Also, the temperature sensor in the Pro, if it worked as expected, should be a cool addition.
The planned obsolescence conversation seems to revolve around Apple (the only self-interested greedy company on the planet according to the detractors) but they hold the record for software updates on smartphones - 10 years for the iPhone 5s. Here we are, in 2023, and Google is coming around to seven years of support. Apple has done at least seven since 2013.
In any case I applaud this move and at least five years should be mandated by law. I wonder how many "random manufacturer drops a cheap Android on the market and walks away on software and support" Android devices there are sitting in landfills across the globe. Of course there are plenty of Apple devices as well but it's not due to lack of support.
iOS system apps release with the OS on an annual cycle, but in Android system apps are upgraded independently. Meaning, even without Android OS upgrades the device would get new system apps.
It is almost as people in these Apple vs Android arguments have no idea how Android actually work...
That said, I do know this and your reply is based on either a misunderstanding of my point or optimism/enthusiasm for some kind of argument you seem to think we’re having.
I’m not talking about the built in calculator app, browser, etc.
I’m talking about the operating system version used and targeted for by applications.
Compare an Android fragmentation chart to an iPhone/iOS fragmentation chart.
It’s painfully obvious device support, updates, etc are still a mess in the Android ecosystem.
Talk to any team deploying Android applications and the first pain point you will hear is how ridiculous the fragmentation is compared to iOS.
It’s gotten better but it’s still a mess. Announcements like this are heading more in the right direction but I think it’s painfully clear that Apple got at least this one thing right from the start in their overall approach.