• lepinkainen@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    mAh is a stupid way to measure batteries. Wh is more relevant.

    It also tells nothing about the efficiency of the device. You can add a 50kWh battery to a device but it doesn’t matter if it uses 2kWh at idle

    • Johandea@feddit.nu
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      3 months ago

      I’d argue Wh is a complete waste. Just use J, which is the much more established unit.

      • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        I disagree. Joules are really hard to understand to laypeople. Watt-hours directly relate to the power of a device without conversion, and can even be really translated in terms of power bill.

        3.6 megajoules? Eh, I guess that’s maybe a lot? Or not?

        1000 watt-hours? Oh, like running a microwave for a whole hour? Dang that’s a LOT!

    • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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      3 months ago

      I believe it actually has to do more with historical conventions in electronics or math. (This is just what I remember from heresay when I was in university as an electronics engineer), but there is also a mathematical reason.

      history hearsay theory

      The easiest way to measure power draw is by measuring current draw (voltage across a sense resistor) way back before there were affordable, quality ICs to measure voltage and current and pretty much joule count.

      To add to this, current sensors are much easier and cheaper than test machines that do the calculations for you.

      When lithium batteries and NiCAD batteries became standard compared to the earlier lead-acid (which are measured in Wh), they had an extremely flat voltage curve compared to lead acid. They could be considered to be at a constant voltage.

      Now cheaper electronics were being made and if a designer wanted to know how long a battery would last, they could take the nominal battery voltage that the battery would be at a vast majority of the time, and they could just measure the current draw over a short time of the circuit, 10s of calculations, and you have your approximate battery life. There is a joke that engineers approximate π to 3.

      Even designing electronics today, everything is specced to current draw, not power draw. ICs take X current in mA during Y operations. Your DCDC converters have Z quiescent currents and from there you can calculate efficiency. It is much easier to work in current for energy running through the circuit.

      Math units

      Ah is a measure of electrical charge.

      Wh is a measure of energy

      Batteries and capacitors hold charge so are measured in Ah, generators that power the grid generate energy and use of that energy is measured in Wh (it also isn’t a “constant” voltage source like batteries as it is AC)

      • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        The thing is, it does not matter how much charge the battery holds, it does matter how much energy it holds. Without knowing the Voltage the Ah is useless.

        • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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          3 months ago

          Sorry, but you are simply wrong. Simple math says that you are wrong.

          You can buck or boost convert nearly any voltage to any other voltage.

          Then measure the current output of the battery, boom you have battery life.

          Also electrical charge can be used in many, many very valuable calculations without involving voltage at all.

          Let’s take an arbitrary example with an arbitrary battery powered device. Let’s say the battery is somewhere between 1V and 10000000V. You can’t measure it because you might blow up your multimeter.

          You know that the battery is 5000mAh. You can safely measure that all of the circuitry is draining 1000mA because sense resistors or contactless magnetic current measurements don’t have anywhere near dangerous voltages. You know that the battery will last about 5 hours. What is the voltage? Doesn’t matter.

          Yes, charge and the flow of charge is not the entire story, but to say it is useless or does not matter is just a straight lie. It is fine if you don’t understand electronics, but then don’t spit out misinformation.

          Yes Watt-hours would give a more complete picture to slightly tech-inclined consumers (makes 0 difference for 99% of consumers), but then it returns to not mattering because you can do the 5s calculation yourself because single cell lithium batteries are overwhelmingly 1 nominal voltage.

          Literally 90% of calculations related to efficiency are JUST as valid using mA as W.

          Your device uses 12mA at idle with a 5000mAh battery has the same relevance as your 18.5Wh battery using 45mW at idle.

          • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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            3 months ago

            I am ONLY speaking from a consumer position and for those Wh is more useful.

            The consumer looks on device a and on device b and then determines how often he can recharge its device. With Ah you cannot do this unless you know the Voltage, with Wh you can make this decision without any further knowledge.

            Yes this does not include battery life or conversion of efficiency. But a cunsumer measures nothing he looks at the lable.

            It is fine if you don’t understand electronics, but then don’t spit out misinformation.

            Btw. no need to insult me. I have never put out misinformation, I may have not stated enough that I am viewing this as a consumer.

            • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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              3 months ago

              Please explain to me what the difference is between battery life if you have a 5000mAh battery and an 18Wh battery.

              Please state the calculation that you would use to “determine how often you have to recharge” that is valid for Wh and not for Ah. I am all for it. If you can cite a single source where the manufacturer gives a specification that would give battery life in Wh, and not in Ah, I will concede the entire argument and say that you were right the whole time in every comment make a note that you were right. Please show your calculation work.

              The thing is, it does not matter how much charge the battery holds, it does matter how much energy it holds. Without knowing the Voltage the Ah is useless.

              This is patently, objectively misinformation and completely false. That is a direct quote of your words, today. That was your last comment. I have already laid out multiple examples of how Ah is a useful measurement and what you can do with it. Therefore, it is misinformation. It is not disinformation, but stating untrue things as fact is misinformation, even if you have no idea you are wrong.

              • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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                3 months ago

                If you can cite a single source where the manufacturer gives a specification that would give battery life in Wh, and not in Ah, I will concede the entire argument and say that you were right the whole time in every comment make a note that you were right.

