The list of difference between iphone and android goes On and On ..........
But i have gathered some points which you may like.....
which are given below why iphone dominates android mostly but not all the time............
1.best apps for IOS.
Iphone gets the first best apps, Although it do not have a bigger market share but still developers first make best apps for IOS.If you do care to have better apps for your mobile phone then do buy a IPhone.
2.Difference in passcode lock.......
iphone is far better than android with icloud facilityand android is very easy to break its lock.
3.Apps (selection vs Control)
While the iPhone App Store offers slightly fewer apps than Google Play—around 2,000,000 vs. 2,200,000 (as of June 2016)—overall selection isn’t the only factor. Apple is famously strict (some might say unpredictable) about what apps it allows and how it changes its policies, while Google’s standards for Android are lax.
Many developers have complained about the emphasis on free apps for Android and the difficulty of developing for so many different phones. This fragmentation—the large numbers of devices and OS versions to support—makes developing for Android expensive (for instance, the developers of Temple Run reported that early in their Android experience nearly all of their support emails had to do with unsupported devices—but they support over 700 Android phones!).
Combine these development costs with an emphasis on free that reduces the likelihood that developers can cover their costs and not all of the best apps make it to Android, and those that do don’t necessarily run on all phones. Key apps also almost always debut first on iOS, with Android versions coming later, if they come at all.
Winner: iPhone
4.Gaming
Just a couple of years ago, video gaming—and especially mobile video gaming—was dominated by Nintendo’s DS and Sony’s PSP. The iPhone has changed that. The iPhone (and iPod touch) has rapidly become a major player in the mobile video game market, with tens of thousands of great games. The growth of the iPhone as a gaming platform, in fact, has led some observers to forecast that Apple is well on its way to eclipsing Nintendo and Sony as the leading mobile game platform.
Beyond that, the general expectation that Android apps should be free (noted above) has led game developers interested in making money (i.e., almost all of them, and certainly all the major ones) to develop for iPhone first and Android second. In fact, due to various problems with developing for Android, some game companies have stopped creating games for it all together.
While Android has its fair share of hit games, the iPhone has the clear advantage here.
Winner: iPhone
5.Support(Ever given by Android)
Both smartphone platforms generally work pretty well and, for day-to-day use, don't present too many problems or malfunctions. But everything breaks once in a while and when that happens, how you get support matters.
With Apple, you can simply take your device to your closest Apple Store, where a trained specialist can help solve your problem. (They're busy, though, so it pays to make an appointment ahead of time.)
Have you ever seen an Android Store? Samsung Store? Google Store? Sure, you can get support for Android devices from the phone company you bought your phone from, the phone's maker, or maybe even the retail store where you bought it, but which should you pick? Having a single source for expert support easily gives Apple this category.
Winner: iPhone
6.Android Assistance
The next frontier of smartphone features and functionality will be driven by artificial intelligence. On this front, Android has a clear lead.
Google Now, the most prominent artificial intelligence/intelligent assistant system on Android, is extremely powerful. It uses everything Google knows about you and the world to make life easier for you. For instance, if your Google Calendar knows you're meeting a friend at 5:30 and that traffic is terrible, Google Now can send you a notification telling you to leave early.
Siri is Apple's answer to Google Now for artificial intelligence. Siri is improving all the time and gets even more powerful in iOS 10, but it's still limited to fairly simple tasks when compared to Google Now.
Winner: Android
7.Battery Life
Because of the greater variety of hardware used in Android phones, Android’s battery life is more varied. While early iPhone models had batteries that required a charge nearly every day, that’s no longer true. With recent models, it’s easy to go days at a time without needing a charge.
The story is much more complex with Android, thanks to the large variety of models that run it. Some Android models have 5-inch screens and other features which burn through much more battery life.
Combine the advanced hardware with battery-intensive apps Android phones run (including some in the background that the user doesn’t necessarily know are there), a charge every day (or less) isn’t unheard of.
That said, there are some Android phones that offer ultra-high capacity batteries. If you don't mind the extra bulk, they'll work much longer than iPhones on a single charge.
Winner: Android
8.Pure Experience(android junk apps)
The last item touched on the idea that Android's openness means that sometimes manufacturers install their own apps in place of higher quality standard apps. This gets even worse on Android when you consider that phone companies do the same thing. As a result, it can be hard to know what apps will come on your Android device and how good they'll be.
You don't have to worry about anything like that with the iPhone. Apple is the only company that pre-installs apps on the iPhone, so every phone comes with the same apps (most of which are fairly high quality).
Winner: iPhone
9.User Management (Storage )
Apple prizes elegance and simplicity in the iPhone above all else. That’s a major reason that users can’t upgrade the storage orreplace the batteries on their iPhones (it’s possible to get replacement iPhone batteries, but they have to be replaced by a skilled repairperson). Android, on the other hand, is open to user customization, meaning that users can change both phones’ memory and battery.
The trade-off is a bit more complexity and a bit less elegance, but that might be worth it compared to running out of memory or needing to pay for a battery replacement equal to a large percentage of the cost of your iPhone.
Winner: Android
10.Security(No doubt)
If you care about the security of your smartphone, there's only one choice: iPhone.
The reasons for this are myriad—they have to do with Apple and Google's philosophy about how to use data and how each company makes its money—but consider these two facts:
- In one study 97% of all malware—viruses, worms, etc.—were for Android. In that study 0% attacked the iPhone.
- Even the head of Google's Android team admitsthat "We can not guarantee that Android is designed to be safe ... If I had a company dedicated to malware, I should also be addressing my attacks on Android."
I think that says it all.
Winner: iPhone