Bad News, Windows Phone Fans: Google Now is the Real Deal

Remember when Windows Phone was the most innovative smart phone platform?

Like Amiga users from 20 years ago, Windows Phone users are a tiny minority who are convinced, often for good reason, that their cherished platform is superior to the systems used by the masses. But Windows Phone is entering a dangerous time, one in which its competitors are starting to catch up and even surpass the innovations of Microsoft’s mobile platform. And Google Now is a great example of this trend.

When Windows Phone debuted three years ago, I lauded it for its innovative design, which was not just different to be different, but was simply better than that of iOS and Android. But I also recognized that Microsoft’s faster moving competitors would quickly realize the advantages of Windows Phone and start building their own integrated experience. And that if Microsoft didn’t move quickly enough, its advantages would be rendered moot.

And that’s what’s happening. There are small examples of this, like Apple slowly integrating Twitter and then Facebook into iOS. And then there are big examples of this. Google Now is such a thing.

Google Now is “an intelligent personal assistant available for Google's Android operating system,” according to Wikipedia, an “extension of Android's native Google Search application.” Like Windows Phone hubs, it’s really just a glorified app offering deep integration with useful online services. But Google Now exceeds the capabilities of any Windows Phone hub in many useful ways. It even predicts what you will want, based on the past and where you are and what are doing at the moment. It’s almost artificial intelligence, and it puts Apple’s vaunted (but silly) Siri feature in iOS in perspective.

Putting aside the understandably troubling aspects of Google’s knowledge about you for a moment, Google Now is a revelation. And today, Google announced a new version of this interface, which I’m beginning to think is the future of Android, all wrapped up in a single app. Google Now, in many ways, should be the Android UI. It should be what you see what you look at your phone.

The new version of Google Now, Google says, adds additional “cards.” These are the Google Now UI elements that, similar to Windows Phone tiles but more powerful, provide live, dynamic information from various online services. There are obvious cards—birthdays, news, weather—and then truly exciting cards that relate to your current situation/location, such as photo spot nearby, places, public transit, traffic, and many more. This week’s update adds cards for movies and real estate listings, and there’s now a Google Now widget for the Android lock screen and home screen so you really can see this UI when you glance at your phone.

To understand why this thing is so crazy powerful, consider today’s new movies card. According to Google, this interface include the latest movie ratings from Rotten Tomatoes, helping you pick the right movie. It lets you purchase your tickets through Fandango. It reminds you when you need to leave for the theater. And it displays your e-tickets for the movie once you arrive at the theater.

What the ... what?!

Folks, that kind of deep online services integration is amazing. Simply amazing. And it’s starting to make Windows Phone look a little, well, static by comparison.

I wrote this week that Microsoft should seriously consider handing over its phone efforts to the Windows client team in Hey, Microsoft: It’s Time to Pull Phone into Windows. This week’s news about Google Now makes this situation even more serious, in my opinion. I’m not sure that any part of Microsoft can move with the alacrity and clarity that taking on Android would require. I’m really not.

This should scare the living daylights out of anyone who cares about Windows Phone.

Here’s a cute little video about Google Now.

Discuss this Article 101

cxone
on Feb 13, 2013

Doesn't scare me but I'm not looking forward to some dbag from Google spouting off about their innovative design.

mebby
on Feb 13, 2013

I am hoping this is not a case of MS not following through. I think the reason Google (including Android but in general) and Apple (iOS) have succeeded is the continual, regular, and fairly quick improvements they make with their systems and devices. MS does not seem to be able to follow through or at least they wait 3 years. Three years is too late nowadays.

I just think about the Zune, Kin, others. and what would have happened if MS had kept making visible improvements. The initial versions of iPhone and Androids phones weren't that great.

I have read a laundry list of improvements that MS should make to Windows Phone and Windows 8 in Paul's writing. If they don't make those improvement (or make even better ones that Paul has not discussed), we will have another Zune/Kin. Start them now and finish over the next year. Otherwise, kaput for WP and for WIN8!

jimbie882
on Feb 13, 2013

From the examples in the video, I can see some advantages, but I'm not necessarily sure it offers anything more useful than what you see precisely on the screen. In other words, it is trivial.

jumpinghooligans
on Feb 15, 2013

I disagree. At first it is trivial, initially it gives you exactly what you ask for but after it begins to learn your habits it can synthesize some truly useful information.

