[citation][nom]keither5150[/nom]Apple would be well served to offer a 5 inch phone with a better display, more ram, and a SD card slot. A 5 inch size would allow for a larger battery. Everyone I know bitches about the iphone's battery life. And they don't believe me when I tell them how long my Note 2 lasts. Hopefully for Apple, they don't just add an app and a "s" on the end. Hopefully they don't screw the people out of that app. People who bought siri before the 4S came out got screwed. And then they were told that the iphone 4 or 3 wasn't fast enough for siri. It shocks me that a company can constantly shit on their customer base and still be successful. They really need to do something magical. If they don't, they have zero chance enticing anyone who has switched to android. Never mind the phone, update your software. And maybe you should stop saying that the competition's features are shitty. That way you won't look like such a tool when you choose to adopt these "shitty" features a few years later. Cough cough, small tablet, cough, task manager, cough, S pen and notification bar. Companies that never say never rarely look like fools.[/citation]
I won't touch a 5" phone, 4.3 or 4.5 is a good size.
People I know with a Note II complain about their battery life as oppose to the iPhone users I know.
They shit on their customer base? You do know they provide a solid 3 year update support on the first day an update is available, can you say that about Android devices and providing for their customer base? You're talking about adding new features through update, S2 doesn't even have full JB support or Note 1 yet for its customers, now that's a joke.
The Apple store has top-notch customer service to help people with problems and needs, you phone Samsung for help their awful. Have a hardware problem with a phone you cannot even compare the help Apple provides compared to Android manufacturers they are light years apart (even when the phone is not purchased at the Apple store they are incredibly accommodating to their customers).
Android manufacturers have the habit of abandoning and providing obstacles post-purchase for any help and support.