Technology Android

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
The charger itself is going to be smaller/cooler, but it will have no impact on the way the device is charged. The way phone heats up or not is entirely on the phone's side.



The OnePlusZ looks like a low-end OnePlus phone. Xiaomi announced the Mi Note 10 today which will likely be the best mid-ranger, as it looks great and its predecessors were the best selling mid-rangers (globally).

As for displays, a high refresh rate doesn't cost anything on LCD or OLED and is easy to implement. Display manufacturer's BOM might be an extra $2 or so for a faster controller and that's pretty much all that is needed.
There are only two reasons why high refresh rate screens are still not the default:
1. It taxes other hardware and is still impractical on battery-powered devices - the smaller the device is the worse of an idea it is as the smaller battery has to withstand a larger portion of the significantly increased GPU/CPU demand.
2. It requires a fast interface between the GPU and the screen. One of the reasons 4K monitors are 60hz is just because a higher refresh rate at that resolutions requires HDMI 2.1 or DisplayPort 1.4 which are new, fairly rare, and more expensive. Devices like laptops and phones also have such interfaces which are typically much slower to save costs and energy.
So for GaN chargers, it's really more about the size of the charger and that's it? So it'd be something for someone with a crowded outlet or surge protector, or someone who travels a lot?


Good to know on the screen refresh tech. I thought it would be a bit more complicated than just a part having a few dollars premium. But I get the part about battery consumption and have read about the effects of high refresh rates on that. I think it was the Razer phone from a year or two ago that had one at 90 or 120? And it was the highlight of the phone but after seeing the S20's issues, it looks like OnePlus's 90 hz is good enough for anyone wanting to go beyond 60.


About the SE, Tim Cook just came out and said what most of us knew about the SE's goal: https://9to5mac.com/2020/04/30/tim-cook-iphone-se-android-switchers/

One more video you'll definitely like is this Indian tech reviewer talking about fanboyism ruining brands in the long run. He doesn't mention Samsung but he does mention two brands you're still more familiar with than I am with Sony and Xiaomi and could still probably be applied to Samsung, as well as any other brand:
 

THEV1LL4N

Well-Known Member
The charger itself is going to be smaller/cooler, but it will have no impact on the way the device is charged. The way phone heats up or not is entirely on the phone's side.



The OnePlusZ looks like a low-end OnePlus phone. Xiaomi announced the Mi Note 10 today which will likely be the best mid-ranger, as it looks great and its predecessors were the best selling mid-rangers (globally).

As for displays, a high refresh rate doesn't cost anything on LCD or OLED and is easy to implement. Display manufacturer's BOM might be an extra $2 or so for a faster controller and that's pretty much all that is needed.
There are only two reasons why high refresh rate screens are still not the default:
1. It taxes other hardware and is still impractical on battery-powered devices - the smaller the device is the worse of an idea it is as the smaller battery has to withstand a larger portion of the significantly increased GPU/CPU demand.
2. It requires a fast interface between the GPU and the screen. One of the reasons 4K monitors are 60hz is just because a higher refresh rate at that resolutions requires HDMI 2.1 or DisplayPort 1.4 which are new, fairly rare, and more expensive. Devices like laptops and phones also have such interfaces which are typically much slower to save costs and energy.
That would be the Mi Note 10 Lite (the Mi Note 10 was launched about 6 months ago). The Redmi devices also do really well and it looks like they've launched another good range of phones.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-rdna-exynos-samsung-soc-smartphone-graphics

Watching AMD tech compete with itself in the mobile GPU space is amusing at this point. This is literally "AMD teams up with Samsung to compete with old AMD chips and actual AMD chips. Breaking news: it now outperforms ex-AMD chips".

At this point Apple is the only major maker potentially not using AMD tech in their phones, even though they are using exclusively AMD tech in laptops and desktops. And that's assuming the so far unconfirmed but most likely rumor that Apple licenses their mobile GPU from AMD is not true (who else would make them though?). Technically ARM's Mali and Intel's Atom aren't AMD-based, but nobody uses these anymore.
 