For instance living in NYC and traveling a lot it’s nice that Google Now pulls my flight confirmation email and shows me the flight status that day, terminal in gate I take off from and land in, the weather in the location I'll be landing and the kicker: it alerts you when you're supposed to leave based on the current traffic to get to the airport a specified amount before takeoff (defaulting to an hour on domestic, two on international). This is super useful when the level of traffic fluctuates drastically throughout the day.

Google Now helped me out when it showed me a card one morning saying that a band I liked will be in town this week and provided a link to buy tickets and directions to the venue. How did it know I liked this band? It used my YouTube browsing history... that's nuts.

It tells me what time I need to leave for work based on train schedules. It shows games that are coming up, current scores and results for teams I search or set manually. It tracks my packages, hotels and restaurant reservations and even gives me an update of how much I walked on a month over month basis.

The app is still in its infant stages but if you're strongly invested in the Google universe (GMail, YouTube, Calendar, Docs, etc) it can provide some truly useful information.

wattsvilleblues
on Feb 13, 2013

It's things like this that make me regret getting into another 2 year contract with a Windows Phone back in November. I don't see Microsoft ever coming out with something like Google Now.

InfoDave
on Feb 13, 2013

People have used the the tortoise and hare analogy to say that the race is a marathon rather than a sprint. I think it's more like a game of leapfrog.

JimmyFal
on Feb 13, 2013

If MS let Siri go by, without seriously planning on a rebuttal, I'd be surprised. But the rebuttal would have to be by the fall, after that, then we are back to the same old Microsoft.

zicoz
on Feb 14, 2013

It seems to me that they have been planning a rebuttal for quite some time, at least Ballmer has been talking a lot about a personal assistant the last year or so.

On top of that there are the new rumors of a personal assistant coming with the new Xbox as well. I just hope that something actually comes of it all. Hopefully as part of Blue this summer.

wss
on Feb 13, 2013

Windows Phone is doomed. Doomed, I says. DOOOOMED!

Kidding aside, Paul, the fact that you write articles like this is exactly what gives you credibility over those who never see anything wrong with their chosen (or brainwashed) platform.

This was foreseeable. So what's the plan? There's already a plan, right? And the Devices and Services giant, formerly known as "software" - whatever *that* means, pfft - giant, is executing it as we speak?

mghartman
on Feb 13, 2013

I have been seriously considering a new phone on all there OSes, Google Now is what drives me toward Android.. Design and reliability from Apple and usability/efficiency on WP.. Still a toss up for me, I wish they would show WP8.5 or something..

tbsteph
on Feb 13, 2013

Bad news indeed. It's hard to understand why MSFT cannot manage to make improvements to the WP OS on a more frequent basis. I've seen your list of needed improvements (And others) to the OS for months. Yet, nothing from Redmond. Annual updates that take multiple more months to be implemented by carriers is unacceptable. (Can you tell I'm still waiting for Portico on my HTC 8X from Verizon.) Yea, bad news indeed.

abettadapur
on Feb 13, 2013

I love Windows Phone, but at some point, I realized that the writing is on the wall for the platform. Microsoft I think is just too slow with the innovations.

Jonathan Potter
on Feb 13, 2013

Windows 8/Metro proves that the Windows team has completely lost the plot, and you want them to take over Windows Phone? WP8 is the only decent thing to come out of Microsoft since Windows 7. If anything the WP team should take over Windows.

Brian_Miller
on Feb 13, 2013

This article is a great example of why relying on a slick PR video to get a sense of user experience is dangerous.

Try actually using Google Now on a relatively recent Android device.

It's the same old Google problems -- widgets that freeze and stutter, lag, and frequent crashes.

The integration being pitched has to be supported by the app in question, which must run in the background -- reducing performance on even the fastest handsets. To pay for your tickets, as in the movie example, you have to have a bank card AND provider who support the Google Wallet -- which is a very limited, tiny subset.

Try using it for a few weeks on a reasonably modern Android device, and the delivery is far inferior to the promise.

Raptor
on Mar 3, 2013

Ah, the typical delusional Windows Phone user spreading bullshit because his platform is so barren, useless, problematic, buggy and laggy. No wonder no developers support this dying platform.

West3man
on Feb 13, 2013

I'm more scared by your dropping "alacrity" on our @$$es like that.

Serious side: Microsoft can hang in there in a way that Palm couldn't so I don't see them getting squeezed out of third place in quite the same way - especially if they take your advice about Windows 8 adding phone goodness.

