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The 30 Day Android Challenge is OVER.. Now Who Wants Their iPhone Back?

Linus Tech Tips@LinusTechTips4.1M viewsMar 29, 202523:56
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Grab yourself a case or some overpriced stickers at betterlttstore.com It's been 1 Month since our 3 iPhone users switched to Android! How did it work out? Was using a Samsung or Google phone better? Will they go back to their iPhone? Watch to Find out! Discuss on the forum: linustechtips.com Google Pixel 9 Pro XL: geni.us Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold: geni.us Samsung Galaxy S24: geni.us Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra: geni.us Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6: geni.us Oppo X8 on eBay: geni.us OnePlus 13: geni.us ASUS ROG Phone 8: geni.us Nothing Phone (2a): tidd.ly Sony Xperia 1 V: geni.us Apple iPhone 16 Pro: lmg.gg Apple iPhone 14 Pro: lmg.gg ► GET OUR MERCH: lttstore.com ► GET EXCLUSIVE CONTENT ON FLOATPLANE: lmg.gg ► GET A VPN: piavpn.com ► SPONSORS, AFFILIATES, AND PARTNERS: lmg.gg Purchases made through some store links may provide some compensation to Linus Media Group. CHAPTERS --------------------------------------------------- 0:00 Intro 1:55 The Switch to Android 6:00 The Hardware Experience 10:24 The Android Experience 21:00 Did anyone HATE Android? 21:10 Do they Trade in their iPhone Forever? 23:02 Make an iPhold 23:46 Outro

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The video unfolds as a post-mission debrief after The 30 Day Android Challenge, where three iPhone users switched to Android for a month and Linus tries to assess whether Android is truly better or if the issues were simply a result of habit. Early on, the team explains the process: subjects could pick any flagship Android device, then go on vacation guided by a colleague, and the results would reveal how the switch affected daily life. The segment highlights the Switch experience first, noting transfer hurdles, app re-downloads, and messaging quirks such as iMessage remaining intertwined with iCloud for a time. The discussion emphasizes that setup friction, language preferences, and app compatibility created notable friction, even as some benefits emerged like quicker hardware access and faster charging. The long-form review then pivots to hardware experiences across phones, with Pixel, folding devices, and the Galaxy line evaluated for camera quality, battery life, and form factor, including real-world tests in a Disneyland trip. While some participants praised Android Auto and the flexibility of devices like foldables for multitasking, others missed iPhone-specific conveniences such as AirDrop and seamless ecosystem continuity. The video culminates in a candid verdict: Android is not inherently better for everyone, and the Android experience is highly dependent on ecosystem familiarity and personal workflow. The team teases a final trade-off offer that would let participants swap permanently, underscoring that for many, the decision hinges on lifestyle needs, not a simple feature comparison. The closing thoughts reiterate that while Android can be excellent, the iPhone’s integrated ecosystem and familiar workflows still hold strong appeal for certain users, and the choice ultimately comes down to which compromises feel more acceptable in daily life.

Topics · technology · mobile · product-review · ecosystems