[NFBCS] Switch to iPhone?

Nancy Coffman nancy.l.coffman at gmail.com
Sun Sep 19 03:33:29 UTC 2021


I think you would be pleased with how easy an iPhone is to use. If you would rather stay with Android, I would look for a Google phone or a Google family 1 phone. Manufacturers have agreed to accessibility standards for those phones.

Have you reset your phone in any way? Some resets don't require you to reload everything. 

Hope this helps. If you are being budget concious, the iPhone SE might be a good buy for you. It still has the home button. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles that some phones have but a lot of people love theirs. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Sep 17, 2021, at 5:10 PM, Brian Buhrow via NFBCS <nfbcs at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
>     hello.  I have been an iPhone user for just over 8 years, having started with an iPhone 5
> and graduating to an iPhone 6S 3 years ago.  As iPhone users go, I am a relative newcomer.
> Having said that, I use it for many tasks, so I believe my level of dexterity with iOS devices
> is pretty good.
> 
>    To answer your question regarding reliability, I don't believe you'll have the type of
> issues you're describing with your Android  phone with an iPhone.  Both iOS devices, i.e.
> iPhone, and Android devices are complicated computers doing many things at once, so there will
> be times when your iPhone is doing something you won't understand.  However, this is almost
> always due to something you haven't yet learned about your iPhone.  I use my phone for work
> while on the move and I find it to be  extremely stable, very reliable and, for the most part,
> not frustrating to use.  In other words, if you switch  to an iPhone, I think you'll be very
> happy and wonder why you didn't switch earlier.
> 
>    I don't know if you like big phones or small ones, but if you're okay with something a bit
> smaller, I suggest the iPhone SE2 with 128G or 256G of flash storage.  This phone is fast,
> compact and costs a *LOT* less then one of the new iPhone 13 models.  It's based on the A13
> processor, which is a very low-power, fast processor for phones of today.  
> 
> Hope this helps.
> 
> -Brian
> 
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