I used a company provided Blackberry for a number of years at work, and then a company-provided iPhone for a couple of years until I retired 2012. Bought an iPhone when I retired, primarily because I really, really did not want to learn yet another operating system, and then upgraded it to another iPhone in 2014.
My iPhone's mobile phone functuality is limited to Japan, and if I use it abroad, like when in the US, very high roaming rates apply. (This Japan-only limitation -- the phones are not SIM free and cannot be made so except by the Japanese service providers, and they will not do this -- is beginning to change, but is not retroactive to iPhones sold in Japan prior to May 2015.)
In the US for the past 10 years or so I used cheap flip phone, and then a cheap ($15) phone with a QWERTY keyboard, with a prepaid, no contract, service. Used in conjuction with my Japanese iPhone on WiFi only, this works okay, but is cumbersome.
So last summer I bought a cheap, $100, Android phone, stuck in my US SIM, and have been learning how to use the Android system when in the US. (Android is a mobile operating system by Google which as far as I can tell everyone except Apple/iPhone uses for their smart phones.)
While it is a bit cumbersome to learn a new system, it seems to me to do everything IOS, Apple's mobile operating software, does. And the phone costs a fraction of what an iPhone costs.
Hmmm....
My iPhone's mobile phone functuality is limited to Japan, and if I use it abroad, like when in the US, very high roaming rates apply. (This Japan-only limitation -- the phones are not SIM free and cannot be made so except by the Japanese service providers, and they will not do this -- is beginning to change, but is not retroactive to iPhones sold in Japan prior to May 2015.)
In the US for the past 10 years or so I used cheap flip phone, and then a cheap ($15) phone with a QWERTY keyboard, with a prepaid, no contract, service. Used in conjuction with my Japanese iPhone on WiFi only, this works okay, but is cumbersome.
So last summer I bought a cheap, $100, Android phone, stuck in my US SIM, and have been learning how to use the Android system when in the US. (Android is a mobile operating system by Google which as far as I can tell everyone except Apple/iPhone uses for their smart phones.)
While it is a bit cumbersome to learn a new system, it seems to me to do everything IOS, Apple's mobile operating software, does. And the phone costs a fraction of what an iPhone costs.
Hmmm....