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16 votes
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Announcements from Google's 2019 "Made by Google" event
14 votes -
Rwanda's Mara X, Z are the first smartphones made fully in Africa
16 votes -
The iPhone and Apple’s services strategy
7 votes -
Kuo: Apple to debut Tile-like tracker next week, new iPhone design in 2020
7 votes -
Apple Change Causes Scramble Among Private Messaging App Makers
7 votes -
Fairphone updates its ethical smartphone for 2019
18 votes -
If you lose your iPhone, you can’t pay your Apple Card bill on the web
6 votes -
Huawei officially reveals Harmony OS, its first-party operating system
14 votes -
Budget smartphones - apparently there are good options. Opinions and recommendations?
I just picked up a Nokia 3.1 for $120 in a bit of an emergency and I really like it. It's very light, Android One, very nice styling and again it's $120! I was shocked by this experience at this...
I just picked up a Nokia 3.1 for $120 in a bit of an emergency and I really like it. It's very light, Android One, very nice styling and again it's $120!
I was shocked by this experience at this price point. This thing is excellent for my use case, as a pre-paid EU phone as my lovely iPhone 6s Plus has only one Sim slot. Are there any other great budget phones out there?
27 votes -
Apple in advanced talks to buy Intel’s smartphone-modem chip business
5 votes -
Diminishing differentiation: Are all our gadgets making each other redundant?
15 votes -
Google argues the Huawei ban would hurt its Android monopoly
6 votes -
What is the size of your smartphone?
This thread might seem weird, but I am considering buying a new smartphone and I have my eyes on the Moto g7 power (for its awesome battery!). Sadly, it is 6.2"! My current phone is 4.7". I have...
This thread might seem weird, but I am considering buying a new smartphone and I have my eyes on the Moto g7 power (for its awesome battery!). Sadly, it is 6.2"! My current phone is 4.7". I have small hands, 6.2" seems way too big.
If anyone has a 6.2" phone, how do you feel about it? Does it even fit in your pants?
12 votes -
An analysis of the ruling declaring Qualcomm a monopolist, showing their nearly twenty-year history of overcharging smartphone makers for cellular chips
12 votes -
Community can offer a cure to our technology addictions
5 votes -
Man cons Apple out of 1,493 iPhones
7 votes -
Any recommendations for a future-proof smartphone for a power user?
I'm gonna have to buy a new smartphone soon, but I want to be able to keep that as long as possible. From my viewpoint, there are mainly three aspects to that: performance, software and battery...
I'm gonna have to buy a new smartphone soon, but I want to be able to keep that as long as possible. From my viewpoint, there are mainly three aspects to that: performance, software and battery lifespan/replaceability.
Do you have any recommendations (what I was originally hoping for - but didn't find - is a mid to high range phone with a maintained lineageos build and a replaceable battery)? And what are your ways to handle the problem of the user experience on smartphones degrading so quickly?7 votes -
Apple is telling lawmakers people will hurt themselves if they try to fix iPhones
8 votes -
Meet your iPhone’s grandparent
6 votes -
Which smartphone and carrier are you using? (USA only)
For the past five or so years I've been using prepaid mvno carriers (in the us btw) and buying my own phone. It's somewhat of a frustrating experience trying to figure out which phones will...
For the past five or so years I've been using prepaid mvno carriers (in the us btw) and buying my own phone. It's somewhat of a frustrating experience trying to figure out which phones will actually work with which carrier. There's a lot of very attractivly priced phones from Chinese companies that unfortunately just don't support the u.s. LTE bands that i need. Im not really the kind of person who wants to buy a $600+ flagship and carrier offerings are generally abysmal and overpriced.
I also don't feel like I have very many options for carriers as I Live in a fairly rural area where t-mobile gets fairly spotty coverage. I have seen compelling options for Verizon if I wanted 4+ lines (it's only me and the wife right now, so that doesn't help us much) .
I'm definitely jealous of people in Europe and parts of Asia when it comes to cellphone and internet options.16 votes -
Don’t buy a 5G smartphone—at least, not for a while
20 votes -
Survey: 83% of US teens have an iPhone, Android 9%
30 votes -
Apple and Qualcomm settle all disputes worldwide
11 votes -
What do you think will be the next big innovation to smart phones?
Recently, the ability to fold has came along, what do you think the next big innovation will be?
30 votes -
F(x)tec Pro 1 – A slider phone for QWERTY keyboard lovers?
10 votes -
Right to repair legislation is officially being considered in Canada
15 votes -
Why aren't smartphones like PCs where you have choice over your OS and get updates directly from OS vendor?
I can install Linux or Windows or even BSD on my laptop without much hassle, and get the updates directly from the OS vendors. This isn't the case for smartphones. You don't have choice over your...
I can install Linux or Windows or even BSD on my laptop without much hassle, and get the updates directly from the OS vendors.
This isn't the case for smartphones. You don't have choice over your OS. You don't even get android updates directly from Google, and have to wait for device manufacturers to release the updates. Why is it so?
32 votes -
How all-knowing smartphones could become the Pentagon’s employee access cards
9 votes -
Major iPhone FaceTime bug lets you hear the audio of the person you are calling before they pick up
25 votes -
A tiny screw shows why iPhones won’t be ‘assembled in USA’
15 votes -
Reviews of the Royole FlexPai - the first foldable smartphone/tablet
Victory, Royole: The FlexPai is the first folding phone we've seen The foldable Royole FlexPai has a way to go World's first foldable smartphone is glorious, and a hot mess
10 votes -
Global smartphone shipments will rebound in 2019: IDC
3 votes -
Your ideal smartphone in 2019?