                Basically every Laptop manufacturer.

                Primary Battery

                3-cell, 54 Wh, ExpressCharge™ Capable, ExpressCharge™ Boost Capable

                https://www.dell.com/en-us/shop/dell-computer-laptops/latitude-5550-laptop/spd/latitude-15-5550-laptop/s0035l5550usvp?ref=variantstack

                • JustEnoughDucks@feddit.nl
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                  3 months ago

                  Lol, you literally quoted me, didn’t actually read what you quotes, and then did something completely different.

                  Do you know that battery life ≠ battery capacity? That is not the same measurement as I have already tried to teach you 3 times.

                  Please state the calculation that you would use to “determine how often you have to recharge” that is valid for Wh and not for Ah.

                  What is its idle power draw? What is its power draw under load? Playing video? Sleep mode? That source gives nothing which determines battery life. All it gives is a nearly useless capacity number, just like all other manufacturers. So not valid at all. You still have exactly 0 more information about battery life.

                  If I am wrong, please state your calculations of what the battery life is with that 54Wh battery.

                  Your entire argument was “Ah is useless and Wh gives consumers the information to determine battery life” So go ahead, determine the battery life.

                  How is this any different at all if they said that it is a 5.8Ah battery? They don’t give any current or power draw.

                  As an exercise:

                  can you tell me the battery life difference between an arbitrary Laptop A with a 54Wh battery and Laptop B with a 27Wh battery?

    • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      Yes. I really wish all batteries used watt-hours. All it’d take would be for someone to design a phone that runs at a different voltage and their battery numbers would stop being comparable.

    • Resonosity@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I guess it comes down to whether we want to primarily communicate battery size in terms of charge (Coulombs = Amps * Time) or energy (Joules = Watts * Time).

      The first metric you multiply by your operating voltage to get the second metric, whereas the second metric you have to divide by your voltage to get the first. Depends on what comes easier to most people.

      • f314@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        With the increasing abundance of electric vehicles people are getting used to (k)Wh as the unit for battery size. It would make sense to use the same unit for smaller electronics as well, IMO.

    • answersplease77@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      you can optimize your android device battery in ways iphones cant. For example you cant disable or remove any system app consuming your battery in iPhones, but that is instantly doable in Androids

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 months ago

          To be fair, you can do pretty much anything on a rooted Android.

          But I wouldn’t say “instantly” since you’d have to root it first.

        • BigFatNips@sh.itjust.works
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          3 months ago

          Settings, apps, Google play services, disable. Very easy. Nobody is saying “you can disable any app you want on android and your phone will magically just keep running perfectly as though it’s not dependent on it” just that it is possible to do so. Yes, I understand disabling Google play services will cripple many features. It is however possible, and you’ll still have a functional phone afterwards. The same cannot be said about iPhones.

        • answersplease77@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          iphones cannot temporarily disable apps, cannot prevent specific apps from accessing network, cant spoof live location sharing, cannot even multi-window several apps at once. those are 4 simple examples which I personally find very helpful which all androids can do for more than 10 years already while iphone cant.

    • untorquer@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      A 4Ah battery at 5V would be a 20Wh battery, drop the kilo. Electronics draw power at idle, not energy. 2kWh is meaningless without an idle duration. What are you saying?

      Wh may be better for determining total energy storage across differing cell chemistry. mAh is standard for electronics and makes more sense at the design level as the battery voltage is chemistry dependent and known to the designer.

      • lime!@feddit.nu
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        3 months ago

        i don’t think any manufacturer publishes the voltage their devices run at, could be anywhere from 3.3 to 5V. so i don’t know how an end-user is supposed to compare battery sizes between devices.

        • untorquer@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          They would also have to give current draw which isn’t really possible since each end user has different apps and behavior. So you more often get standby time or video playback time which are based on an “ideal” (probably non-bloated) clean OS. That’s more useful to an end user but also subject to marketing fudging the figures.

          You can often look up the battery chemistry or use an app to access sensors btw.

          At the end of the day battery capacity is only one factor of many in battery/charge life and is generally just marketing in the context of phones.

      • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        What? They draw power, not energy?

        Energy is just the product of power and time. And just like amperage, the power draw of a device varies.

        And this should be obvious, but what makes more sense to an electronics engineer doesn’t matter one bit to the end user. And the end user doesn’t know anything about milli-amperes or volts (except maybe their wall outlet voltage).

        • untorquer@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Yes power is a rate. As you said energy is the time integral of power. So it’s meaningless to state an “energy draw” without a duration implied or explicit. E.g. what does drawing 2kWh at idle even mean?

          I agree about end user sentiment. I was trying to suggest as well. The only way to know which battery/phone is going to have a better battery life is to identify reviews with similar usage to your own or cross-compare metrics across devices you’re familiar with. In general, phone A with a 4000mAh battery won’t necessarily outlast phone B with a 4500mAh batt.

          • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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            3 months ago

            Well you don’t say it draws 2 kWh at idle. You say it draws 2 kW at idle. While that is incredibly inefficient, it means that for every hour the device is idle, it draws 2 kWh of energy.

            Oh yeah battery size isn’t sufficient to fully gauge battery life. You need to know power draw to calculate that. And it’s good to get battery life ratings from reviews. Great. It helps a lot.

