In its most recent form, iOS 4.3, the operating system has expanded on all of its key tenets, incorporating new and exciting features into the software that are immediately accessible to users of all levels of experience, after all, there's no point making all the good stuff impossibly hard to use, is there?
In addition to the usual, reliable and eminently usable OS, version 4.3 brings new and advanced camera effects (if you're using an iPhone that is), improved eye-candy and an overhauled soft QWERTY keyboard, allowing users to get the most out of their typing experience when working on longer documents and e-mails.
Version 4.3 also allows it's amazing AirPlay functionality to be harnessed by third-party developers, so you can expect a host of new and exciting apps to allow you to maximise your multimedia experience by streaming content to your Apple TV or iMac. As well high-profile additions like the aforementioned AirPlay improvements, you'll also find your device's security and stability beefed up thanks to a number of behind-the-scenes bug fixes and improvements.
If iOS 4.3 personifies the mantra 'If it aint broke, don't fix it' then Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) represents a far more pragmatic approach to perfecting a tablet OS.
Google has kept the basics of its hugely popular Android OS intact, but users of this latest iteration will find a richly re-designed user interface sitting atop its open source core. This new look interface boasts a number of refinements, intended to make the software super tablet-friendly, such as a new 'system bar' which sits at the bottom of your home-screen, bringing you alerts and other important notifications and a new 3D style interface, allowing you to flick between windows with ease and generally interact with the OS in a far more fluid manner.
It's worth taking into account that Google's overhauled Android software offers slightly more bang for your buck too, owing to the number of devices that run the software, allowing you to choose a tablet that suits your budget.
Apple's impending iPad 2 will almost certainly bring with it a host of new invention and development, allowing the OS to catch up with the obvious leaps and bounds that Android has taken in recent months, but for now Google's platform is the standout performer of the two, offering more choice, new, advanced features and support for diverse hardware.
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