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dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-rdna-exynos-samsung-soc-smartphone-graphics

Watching AMD tech compete with itself in the mobile GPU space is amusing at this point. This is literally "AMD teams up with Samsung to compete with old AMD chips and actual AMD chips. Breaking news: it now outperforms ex-AMD chips".

At this point Apple is the only major maker potentially not using AMD tech in their phones, even though they are using exclusively AMD tech in laptops and desktops. And that's assuming the so far unconfirmed but most likely rumor that Apple licenses their mobile GPU from AMD is not true (who else would make them though?). Technically ARM's Mali and Intel's Atom aren't AMD-based, but nobody uses these anymore.

Does Apple need to, though? I thought even the GPU in the iPhone 11 was beating out many flagships.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/14892/the-apple-iphone-11-pro-and-max-review/6

Does it use Apple's own GPU? I don't know the anatomy of chipsets so this was news to me

Any thoughts on the new Pixel Buds released about a week ago? I don't know what makes them worthy of being priced higher than the Galaxy Buds, although they do look nice. I remember when the AirPods were announced, it was mocked endlessly about looking like you had bent Q-tips in your ear and people started taking pictures of Q-tips in their ears "for the luls." But now the design of the AirPods is accepted and a lot of the new wireless bud designs follow that same design; those comma-shaped buds. And then there's the "plug" design of the Galaxy Buds and a few other models. It's funny how many things get mocked or dismissed at first but then people either slowly realize and appreciate it or it just doesn't become a big deal anymore.

Sort of like the whole headphone jack-removal fiasco for the iPhone 7 (I think) and how many people, especially audiophiles, were worried about going wireless. It was such a big deal but now it's only a topic of discussion among Android users hoping flagship phones don't remove the jack. Which most of them have done and I think the Pixel lineup was one of the first to go down that path and Samsung being one of the last ones with the Note 10. Now, I really don't see anyone wearing wired headphones at all. I know the high fidelity stuff is still in wired headphones but I think the group of people walking around with $1000 headphones and DACs and all those other accessories was low to begin with. At home? Yeah, I bet that portion of users has still stayed the same, or increased, but on the go? I think people are just happy with the convenience over sound quality, or were just oblivious or didn't care to begin with. Whether its the AirPods (easily the most popular ones I personally come across) or Galaxy Buds that many new Galaxy users own because of the pre-order giveaway, I think that push to go wireless ruffled some feathers but mostly strong-armed the industry to start going wireless and improving on the tech there.

I try my 1More Triples once in a while but I still prefer the convenience of the Level U Pros for "rough use" and the WH1000s for watching a movie or something. And my mom was the last person in our house to still use wired headphones in our house and was worried about the ease of use of wireless buds when working out but even she got on board with the Jabra 65t.
 
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dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
https://9to5google.com/2020/05/05/rumor-android-tv-google-tv/

How competitive is Android TV, in terms of adoption and usage rate, compared to Apple TV and Roku? Whether it comes integrated in to a Smart TV or as a separate streaming device, is there any Android TV device that holds a candle to the Roku or Apple TV?

One big criticism I've read about TVs with Android TV built-in is that after a year or two, it stops getting updates and Android TV apps are no longer compatible with the older versions. I think this is an issue brought up frequently in discussions of Sony's TVs, which have Android TV built-in.

On the other hand, something like TCL has Roku built-in and people rave about the OS and then also praise how the OS doesn't become so outdated that apps stop working due to being on an older OS.

Apple TV, I don't think, has ever had a problem with that; you just have to buy the expensive-ass set-top box device, but typically see similar support as other Apple devices for future updates.

