Samsung could be stepping up its game by offering seven years of major Android updates for the Galaxy S24 series, and the generous update policy might extend to other Galaxy flagships.
The Galaxy S24 series might also introduce charges for AI features like Live Translate and Pixel-like photo editing tools after 2025.
There's speculation that users may need to sign in to their Samsung accounts for certain AI functionalities.
Samsung s23 ultra is my first Samsung and despite having come from Pixels and Oneplus I found I actually liked the Samsung stuff like edge panel, one hand plus+ operation, and sound assistant. All the good lock additions was like getting custom rom features. Find it hard to consider a phone without something like the Spen too now, since I use it to take notes and select text.
For me it's the dex mode when I connect my s22 to a monitor, I use it daily at work with a kvm so I can work on one monitor and VPN to my home vm on a second monitor with my phone, I came from a pixel 3 and the nexus 5 before that and I hope the s22 lasts me forever
Really love this community, so one-dimensional and not willing to accept alternate views, and can't wait to twist words in people's mouth to make themselves feel better intellectually superior.
Every time I've needed a new phone I've considered Samsung. But I just can't buy into their extremely heavy modifications and have always opted for a clean android experience. Their hardware looks amazing and I want nothing more in a phone than a Samsung running stock.
I'm a bit torn on this. I'm not a Samsung fan by any mean, but the hardware issues with the different Pixels (reception, overheating, etc.) and the Tensor ships vs Snapdragon make me reluctant to get one.
S23 especially seems like a solid device, with better battery than S22, "compact" size and good chipset. Also not the biggest fan of supporting Google while they clearly lack vision on what they are doing with most of their products.
GrapheneOS might be an option but I would prefer not having to tinker with the OS of a several hundreds euros phone.
Personally, I've had Pixels since the pixel 2 and I've never had an issue with them except for normal wearing out. They've lasted longer than any samsung phone I've owned (granted that was pre-pixel 2). What I liked about Pixel is that it's pretty much stock Android, with google play stuff on it, vs samsung which I felt was overloaded with both Google stuff and Samsung stuff.
As for Google - well, remember Google has it's hands in both systems, getting Samsung doesn't mean you're de-googling, Google still gets it's cut.
Software yeah flash away, but then it's just purely a hardware comparison.
My last few phones have been Pixels and the only issue was my Pixel 6 having a greenish screen, but I was able to fix that with an app that altered the color temperature I think.
But a few updates later I hadn't reenabled that app and the green was gone anyway. Google fixed it in a software update.
Interesting, I read so much negative feedback about the Pixel 6 and 7 hardware that it really stuck with me. Also I'm not in the US so I wouldn't benefit from a lot of Pixel unique features.
By the way, is it true you can't remove the search bar from the Pixel launcher?
It's worse then that there is so much bloatware on a pixel, I'm surprised there isn't more complaining. You can "remove" it with ADB but it doesn't actually remove it.
Google's Tensor chips are prone to overheating, and the Pixel 8's chip is no different. While we noted in our review that the Tensor G3 is better at managing temperature than its predecessors, you may notice the phone getting warm in your hand.
Getting warm isn't the same thing as catching fucking fire like my girlfriend's Samsung did in October. They have had it happen consistently across multiple models now. Go ahead and keep shilling for them with your ridiculous whataboutisms though.