A recent study carried out by the
parent company of tech problem-solvers FixYa has found that Apple’s iPhone is
far and away the most reliable on the market, and compared with arch-rival
Samsung, is a full 300% more reliable. Earlier this week, we learned the
Cupertino handset was the best-selling smartphone in
the world based on Q4 sales figures, but while that is a seasonal affair which
often swings in favor of the company which has most recently dropped a
flagship, the depth of the FixYa study makes the
outcome even more damning. It took into account a total 722,558 combined
problem reports, along with market share data from StatCounter, in order to
obtain reliability scores; and in short, Apple excelled while competitors
faltered.
Apple’s handsets scored in at 3.47, almost
300% better than Samsung, which only managed 1.21. Meanwhile, Finnish company
Nokia took third spot with 0.68. The least reliable were found to be handsets
of Motorola devices, which could only muster a score of 0.13.
Among the common problems reported
with the iPhone were battery life, and although FixYa users also reported
issues such as “Lack of New Features” and “No Customizability,” we’re not too
sure how these gripes affect reliability. Samsung users, conversely, commonly
found issues with their smartphone’s microphone and speakers, while Nokia
owners cited problems such as “Laggy Response Time” and “Poor App Ecosystem.”
Again, a “poor app ecosystem” is more of a subjective comment than an actual
issue with reliability, and even the complaint regarding lag seems a little off
since Lumias are renowned for their responsiveness.
FixYa CEO Yaniv Bensadon maintains that the
result is “an accurate and fair method of, scaled approach to fairly compare
these top companies to truly see who is the most reliable, and who is barely
even competing.”
Having used a bunch of iPhones
through generations, I can certainly vouch for their reliability, and although
Samsung appears to have scored way behind its bitter Cupertino-based rival, it
has still done a much better job than the vast majority of its other
competitors.
Samsung, Nokia, Motorola users – do you agree
with these results? Is your smartphone as unreliable as has been portrayed by
these findings? Share your thoughts below! [RedmondPie]
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