            But it doesn’t mean we shouldn’t get good, comparable physical specs.

            Kinda like processors. Gigahertz and core counts are far from telling you everything, but it doesn’t mean it should be abstracted into some weird unit.

            • untorquer@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Per the kW vs kWh, see top level reply.

              Yeah a metric would be nice but it would need a standard test. That’s why idle time and video playback time makes a good amount of sense. But it’s not entirely clear how that would translate into usage for example in back country (where cell network drains power harder) or travel. So it’s not perfect. But it is probably the best measure guven hardware and usage vatiation. In any case it’s subject to marketing dudging the numbers in various ways.

  • technotony@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Not even what it was once close to being unfortunately on the android side either.

    Android users have also been losing features every year.

    Flagships have seen the removal of:

    -SD card expansion - what we could once count on to use phones like mirrorless cameras is now gone so they can rip you off for higher non expandable storage (128GB SD? $10. 128 -> 256 GB base? $200)

    • 3.5mm - why buy cheap wired headphones when you can force people to spend 10x as much on wireless! Coming up with a solution to a problem they invented.

    • IR blaster - yes I used it since it worked on TV, receiver, DVD player, air conditioner, etc. Also super convenient if you have used stuff you bought without the remote

    • FM radio - yes I used it again since no data needed! Can also be fun to listen to campus radio or when travelling

    • notification led - The RGB led was pretty good when you had binds foe each app to know who texted you and why. Always on OLED draws substantially more power than the LED did

    • Always unlocked bootloaders - the custom ROM scene was pretty big at one point, but has shrunk as more manufacturs have begun locking bootloaders ‘for safety’

    • removable battery - phone no longer holding a good charge? $15 fix. Was also super convenient since I bought a spare that I kept charged and in my bag, meaning I could go 0% to 100% in 2 mins… better than fast charge!

    List could go on for longer. Maybe it’s just nostalgia but I do miss some of those days.

    • 5redie8@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      This is what Android users get for pining after Samsung despite them being first in line after Apple to remove most of these. JFC they made a phone that exploded and they STILL lead the market.

      (yes, I use android too)

    • Melody Fwygon@lemmy.one
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      3 months ago
      • Losing SD Expansion sucks; they should bring this back. Only reason they stopped this is greed.
      • Yet another Nice-To-Have that is gone; but I’ve never seen any phones that weren’t Samsung with this. This one doesn’t really even affect waterproofing; or phone size so they have no excuse.
      • I certainly miss this one; but the FM Radio was present back on my 2020 Moto G6 Power. It was present on my 2020 Moto Edge. This one got stolen from us because we lost the 3.5mm Jack too…they used the wire from your wired headphones as an FM Antenna lead.
      • This is nice; but I ended up having to root my Nexus 6 to make this work properly and use all the colors the LED could perform. I don’t really miss it with Bezel-less phones.
      • I hate that bootloaders are frequently locked; but it’s been less necessary to root Android as it’s improved over the years. There are still a few pain points; but not quite as many that require root.
      • This is another case of greed. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t have removable batteries for phones that aren’t IP67 or higher. If it ain’t waterproof; there’s no reason to seal the battery in…and replaceable batteries is a benefit when they accidentally ship units that become “spicy pillows” when the batteries swell due to bad batteries. It also simplifies disposal of phones; which don’t need disassembly if they’ve got a removable battery.
      • JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        The newest HTC phone had a headphone jack and expandable memory. Hopefully they keep going down that route and keep up the software support and I might have to consider them.

      • TonyOstrich@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        IR blasters are very common on Chinese brand phones even today. It’s easily the feature I miss most from my Huawei.

        • Melody Fwygon@lemmy.one
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          3 months ago

          Ah; I don’t use Chinese branded phones at all. Never have.

          Phones in the US market do not usually have them, unless they’re Samsung branded, and since I don’t include Chinese made phones in that “group”, what I’m saying is true for the US.

          • TonyOstrich@lemmy.world
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            3 months ago

            I’m based in the US and that’s where I used my Huawei phone until recently. OnePlus is among the manufacturers that still do IR blasters, and it looks like the OnePlus 12 has one and is easily purchased from their US store page.

            As far as I can tell Samsung hasn’t released a phone with an IR blaster since 2015 either. Essentially, IR and Samsung hasn’t been a thing for a long time. If we are going by total volume then I would agree that the most common manufacturer in the US that has/had IR is Samsung. If we are going by new phones available today, then Samsung isn’t even in the conversation.

            I’m not entirely sure what this comment is in relation to yours, I don’t think I disagree with you, I think I’m just adding some context or nuance.

      • BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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        3 months ago
        • Losing SD Expansion sucks; they should bring this back. Only reason they stopped this is greed.

        Fuck that noise. SD expansion was a terrible idea and I’m glad it’s gone. There are so many problems introduced by removable storage, it was a terrible PITA to deal with as a developer. One of Google’s dumbest ideas in early Android. Good. Fucking. Riddance.

        • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          I have honestly never heard this take but it makes sense. If you feel like elaborating more on why it’s a pain for developers I would be interested. But like, I also have google if you don’t feel like typing it all out lol.

          • BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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            3 months ago

            Several things that made the SD card annoying to developers.