But I'm thinking long-game.

plymouthduster63
on Feb 13, 2013

Thank you, Paul. Once again you've made me feel wonderful for coming back to Windows Phone.

brians
on Feb 13, 2013

In related news, the last major OEM not already on Android, HP, is making an Android tablet. It is based on the Tegra 4 chip, so about twice faster than a Surface RT, 1/2 the speed of a Surface Pro.

http://readwrite.com/2013/02/13/hp-to-adopt-android-for-upcoming-mobile-...

An Android phone from HP might appear later.

Brian_Miller
on Feb 13, 2013

I'm sure the Android TouchPad will sell at least as well as the webOS TouchPad. :P

Super2online
on Feb 14, 2013

If zero Palm sales is any indication it will perform even better, never get out of the gate. HP switching to Android does not scare me, what does? Microsoft's apparent inability to integrate the vast myriad of services they already have to perfection.

nick.karasev
on Feb 13, 2013

Here's why I don't care that much about Google Now... For now.

First, as you mentioned briefly, it involves a fairly significant assumption of the user tied closely into various parts of Google ecosystem (Maps? Gmail? News?), which may not be true of all people. It will certainly become less true as others catch up to Google offerings (Outlook.com anyone?), especially with that "don't be evil" mantra losing a lot of its gloss lately.

Second, and more important, as long as Google Now is well... just Google, it can't be compared to richness of the Windows Phone home screen/hubs or at least their potential. My tile sizes are determined by me, not some unnamed engineer in California. I can add as many sources of information from as many providers as I wish, not just the cards that Google decided to bestow upon us. No phone vendor can strip off my Home screen, nor is it permanently disfigured by their own widgets. If I don't like a Nokia shipped Weather app, I have a dozen of great alternatives. I can choose and mix things any way I want! Best of all? Same applications that provide Live Tiles can also provide useful reminders, toast notifications, and obviously information updates. The latter isn't real-time though, which ensures I will still have my phone working at the end of the day.

That being said, Google is moving in the right direction learning from all the great things Windows Phone has to offer. First, it was clean type-driven digital aestetic of Metro (Holo UI anyone?). Then it was buttery smooth animations (Project Butter). And now they are chiping away at other platforms main differentiators -- Home Screen/hubs and Siri. I'm not worried about Apple responding to a challenge. I have less and less faith in Microsoft though.

ad1980
on Feb 15, 2013

You seem to have received a whole lot of information that is simply incorrect.
Regarding your tile sizes... Android allows the entire icons to be changed out. Don't like the little squares, use large circles, or something completely different. Come up with your own. You're complaining about the stock presentation, however it is easily changed.

Exactly what sources of information can you add to your Windows Phone device that Android cannot?

"No phone vendor can strip off my Home screen, nor is it permanently disfigured by their own widgets."
I have no idea what this even means. Vendors can't remove your homescreen... And no widget is permanent. If you don't like the stock presentation, simply remove the widget. Use different ones, or none at all. It's entirely up to the user. Actually, it is no different from your Nokia weather app example. No idea where you could have gotten the impression it wasn't this way.

I can understand being a fan of a product, but it would behoove you to at least have some understanding of what other products are capable of before slandering them.

adriel623
on Feb 13, 2013

Microsoft surely must have something tremendous up their sleeves. You can't really expect Microsoft to just sit still and cede ground to Google with a R&D department as amazing it is. Remember Mcirosoft has been collecting data from Voice Command for Windows Mobile and Windows OSes and Kinect for a while now. They surely have the voice recognition down to a 't' and are just waiting to unleash it soon (Maybe beginning with that rumored "siri-like" voice stuff for Xbox Next. And then it'll move to the next level with Windows Blue and the next Windows Phone update. Don't count Microsoft out just yet....or ever :)

adriel623
on Feb 13, 2013

Just lost a great comment I made. Bummer.

MarkH
on Feb 13, 2013

The problem, of course, is that Apple has a vested interest in iPhones, because they make buckets of money selling them. Google has a vested interest in Android because it steals even more personal data for them to run through their advertising engine and thereby make buckets of money.