As evidenced by recent topics, most people are unhappy with the direction the smartphone industry has taken in recent years. As more unnecessary features and sacrifices are made with each passing...
As evidenced by recent topics, most people are unhappy with the direction the smartphone industry has taken in recent years. As more unnecessary features and sacrifices are made with each passing generation of handsets, what components are essential in your ideal smartphone? Create one in the comments.
Here is mine, in no particular order:
- Optimized Stock Android
- Gesture-based navigation (think iPhone X)
- Removable matte black plastic back
- 2:1 Aspect ratio, 5.6" diagonal AMOLED display
- Dual front-facing speakers in top and bottom bezel
- Dual front facing cameras (Wide Angle and Standard)
- Bezel-less sides
- Dual back cameras, with OIS (Wide Angle and Standard)
- USB-C
- 3700 mAh removable battery with Fast Charging+Qi
- Snapdragon 855
- Apple-esque Face Unlock
- ~$750 price tag
28 votes -
We're no longer in smartphone plateau. We're in the smartphone decline
30 votes -
China ruling could ban some Apple iPhones sales amid Qualcomm fight (affects 6S through X)
7 votes -
Alcatel 1X - A $99 phone that’s actually usable
6 votes -
Tech Talk: What's the make & model of your current phone? What do you like about it? Dislike? What phones have you owned in the past?
Following on from the Tildes 0.5 year survey in which 72% of users stated they used an Android device, and 24% used an iOS device, I thought it'd be fun to ask people in a longform manner to talk...
Following on from the Tildes 0.5 year survey in which 72% of users stated they used an Android device, and 24% used an iOS device, I thought it'd be fun to ask people in a longform manner to talk about their current phone, and their dislikes & likes about it. What has your upgrade history been like?
I'm currently utilising an iPhone XS (no "Max") in 256GB. This is my first phone upgrade where I've felt like the changes are a step sideways rather than forwards from what I've previously experienced. The minimal bezels are very nice, and once you understand how the iOS experience fits into the overall vision for Apple's phone lineup, the notch becomes an immediately obvious choice—a design compromise for the time being until we can place the sensor array under the display.
Face ID is acceptable. It fails a bit more often than Touch ID ever did, but it fails in different situations, and also works better in others. For a first generation iteration it's acceptable; if it can get more diverse with time and work better in extreme sunlight and at wider angles, it'll become definitively better than a fingerprint scanner.
I talked a bit about the OLED display in the XS in this comment here, where I can distinguish the pentile crosshatching pattern, and again, I feel that the OLED is a case of better in some situations, worse in others. The inky blacks are fantastic, but the dark ghosting is a compromise I'm less happy with. Apple's IPS LCD panels are so good, they had a high bar to meet here.
The camera is again truly fantastic; not enough to ever make me consider selling my Sony mirrorless, but the computational photography aspects makes taking challenging photos more of a breeze than ever before.
Finally, after living with a plus-sized phone for the past 4 years, a step back to a smaller form factor with a similar sized screen is a breath of fresh air—I can finally tie my shoelaces up with my phone in my jean pockets again.
The watch & AirPods & continuity integrations will keep me happy in the Apple ecosystem for a while yet, but I'd need to see a very compelling new feature of aspect to a future phone to upgrade in the next 2 years at this point. Phones are lasting longer than ever before, as they should, and Apple knows this.
Previously I've owned
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iPhone 7 Plus, Jet Black 256GB. The Jet Black finish coupled with the weightier frame & thicker body definitely resulted in this feeling like the most polished iPhone 6-style design to date. Runner up for my favourite phone. Further more the P3-gamut display significantly improved image quality. I wasn't happy enough with the iPhone X to consider an upgrade.
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iPhone 6 Plus, Silver 128GB. Might be my least favourite phone of all time? Too thin, slippery, suffered from bendgate; and had display issues which gave it a bad rap. Touch ID was cool; however.
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iPhone 4, Black. Might be my favourite phone of all time, purely from a design standpoint? Utilising the steel frame around the edge of the phone as an antenna was completely unheard of back then and truly a fantastic design innovation. The sandwiched glass profile was both a fingerprint magnet and truly gorgeous; and the Retina display was breathtaking. I'd love to see a return to this design profile.
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iPhone 3G. My first phone. I distinctly remember jailbreaking this device to change the cellular provider name in the top left corner & enable some extremely low quality video recording; this was also the good old days of fantastic games like Tap Tap Revenge.
How about you?
35 votes -
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A dark consensus about screens and kids begins to emerge in Silicon Valley
26 votes -
China suggests Trump 'can use Huawei' after iPhone tapping report
9 votes -
Palm is back (sort of), and it built a tiny smartphone sidekick
9 votes -
How the humble pocket calculator morphed into the smartphone
10 votes -
OPPO Find X review: Are phones only about Style now? - LinusTechTips
9 votes -
iPhone iOS passcode bypass hack exposes contacts, photos
8 votes -
The real reason Google made Android
13 votes -
iPhone Xs max durability test
3 votes -
Was ditching the headphone jack a good idea?
41 votes -
The iPhone franchise
4 votes -
Progress update from the Librem 5 hardware department
15 votes -
The "Chatty" messaging app for Librem 5 (Linux phone) with SMS and XMPP support
16 votes