            First: you could not install an APK on the SD card (probably due to DRM reasons). So if you had a larger app and you wanted users to be able to take advantage of the additional storage offered by the SD card you could not do this simply by having a large APK. (Note that this also was true for phones that had no removable SD card but had internal memory that presented itself as ‘external storage’).

            On some phones the normal storage was so small that any larger app had to leverage the external storage to be able to even fit (we’re talking 10+ years ago). The way to do this was using so-called ‘expansion files’. These were additional data files, up to 2GB a piece, that could be installed on the external storage. These came with some additional difficulties.

            • They were pure data files, so they could not contain any executable code. They were just big binary blobs, so none of the Android built-in mechanisms for loading assets depending on screen density, screen size and all that stuff worked. You had to do it all by hand.
            • Since they were just binary blobs, you had to do any organization inside the files yourself. For example, they could be large ZIP files but you had to do all the ZIP handling yourself. Compared to normal APKs that are also ZIP files but where you can just load stuff from the APK archive and it’s all handled by the framework.
            • The expansion files were separate from the APK. The Play Store did try to automatically download them if your app had expansion files, but this was not guaranteed. Furthermore, because they live on an SD card they could disappear at any moment. Your app needed additional logic to deal with this, code to re-download the files if they were missing, code to handle errors during the download, UI to show the download progress, etc.

            Another problem with SD cards was the huge variety in quality of SD cards. Phones internal storage is reasonably fast, but you never know what kind of cheap-ass yanky SD card the users installed in their phone. This caused all kinds of performance problems in more demanding apps and as a developer you had to deal with the fall-out (bad reviews, support requests, etc.)

            • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Thanks for all the info. That’s really interesting. I remember those phones that had like 2GBs of internal storage and 1.5GBs was taken up by the OS so you could have like 5 apps and 1 video on there before you needed an SD card. Those were a huge pain.

              I also remember not being able to move certain apps to an SD card as it was restricted by the software. I used to wonder why, but that actually makes a lot of sense now lol.

              Also, are you saying my SpamDisk 150TB SD card I got on wish for $0.93 is not good enough for you? Elitist.

        • Melody Fwygon@lemmy.one
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          3 months ago

          Uh, No. Hell to the fucking no. Bring back SD expansion. Treat it like the data storage device it was.

          Your beefs with Google are misplaced; because they were trying to mess with what folders were used; and with trying to protect user privacy because applications were misusing storage to violate their user’s privacy.

    • ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      I’m conviced LG (do they even still make phones?) and Samsung removed the IR blaster so you connect their ACs, TVs and other shit to the internet

    • kazaika@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Bought a new phone and still find myself searching for the audio plug every time i pick up my headset…

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    3 months ago

    That Sony retailed for $1300 when it launched

    The iPhone goes for $800

    The 13 Pro which released around the same time also had USB 3.2g2 and 120hz display. The Pros are clearly a better comparison.

    That’s not to say Apple’s done good or anything, just a super expensive Android device vs the entry iPhone doesn’t seem like the best comparison

        • thethirdobject@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          op’s post was making the point that a lot of specs of the 2024 iphone 16 were already found on the 2021 sony xperia 1 III. I don’t really care about either, and you could use a lot of different 2021 android phones as a comparison. I don’t even think the comparison is entirely fair, but to ignore the fact that apple is clearly lagging behind android on certain aspects while hiding behind marketing is just misguided. Also, their phones are just overpriced because of price, and the innovation argument is getting old.

      • assassinatedbyCIA@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Buy a phone and keep it for as long as you can, and in general, just buy less phones. Don’t upgrade each year, that’s extremely stupid.

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            3 months ago

            Repairability is definitely a factor, but don’t forget considering how long a company will support software updates for the device, how the device meets your needs no only today but 5-6-7 years from now, and your options for repurposing the device once it reaches EoL.

          • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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            3 months ago

            That won’t solve the software side. My previous phone was still working, but then Google fucked up the software. The first because it required some new ssl standard for all connections that the phone didn’t support. The other one because google added a whole lot of local Infos, pictures and features to the map that could not be disabled, therefore rendering my Navi to a unresponsive, slow and battery draining app I could no longer use. And then there where some apps that would not run because my os was to old.

            • PotatoesFall@discuss.tchncs.de
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              3 months ago

              True! fairphones are at least okay-ish there too. They actively cooperate with devs that make open source android OSs. But yeah Google still has way too much power in the entire android ecosystem. Many banking apps don’t work without Google Wallet, which doesn’t run on degoogled OSs.

          • vga@sopuli.xyz
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            3 months ago

            My iPhone is repairable and supported until 2028. And because Apple is refusing to make more mid-size phones, I will be using this one until 2028 at minimum.

            • cm0002@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Lol “repairable” as long as it’s just the battery, can’t even change the screen without breaking functionality because “security” and you’re more likely to need to replace the screen than anything

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          3 months ago

          I will never understand if some people are rich or simply stupid to buy a new phone every year, especially iphones since there is almost to nothing in terms of upgrades to the hardware.

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            3 months ago

            With T-Mobiles JUMP program you can just turn on your phone and they wipe out the remaining EIP in exchange for the new EIP each year (and for awhile every 6 months). If the new phone is not more expensive then your bill doesn’t change at all, if the new phone is cheaper then the bill goes down. They refurbish and resell the turned in phones, which also means the catch is you have to keep the phone in good condition.

