Technology Android

It's senseless to regularly upgrade a phone honestly. It's such a waste of money.
True. My S22 made me realize that, permanently. The hardware features, aside from the camera, have been stagnant for some time now. I don't need a more powerful processor for the simple apps I use daily.

Maybe one day companies will realize we'd like that battery life to double or triple.
 
  • Like
Reactions: linx
I want the Neo and 17e but I think I'll keep my gold for now and stick to my SE and 10 year old late 2012 iMac.

At $600, is it still a status symbol?
 
Last edited:
So I don't know if I can re-read all the posts since I last checked here, but I don't presume anyone is buying anything at the moment. Kinda bittersweet how little progress we've been getting in consumer hardware in the recent years, with an upside that a phone/laptop/PC bought in the last 5-7 years, is likely still perfectly fine today.
 
So I don't know if I can re-read all the posts since I last checked here, but I don't presume anyone is buying anything at the moment. Kinda bittersweet how little progress we've been getting in consumer hardware in the recent years, with an upside that a phone/laptop/PC bought in the last 5-7 years, is likely still perfectly fine today.
TMO offered me an $800 credit to trade in a phone in any condition, cracked screen, etc. It was only if it was towards a Pixel 10 device. I thought about it, since I have my old S7 I never traded in ten years ago. I ultimately didn't take advantage of it because it would've burned an upgrade on my current line/phone with the S22U.

The S22 works fine but I have noticed a big hit to battery in the last few months. It lasts a day but I am in the teens by late night, which is a bit unusual. I may just pay $100 or so and get a battery replacement as it is still on its original battery. So four years.

No itch to upgrade but if the deal is right with the trade in value, I'll do it. But despite using my phone for emails and streaming YouTube audio and using Gemini for at least a dozen queries a day, I can't say a new phone would do any of this any better.

My PC is doing fine, handling whatever gaming I throw at it. My M4 Pro MBP is also fantastic for daily use in the office. That battery lasts over two days of use at work and at home. I expect neither of these devices not fitting my needs for at least another five years.

I did upgrade my mesh network at home, though. Best Buy had a solid deal for 2 Eero 7 Pros and my current eero Pros were WiFi 5 devices from 5 years ago. I traded one Pro node in and kept the other two to use maybe in the office or something. Got 15% towards a new router and got two Eero 7 Pros. I think they broadcast a good bit further than the three eero Pros did, so I downsized to two and it looks like it covers the house well. I get 700 Mbps wirelessly to my MBP on a 1.2 Gbps internet plan, so that's good enough for me. Hoping for another 5 years with this setup. While I have no devices that supports WiFi 7 yet, the older eeros I had were WiFi 5, so it was worth upgrading that for that reason.

Some say the recent parts shortage is a coincidental benefit to companies who don't want people to own software and instead just get hardware as a means to access movies, games, software, etc., via streaming it. So it benefits them to invest in AI and cloud based stuff and have the consumer just rent the software and services since they'd be priced out of hardware.

Makes sense. GPU pricing never came back down after COVID, I don't imagine storage and RAM comes down to "normal" prices either. Just price everyone out.
 
  • Like
Reactions: masta247
Yeah I've ordered the S26U with a trade-in offer for my S23U. I ended up sending back the S26U. Almost $1000 for what feels like essentially the same phone, made me realize the biggest difference is the $1000 I could spend much better. A bit of a sad time to not see new exciting tech, but on the flipside it's good that I can just enjoy what I have for longer without feeling any FOMO. The display looking a bit wonky, and no BT pen (that I use as a remote shutter when taking travel pics with my girlfriend on the S23U) made the decision all the easier.

RAM and GPU prices will be up for as long as businesses keep pouring as much money as they have into AI. Even if we don't see a dramatic bubble burst, there just isn't anywhere close to the money they need to pay back for all those investments, so it will deflate, and with it the extreme infrastructure investments, and GPU/RAM prices. For GPUs, most players will likely switch to dedicated ASICS rather than paying a huge premium to Nvidia, forcing them to spend more time on consumer products. Their GPUs have indeed never had a chance to go back to normal prices driven purely by consumer demand, as it was COVID lockdowns, then Crypto bubble, and now AI.

For RAM, it's an excellent opportunity for the Chinese vendors to step in.

All-in-all though, it's a good time to enjoy whatever devices people have. Anything made in the last 5 years is basically the same or very similar, except prices are higher. The profit fuels R&D that we will benefit from once the demand pressures subside, and on the other end new supply/fabs begins to overshoot.
 

Latest posts

Donate

Back in the day, we used to recieve donations sent as cash in fake birthday cards! Those were the days! I still have some of them, actually.

Now we have crypto.

Ethereum/EVM: 0x9c70214f34ea949095308dca827380295b201e80

Bitcoin: bc1qa5twnqsqm8jxrcxm2z9w6gts7syha8gasqacww

Solana: 8xePHrFwsduS7xU4XNjp2FRArTD7RFzmCQsjBaetE2y8

Members online

No members online now.