your phone.
Just like Cover, Ginlemon Software’s
Smart Launcher app takes over the user interface on your Android phone.
But instead of just taking control of your lock screen, it replaces
your home screens as well.
The app separates all of your
installed applications into groups, making them very easy to access
quickly. It can also learn which apps you use the most and make those
apps more accessible than others.
Smart Launcher spans every
Android device you own — your phone, your tablet, even a Google TV box —
and it even interacts with other launchers you might be using.
The free version of Smart Launcher can be downloaded here, while a $4 pro version adds much-needed widget support.
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