this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2023
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Other than your carrier give it for free or cheap, I don't really see the reason why should you buy new phone. I've been using Redmi Note 9 for past 3 years and recently got my had on Poco F5. I don't see the point of my 'upgrade'. I sold it and come back to my Note 9. Gaming? Most of them are p2w or microtransaction garbage or just gimped version of its PC/Console counterpart. I mean, $400 still get you PS4, TV and Switch if you don't mind buying used. At least here where I live. Storage? Dude, newer phone wont even let you have SD Card. Features? Well, all I see is newer phones take more features than it adds. Headphone jack, more ads, and repairability are to name a few. Battery? Just replace them. However, my Note 9 still get through day with one 80% charge in the dawn. Which takes 1 hour.

I am genuinely curious why newer phone always selling like hot cakes. Since there's virtually no difference between 4gb of RAM and 12gb of RAM, or 12mp camera and 100mp camera on phone.

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[โ€“] Metallibus@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Foldables are the only interesting thing to have happened to smartphones in the past like 6-8 years. It's kind of sad.

[โ€“] xthexder@l.sw0.com 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

While the tech is cool, I don't see folding screens as an improvement, at least for me. Sure, a larger screen would be nice, but I already carry a laptop that's WAY more capable than any phone.
All the folding phones are more expensive, less durable, worse battery life, and the software still isn't 100% even 4 generations in.

If I actually cared about having a bigger screen on my phone, I could just buy a normal phone + a tablet for the same price as a foldable.

[โ€“] Hexarei@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

As an avid user of a foldable, the main points for me are around the convenience and flexibility. I mean, it is literally a bigger screen, but carried around in my pocket. At all times. I don't need to juggle account information and managing battery and storing/swapping between two devices if I want a screen that's bigger than a usual phone for playing games on (RCT Classic, Baldur's Gate, Bloons, Arknights, Crashlands, RuneScape... Lots of great games benefit from the better precision of playing on a bigger screen).

It's great for reading manga, reading PDFs, watching videos, running two apps side by side (ticket on one side, team chat on the other), each with the normal screen real estate if a whole phone!

I adore the ability to pull out my phone and use it one handed like a normal phone, but then instantly switch to a much bigger, more comfortable canvas running the exact same instance of an app the moment I need to do something more involved than typing a few sentences or scrolling on Lemmy. If I realize I want to type with two hands, it's so much faster and more comfortable on the inner screen thanks to the split keyboard.

Then it's on top of all of that that with a flip out kickstand case on it I can carry around a pocket folding keyboard+trackpad in the other pocket and a decent pair of earbuds and then if I'm out and about I can comfortably use it like a mini laptop, writing code with Neovim via Termux or writing things down in my Obsidian vault, or even just chatting - All without it feeling like I'm squinting at a tiny phone screen.

To be fair ... That could just be the autism though.

[โ€“] xthexder@l.sw0.com 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I think you've convinced me it makes sense for the right person. Especially if it's the only device you carry around.

I don't game on my phone apart from some really simple ones like Minesweeper and Flow Free. Everything else I do is just reading, which I have no problem doing on my Galaxy S10's screen. I never even considered that something like RCT or RuneScape could run on a phone now. All my serious gaming happens on a desktop or my Steam Deck.