Why rebrand it? Just kill it because Android TV is usually an afterthought when people are looking for streaming devices, similar to Android's perception in the tablet market, where Amazon, Apple, and Roku devices are deemed as much better.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
https://www.tomshardware.com/news/amd-rdna-exynos-samsung-soc-smartphone-graphics

Watching AMD tech compete with itself in the mobile GPU space is amusing at this point. This is literally "AMD teams up with Samsung to compete with old AMD chips and actual AMD chips. Breaking news: it now outperforms ex-AMD chips".

At this point Apple is the only major maker potentially not using AMD tech in their phones, even though they are using exclusively AMD tech in laptops and desktops. And that's assuming the so far unconfirmed but most likely rumor that Apple licenses their mobile GPU from AMD is not true (who else would make them though?). Technically ARM's Mali and Intel's Atom aren't AMD-based, but nobody uses these anymore.
Also, what do you think of the updated 13" MacBook Pros? They brought the new, Magic Keyboard design to it, so hopefully the BF keyboard issues are gone. But there was some discussion of the value of the Ice Lake processors in them. Not many die-hard Apple fans in the discussion were mentioning it directly, but they were dancing around the fact that Intel was so far behind and that Windows machines were reaping the benefits of Ryzen CPUs. This was all in relation to people deciding whether to upgrade their current machines because these new keyboards were fixing the issues of the past.

I wonder if many people continue to hold out on upgrading until Apple releases their ARM MacBooks in the next year or two, instead of upgrading solely for a better keyboard but for CPUs that are still not close to their Ryzen alternatives in performance.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
Does Apple need to, though? I thought even the GPU in the iPhone 11 was beating out many flagships.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/14892/the-apple-iphone-11-pro-and-max-review/6

Does it use Apple's own GPU? I don't know the anatomy of chipsets so this was news to me
Apple is sort of a separate thing as you can't just buy their chipset as an OEM, and their chips are just *way* ahead of everyone else at the moment. With CPUs it's so bad that an Android phone with a Qualcomm chip you buy two years from now will maybe be competitive with last year's iPhone. Let's be real, Apple's core is some 50% faster, and while benchmarks test multi-core score, the real world user experience is largely based on the main core's performance. If you browse the web, scroll through the UI or play with apps, iPhones will be up to 50% faster than today's flagship Androids. I'm surprised that flagship Android makers have the audacity to charge more for their phones this year and definitely is a large part of why I'm so disappointed with Samsung this year. You're getting a far inferior phone for more money, and one that won't be supported two years from now. Part of Android's magic was definitely the value, and now you're getting a worse value with Android than you do with iPhones.

For GPUs, Qualcomm and stock ARM aren't as far behind, but there is speculation that Apple uses AMD's GPU license to make their GPUs though. They are definitely using someone's GPU tech behind the scenes as a base for their GPUs, and AMD was the prime suspect. The new AMD GPU that Samsung is testing is faster than all existing mobile GPUs, including Apple's.

Any thoughts on the new Pixel Buds released about a week ago? I don't know what makes them worthy of being priced higher than the Galaxy Buds, although they do look nice. I remember when the AirPods were announced, it was mocked endlessly about looking like you had bent Q-tips in your ear and people started taking pictures of Q-tips in their ears "for the luls." But now the design of the AirPods is accepted and a lot of the new wireless bud designs follow that same design; those comma-shaped buds. And then there's the "plug" design of the Galaxy Buds and a few other models. It's funny how many things get mocked or dismissed at first but then people either slowly realize and appreciate it or it just doesn't become a big deal anymore.
Idk, I personally still think that Airpods look stupid. They've been a meme for years and I don't think that design actually became less ridiculous or grew on anyone - I think we're just more used to seeing them.

I love the Galaxy Buds. The sound quality on wireless headphones is still average at best, but the Buds sound nice and just work so well.

You think this is going to be something worth tuning in to?

https://developer.android.com/android11

$10 says there won't be a new feature that sets the internet ablaze with excitement.
I have a tiny glimmer of hope, but the last time I was excited about anything in a new Android version was now over five years ago. The last feature that was worth much imho was Doze, and that one came in 2016.