Microsoft, on the other hand, obviously doesn't give a rats...well...they clearly don't care one bit about their phone users. All the broken promises, screwed up updates that hardly any non AT&T/Nokia user gets, and general "we don't give a crap" attitude. Doesn't matter if their phone is better in every way or not, maybe they deserve to die.

simplify
on Feb 13, 2013

I don't think it will be that amazing once they put the ads back in. To the degree that Google Now works, the ads will work too. If the Cards display automatically / predictively then Ads will display at opportune times also. In other words, these ads could control your purchasing behavior because they travel with you when you're about to make decisions. Adding social to the mix makes them more powerful, pushing you to keep up with the Joneses. If you turn the ads off, you'll lose your 'Google Offers' so they get you both ways. Just like supermarket cards where you pay more if you don't have a card and the card price is usually regular price.

johnwbaxter
on Feb 13, 2013

1. Google Now looks wonderful (and sounds wonderful) when others praise it.

2. I don't trust Google enough to use Now; I'm using Google services as little as possible.

cadrethree
on Feb 13, 2013

The biggest problem with WP8 is still the hardware (IMHO). The Nokia 920 is the perfect reference design for what the cheapest WP8 should be selling at now. The kind of phone you would be selling in India, or China. Anything else is a compromise in screen size, camera, speed, etc. Their cadence in putting out hero devices every 3+ months sucks, along with getting them on all the phone carriers. If you want to change the market sell a Nokia class hardware unlocked for $199 to $299 and speed up hardware development. That's exactly how Android won the war with Apple.

tboggs13
on Feb 13, 2013

The really sad thing is that MS promised similar functionality with Live Tiles with the Tango release. I remember the demo of an airline app that updated based on your location, the time of your flight and the status of your flight. I have never seen anything that works like that.

I would be happy if they added geofencing and phone profiles.

MS is what I call a 90% company. They take everything to 90% completion before moving to the next project. You are lucky if they ever come back and complete it before EOL.

nick.karasev
on Feb 13, 2013

Couldn't agree more! The problem with Microsoft is their quite freightening inability to execute. They often start with a truly original and challenging idea, see it through until it is just good enough and mouth watering with possibilities, then drop. Sometimes it's 70%, sometimes it's 95%. But it is very rarely if ever 100%.

Windows Phone is just one of those vaporware promises. No regular updates, no real efforts to build user or developer communities, no advanced functionality, slowly but surely eroding lead in UI/UX. Google has been making some great strides lately, and I'm sure Jonny Ives is busy stripping iOS of all that ugly faux leather and chrome and building a fresh new start for the next decade of market dominance. Well, if not market then at least mindshare.

What Microsoft is up to? I think they are busy proofing a press release they are be abandoning Windows Phone in favor of Android. Screw you Nikia! You jumped from a burning platform to a sinking one! This got to be why Joe Belfiore is running with Nexus 4!

SamR
on Feb 13, 2013

I am not that impressed with Google Now on Android, not because it is not good, it is. I am not impressed because it is just an App. Any phone could do this.

Having said that, I am not a big fan of integrating everything under the sun into the OS. Yeah somethings make sense like a browser (ancient history) but Twitter and Facebook? No way. If that sort of thing was a good idea then Windows would have MySpace integration and you would see it in menus all the time. No!

Keep the OS lean, mean and fast and the Apps will run great as a result.

Justin M Salvato
on Feb 13, 2013

Google Now is IMPRESSIVE.

However, it is not enough for Windows Phone users to jump ship, BUT I can see a new smartphone shopper choose that over WP8.

Or if someone is leaving iOS for something better, they may choose Android simply because of Google Now.

Yes, Microsoft... ACCELELRATE!

glonq
on Feb 13, 2013

Even before Google Now, smartphone shoppers chose Android over WP 30-to-1.

Those numbers aren't going to improve for WP until we start hearing announcements about upcoming impressive WP8 features...

Justin M Salvato
on Feb 14, 2013

WRONG. They didn't choose Android. The were SOLD Android as that what the retailers were pushing. It is only after Windows Phone 8 did the retailers start pushing WP too.

pthurrott
on Feb 14, 2013

Exactly the reason I compared WP to the Amiga. This kind of thing from a fan of the tiny minority player, who believes he is in the only crowd of users who actually knew enough to make the right choice, is part of the rot that kills these platforms. We're not better because we choose Windows Phone. We're just the minority.

glonq
on Feb 14, 2013

Nope, WP7 was pushed heavily, especially after Nokia joined the fray. Don't you remember that big fuss Microsoft made about having to "incentivize" retail store employees?

You'll have to invent more creative excuses for why WP continues to flop.

pthurrott
on Feb 14, 2013

OK, calm it down, bucky. Geesh.