            I upgraded every year, then broke the tradition for my current longest streak of 2.5 years with the OnePlus 8T because no other phones excited me except for the Foldy phones, but at the time only the Samshit folds were available on TMO so I waited for the then rumored Pixel Fold. (OnePlus stopped selling in all Carrier stores in the US during this time, so noe OnePlus Open for me :( )

            I have resumed the tradition as I am awaiting my delivery of my Pixel 9 Pro Fold tomorrow lol

            It’s honestly been a fun journey that started with the Nexus One

            Then to the Motorola Backflip (Cool phone, miss it dearly)

            To one of the first phones with a fingerprint scanner (Motorola Atrix 4G, it was called a “gimmick that wouldn’t last” at the time LMAO)

            To the Nexus 4

            To one of the first waterproof phones in the US, my beloved Sony Xperia Z which then broke 6 months later (think I dropped it) which led to the Nexus 5

            To my first and LAST Samshit phone the Galaxy S5 (Which I hated and upgraded away from as soon as I could)

            To the Nexus 6 and then 6P when the “Phablet Wars” started,

            To the OnePlus 3T (one of the only phones I bought outright)

            To the second phone in the US to sport a “shatterproof” screen, the Moto Z2 Force (pretty fun phone, I tossed that thing around like crazy lol)

            To the OnePlus 6T (Iirc the first phone they started selling in carrier stores) which led to the 7T and then 8T which led to the “Great Waiting” of 2.5 years for Google to hurry the fuck up with their Pixel Fold

            To the Pixel Fold and now finally, the Pixel 9 Pro Fold

            Lots of firsts, and experimentation in that list, lots of memories, root experiments, custom kernels, over clocking, pushed most of those phones to their limits in the year I had them. Hell, I would have probably been among the first with a Foldy phone if it wasn’t for the fact the first foldys were Samshits…

      • vga@sopuli.xyz
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        3 months ago

        You seem to imply that to use a fairphone means using a phone you don’t like

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    Wow, to see an Xperia phone being used as an example instead of a bloody Samsung.

    Good day to be an Xperia user.

    • twoface@sh.itjust.works
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      Xperia is in my opinion the only phone left worth buying. It has all the bells and whistles you expect from a flagship phone + a headphone jack, SD card slot and very good camera.

      I love being able to manually do what ever I want in the camera app and having the camera button is just nice.

      Had the Xperia Z3 back in the day after my beloved Sony Ericson Xperia Play died. Loved both phones. Switched to Samsung for a few years and are now back to Sony (Xperia 1 IV) since 2023. Words can’t describe how happy I am being back. :D

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        I miss my Xepria Z from 2013 :( one of the first waterproof phones in the US and I loved the novelty of taking it into the shower LMAO

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        Dunno about other Androids, but just hitting the “power” (or wake or whatever it is) button 3 times on the Pixel pulls up the camera app. Even if the phone is currently locked. I think you can set it up so one of the physical buttons takes a photo as well but not 100% sure.

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          Yeah, the Sony phones do that as well. The special part of the camera button is that it acts like one on a proper camera. If you half press it (you can feel a slight change in resistance when you hit the spot) it engages the focus and then you can press it fully to take the picture.

          I was able to program the Bixby button on my Samsung S10+ to take pictures as well, but it lacks the half press feature.

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        I love Z3. I still mourn the loss of it to this day.

        However, I must admit that Xperia quality hasn’t been the greatest in the recent years, with the light lines issue plaguing the 5 series from mk II onwards, and now the 1 VI has similar issues too.

        • twoface@sh.itjust.works
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          What do you mean with “light lines issue”? I haven’t had any major problems with my Xperia so far. Sometimes it reboots after being on for a few months, but that’s about it.

  • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Someone should saw off the legs of the techbros that came up with the idea of removing the headphone jacks from phones. Just like the headphone jacks, legs are technologically “superseeded” by cars and electronic wheelchairs.

      • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        And then you can sell USB-C -> Jack converters (which break after a while - I’ve dismantled one for recycling for my Raspberry Pi, later I might make one epoxy potted for my phone), easy to lose wireless earbuds, etc.

        • filcuk@lemmy.zip
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          If the fucking usb c audio was at least consistent, but no, the dongles are different and the phones are different, good luck trying to not blow up ypur phone by buying the wrong accessory (I blame the spec, not that I’ve read it)

      • Alex@lemmy.world
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        They did it to improve water resistance and to sell the more expensive wireless earpods.

        • bountygiver [any]@lemmy.ml
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          which don’t really matter unless the difference allows your phones to survive a full cycle in a washing machine. So far many phones which removed the headphone jack still does not.

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      I wouldn’t mind if they replaced TRRS with a better connector. I get that the jack is a large part and it’s difficult to seal against water ingress. The wiper contacts on it are also unreliable, and the plug doesn’t release well when your cord snags.

      Multiplexing headphones with my one and only charging port is absolutely the worst possible answer.

      (Did i forget to mention that I want it to be an open connector? One that any vendor can make without Apple’s permission?)

      • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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        (Did i forget to mention that I want it to be an open connector? One that any vendor can make without Apple’s permission?)

        Apple ditched Lightning last year. All iPhones from the 15 forward are USB-C.

