• blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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    31 minutes ago

    I think it’s a psychological thing.

    Like, while thinking about what kind of phone we want - a small phone sounds pretty good. But when it comes time to buy it, we start comparing phones, and we see some small ones, and some slightly bigger ones, and some really big ones. We tend to go bigger than we’d originally intended because of psychological anchoring effects.

    The slightly bigger phone is seen as a slightly better phone. “not too big” we think, as we compare it to some monsters; and the key stats such as screen resolution and battery capacity sound slightly better. So we tend to buy that bigger phone even if it isn’t what we actually thought we wanted.

    [edit] I should say that I’m saying “we” in a totally generic way. I definitely don’t do this myself. I’ve literally only ever owned smartphone in my life, and it isn’t particularly big or flashy. I have an anti-phone attitude.

  • weew@lemmy.ca
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    15 hours ago

    Because every time a manufacturer releases a small phone, nobody buys them.

    • Jtotheb@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Well yeah, the people who want a small reliable phone are unlikely to replace them every year for no discernible reason. Cue more articles and comments about how there’s no sale data to support the idea that people want small phones! The odds are stacked against us.

  • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I don’t know how you youngsters do it.
    One hand eternally glued to this big phone and now they need the other for a soup thermos they suddenly feel the need to drag with them everywhere.

  • kamen@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Because apparently people want big phones.

    For the last 10-15 years it’s been a boiling frog situation really - .1 or .2" increase every generation until 7" somehow becomes the norm (for a phone, not a tablet, mind you).

    I wish there were more small hi-end phones too.

  • BlueBaggy@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    “Why can’t we go back to small phones”

    Company releases small phone

    “No one” buys it

    Company stops making small phones

    People complaining why there are no small phones

    • moonbunny@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      Don’t forget that company does fuck all in advertising the small phone at a similar level as the “regular sized” phone

    • glitchdx@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      no one bought it because it was shit. companies do this all the time so they can make more expensive things more cheaply, and force people into buying the most expensive.

      I want an easily removable battery. As in, I want to be able to have two batteries, one in my phone and another in a charger and I just swap them once a day. I used to be able to do that, and it was normal. Now, the only phones that have that are either extremely garbage or also feature a barcode scanner and cost as much as a “flagship” device.

      • BlueBaggy@sh.itjust.works
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        18 hours ago

        “because it was shit” if you look at the iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 mini they were essentially the same phone just in different sizes, while the sales of the mini stayed in the low 1 diget % the iPhone 13 was around 35-40% of all iPhone sales in it’s first year.

        I agree with some of the things in your 2nd part it has nothing to do with small phones.

        And not to say you said it but it came up in the article a couple times, comparing screen inch sizes to determine if a phone is big or not is flawed > the screen to body ratio increased a lot over the last year’s which means that a phone could have the same physical size with a bigger screen.

        • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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          13 hours ago

          To be fair, these are Apple users we’re talking about. They uhh… kind of epitomize rampant American consumerism.

        • glitchdx@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          I think I may have just done a bad job of explaining my first point:

          I’m saying that manufacturers are putting these features on phones that people weren’t going to buy anyway on purpose, in order to support the narrative that nobody wants those features.

          There’s counter examples of course, but for the most part I think what I said is applicable.

  • jaschen@lemm.ee
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    14 hours ago

    You can. Ditch Apple and join us. Plenty of small phone selections here on the other side. Edit: you know what. Android doesn’t have that many either.

  • Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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    17 hours ago

    Here’s my dilemma:

    • Been without cell service since the pandemic (eventually stopped using the smart phone altogether)
    • All my digital needs are satisfied, devices and functionality in every room for every purpose I need
    • Have multiple forms of solid and satisfactory communication channels (don’t need a cell number)

    I’ve thought about buying a model I could jailbreak, but again it’s just to use a system that’s abusive. “Download our app!”, “Use our digital coupons!”, “Link your phone number!”, “Scan our code!”, “Let us track your location for your convenience!”.

    I’m really a niche subgroup though, I already need other devices while at work that a phone wouldn’t suffice for. I kinda see more people going this route though. If your transportation has a computer, then what’s the endpoint in carrying a phone? If your job requires digital devices, the phone is basically reduced to a large brick of a communication device. I see more and more equipment being specialized and having added communication aspects for more complicated machinery, cell phones are not going to keep up with it in a general sense.

    tldr: cell phones are just a fad with an abusive system that will die out one day and be remembered like rotary phones. They’re generally subpar for any specific task and are only a place holder till we figure out better systems.

    • Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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      7 hours ago

      I think people don’t want specialised tools, they want one tool they can always have with them. We can see the decline of computer use (and literacy) as a consequence of this. Many young people don’t use computers much, if at all.

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Seriously.

    I don’t want a tablet in my pocket all day.

    I bought my current phone because it was small and the options I had when looking for small phones were extremely limited.

    I’m not trying to seriously game on a smartphone. I’m not trying to watch full length movies. It’s in my pocket 90% of the time. I want it to be small.

  • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Why is the article using diagonal screen size as their measurement for phone size? In that case you could have a phone the exact same size get “bigger” just because bezel sizes have shrunk over the years.

    They specifically call out the iPhone SE as a “small phone” that they seem to want. But the newest iPhone, the iPhone 16 is only 6% bigger in width and height. Fractions of an inch larger. I can totally understand why somebody would want a phone with smaller overall dimensions, but why on earth would your metric for an ideal phone be a smaller screen?

    • olmec@lemm.ee
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      18 hours ago

      Because, for a touch screen, the screen itself IS the user interface. Imagine while holding with one hand, you want to reach your thumb to the opposite corner to hit a button. Even if the body of the phone is the same, a larger screen will need a bigger reach for your thumb. That is primary issue.

  • User79185@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    I do, I bought smallest phone available from known company. But most of those companies just decided you need huge phone that can’t fit everywhere, removed sdcard slot, removed headphone jack. Last time I remember nobody asked them to remove those features. I think it is the same enshittification like with everything, they no longer make cheap houses, smaller cheaper cars, actual budget gpus etc, etc. Feels like every company targets top 20% and the rest - gtfo and be damned.

  • engene@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    I don’t see why we don’t already have an iPod size device. I just need something for music and if a phone call happens to come in - great! It was so simple then.

  • catHerder93@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Even for the government you need apps nowadays. Yes you can try doing things in person but wait times aren’t reasonable. I’ve been trying to get a dumb phone for myself but still find I need a smartphone for specific apps a couple of times a month…

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      What happens if sms 2fa is phased out, and more sites require either an Authenticator app or passkey?

      My workplace requires an Authenticator app, actually multiple, and help with my phone bill in return for doing that in my personal device. I don’t know what they do if someone had a feature phone

  • LucidNightmare@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    I believe I saw where you hear that people want small phones, they make them, and then they sell poorly. So, to the company at least, it doesn’t look like people want the smaller devices.

    Now, I saw some comments in here about the smaller devices usually being less robust than their normal/pro counterparts, and that could also be a major reason small phones don’t sell.

    • Hildegarde@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      17 hours ago

      They make bad small phones that people don’t buy because they’re bad, then conclude its because people don’t buy small phones.

      They make phones like the palm palm, the second phone you have to pair to your other phone, for those days when the big phone is too big. Also the battery didn’t even last a day. When it doesn’t sell they say its because it was small, not the everything else.

  • rimjob_rainer@discuss.tchncs.de
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    18 hours ago

    I was small phone enjoyer until my Sony Z3 Compact. I really liked it, but after it died, I tried bigger phones and I couldn’t go back.