Turbo
on Feb 13, 2013

I see nothing special here! Windows Phone does everything the video shows, but it does it when 'I' want it to, not when the damned phone 'thinks' I want it to! :-)

Hoomgar
on Feb 15, 2013

Exactly what I was thinking when i watched the video. We wont need to think anymore. Oh wait, my data connection went down and I can no longer think for myself, what will we do? Where will we eat? How do i get to the beach? For crying out loud, my WP is a tool for me to use, not a personal assistant to tell me what to do at every turn of my life. I'll stick with my Windows Phones forever or until they finallly stop making them. Whichever way it ends up.

Plus, if MS really wanted to compete with this, the ground work is already there in Windows phone. They could push an update and whalla! Now your Windows Phone can help you be just as mindless as Google now!

jlynch2
on Feb 13, 2013

I am on my 3rd WP and had a WinMo phone as well as 1 Android (seriously, worst OS ever!) and this is the first Google service that I have ever seen that actually makes me jealous.

ewoodrick
on Feb 13, 2013

I was really surprised to see just how little difference there was between WP8 and WP7.5. I was really hoping that WP8 was going to let the Windows shine through, but it just looks pretty much the same from the outside.
The current rumors of a push to consolidate the platforms are about the only reforming part of WP8+ at this point. Microsoft still has the ability to throw the switch and enable compatibility across all of their platforms, and if they do so, the other guys had better watch out.
Also, they need to stop trying to kiss up to the cellular providers and drive the market. A phone is now only about 10% cellular, treat it that way! They're small computers that just happen to use cellular carriers.

jamiept
on Feb 13, 2013

I also read Paul's article about MS needing to unify WP8 and Windows, and I think this highlights a real 'ace' up MS's sleeve.

WP8 feels like the first real step towards a truly groundbreaking mobile OS, but something still seems missing. Take Google Now for example - I don't know a lot about it, but to me it feels like the natural next step ahead of WP8.

There's a cognitive term called "remembering the future" (NOTE: please don't ask me to explain what it is, because I can't quite remember) but to me it is a term which ably describes what Google is trying to achieve.

Here's a quick example: I don't know how seamless it would be, but I like the idea that a navigation app (like Nokia Drive) could only begin as soon as I make my daily commute to work, without me having to open the app. As soon as I start driving, the phone will recognize this (through GPS or whatever) and load up the Drive app with traffic updates.This way, I don't even have to have the app pinned to the start screen, and therefore can make room for other apps instead. And on the weekends, the app wouldn't start because it knows I don't work weekends.

This is just a basic example, but if a phone was smart enough to do this, I don't know how anything else could compete. It's like having an executive personal assistant who knows your daily routine and organizes things accordingly

I'm not saying Google Now is this advanced, simply because I haven't experienced it. But it sounds like it's walking that path.

I don't have the brains to figure out what MS can do to capture a bigger market share (maybe stop wasting money on crappy ads :0 but something is missing - some 'X' factor - which Microsoft just can't seem to put their finger on.

But it doesn't help their cause when companies like Google bring innovation to the market such as Google Now.

cbj78
on Feb 13, 2013

Hello, I'm a first time poster..long time 'listener'. I'll keep it short. I think MS is aiming at the wrong target with Windows Phone. For the longest they were chasing Apple, but now it looks like the real #1 is Android. Google has taken over the Iphone with their services and rapidly revisinig Android. I think MS is too old and frankly can't modernize itself fast enough to compete. While they are focusing on the WP8 software itself(no notifications, no local folders, broken sync and music)..Google is transforming Android into the window you consume all their integrated services. Google wants to be the backbone through which your daily life consists of consuming their services and info..without even firing up a web browser. MS should have known this when Google NOW became a full screen search app..completely replacing the phone search on Android. I don't think MS is anywhere in that picture. So, does MS want to be and information and services company or a device company. If it's the first, then they have to dramatically change their thinking. If they want to be the later then maybe they should begin thinking about striking deals with Google instead of fightiing them...get Google services on WP8 and Windows..and make the best OS and software they can.

pikablu0530
on Feb 13, 2013

Microsoft needs to innovate further with its "Search" button (i.e. Bing hub/app) - something like universal search is long overdue. Taking that idea further, they can perhaps even turn that into a serious Google Now / Siri competitor.

EricoF3
on Feb 13, 2013

Big deal Paul!!!

Google Now is just a gadget that Microsoft can create on WP...

But you know a good gadget does not transform a bad smartphone OS paradigm in a good one.

As I can expect to the new Google Now gadget it is probably lagging a lot and make Android to crash much more, while it would probably by difficult to make this crap OS more unstable than it is actually...

