sedrosken
Florida Man
I don't mind a lower end SoC if the performance is "good enough" and the battery life holds up -- I'm used to waiting a minute for things to catch up. I'm also pretty depressingly familiar with the "Recent Apps->Clear All" dance. Then again, it's more about pricing for me as well, I just don't have the extra cash to drop 6-800 dollars or more on a flagship. I set a max budget for this new phone at around 400, and didn't even want to spend that much, I just acknowledged that to get anything half decent anymore I may just... have to. Technically the G Stylus was only a bit more expensive and had half again as much RAM, which could have been useful, but iirc it dropped a couple features of the Power and I considered it to be inferior as a result. I'm probably still going to have it charging every night, but it's nice to be able to have a phone that I'm not worried about the battery on at any given moment. There were situations where I'd have what would have been plenty of battery on here that, on my iPhone, I'd stop using the phone because I'd be concerned about running out and potentially needing it for navigation or waiting on a call or what-have-you. I also literally kept my iPhone on battery saver from the second I took it off the charger -- I don't foresee myself ever turning battery saver on with the G Power, though I keep the option open in case.
The push to eliminate mSD, especially on phones where the storage is eMMC to begin with, isn't about speed or uniformity -- even with each successive release of Android treating mSD more and more like a second class citizen -- it's about being able to save the three cents or so on a connector, which, when pushed to scale, is probably several tens of thousands of dollars of cost reduction they can put in their pocket since they're obviously not going to pass those savings along to the consumer. It compounds with the extra savings in dev time making sure mSD stuff works, not having to make the SIM tray big enough to hold a mSD as well, hell, I bet within a couple years most manufacturers will go full iPhone and just integrate a SIM so they don't have to expose the slot. It'll be in the name of cost reduction and helping waterproofing, of course.
I'm also pretty old-school, I guess -- I pretty much immediately turned on 3-button navigation in lieu of the gestures they pushed on me. It may just be my imagination but ironically it feels like the gestures worked better on my A10e than this. The 3-button method just feels way more natural and immediate. I'm honestly a little scared going forward of what the future of this style is -- if they're going to keep it around as an accessibility option, especially for people with small hands, or if they're going to axe it. Then again I also miss the actual hardware navigation keys that my Droid Turbo had, even if they make no difference as opposed to the software-controllable navbar in regards to responsiveness or whatever.
The push to eliminate mSD, especially on phones where the storage is eMMC to begin with, isn't about speed or uniformity -- even with each successive release of Android treating mSD more and more like a second class citizen -- it's about being able to save the three cents or so on a connector, which, when pushed to scale, is probably several tens of thousands of dollars of cost reduction they can put in their pocket since they're obviously not going to pass those savings along to the consumer. It compounds with the extra savings in dev time making sure mSD stuff works, not having to make the SIM tray big enough to hold a mSD as well, hell, I bet within a couple years most manufacturers will go full iPhone and just integrate a SIM so they don't have to expose the slot. It'll be in the name of cost reduction and helping waterproofing, of course.
I'm also pretty old-school, I guess -- I pretty much immediately turned on 3-button navigation in lieu of the gestures they pushed on me. It may just be my imagination but ironically it feels like the gestures worked better on my A10e than this. The 3-button method just feels way more natural and immediate. I'm honestly a little scared going forward of what the future of this style is -- if they're going to keep it around as an accessibility option, especially for people with small hands, or if they're going to axe it. Then again I also miss the actual hardware navigation keys that my Droid Turbo had, even if they make no difference as opposed to the software-controllable navbar in regards to responsiveness or whatever.
Last edited: