You can't use Google pay everywhere in the US?
Things may be changing but I don't think most places have an NFC kiosk. Some of the big franchises, like Starbucks and Panera and Walgreens have them but I don't shop at those places often. I relied on MST to pay at the grocery store or most other brick and mortar stores.
GPay does work in-app so if I order food from a restaurant's app or GrubHub, it works, but that's nothing special.
But no, I don't think NFC tech is as widespread in the States. I'll have to keep a better eye out now that I'm without MST and then get back to you to see if things have changed.
Right, I forgot about 5G - it's something my carrier isn't even offering, and in my city I'm getting LTE-A speeds in line with what you're getting on 5G, so the presence of a 5G modem would in no way affect me.
And yeah, Samsung's strategy was once to deliver swiss army knives across their top product ranges. They made sure that they had every feature that any competing product could have had, to tick all boxes that any buyer in the product category could be looking for, to make sure they will find what they were looking for with Samsung. It's specifically what made the Galaxy series into the biggest line of Android devices imho. Samsung's marketing (and reviewers) would always point out things the iPhones/HTC phones or any other competitor couldn't do that Samsung devices could.
They changed that strategy to now be more like Apple - where they are narrowing the scope of what they are delivering to offer a simpler, polished experience. Use their superior numbers of engineering hours to deliver fewer features, but focus on getting them to work better than others can. I have no idea how this will work out for them as times have changed, but I'm certain that if they followed this strategy with the S2, S3 or S4, the Galaxy series wouldn't have been anywhere as big as they are.
Maybe Samsung got too big and start getting cute and lazy with their products over the years. I still like their stuff but this is what happens when the underdog (compared to Apple) from a few years ago is no longer the underdog. It happened almost overnight with the OnePlus phones from "flagship killer" to just...whatever it is now. I agree Samsung switched from having a wide variety of offerings of features to basically just chasing Apple. But not before mocking them before doing it themselves.
These companies stick to just what works and what consumers don't complain about. Casual users probably didn't even use Samsung Pay as much as Samsung would have liked. Those same users didn't raise a stink about losing the headphone jack because they were instead attracted to the fad of wireless headphones when they first came out, so Samsung felt comfortable removing the jack too. Expandable storage? Everything is streamed and the average user, I bet, is fine streaming Spotify and not downloading songs, even though Spotify allows you to do that. So storage isn't an issue for them, either.
It kind of reminds me of manuals in cars. There are so many campaigns on the internet to "save the manuals" but the sales figures don't suggest to manufacturers to keep them around. Who will the manufacturers listen to, randos on the internet or the sales numbers?
It sucks but that's how it goes and no company is immune to getting a big head and forgetting what made them successful in the first place. Apple and Samsung won't be the biggest OEMs forever. It's just a matter of time before someone breaks through and becomes the new Samsung for Android. Although, it looks like other Android OEMs are dropping like flies (HTC and LG) and the ones still around are content with making mid range phones for prepaid services, like Moto.
Also, I just found out Vanced is shutting down. Google caught wind of them and sent a cease and desist. Hopefully someone continues to offer something similar in the future. I've read of some alternatives on Reddit but people are saying nothing does what Vanced did and that there are some tradeoffs in features between the several alternatives recommended.
Sad day. Maybe I'll use some of that Google Rewards credit to pay for YouTube Premium.
Also, you mentioned 5G; I now get 60+ Mbps in my house, which is pretty nice. I keep flip flopping between 5G and UC but it all feels the same to me, which is quite snappy. But the thing with US carriers is that video streaming is capped based on your plan and my plan is just for 480p streaming, or 2.5 Mbps. So everything loads at 50+Mbps until I stream YouTube or Hulu or any other video service, which then drops down to 2.5 Mbps. So I can do 1080p with minor buffering but 4K would require me to upgrade to a plan that's $20 more per month (for four lines) to get uncapped video streaming.