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First of all, this is not entirely true - it depends entirely upon the nature of the background applications you are running. Secondly - which situation would you rather have... One where YOU can decide how much you want your phone to do in the background and make the decision weighing battery life versus functionality - or one where you are not even given a choice but the decision is made for you because Steve Jobs knows that you would rather have your battery last 30 minutes longer than have your phone turn its ringer on or off automatically based on location or time while you have a Google Talk IM client running?
The android comment is really not true - properly designed background apps work just fine.
Anyone who wants to see the iPhone get better should be rooting for Android, Palm, etc - because Apple will certainly hold features back as long as they can (front facing camera? video conferencing? copy and paste? flash player?) when they don't feel competition breathing down their neck.
It's science, my friend. Multi-tasking and running background processes takes a big toll on performance and battery life.
Say what you will about Steve Jobs or Apple. Yammer, yammer, MC Hammer. The bottom line is that mobile performance is a problem, and multicore processors in mobile phones will be a nice step forward for all of these devices.
Let's try to put the religiosity aside for once and stick to the business at hand. This was supposed to be news about smartphones, and here you've gone and ruined it by mentioning the iPhone in context.
Thus who is ruling this mobile market? Nokia or Samsung?