Not as popular, but Google Duo can do 1080p calls since sometime in 2020 (https://www.xda-developers.com/google-duo-galaxy-s20-1080p-v...) About the same time Apple bumped Facetime up from 720p as well.
Also, we're probably a year or two away from Apple opening the iMessage in some way to Android users, or shifting significantly to RCS on their terms to avoid the EU enforcing the same.
- I love that the choice of phone is easy to do. The flagship was the iPhone 12. Easy. Initially I wanted to buy a high end Android but couldn’t figure out what the flagships were. So I decided I was going to give iPhones a try instead. - iPhones do feel premium. The box is great. The hardware is amazing. I used it without a case for a few months and it’s incredibly « sticky » in the hand. The first case I bought was actually more slippery than the bare phone. I got a case anyway because the materials still make the phone fragile: if it falls, it breaks, period. - the camera is amazing. I’m not huge on taking pictures, that’s not my thing. Or that’s what I said before getting an iPhone, now I’ve taken thousands of pics in the past years. Before the iPhone, I had Google Pixels and found the camera great at the time. It was not. iPhones cameras are amazing, and you actually feel like the pictures you take can become real memories, because they won’t look ugly in a few years. - if your close ones have an iPhone, just go for it. Being able to share photos that easily with family members, FaceTime, and all that stuff, even if they’re not savvy, has no equivalent on Android - it just works. I use all the basic apps (calendar, mail, notes, even Safari!) because they work good enough, they’re beautiful. Even Apple Maps works great now (I even use it instead of Waze because it keeps telling me to use crappy roads) - And finally, I’ve come to hate Google as a company and try to not use them anywhere. I decided to pay for iCloud+ (1€/month) and that gives me access to iCloud mail. I use it with a custom domain and that allows me to switch gradually from gmail to something more in my control. If I’m tired of Apple one day, I’ll just switch somewhere else easily.
Of course, if most people you communicate with use iPhones, then there are some compatability benefits. You can connect to FaceTime calls from Android. I've never used iMessage, so I don't know how it is "better" than SMS + eMail, etc.
My major reason for sticking with Android is that the phones don't get obsoleted as fast as iPhones. I can still install the latest version of Chrome on a Moto Razr/V.
I also hate how intrusive apple is with shit like iTunes. I just don't see a reason to switch to iPhone just for FaceTime. Just tell ppl to se whatsapp calls.
There are some adblocking tools but non with proper cosmetic adblocking, meaning that you can not hide ads on social media platforms like facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, reddit, Instagram, etc.
I am required to work with a current iphone for work reasons and I just made it a habit to never use it for content consumption because of that major flaw.
If that's not an issue for you (or you only use it for calling/texting anyway) I think it's a great device: fast, robustly built and nice to look at.
With 50% signal you can't make a phone call because the device lies about the real signal level. You see, when the device has no signal, people will blame the device, if the device lies that it has signal, the people will blame the network (because the calls fails). And there are many more issues like this. I still feel robed that I bought an iphone (the best there was) and I wish people would have warned me about it.
There's reason iphone is no 1 in us an nowere else: it has to do will limited access to education, so simpler devices are "best". In the rest of the world is about social signalling: I can afford it. If you had access to good education and you don't care about social signalling then there is no point in buying one as there are much better devices with android. Even my ten year old samsung has more features than the iphone.
In first place I would rank a jailbroken iPhone, Android in second, normal iPhone in third.
Some reasons: no ads in most places, piracy, ability to change UI to my liking. Example: stock ios alarm app takes 3 clicks to change the alarm time, with a tweak it just takes one. There's a large and thriving community. The only limitation is that you need to be on one of the compatible ios and model versions, so I'm stuck on ios 14.3 for now.
UI consistency: The OS apps are very consistent in terms of their UI patterns and overall user experience. Its not perfect (as some people claim), but it is significantly better than the weird mixture of OEM and Google apps you get with Android phones that aren't pixels. Not only are the preinstalled apps better, the apps from the store are also more consistent in terms of platform specific UX patterns (again, not perfect but significantly better)
General app quality: the accessibility of the Play Store (and the overall Android platform) certainly has its benefit, but unfortunately it often also leads to bad quality applications. While I don't particularly like Apples strict walled garden approach I'll have to admit that the apps tend to be higher quality than Android ones. A drawback is that the vast majority of iOS apps are paid. Being paid isn't really a problem, but the fact that everyone is moving to subscriptions is certainly starting to become one.
Overall reliability: the overall platform feels much more reliable than on my last Android. I've been a heavy Android Auto user before. But just 30 minutes of being connected heated up my phone so bad the CPU throttled like crazy for the next 45min making a lot of apps incredibly slow. My iPhone never had those issues and it feels like it doesn't even warm up with CarPlay. CarPlay also tends to be much more reliable than Android Auto ever was for me.
If switching will benefit you largely depends on you specifically. But since smartphones have largely plateaued over the last few years, you won't gain a whole lot, but you won't loose much either (unless you are super into the open source aspect of android)
I’m a Mac user so switching had massively improved integration for me.
Granted it’s not going to function 100% worry-free as a daily driver just yet. But if Linux is your thing, a Linux phone may bring things to the table that you’re not going to get from Android or Apple.
Example: longevity. A Linux phone whose drivers have been mainlined will benefit from many years of updates, both kernel and userland.
So the right question is not whether you happy with samsung, but with Android.
From my experience most of the ios apps and features are way better for me as an end user (not as a hacker) than android swamp.