Slashdot Mirror


Ask Slashdot: What Are the Most Stable Smartphones These Days?

janimal writes: The iPhone used to be the smartphone that "just works." Ever since the 4S days, this has been true less and less with each generation. My wife's iPhone 6 needs to be restarted several times per week for things like internet search or making calls to work. An older 5S I'm using also doesn't consistently stream to Apple TV, doesn't display song names correctly on Apple TV and third party peripherals. In short, as features increase, the iPhone's stability is decreasing. In your opinion, which smartphone brand these days is taking up the slack and delivering a fully featured smartphone that "just works"?

35 of 484 comments (clear)

  1. Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed on i by DeadlyFoez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every phone seems to have this same issue, but it is not the phones fault. It's the fault of what the owner installs on it. My wifes galaxy mega was great at first, but now that she has all these stupid games installed it is buggy and needs to be restarted regularly.

  2. Hands down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Windows Phones (at least the Lumias).

    1. Re:Hands down by JawzX · · Score: 3, Informative

      Agreed, the last time I restarted my 928 was because it ran out of Battery. Before the 8.2(denim) update I had some cell-radio failures every once in a while that required a restart to resolve, and camera freak-outs with failure to reinitialize auto exposure, but since the update it has "just worked" all the time, every time, Apps may crash but the system stays up, all feature work as advertised, and it's tough as nails too. I may be moving to an Icon soon, I certainly WILL NOT be getting an Android or iOS device. I admit to occasionally wishing there was the embarrassment of app support those platforms have, but then I realize I have all the time wasters I need and most of the productivity stuff I need and I don't have to deal with all the other bullshit.

  3. Blackberry. by damnbunni · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, seriously. Blackberry OS 10.3 is pretty damn solid. I don't have any issues with system stuff crashing on my Q10.

    I do have some apps crash, but that's the app developer's problem. Not much the OS vendor can do about that.

    I initially got a Blackberry because I wanted a hardware keyboard, and couldn't find an Android with a good one. However, after using the Q10 for a while, I would hate to go back to Android even with a good keyboard - I really, really like the Hub and the way gestures work.

    Blackberry's voice assistant isn't as flexible as Google's or Apple's, so that might be an issue for you. It works well within what it's designed to do, though.

    Apps can be an issue. Usually for anything I want an app for there's one or two apps, probably paid, versus thirty free ones in the Google Play store. I can access the Amazon Appstore for Android (comes with the OS) and sideload Snap, which lets me use the Google Play store, but the phone lacks some Android services so a good chunk of apps don't work. The Android runtime's pretty solid, so the apps that don't need Play Services work well.

  4. WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is this a joke? Paid corporate fodder?

    You spew some anecdotal crap about iOS becoming less stable over time and then an almost rhetorical question about an alternative "fully featured smartphone that just works". The iPhone and Apple eco-system is the fully featured system that just works. If you're having a bad time now, don't even bother with Android -- just give up and get yourself and your wife some flip phones because the problem is the user not the OS or device.

    1. Re:WTF? by umdesch4 · · Score: 3, Funny

      You know, the odd thing is, every single person I know with an iPhone (too many to count, dozens perhaps?) has all kinds of strange problems with it that they feel compelled to tell me about, I guess because I'm "IT guy". They all say the same thing. It must be just them, because otherwise, everybody would be screaming. My assumption is that there is something severely wrong with iPhone owners.

  5. Re:The same as ever: Android by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We're talking about stability here. If I compare the Apple devices I have used (iPhone 3G up to 5s) to the Android devices (various tables, and a Samsung phone we bought to replace my mother-in-law's iPhone 4), Apple still comes out ahead. I've had some hardware issues on the Apple devices, most notably the AntennaGate issue (noticable but hardly a real issue) as well as WiFi dying on an iPhone 4s (pretty uch bricking it, and just after warranty expired, of course). I have had hardware issues on Android stuff as well, mainly home buttons breaking and a battery dying because it got undercharged... the battery was replaced easily enough, but the new battery will break just the same if I leave the tablet off the charger for too long.

    Software wise, iPhones have been rock solid for me, a few minor issues asides. I have not had any major issues like I experienced on the Android devices, such as the browser getting hijacked somehow (with only a couple of regular apps installed), and one Samsung phone that at some point will just reboot every few minutes, with the only fix being a factory reset.