As a side note, I don't remember ever being as critical about Android as I am now. I just realized that over the last year-ish I've been growing more and more disappointed with Android and its OEMs. I've recognized that the level of innovation has been dropping ever since 2015-2016, but this year I feel like they are hitting rock bottom. They really need to shake things up a lot to be interesting again in my view.

On the other hand, something like TCL has Roku built-in and people rave about the OS and then also praise how the OS doesn't become so outdated that apps stop working due to being on an older OS.
Ok, this is going to be just my personal opinion again, but I think Roku is so far ahead of everyone else I'm not sure why would anyone need a different platform. Roku is either built in or comes as a $20-50 add on. So far the shortest a device has been supported with always getting newest updates was 7 years for the first generation players - all others are still supported. You get all streaming apps and the experience is just far simpler, smoother and reliable than with any other platforms I've tried, and there's no bloat or annoying ads. I personally really don't like Android TV - I think it's just incomparable to Roku in terms of user experience, performance, support, and value.

I personally haven't had a chance to try Apple TV, but I can't imagine getting a $200 set-top box to have a similar experience at best to what Roku delivers built-in or in form of a tiny $30 streaming stick unless Apple caught you in their ecosystem and you're paying the price of it to also have it on your TV.

Imho Roku just does everything perfectly and I can't imagine anything that could be done better as a Smart TV platform. Oh and to answer your question about market share, or usage to be more specific (as of last year):

 
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dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
Apple is sort of a separate thing as you can't just buy their chipset as an OEM, and their chips are just *way* ahead of everyone else at the moment. With CPUs it's so bad that an Android phone with a Qualcomm chip you buy two years from now will maybe be competitive with last year's iPhone.

I don't know how to quote certain pieces of a post, so I'll do my usual log-ass post addressing everything


It's pretty incredible how far ahead Apple is in terms of hardware compared to the rest. The more you explain what's going on in the industry to me, the more it's surprising this isn't a bigger issue, especially on Android forums. While I understand hardware or software alone isn't everything, it makes non-Apple news about a new model of hardware silly to read as they rave about its performance when another OEMs like Apple is so far ahead but just on a different OS/platform. We hear so much about Apple's walled-garden in reference to their ecosystem and services (FaceTime, iMessage, the App Store) but I don't think many people think about the hardware implications of that, either. Sure, not every component is built by Apple, like rumors of the AMD-built GPUs they may or may not have been using, but the final product is an Ax chip that is only available in their iOS devices and not sent to anyone else. So while this walled-garden approach may irritate anti-Apple users and even Apple's own users at times, there are clearly some benefits to it with superior hardware being one of them. Also, on the software side, Apple having its hand in every dev's money jar and ensuring that apps are developed up to spec for all iOS devices is probably a big reason why apps get updated first on iOS and why they look and perform better, too.

You're right about the Android pricing scheme and it's been a complaint by many people for the past several years. 2015 or so. When did the Nexus 6p come out? If I remember correctly, it was the Nexus device that saw the big price jump from the Nexus 4 or 6. Maybe it was the 6? One of them had a big jump in price that deviated so far from the original Nexus lineup pricing that people started to question whether Google was trying to do what Apple was doing, which was the pricing climbing closer and closer to $1000. Today, we're already there and people bat their eyes a few times and still pay $1000 for either an iPhone or some Android OEM's flagship. Samsung, namely. With what you've explained to me, I can understand Apple fanboys BSing themselves and citing the superior hardware as the reason to pay the premium. But with the iOS flagship as the standard to compare everything else to, I don't see how one can roll over and pay the same, or more, as an iPhone and still be happy with the BS that Qualcomm pulls with its chips (that 5G radio always being on). Even an $800 Android device is a lot, but we've long since accepted anything over $500 as "OK." But if the gains are so minimal year over year and so far behind the competition in Apple, it really is a shame people cheer at a new flagship announcement or a new chip announcement while knowing the competition's hardware is head and shoulders above what they're getting now.

