uTest Compares User Satisfaction Between Android And iOS Apps [Infograph]

uTest Compares User Satisfaction Between Android And iOS Apps [Infograph]
Ever find yourself alone in your positive review of an app? Maybe you think the price of a mobile game is too high while others think it’s a steal. User satisfaction in the mobile ecosystem is quite a roller coaster of information and emotion. That’s why uTest, a software testing company, decided to crawl hundreds of thousands of apps and user reviews to see just how happy or unhappy users of the top two mobile operating systems were with their app experience. uTest has laid out this information in a nifty little infograph showing user satisfaction across Android and iOS with side-by-comparisons of the two. Check it out and tell us what you think.

uTest Compares User Satisfaction Between Android And iOS Apps [Infograph]

via Droid-Life

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  • AndyDroid71

    Incomplete, incorrect and completely irrelevant. How on earth are you going to compare 182K comments vs. 38K comments? If you want to do a comparison, do it with even numbers and with correct information. For instance: compare Angry Birds on Android with the one on ios. This is not how I (or we) want to win this comparing battle… I like to win by winning for real and not cheating.

    • aardman

      You think 182K comments vs. 38K makes the survey invalid?  You haven’t taken a statistics course, have you?

      • Roger_Ramshit

         I thought the overall results seemed ok but a couple of things spring to mind:
        Firstly there was a survey last week that said Android Apps were more expensive, on average, than iOS….so whats going on there?
        Secondly that final result where users hate iOS security/privacy twice as much than Android….that is highly questionable unless people gravitate toward iOS for the extra privacy/security and are still not happy which brings into the eauation the whole factor of EXPECTATIONS.
        When someone buys something they have generally chosen it with a set of requirements and expectations. If the expectations are recieved then they will rate it favourably, if their expectations are not recieved then they will rate it unfavourably EVEN if it comes closer than any other product available to them. Given that I think the whole poll is flawed.

  • Joshua Bell

    You cannot compare these. Users of iOS have higher standards thats why they buy Apple products. So they are going to be more critical. Those stuck in the lesser Android world do not know what they are missing and do not know a higher standard so they are satisfied with what they know. I know, I was one.

    • darwiniandude

      This

    • Roger_Ramshit

       +1

    • http://twitter.com/anupash Anupam Ashish

      You have no idea what u r talking right .. higher standards .. FYI iOS device are so incapable of true multitasking… 

  • http://twitter.com/ProfBriHi Brian Hight

    And how would you measure “higher standards?”

    • M. Niazy

      Higher expectations. I’m sure you’ve noticed how highly Apple users think of their products, which is the main reason people despise Apple fanboyism. They get the iPhone expecting a magical device – either because of their personal experiences with Apple products, or just because of their reputation – and hence met with more disappointments even if using better software. Android users are usually not Apple users, and come from the Windows world, used to crappy operating systems, apps, crashes, viruses…etc, so they don’t know what to expect as they go for Android, and are often pleasantly surprised, because even if the apps are inferior to the iPhones’, they’re still leaps beyond what they’re used to in Windows.

About the author

Vincent MessinaVincent Messina has been writing and evangelizing about Android for the past three years. When he's not playing the part of "Loki" to his 5 and 4-year-old, he can be found here, covering all things Android. He adamantly believes Android has the greatest community around and can be harassed at any of the following locations: Google+, Twitter.

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