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      Meh, I haven’t really missed it as much as I expected. The one and only (pretty minor in my case) issue I’ve run into is not being able to charge the phone while connected to the car’s stereo. Though it wouldn’t surprise me if you could just use a usb-c splitter to do that.

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      I’ve literally never used the headphone jack on a phone in 10 years.
      And I wonder how many would still want it back if they realized the phones then were bricked after getting submerged in water like they used to.

      • Lileath@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        There are many phones with a headphone jack that have an IP68 rating which invalidates your whole point. If the headphone jack was so compromising then Apple would have needed to remove the charging port as well.

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          many phones with a headphone jack that have an IP68 rating which invalidates your whole point

          Typing on one right now.

        • InputZero@lemmy.ml
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          A sick and twisted part of me wants to see charging ports removed too. Every port! Make it IP69+ compliant. Maybe then the careless kids I know might keep a device alive for more than a year. Ultimately all that would do is barely solve one problem and introduce a whole lot of other problems.

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        Phones became waterproof before removing headphone jacks became a trend. You’re talking nonsense.

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        About 10 years ago I used headphones daily, now I do so just frequently enough that it’s irritating to realize I need to purchase a dongle just to do so and go “well I guess I’m not listening to music/podcasts right now”

        What I learned when working for a phone manufacturer is that the headphone jack usage varies by product segment. Cheaper phone users use the headphone jack far more frequently than premium phone users, so they’d keep it on the budget models but drop it on the higher end models. They also did similar with NFC and wireless charging which was interesting…

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        I’ve literally never used the headphone jack on a phone in 10 years

        We understood that as soon as you said “literally”.

        I’ve not used on*star, a fire extinguisher or a #2 pencil in a while either, but I bet they’re important. Beware false consensus.

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        I do. I don’t use wireless headphones, and the dongle sucks. And hate having earbuds with a proprietary jack I can’t use elsewhere. Plus I used my iPhone as a synth/drum machine and needed to charge and play at the same time.

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        Most people don’t use them and never did, all the people downvoting are just salty because they’re not the target audience.

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              Nope.

              if they realized the phones then were bricked after getting submerged in water like they used to.

              This is not subjective, it’s objectively false.

                • null@slrpnk.net
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                  So we agree, you were wrong about it “all being subjective opinion.”

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      Most people don’t care, don’t use it and it saves cost and thickness. I think they are smarter than you on this.

      You are not their target audience, they know there’s not enough of you for it to make a difference.

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        It saves an amount of money so minuscule it literally makes no difference.

        As for thickness, the iPhone 15 is 7.8 mm thick. You cannot in good faith believe that a 3.5 mm headphone jack can’t fit in it.

        • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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          Wouldn’t they have to sacrifice like three* minutes of battery life or something though? Everything packed sooo tightly.

          *or 10 or 30, somebody here probably can make a really good educated guess

          • Eiri@lemmy.ca
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            Depending on the internal design of the phone, maybe.

            But batteries are rectangular and they can’t put them EVERYWHERE. There are places (such as near the USB port) where you can’t really put battery no matter what because there have to be things that would interfere with the rectangular battery.

            So it might have an effect, but not necessarily, depending on design, and it might be smaller than you’d think.

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    3 months ago

    As a person who has worked in telecom for over 15 years…shhhhhhhhh…

    You like android better? Cool. You like IOS better? Cool. They do essentially the same thing in different ways with different pros and cons. What works best for one person may not be for someone else.

    In 2024 if you’re arguing on the internet (or perhaps worse, in real life) about which phone is better you need to take a step back, take a deep breath, and take an assessment of your priorities.

    Also, because I love downvotes apparently, this also applies to windows/linux/mac OS. Unless I’m on my Mac like “Gee I sure wish this was more open source, if only there was an alternative.” I don’t need you telling me to switch to linux bro.

    • Eyck_of_denesle@lemmy.zip
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      It’s a relevant topic to talk about. You wrote so much yet said nothing except I don’t like seeing people talk down to apple users. Which i agree with a little but people will talk about relevant things like smart phone choice whether you like it or not.

      Also have you tried switching to linux?

      • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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        It was more the fact that someone took the time to make a meme about it. Like, go outside. Also, perhaps, I’m a tad jaded since I remember this exact type of thing only it was Blackberry/Android/iPhone/Windows. It was more relevant back in the day when there were marked differences between the all the different mobile OS, but now it’s basically the same thing different ways.

        Also yes, I have several Linux computers that I mostly use as they are older machines so I drop linux on them for various projects or just to make the computer run better for web browsing and other simple tasks. I also have a Mac for making art and music. I primarily use my windows PC because I mostly game and work (using Microsoft 365) on it and that’s the easiest solution. I honestly don’t understand why everybody feels the need to bring up linux constantly around here. If you like linux that’s cool, if it’s relevant to the conversation, that’s cool. But if I’m on a windows related thread asking about a windows issue it is rather annoying for someone to jump in and be like “jUsT uSe LiNuX” every 3 seconds.

        In summation, if people get to complain about how other phone sucks I get to complain about how people complain about other phone sucking is bothersome to me.

        • Lizardking27@lemmy.world
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          “In summation, if people get to complain about how other phone sucks I get to complain about how people complain about other phone sucking is bothersome to me.”