I think it's good to be critical of whatever we're fans of. I'm fortunate to be a part of both Apple's and Google's/Android's ecosystem and have several devices to use them on. Apple and iOS aren't perfect but boy do they do some things better than Windows and Android OEMs. I don't think I'd enjoy iOS on my phone, namely because of the sideloading of apps that I do. But I also don't think Android would be good on a tablet, although I haven't used a modern Android tablet in some time. Maybe the Galaxy Tab S3 or S4? Was there ever a Note Tab, that was bigger and had the S Pen? Whatever the flagship was in the Winter of 2013 lol. I tried it out at Best Buy and while it was neat, I would take an iPad any day. But back to about being critical, I linked to a video about two weeks ago by Geeky Ranjit and he emphasized how OEMs fall complacent because they hide behind their fanboys who try to do the PR damage control for them when they mess up. He specifically mentioned Xiaomi and their bad advertising practices within the OS, but he extended it to Sony and some other OEMs that are more popular internationally and that I'm not familiar with. But he was exactly right about what happens when OEMs lose their place in a market and I think you make the points for what Samsung is doing and what could possibly happen to them. Two or three years from now, the Galaxy S-whatever may not have the shine and prestige it has today. The S20 seems to have put a dent in the reputation and who knows what the Note 20 brings? We might see someone new or another OEM rise up from the ashes and reinvent themselves. lol Microsoft could expand in to mobile hardware, who knows?


About the headphones/AirPods, yeah I meant we got used to the look of having them in our ears. We still might think it looks silly but the memes have died down and their usage is more and more commonplace. I think something leaked today about Apple making over-ear headphones with the AirPods moniker. Sort of the Beats Studio Pros, I think, but probably still aiming at the professional crowd, whereas Beats are still more of a fashion trend promoted by celebs. It'll be interesting to see how they compare to the Bose and Sony ANC headphones, especially since these are rumored to be priced $50 cheaper.

And I know your feelings on the Roku. You explained it to me a few months back when discussion TVs and TCL's usage of Roku and how great it is. My dad is still looking at a TV but I'm going to have to sway him away from looking at OLEDs. After really paying attention to what he watches, it's a good bit of static images from the news and then some live Indian comedy shows. It may not be too big of a risk for burn-in, but he also doesn't need the true blacks of OLED to enjoy those lol. I've been seeing some of the 85? 88? inch Sony flagship TVs go for about $3K on sale and I bet the pricing changes after the Summer when this corona shit is done and supply starts to increase. I think he'd appreciate like 90% of OLED quality but a bigger screen and no risk of burn-in for less than an 80+" OLED TV. Plus, I hear Sony's processing on both OLEDs and regular LED TVs is the best out there. You just pay a big premium over LG's OLEDs and other OEMS for LEDs. I looked in the TCL 8 series but a deal site I visit said people complained about smushed blacks and some other stuff on TCL 8s. They all have a hard on for the Samsung QLEDs, I think the Q80? 90?
 

THEV1LL4N

Well-Known Member
As a side note, I don't remember ever being as critical about Android as I am now. I just realized that over the last year-ish I've been growing more and more disappointed with Android and its OEMs. I've recognized that the level of innovation has been dropping ever since 2015-2016, but this year I feel like they are hitting rock bottom. They really need to shake things up a lot to be interesting again in my view.
I think the innovation will happen at the mid-range level. It should have always been the way where mid-range phones demonstrate good value where price meets performance and where flagships actually bring something groundbreaking and worth paying the premium for. I have been thinking this for a while, and found this video earlier in the week that fits with my view and pretty much hits the nail on the head.