    Apple stuff still "just works". Unless it does not do out of the box what you want it to do, then chances are that you're stuffed if you picked iOS. iOS is a walled garden, but sitting here in my comfort zone I can't even see the wall, much less feel it or be bothered by it. Never even considered jailbreaking my phone. I don't like Apple or their business practices all that much, and I wish they'd open up their OS a little, but there is no way I'll switch to Android anytime soon after the decidedly poor experiences I have had with Android. But that is just personal, I know plenty of people who switched from Apple to Android and haven't looked back. Some others have returned to Apple. So perhaps it is mostly a matter of taste after all.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  6. No problems with iPhone 6 by pghmike4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Actually, I'm pretty happy with the iPhone6: it just works. I'm on T-mobile, and I doubt I've had to restart it to get it to work more than 3 times since I got it in September 2014. My wife has had the same experience -- she can't recall ever having to restart it to get it to work.

  7. The plural of "anecdote" is not "data". by jpellino · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your wife's iPhone needs to be looked at. Your 5S is streaming even higher res video to another device on a WiFi network (it couldn't be the home network - nah, impossible) yet here you are, putting a trend line on something with two data points. Yeah. That's how it's done.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  8. Wireless Networking by willy_me · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In my experience many problems can be attributed to networking. Most wireless routers have crap support for device discovery. I have some WNDR3700 routers are they were constantly requiring reboots. The only solution was to install a basic OpenWRT firmware - then they were great.

    So when a device can not connect to another, or freezes when communicating over the network - check your wireless network. Many problems that are realized on portable devices can actually be tracked back to other devices entirely.

    1. Re:Wireless Networking by willy_me · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I was using v2 of the router but that should not make a difference. Apple devices use multicast DNS for device discovery. I found that the router would not bridge mDNS packets between the wired and wireless domains. They would at first but eventually they cut out. This can prevent your iPhone from talking with your AppleTV. From the user's perspective, the iPhone is at fault when in reality it is the network.

      There were also problems with multiple routers on the same network. A Netgear suppled service (forgotten which one) would conflict the same service on another router when attached to the same network. Eventually one of the routers would crash. But first DHCP would stop working. Caused all sorts of problems.

      The routers are great but somehow Netgear really screwed up the firmware. It is possible the latest versions are fine, but then so is OpenWRT.

  9. Re:The same as ever: Android by BasilBrush · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In other words you don't know what you are talking about with regards to the merits of different smartphone OSs.

  10. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by jblues · · Score: 5, Informative

    Why is an OS in 2015 allowing applications to make the whole UI unusable?

    They don't, generally. They make a very solid effort for that not to happen.

    • * All the major SmartPhones (Apple, Vanila Android, Windows, Forked Android) are running pretty decent Kernels under the hood, its not like Windows 95 where a rogue memory leak can bring the whole system down.
    • * All but system libraries are statically linked.
    • * There's a watchdog that scans for misbehaving apps - ones that are using too many resources for too long, and kills them before they prevent overall responsiveness.

    Its conceivable that the kernel or watchdog is misbehaving, but more likely competition and increasing complexity has lead to:

    • * More software services and apps running on top of the core OS. And marketing cycles that mean these are released with bugs.
    • * Devices capable of running a whole lot more apps. Some of which will have bugs. If your early phone had 10 apps and one bug, and your new one has 100 apps and 10 bugs, the latter will be more noticible.
    --
    If it acquires resources on instantiation like a duck, then its a shared_ptr<Duck>
  11. Re: Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed by v1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've had my 5S for close to a year now and it has never actually crashed. It's rebooted for OS updates and for a few dozen dead batteries but that's about it. I *have* had to reboot it maybe a dozen times in all due to lagging performance though when it hadn't been rebooted in weeks. My desktop computer's the same way though. Every 2-3 weeks it just needs a reboot to clean house.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  12. Re:The same as ever: Android by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    McDonald's has always been the superior cuisine. Why else do you think it has more global market share than any other restaurant chain?

  13. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by taustin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes.. Blaming the user for shitty software...

    "Fool me once, shame you on you. Fool me 1,387,406 times, shame on me."

