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  • - So no, this title is not clickbait.

  • I really do feel like it's time to consider switching

  • to Android from iOS.

  • So just give me a couple minutes to make my case.

  • So I've been primarily daily driving an iPhone

  • ever since the 5S back in 2013.

  • Now before that I pretty regularly use Android.

  • I mean phones like the Galaxy Note II

  • and the HTC One M7 really were way ahead of their time,

  • especially compared to the iPhones of their day.

  • But once I got my hands on that iPhone 5S I was hooked.

  • Part of it was the camera was absolutely top of its class

  • for back on its day.

  • But on top of that, the performance,

  • and especially the fact that iOS 7

  • was such a big step forward

  • and the design really did draw me back over

  • to the iOS side of the camp,

  • and once I was in, I was in.

  • FaceTime, iMessage, the lock-in that you find

  • with these Apple devices is really real.

  • And in the last seven years I really haven't had

  • a huge incentive to go outside of the iOS ecosystem.

  • Yes, I can and absolutely have continued

  • to use Android devices as a secondary device, right?

  • So when I'm reviewing something,

  • when I'm spending time with it,

  • I will absolutely switch over to that device.

  • But after the week or couple of weeks

  • or whatever the case is,

  • that iPhone always has slid back but not anymore.

  • All of this started to change with this,

  • the OnePlus 7T.

  • Now, like most other devices when I got it,

  • I started to do my video on it,

  • I spent some time with it.

  • But the difference was this stuck around

  • in my back pocket for most of last year,

  • at least most of the end of last year,

  • and for a couple of major reasons.

  • First of all, I've always appreciated OnePlus phones

  • for the very clean simple build of Android,

  • with a lot of emphasis on performance.

  • So that's one of the things have always drawn me

  • to the iOS side of the camp.

  • Because iPhones almost without fail since

  • that 5S had been one of,

  • if not the most powerful phone

  • that you can get your hands on,

  • and the 7T especially with its 90 hertz display,

  • made some huge strides in really pulling me away

  • from the iOS ecosystem.

  • Because I realized,

  • this phone had pretty much everything I needed except

  • for a good camera.

  • Naturally, that brings us to today

  • where we of course have the OnePlus 8

  • as well as the OnePlus 8 Pro.

  • Now these phones really do promise to deliver

  • a full flagship experience.

  • And specifically I spent a lot of time

  • the last few weeks using the OnePlus 8 Pro.

  • This display with a 120 hertz refresh rate

  • and honestly excellent color, excellent resolution.

  • The entire package has been one of the most appealing things

  • that I have ever laid my eyes on in the phone space.

  • But when you look at just how smooth this phone is,

  • you look at how much work the OnePlus has done

  • on optimizing all aspects of this phone, right?

  • With Snapdragon 865,

  • with the high end LPDDR5 memory,

  • with the fact that they've done a lot of work

  • on the optimization side of Android,

  • and you pair that all with probably what is

  • the best display on any phone out right now,

  • it was immediately something that drew me away.

  • Now that's not to say that you should overlook

  • the standard OnePlus 8.

  • Again, this is not only a cheaper phone

  • and it does have a lot of major features including 5G,

  • which we'll get into a little bit later,

  • but this still does have an excellent KDP 90 hertz display,

  • very similar to that 7T last year that really drew me over.

  • Sure, if all you're looking for are benchmarks,

  • then the iPhone still is

  • an absolutely incredibly powerful device.

  • Both the iPhone 11 as well as the 11 Pro

  • have the incredibly powerful Apple A13 chip,

  • and while yes, they may only have four gigs of RAM,

  • a.k.a one third as much RAM as my OnePlus 8 pro here,

  • there's something to be said for these sheer leadership

  • that Apple has had and continues to have in

  • the actual chip space.

  • Where it starts to fall behind,

  • is when you look at the overall package.

  • For example, both the OnePlus 8 as well as the 8 Pro

  • have full fat 5G built in.

  • Now sure, Apple will likely bring out a 5G iPhone

  • in six months or whatever,

  • but I don't care about six months from now,

  • I care about the experience I can get today.

  • Not only do they continue to have their Warp Charge 30,

  • which will charge the entire phone up to a 100%

  • in less than an hour,

  • but they also now have Warp Charge wireless.

  • Now this is something that I've dinged OnePlus

  • on many times in the past.

  • While the 7T and the 7 Pro last year were very, very solid,

  • they weren't the full package, right?

  • The camera wasn't really there,

  • there was no official water resistance

  • and there was no waterproofing.

  • When you look at the 8 Pro,

  • pretty much all of those things have been addressed.

  • It not only has that super fast wired charging,

  • but you almost get the exact same speed using

  • the wireless charging.

  • Sadly, this is not a feature on this standard OnePlus 8,

  • which still has that wired charging

  • but doesn't have the wireless charging,

  • and it also doesn't have the reverse wireless charging,

  • which I find to be kind of useful.

  • But one of the things that really does elevate

  • these phones is the camera experience,

  • especially on the 8 Pro, it is a major step up.

  • So first of all, with the OnePlus 8 Pro,

  • the 48 megapixel main camera is much better.

  • So importantly just like a lot

  • of others flagships this year,

  • they've gone with a much larger sensor,

  • which means that you actually get surprisingly

  • good low-light performance within 12 megapixel mode,

  • and when you're out and about with

  • the sort of really nicely lit like daylight conditions,

  • 48 megapixels actually looks pretty good.

  • Unfortunately, the night mode really can't hang

  • with something like the iPhone or the S20.

  • And while I really liked the look of

  • the 3X telephoto camera on the 8 Pro,

  • that is sadly something which is missing on

  • the standard OnePlus 8.

  • Speaking of the OnePlus 8, it's similar,

  • although it still has on paper,

  • 48 megapixel camera,

  • is a much smaller sensor.

  • And generally speaking, I have found the results

  • to be better on the 8 Pro.

  • And if I'm being real, I still feel like while OnePlus

  • has sort of stepped up the game,

  • they're still behind something like the iPhone

  • or the Galaxy.

  • And specifically when you look at the iPhone 11

  • it's 700 bucks,

  • it's kind of a little bit of a tough sell on the OnePlus 8,

  • because it just simply cannot compete.

  • Video is also somewhere where OnePlus have...

  • Well, I mean they're trying,

  • they're making some progress,

  • but really the iPhone is the undisputed video champ

  • as far as I'm concerned in smartphones,

  • which is a problem,

  • because obviously as someone who spends

  • a lot of time working with video,

  • the OnePlus is not really something

  • I feel comfortable using,

  • whereas I will use the iPhone to shoot video all day long

  • for the channel.

  • Is this OnePlus 8 Pro an expensive phone?

  • Absolutely.

  • But iOS is expensive,

  • pretty much every other flagship out there, right?

  • $900 is a lot of money, but so it was a $1,000, so is $1,400

  • for the Galaxy S20 Ultra,

  • and so is the other phone that