The phone may not be as earth shattering as Apple would have you believe, but it still has the organic intuitiveness you expect - and almost always get - from an Apple product.
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| Are you following this guy @BethesdaRow on Twitter? | 
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| Hey, it's the Piano Guy at American Tap Room! | 
Where Apple continues to dominate, is not just in the interface, but in the tools provided (or downloadable) for video and audio recording and editing.  And they continue to hold a slight edge in the apps department, as there are still a few apps exclusive to Apple (The Drybar was a recent example, much to the chagrin of Android-using ladies at Bethesda Row), and still some tricks you can't make your Android do with a trip to Google Play.
Panorama?  The Galaxy S III can do that too.  Front facing camera?  Ditto.  And the "new" Siri seems mostly just an upgrade to catch up with the app-launching S-Voice.
Which gives one the sense that with Google, Apple, and - almost unbelieveably - Microsoft, Amazon and maybe even Facebook hunched over their workbenches, and more competitive than ever, the next generation of phones after this will be truly exciting.


 
 
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