 

THEV1LL4N

Well-Known Member
Any thoughts on the new Pixel Buds released about a week ago? I don't know what makes them worthy of being priced higher than the Galaxy Buds, although they do look nice. I remember when the AirPods were announced, it was mocked endlessly about looking like you had bent Q-tips in your ear and people started taking pictures of Q-tips in their ears "for the luls." But now the design of the AirPods is accepted and a lot of the new wireless bud designs follow that same design; those comma-shaped buds. And then there's the "plug" design of the Galaxy Buds and a few other models. It's funny how many things get mocked or dismissed at first but then people either slowly realize and appreciate it or it just doesn't become a big deal anymore.
I actually think the Pixel Buds offer a really complete product minus ANC and not having the best battery life. If I had to pick wireless earbuds, these would be up there. But there are much cheaper alternatives such as ones from Xiaomi, Honor and a few other brands but perhaps with more compromises. The Pixel buds are very well designed product with ergonomics, sound and functionality kept in mind. They don't hang out of your ear like many others do and look really nice too compared with other designs that just look silly. I definitely prefer the 'bud' design than the 'pod' design (or 'glob' as Dilla mentioned earlier). The only way I would go for something that sticks out more is if they were audio specialist ones like Sony or Sennheiser with a significant difference in battery life that justify a larger design.

Did anyone ever like clip designs that go around your ear? My current Sennheiser sports earphones have those and I do like them but they feel slightly uncomfortable after a couple of hours use. I hate having to push them into my ears constantly when I'm running as they slip out of the earhole (the silicone sizes are either small or big for me).
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
I've been hearing the SE has been having some complaints about poor battery life. Well, Unbox Therapy said there were complaints but I trust him enough to believe one people are finding issue with it. I guess thats one more thing to add to the listmof tradeoffs with the SE. It makes sense that it has a smaller battery than the larger form factor phones it's internals used to be in but you'd also think Apple would compensate somehow before releasing the phone like that. Maybe a software update fixed it but I also haven't read any headlines bemoaning it.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
I've been hearing the SE has been having some complaints about poor battery life. Well, Unbox Therapy said there were complaints but I trust him enough to believe one people are finding issue with it. I guess thats one more thing to add to the listmof tradeoffs with the SE. It makes sense that it has a smaller battery than the larger form factor phones it's internals used to be in but you'd also think Apple would compensate somehow before releasing the phone like that. Maybe a software update fixed it but I also haven't read any headlines bemoaning it.
Well, so far in most tests it lasts just a bit longer than the iPhone 8 with the same battery and a significantly faster processor. It's just behind current flagships, which is more than understandable - it's a tiny phone with a battery that's almost half the size of the one found in the iPhone 11. While the battery life result might not be great, it is impressive considering what they worked with, and just fine if you were fine with iPhone battery lives before they went with larger designs.
 
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dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
Well, so far in most tests it lasts just a bit longer than the iPhone 8 with the same battery and a significantly faster processor. It's just behind current flagships, which is more than understandable - it's a tiny phone with a battery that's almost half the size of the one found in the iPhone 11. While the battery life result might not be great, it is impressive considering what they worked with, and just fine if you were fine with iPhone battery lives before they went with larger designs.

I'll have to look up those numbers, then. I got a different impression, albeit from just one YTer that mentioned it. UT was comparing the SE to the mid range Galaxy line, which I think is the Galaxy A, or something like that. But I can't remember if his comments specifically mentioned which device the SE was "poor" against in battery life. I think it was just a comment in general, which probably meant it was in relation to what iPhone users were expecting relative to the current flagship iPhone.
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
I'll have to look up those numbers, then. I got a different impression, albeit from just one YTer that mentioned it. UT was comparing the SE to the mid range Galaxy line, which I think is the Galaxy A, or something like that. But I can't remember if his comments specifically mentioned which device the SE was "poor" against in battery life. I think it was just a comment in general, which probably meant it was in relation to what iPhone users were expecting relative to the current flagship iPhone.
The mid range Galaxy A phones have a battery that's almost three times the size, and their battery lives are great. So are the newest iPhones with batteries twice the size. I think people forgot the battery lives of sub 5 inch devices. The SE is tiny, and despite the A13 delivering crazy performance it still lasts at least as long as the iPhone 8 did.

