The 1st Ever Golden Lemmy Award for Best Android Device
To celebrate a particular movie's nominations for the Golden Globes next Sunday, Jan 7, we are hosting our very own Golden Lemmy award for Best Android Device on !android@lemmy.world.
Rules are simple, tell us about your favorite Android phone from 2023 in the top level comment, and the device with the most up votes wins the esteemed and coveted Golden Lemmy Award, along with 1 Lemmy Silver.
*Flashing will vlow the eFuse and disable Knox. It will also make it a bit more difficult to use some apps.
Negatives:
Its old hardware is prob gonna struggle to run most things these days.
(I'm half kidding. My S23 Ultra is hot garbage for features. Fuckers even stripped the SD card support out so my storage just got cut significantly unless I pay for a subscription instead of a single payment on an SD card that I can access in a Faraday Cage if I wanted to. Idk why they care so much about camera quality - especially when they've just made it more difficult and expensive to store images in bulk. If you want pro pictures, get an SLR and take pro pictures. You don't expect that from a laptop, why do we expect it from a pocket computer?)
I went from a Motorola Pure to a Galaxy after Motorola's acquisition by Lenovo, and I really miss the Pure.
It's absolutely baffling how many useless programs Samsung loads on these things, as is their weird insistence on having their own custom settings that are just a downgrade from basic Android. I've gone looking for a setting or a feature dozens of times just to find that Samsung decided it wasn't needed.
Why?
Why the fuck would you take away features like a notification history?
The specs are fine in terms of running whatever you feel like even several years after purchase but it's hard to think it's worth it when you keep running into basic design incompetence.
Tl;Dr Galaxies had decent hardware and terrible software, so when they start going after hardware features it's time to bail.
I don't remember ever not having notification history - you'd just have to dig a bit to get there. I think Nova used to even let you make a custom shortcut right to it.
The problem with hardware is that they were one of the last (and possibly the last of the heavy hitters) to ditch the SD cards.
The best camera is the one you have on you. It's one of the basics of photography. I don't carry an slr with me all the time for good reason, but I do have my phone, and it being able to take good pictures is important to me.
I also often carry an APS-C mirrorless with me when carrying stuff is less of an issue, and it certainly takes way better photos, most of the time.