Anyway, I also contemplated a switch, but I remembered the frustration that I experienced the last time I made such a  switch to iOS that I promptly got rid of the idea. But our fellow Mobilista went through with is plan to switch and got himself an Apple iPhone XR. While setting up the smartphone and installing apps, he was shocked at how much bigger iOS apps are than their Android equivalent. The difference in app sizes is huge. I was taken aback too as I compared apps in the App Store with their equivalent in Google Play Store. Let’s pull up a comparison table to make it easy to compare. As you can see from the above table, the difference in size between iOS apps and their Android equivalent ranges from about 4 times the size to 10 times the size, depending on the app. So, off the bat, iPhone users are burning more data to download apps and will likely burn more to keep those apps updated as well. To install all the above-listed apps on Android requires only 238MB of your data subscription. If you were to download the same list of apps on an iPhone, you would need 1.36GB. That is about 6 times more data. Mad; right? Of course, this also means that iOS apps take up more of the phone’s internal memory for storage. If you are an app junkie, that is a lot of space you will be using up for your iOS apps. PS: Note that the size of some of these apps vary with the device it is being installed on, but regardless of that, there is always a big difference between the sizes of apps from both platforms..

Why are iOS apps bigger than Android apps?

At this point, it is only natural to ask why iOS apps are that much bigger than Android apps. There are a number of answers to the question and they all have to do with the development. For one, iOS apps require multiple versions of images and artwork for different display sizes. Thesa all add up and contribute to why these apps are much larger. Also, the binary codes for iOS apps are encrypted, which makes for poor compression. The programming language for iOS apps also requires multiple libraries (coders will understand this). Most of the issues are technical and beyond the scope of everyday users. What is important is that you realise that there is a huge difference in the sizes of apps across both platforms. Switching from an Android phone to an iPhone is not only expensive in terms of cost of acquisition, it is also expensive in terms of daily usage. You will burn more data downloading and updating apps. One way to go about it is to do your app downloads over a WiFi network or an unlimited data plan, if you can afford one of those. Thanks to Mobilista, Olusheenor, for sharing his initial experiences with iOS apps with me. I look forward to getting more feedback about his experience and sharing here on MobilityArena. WHo knows? I just might still make the switch myself. If you do want to buy an iPhone, we helped you answer the question, Which Apple iPhone should you buy?.

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