          You know, you’re actually absolutely right. Keep up the good work!

    • selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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      What about the need to tell others how to and what to discuss in their free time with their social circle? Can I do that?

      • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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        • be me
        • browsing lemmy
        • see meme about how one phone bad other good
        • get PTSD from having to hear about it for 15 years
        • stupidly go into comments and read more people arguing about which phone good
        • have flashback
        • On the sales floor in 2010
        • A grown man is telling me I need to pull an iPhone 4 from my ass and sell it to him or he’ll burn my house down
        • snap back to reality (moms spaghetti)
        • comment saying everyone should just get over the whole phone thing
        • People argue more and tell me I should let people discuss things
        • flashback to when a grown woman cried and told me I ruined her life because they were out of the specific color of iPhone 5 she wanted while her boyfriend kept literally screaming at her that Android is better and she’s an idiot for getting an iPhone anyway.
        • make a stupid fake greentext comment to heal the pain

        ::rare pepe on the phone picture:::

      • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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        Fair point, but the implication is phone type A bad phone type B good. And both those devices are tied to a specific OS.

        • smb@lemmy.ml
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          the OS was not the comparison, but the hardware it runs on (just as @Freefall said) but also you seem to be wrong with your other assumption:

          And both those devices are tied to a specific OS.

          Which seems not to be the case as install instructions for another OS can be found here (i didn’t try it though) for the mentioned device:

          https://wiki.lineageos.org/devices/pdx215/

          lineage os still is an “android”, but another vendor with clearly different approach than the original firmware and what hinders you from writing bsd drivers and compiling a bsd kernel for it instead? So i count the Xperia 1 III as NOT bound to any OS or OS vendor.

          But despite the way longer possible support/security, freedom of choice and endless other possibilities that often come along with free OS choice, this pure and great advantages weren’t even mentioned there, thus it wasnt an OS comparison as it also wasn’t a bound-to-an-OS vs. absentness of vendor-lock-in-limitation-jungle comparison.

        • Freefall@lemmy.world
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          No implications, it is pointing out facts about hardware (where one is objectively worse). OS is not relevant and was not mentioned. Brand was mentioned because that was the topic.

    • Lizardking27@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      So do you whip out this copypasta anytime people try to have a fun discussion about something or?

    • Fades@lemmy.world
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      Absolutely, well put!! It’s honestly sad in my eyes

      I’ve given up especially when it comes to Linux vs Mac on the topic of open source. People will have such a violent reaction that they cannot possibly consider Apple as anything else but the literal antithesis of open source.

      if you think Apple has a place in open source, you’d be right, but you’ll also get attacked for it because Apple bad.

      Only a handful of months ago Apple released open source AI models that run on-device.

      It’s so obvious over many years that Apple has always gotten their hands dirty in the open source world going back to even before the birth of OSX, both with use and contributions, yet this is stomped out by the notion of expensive and elitist Apple could never and would never actually bother contributing to open source codebases

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        I’m glad someone, mostly, got my point. I’m not an Apple fanboy by any means. I’m a “use the right tool for the job you are trying to do” guy. For me, that means using a mac to make music and art, using linux on older machines and for specific purposes, and using windows to game and work. But by golly, people sure do get up in arms about it.

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      As “three dead trolls in a baggie” famously sung… “Every OS Sucks”.

      As true today as when it was first penned.

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      It used to be the same for Windows until microsoft recall. Putting windows in that category is now an outdated thing.

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        Bro you got me there. If I can’t fully disable that crap when it eventually comes out I’m going to have to figure something out. (I swear to God if someone tells me just to switch to linux without knowing my use case for windows, I might even downvote them maybe.)

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            Microsoft 365, two custom programs made specifically for the company at which I work and that only run on windows, and steam.

            And before someone jumps in and is like “You can do all that on linux!”, I don’t want to use the web portal for Microsoft 365 because it’s terrible(I mean, 365 is terrible in general but the web portal is worse), I won’t be able to convince my boss to spend like an extra $10K to allow the programs to work on Linux, and yeah steam works on linux but it can be a lot of work to get certain games to run.

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              Yeah being locked into an application sucks. I was lucky that the Proprietary CAD package we run had a linux version. Sadly Siemens decided linux share was low so dropped the GUI version of it, but left us cli version for batch processing work, so back to Windows to be on latest release.

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      Everyone I know in tech uses android. People that want capable handheld devices choose android. People that want a basic device that does what the company says and nothing else go Apple. Even I suggest Apple to old people and luddites, it protects itself from them. Oh, and people easily manipulated by social pressures (OMG I need the right colored text bubble!) will deeply overpay for a subpar device.

      • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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        See, this is what I’m talking about. Being so invested in the type of phone people have that calling people with a different phone “Luddites” seems a tad excessive.

        It is literally the equivalent of an iPhone user being like “Only poor people have android phones.”

        Also, for what it’s worth, I too work in tech and talk to probably hundreds of IT people monthly and the phone type split is pretty even. I only know because a lot of time we’re doing security for their endpoints and we need to know device types for that. But see, much like your evidence, that’s just anecdotal. Neither of us know anything.