    It's not like the fact that nearly all apps are shit is a big secret.

  14. IPhones by Andy+Smith · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You're not kidding about iPhones (or rather iOS) becoming less stable.

    I've got an iMac, Macbook Air, iPad Mini 2 and iPhone 6 Plus, all in daily use, and it was a godsend to me when Yosemite and iOS 8 introduced handoff and full AirDrop support. Except... it only works randomly. One minute the iPhone can see everything but nothing can see it. Then it can only see the iPad but now the iMac can see the iPhone.

    I regularly need to transfer screenshots from my iPhone to my Mac and I used AirDrop for about a week, but then it stopped working and hasn't worked since.

    When it first stopped working, I started using Cloud Share and uploading all the screenshots to the cloud so I could then download them on the Mac... but there's always one file missing. No matter how many screenshots I transfer, if n>1 then only n-1 turn up on the Mac.

    Honestly over the past couple of months I've lost confidence in Apple. There's no point adding these great features if they don't actually work. And in my experience, Apple features that don't work never get fixed. New features seem to be more about marketing than actual usability.

    1. Re:IPhones by ahabswhale · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If you think it's any better with Android, you'd be sorely mistaken. After installing Lolipop on my SGS5, it's performance went to complete shit and the battery life is abysmal (even with a brand new battery). I was able to fix the performance problem by doing things no user should have to do but I'm still working on the battery issue. And my experience is hardly anecdotal. Do some googling and you will find this is happening to A LOT of people.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
  15. Any of the mid- high-end Lumias (Windows Phone) by ianbnet · · Score: 3, Informative

    If Windows Phone has anything going for it, it's stellar speed and stability. My Lumia 930 and my wife's Lumia 830 are rock solid and fast - always. If the majority of your time is spent on the basics -- phone, text, email, web, facebook, netflix, games etc - it's the best platform out there.

    That said, the OP's question of "Fully Featured" and "Just Works" are pretty tough to reconcile. Most iPhones I have used or see are less stable than the Lumias -- but they can do more, through their app catalog and integration across Apple's vertical ecosystem. [Insert favorite Android model here] is going to be more capable than anything else out there, but it's been a long time since I've seen an Android distribution that didn't lose control of background tasks and require a fair amount of overhead to keep the thing functional. Windows Phones are definitely more stable and consistent over time, but they don't today have the long tail of apps that Android has or the guarantee that everyone is going to support them that Apple has.

    --
    --------------------- -me, Crusher of those who are Foolish (don't be foolish)
  16. Poster is an Idiot by sonicmerlin · · Score: 4, Funny

    Dude, your wife's iPhone is broken. Go take it to an Apple store and get it fixed you tool.

  17. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by peragrin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't have any issues with my iphone6. okay I have one issue. at work and only at work I have to turn off and then turn on the wifi to get it to connect. At home, at a dozen other places no problems. but at work i have issues.

    Then again it could be an app thing. there could be one app that is crashing her phone. I know if I am at work and I try to use a wifi only app it can crash the app. but if I turn off and on the wifi it works fine. But only with my works Access Point. Any where else I don't have that issue.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  18. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by fustakrakich · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Microsoft or not, it is the fault of the OS if it wasn't designed to sandbox everything. I have to reboot my Galaxy every few days. I do indeed blame the OS, and no doubt the hardware isn't so robust either.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  19. Reboot? A phone! by MrL0G1C · · Score: 3, Informative

    Galaxy Note 2 been going strong for about 3 years, I don't recall it ever crashing, I think I may have rebooted it a couple of times for obscure reasons - big OS update and me messing with phone. I've never noticed any slowdowns or quirkiness after time. Used lots to browse web and play games and use map apps.

    Some people are jinxed I swear.

    --
    Waterfox - a Firefox fork with legacy extension support, security updates and better privacy by default.
  20. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A little less blame on the owner, and a little more blame on the carrier? How much genuine crap comes pre-installed on a carrier subsidized phone? I'm talking about genuine worthless crap, that does and gives nothing of value to the end customer, the owner who pays for the phone.

    The phone is regarded by the carrier as a tool, with which to keep track of the chattel, or the sheeple. Again and again, the carriers are exposed for their overzealous data collection. And, for the most part, people aren't able to turn these "features" off, unless they are willing to invest some time in research, then risk voiding their so-called warranties.

