this post was submitted on 11 Jun 2023
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Android

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A home on LW for Android users.

RULES

While this is s community focused on Android, some of us have devices from the Android, Apple, Windows and Linux worlds, etc. We may prefer Android, but overzealous and obsessive adherence to Android as some sort of infallible platform won't be tolerated long here.

That said, being critical of brands is fine. Android is frustrating in some ways, just like iOS and so forth. Let's be upfront about that.

Be thoughtful and helpful, even with 'stupid' questions. Otherwise, as ya mama said, say nothing at all. The world won't be made better or worse by snarky dudes schooling naive newcomers on Lemmy.

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So, I thought I'd kick things off here with some community building.

Quote this post with answers to the below!

What phone are you using?

Are you happy with it? What are its best and worst qualities?

Which phones have you had previously? Which were the best and worst of the lot?

How often do you upgrade to a new phone?

What other Android ecosystem devices do you have? Watches, headphones/earbuds, etc.

Do you also use any Apple products, or are you Android all the way? (And/or Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, etc.)

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[–] spunker88@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Galaxy S10e. I love the small size of it and the fact that it still has a microSD slot and headphone jack. Its starting to show its age when it comes to battery life and the USB C port not working as good.

I like the Samsung android software with the customization that you get with Good Lock so I will probably stick with Samsung flagship for my next phone. The biggest thing I dislike with Samsung is the amount of bloatware they ship, the out of box experience is terrible and I usually have to spend a day researching what apps to disable with adb to get the phone usable. I will probably upgrade to an S23 next year. I usually buy my phones used when the model has been out for about a year. At a year old its still new enough to have plenty of support left, but its no longer the current model so it sells for less. Its a better value IMO then buying a new mid range phone, especially as there isn't as much advancement year to year in hardware these days. A year old flagship will have better cameras than a new mid range phone typically.

[–] Ataraxia@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

My friend used an s8 until she broke it but that thing was a beast!

[–] xilophor@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Although it's not Samsung, I consider the ASUS Zenfone 9 the spiritual successor to the S10e. It's got most of the same physical features (except the microSD slot), but with an updated battery, screen, cameras, charging, and processor. It is a bit buggy at times, the software update support timeline isn't quite there, and it has none of the useful Samsung apps/features like GoodLock, but for me the phone is still the best one I've had to date.

[–] killerbees@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

This is what I did as well. Bought an S22 Ultra a few weeks after the S23 line launched. The usual cons I found that I actually didn't mind. No expandable storage? 256GB is way too much for me; I can't fill that up with apps and photos. I also use wireless earbuds so I'm not mourning the 3.5 jack. I've always been a fan of the Note line so it's perfect for me.

I'm considering an Android smartwatch but I'm not doing research yet. I will also likely buy a previous generation device if ever.

I have never owned an Apple product, not even an iPod.

[–] haxasaur@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Good Lock took like a year to work after One UI 3 released.