        And my goodness, do I hate the whole colored text bubble thing, from both sides. iMessage is convenient because it gives you all the pros of a third party texting app without having to use a third party app. You’re correct that people get pretentious about it, and that’s ridiculous, but what’s easier? Convincing everyone you know to download signal or whatsapp or matrix or whatever or having that built into the text app. I mean, the whole thing is just a larger issue with SMS/MMS being garbage but still. Hopefully, with IOS 18 having RCS support, it will be less of an issue, but that remains to be seen.

        Anyway, as I’ve clearly not demonstrated by consistently replying to randos on the internet, don’t think about it. There are more important things to worry about in this world.

        • pewter@lemmy.world
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          what’s easier? Convincing everyone you know to download signal or whatsapp or matrix or whatever or having that built into the text app [convincing everyone to buy the same phone].

          FTFY

          When presented this way, the choice is very different.

          • PM_ME_SNEKS_IN_HATS@lemmy.world
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            You make a fair point here. The pressure to just buy an iPhone so you can use iMessage is frustrating and downloading a third party app is really easy (and possibly a better option than iMessage) but you gotta remember most people don’t think like that. Honestly, I use signal for most of my messaging but still need to use text for many of my family members because I’m not about to walk my Dad through downloading, setting up, and using a separate app just to text me.

            Also, yeah Apple could make iMessage available on Android but in the same vein Nintendo could make games for Playstation/xBox. They could, but why would they? People buy their hardware for the specific software that is offered. It’s frustrating but that’s part of their business model.

            The real solution is to replace SMS/MMS with a better solution, which RCS is attempting to do, but it’s sub par compared to anything else still, in my opinion.

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        That social pressure sure does a lot in the USA. In Austria for example iOS sits at 17.8% (July 2024) despite being a rich country.

        Since none of Apple’s native services are being used the only upside of Apple products is their out-of-the-box neatless communication (MacBook-iPhone) and not being able to do much (this is an upside for old people who want to have as little options as possible, like they did on their old flip telephones). Accordingly, iPhones are very popular among people who only ever use their phones for photos and communication, which is a small percentage (as the statistic shows).

        Most people simply care for what their phone can do (screen, camera, battery life, speed, customisability, software availability, bang-for-buck), for the camera it’s a tie (iPhones still win for videos, Android flagships win for photos) and in all other points Android wins, leading to its 70% market share.

        Source for market share by OS: https://de.statista.com/statistik/daten/studie/303829/umfrage/genutzte-mobile-betriebssysteme-in-oesterreich/

  • capital@lemmy.world
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    I would have shared the hell out of this meme on Facebook when I was ~18 years old.

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    Ah, but for only $200 more you can get USB 3.2, which is (…checks notes…) seven year old technology 😂 😭

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    3 months ago

    How does this belong in memes??? thete isn’t a single meme able thing in this image, it’s not funny or interesting either. It’s brain dead fanboy fullshit, as many in the comments have shown.

    Lame as fuck

  • Maxy@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 months ago

    Not to be an unfunny nitpicker (I don’t know why I’m denying this, that kinda the whole point), but all iphones do have lossless audio streaming via AirPlay. I’m assuming that you specifically meant Bluetooth streaming, but then you should’ve said so. Furthermore, normal aptx isn’t high resolution, only aptx HD and aptx adaptive are. The phone does support aptx HD as well, but once again, you could’ve said so from the start (though 3 characters more or less might make a significant difference to most memes, this one certainly wouldn’t have had that problem)

    • frostycakes@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      The absence of aptx is baffling though, given that macOS has supported it for a decade. Same with LDAC, since the encoder does not require license fees to implement.

  • bokherif@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    60 Hz in 2024 is crazy, aside from the fact that iPhones have been the same for the past 6 generations.

    • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      60 Hz in 2024 is crazy, aside from the fact that iPhones have been the same for the past 6 generations.

      iPhone Pro has been 120Hz for a while now. Also bigger base level storage and USB. If you want the fancy specs you get the fancier phone.

      • bokherif@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Just stating we shouldn’t have to pay over $1000 usd to get a 120hz display. This doesn’t justify it when you can buy phones with high refresh rate for $300

        • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          So buy the $300 phone! If the iPhone isn’t your cup of tea you don’t have to buy it. You’ll sacrifice some stuff to get the price point that low, but if they’re things you don’t want or need, awesome!

          That Xperia 1 iii pictured? $1300 new in 2021.

        • TheRealKuni@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          both 16 and 16 pro have 128 GB base storage

          I stand corrected.

          That said, if you up the price to match the pictured Xperia 1 iii ($1300 when new in 2021), the iPhone Pro (13 in 2021) will have 512GB (256GB for the Pro Max at $1200). Fancy price for a fancy phone.

          At the end of the day people should just buy whatever phone fits their needs and their wallets, and let others do the same. Android phones are great. iPhones are great. We’re living in the future and other than the dystopian tendencies, it’s pretty awesome.

    • BowtiesAreCool@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      What are y’all doing on your phones that 60hz isn’t enough. For the power user I guess but your average user. Makes no difference

      • bokherif@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I mean usage wise sure you still see the display either way. But high refresh rate is better for your eyes, especially when it’s a quality display with high PWM rate. There is a huge difference between an S24’s display and an iPhone 15’s. I can use the S24 without my eyes getting tired for hours, while my eyes get sore after viewing the iPhone for a while.