Once, in 2009, I owned a jailbroken second generation iPod touch. Since then, I’ve spent the last 10 years on a carousel of Android devices. But with the launch of the new, affordable iPhone SE earlier this year, I decided that maybe a new decade was a good enough reason to give iOS a try again. After a little over a month on the iPhone SE, here’s what I found — and why I don’t think I’ll go back.
Switching was way easier than I expected
Over the years of my tech blogging career, I have switched between dozens of Android phones. Pixels and Samsungs, LGs and OnePluses. Since Android tends to be heavily customized by phonemakers, switching between Android phones still requires some adjustment. And I was delighted to discover that switching over to iOS — a completely different operating system — was barely any harder to get used to.
In part, that’s because iOS has, uh, “borrowed” a lot of the quality of life features that had previously kept me loyal to Android. iOS 8 introduced third party keyboards that support haptic feedback — a small detail I don’t think I could live without. Apple’s own keyboard picked up a “swipe” mode in iOS 13. In iOS 10, we got the option to clean up clutter by removing default apps from the home screen. And iOS 14 will let you hide Home screen apps all together for die-hard digital minimalism, and even set non-Apple apps as default for mail and browser. It’s even bringing widgets!

This general, long-time convergence mostly removes the biggest pain point from switching operating systems on any device — having to engineer completely novel alternatives to do the things I’m used to, or change how I behave. Because features like the Notification and Control Centner pretty directly correspond to Android’s combined Notification Shade, I was left with the much smaller task of merely locating a functional equivalent, and retraining my muscle memory to call it up instead. The convergence of app availability means that virtually all my favorite apps were on iOS. I’ve found only one obnoxious but extremely nerdy exception so far.
I do worry, however, that I might be making a one-way trip. Part of the ease of going to Apple from Android is that Google’s apps are all available cross platform. Apple’s services are pointedly not. And now that I’m a “blue bubble,” I can imagine getting sucked into Messages-based groupchats that would make switching back to Android a dicey proposition.