Check these out:
https://www.anandtech.com/show/15745/the-iphone-se-2020-quick-review-reinvigorated-classic/7
https://9to5mac.com/2020/04/16/iphone-battery-life-compared/
 

dilla

Trumpfan17 aka Coonie aka Dilla aka Tennis Dog
The mid range Galaxy A phones have a battery that's almost three times the size, and their battery lives are great. So are the newest iPhones with batteries twice the size. I think people forgot the battery lives of sub 5 inch devices. The SE is tiny, and despite the A13 delivering crazy performance it still lasts at least as long as the iPhone 8 did.

Check these out:
https://www.anandtech.com/show/15745/the-iphone-se-2020-quick-review-reinvigorated-classic/7
https://9to5mac.com/2020/04/16/iphone-battery-life-compared/
So it has been confirmed to hit the same longevity as the iPhone 8. Good to know. Relative to its size, it looks like it's still doing just fine on battery life.

One thing I noticed was the Exynos S10+ has longer life than the SD variant. Then what are the Exynos users bitching about all the time on the forums? Sure, this is just one aspect of the test, web browsing, but does it not remain in proportion when using apps but not gaming? Such as social media apps, Google Maps, etc.? Those still aren't GPU-intensive apps and services so it should still have the Exynos beating the SD. I think gaming is a different ballgame but I don't people do enough gaming to be butthurt over getting one variant over the other.

Speaking of gaming, GTA V is now free from the Epic Games store. I doubt I'll ever boot in to Boot Camp just to play it but I got it anyway lol. Just to add to the collection of (free) games I've hoarded over the years from these kinds of giveaways. From what I understand, GTA V is still a very popular game despite being 7ish years old now.

Also, got the smart locks installed on the front door and the garage door. Alexa became more useful now because they're Z-Wave compatible locks. It sucks the other versions required an additional purchase of a smart hub to work with them, be it via WiFi or Google Assistant. But it still feels pretty cool to type in a code to get in or say a voice command on my way to the door to unlock the door lol.

I saw the new XPS models released, at least the XPS 15s did. My dad has the 2017 model and felt he needed something more modern and is looking to get one of the new ones. I'm going to have to talk him down off the ledge though; he thinks the minor issues he has with Windows are a hardware fault and a new computer will fix it. I troubleshooted his issues and it turns out his medical dictation (Dragon Medical) was bugging out and causing about 2/3 of his screen to be unusable when another app was open. Turns out it was in a weird dock mode and it somehow got stretched out so far, Windows dedicated another desktop to accommodate it lol. It took me a few hours to figure it out but it's working now but he likes shiny new things like the next person so he's trying to get one configured with a touch screen.

We had ordered a few Dell 2-in-1s a few months back and I was playing around with it while getting it hooked up to the TVs wirelessly for presentations. I had never used a 2-in-1 the way I did that day, with keyboard folded back, but not all the way. It looked like a bracket ( < ) and the touch screen was really easy to use this way. I only used it in two configurations where it was folded all the way back and in tablet mode or just as a regular notebook. This halfway-point was a lot better and I'm sure I wasn't the first person to use it this way; I just never thought to do so and I don't think I've seen pictures in ads or something of people using it this way.
 

THEV1LL4N

Well-Known Member
If this turns out to be true then I will be very happy and most likely get the Pixel 4a:

https://chromeunboxed.com/google-pixel-4a-leak-349-price-128gb-iphone-se/

https://www.androidauthority.com/google-pixel-4a-price-1119481/

Pushing prices lower whilst offering some innovation at this price point is definitely the route that manufacturers need to be going. The Nexus 7 was incredibly popular and a great device for the launch price. It's also what the Lenovo IdeaPad/Chromebook Duet is shaping up to be (I still need to watch the review videos)
 

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