Android: Apkudo Shows Why iPhone Kills; Java is Culprit; Chromephones, Chromepads Rumored to Replace Google's Android to Better User Experience [VIDEOS]

The information-hoard Google's Android platform has many users at Cincinnati Bell returning their phones, because of bad user experience. Apkudo, Android UX specialist, shows how the Java-fragmented platform can still be standardized, to make sure that apps run quickly and don't crash.

Futhermore, according to TheStreet, Google seems to be diligent in replacing their older Java-caused failure to be utilized with the linux-based ChromeOS platform, usually deployed on the lightweight and popular Chromebooks.

The UX specialist Apkudo is based on Baltimore. They approve different android devices so that they would save customer service time to process the returns and allow the company to actually gain profit from the phones that they manufacture.

Cincinnati Bell states that the phones that have been approved by Apkudo is significantly less likely to be returned for the sluggish, crashy, and fragmented effects of Android (due to its varying support for numerous devices). Apkudo has saved Cincinnati Bell already $500,000, and this number is likely to increase.

The reason why Apple has been dominating the market for its iPhones is that Apple has been using the same device with the same User Experience. People can try out their friend's devices and already become familiar with the UX before they even purchase the device.

Unlike Google's Java-based platform, being continuously fragmented, having users frustrated with incompatibility problems, Apple's iPhones are always compatible and easy to use due to its lack of variation of hardware and software.

The rumored new Chromephones and Chromepads will allow for unanimous experience between users, and likely to replace Google's Java into newer technologies like HTML5, CSS, JSON, and JavaScript. ChromeOS is a more secure platform than its Java-based counterpart Android, due to various hackathons that Google sponsors called Pwnium, and Google's tight control over its codebase.

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