    Yeah, end users are mostly dumb clods, but the carriers are responsible for a lot of the problem.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  21. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fact: Putting the word "fact" before your sentence does not absolve you of the need to back it up with actual evidence.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  22. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Nope. I find that Cisco Enterprise Wireless Accesspoints are complete crap in regards to phones if your IT department doesn't update their firmware regularly.

    Work recently ripped out all the Cisco junk and installed UniFi and all wireless problems, mobile and other went away.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  23. Re:The same as ever: Android by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No - in other words, the man knows how to live life without an electronic nanny in his pocket.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  24. Re:The same as ever: Android by lgw · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most of the stuff you highlight can be handled by a feature phone, though, except reading books. I use my 6-year-old Android, doesn't seem to crash or need to reboot unless the battery is on empty (and shocking the battery still works pretty well after 6 years - will go 12+ hours between charges). You don't need anything fancy - what you want is something stable.

    I'm really struggling with what to get next - the screen on my phone has been cracked for a couple of years now, so I should probably replace it one of these days. But now it's all these damn giant phones that don't fit in my pockets, don't have replaceable batteries - what ever happened to cell phones getting smaller?

    When someone sends me a text or an email, there's no "he said - she said" disputes over what was said. Try doing that with your home phone.

    If you have that problem often enough to care, you need better friends, not a better phone!

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  25. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by WaffleMonster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every phone seems to have this same issue, but it is not the phones fault. It's the fault of what the owner installs on it. My wifes galaxy mega was great at first, but now that she has all these stupid games installed it is buggy and needs to be restarted regularly.

    Blaming applications for screwing up the system is not an acceptable answer in my book. The OS should be capable of gracefully withstanding abuse from user land without freaking out. If it can't it deserves to be called out for its failure.

  26. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Your last point would be my question to the Original Poster: do you want a stable phone or a phone with lots of features? If you want an incredibly stable phone then it's easy to find and kill all of the bugs. But which is worse having buggy whizbang feature or not having whizbang feature at all? If I had to choose I would pick buggy whizbang feature. Because the only thing worse than doing something poorly is not being able to do it at all.

    I worked with a company as an adviser and they refused to add whizbang because they didn't feel they could do it perfectly. Well... the outcome was that people needed whizbang and they picked buggy and slow over not-at-all. And they in my opinion picked correctly. I can tell someone that I can so that but it'll take 2 days and they might pick me. If I tell someone I can't do it at all they'll definitely pick someone else. So even if I'm slow there is still a chance I'll get the job. The end result was the product died because they refused lower their standards and compete.

    This is taking place in the smartphone market. You have to have feature parity. The End. Full Stop. If you can't do what someone else is doing customers will jump ship. Android has taken over the market using this strategy and customers are generally pretty happy with the tradeoffs involved.

  27. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by chr1st1anSoldier · · Score: 5, Informative

    Part of that is because Windows Phone allows very few background processes to run. For example try running a VoIP app like Zoiper and you will see real quick that it's not allowed to run in the background. Even apps from Microsoft like Lync don't work most of the time when you return to the start screen or some other app.

  28. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by stephanruby · · Score: 3, Informative

    Windows Phone. Stable and gives better performance than any Android phone with twice the specs.

    I can confirm. Microsoft gave me a free Windows phone. It now has Android CyanogenMod on it and it is super smooth.

  29. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by Hognoxious · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think, the problem, is you're overflowing, the comma buffer.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  30. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by MrLogic17 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Your post seems to indicate that you're turning your whole phone off & on to solve the problem. There's an easier, faster way- just cycle the wireless on & off. Procedure for those that may not yet know:
    -At any iPhone screen, do a "swipe up" gesture. (Put your finger on the home button, and drag a line to the middle of the phone)
    -At that pull-up menu, there are buttons to turn off & on wireless, bluetooth, etc.

    And ya, what everyone else is saying. The phones are stable. It's the junk you put on them that make them unstable.

  31. Re:Is it the phone or the stupid stuff installed o by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The phones are stable. It's the junk you put on them that make them unstable.

    If an OS lets the apps make it unstable, then the OS (and phone) is bad. A well configured OS shouldn't allow instability caused by apps.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.