I repeat. Who want a computer desktop paradigm on a smartphone??

mkuczara
on Feb 14, 2013

Maybe WP8 is generally better in theory but execution is what counts. Microsoft is slow and as somebdy properly described it here a 90% company. They don't have natural capability to nail down small details. Look at a state of Windows 8 synch app.

shark47
on Feb 13, 2013

Microsoft's success depends more on what hardware makers do than on some apps like this. Google Now sounds good in theory, but it won't do anything to increase or decrease Google's share. If people bought the phone for the OS, Samsung wouldn't have such a big lead over other Android OEMs.

prettyconfusd
on Feb 13, 2013

It's really looking like the Windows Phone team spent most of the two years between WP7 and WP8 launch just porting it to NT.

Nothing has really improved since Mango and as much as I love Windows Phone in general and my HTC 8X, I'm genuinely dumbfounded by how little it has advanced from my Lumia 900 and Omnia 7.

The hub concept hasn't been revised or updated and there's nothing new there other than the groups feature which is near useless as it's a proprietary feature. If it was at least released for WP7 as well my family could use it (they all got Lumia 710's before summer) but otherwise I don't understand why they spent any time on it (or at least didn't just integrate it with the existing SkyDrive groups feature which does the exact same thing).

The apps are better due to native coding and the notifications seem to be more reliable and instantaneous than on WP7 but functionally it's not all that different from 7.8 (well, other than the live tiles actually work).

Windows Phone 8 just seems like a rushed release, everything from the long boot up time to the lack of any truly life changing features to the, quite frankly, broken syncing solutions...

Ugh, and Google is just getting better. I don't particularly care for the company or its practices but it's putting its resources to much better use than Microsoft, who still don't seem to have realised that Windows Phone is an important part of their ecosystem.

I think Google Now is pretty cool from what I've seen. I've obviously not been able to experience it but it seems to be one of the truly innovative features that can change the way you run your life.

I'm really hoping for something amazing at MWC in a couple of weeks but I get the feeling I'm going to be disappointed and while Nokia will probably announce some cool new phones, there'll be nothing on the software and user experience side to back it up.

Heck, they shouldn't even be announcing WP updates at MWC, they should be releasing them!

I'm glad I can still recommend Windows Phone to most of the people I know (The Lumia 710 is/was a great phone at a great price and the new 620 is even better and a much better deal than any of the cheap Androids) but in 6-9 months time, unless things have radically changed I'm worried I won't be able to recommend them in good conscience...

I think you're right about the Windows team taking over Windows Phone but I think that's probably going to turn out to be the plan all along. Just like WP7 was essentially a stop gap till WP8, WP also appears like it's just a stop gap until it's fully integrated with Windows; only this time at least, current handsets will be able to upgrade.

Rev
on Feb 13, 2013

This is disturbing. I'm really hope Windows Phone "blue" (or vNext) will address some of this. The only splice I take is that Windows Phone can offer some of the same stuff from third party apps.

Remember that "future of TellMe" video from a few years gap? It looked a lot like Google Now in that it just found stuff without making you do the work. I hope that's what the big feature is for the next major revision.

I have a feeling X.5 releases are going to be a bigger deal than X.0 releases. WP8 is great, but it's only a minor revision user wise. WP7.5 was a major update, and I suspect WP8.5 will follow the same pattern.

subzerohitman721
on Feb 13, 2013

Android has always had integration pieces with their services that always caught my attention. First it was Google Maps & all the address related information that was killer. Then it was the just log in & instant slip-streaming of contact information from device to device. Later it was all of my Chrome searches in the old stock browser & later in Google Chrome. Then when I got my first Nexus device (A Nexus S 4G), it was saving my wallpaper & downloaded apps. Today, all of those little integration pieces plus Google Now has become the killer feature that keeps me locked in the Google ecosystem.

I have an iPod Touch. I use Windows 8. I have an Xbox 360. My phone is a Galaxy Note II. Out of all of the OSes, Android just keeps nailing it. In a way it does come down to trust. Apple will abandon anything for their vision of future. Microsoft never moves fast enough & continues to be plagued by security issues. Google gets it done. Google Now is now in it's 7th month & has blown Siri out of the water.

I read the criticism of others. The trust issue might have merit. I'm skeptical of that. It sounds to me like Scroggle F.U.D. Bad OS? No way. I find iOS extremely frustrating lately due to software quality & control issues. Apple can't even get the Podcast app to work right. Windows 8 has tons of issues but I still see the potential of it. I'm looking forward to the next Xbox. I can pretty much guarantee that my next phone will be Android.

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