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iFixit: We’re Ending Our Samsung Collaboration
  • Yeah, roll one out with a 5.8" screen and a headphone jack amd I'll buy it at a premium. I'd shell out even more for a true iPhone mini-sized phone if they make the battery fat enough for decent battery life -- small phones can still be ergonomic and light enough with a little extra chonk.

    Giant screen, no headphone jack? No thanks, I might as well buy a $50 android phone at a gas station.

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  • 10/10 review of purelymail as a 2 year user.

    Cost me $20 so far. Because the service is just a service, not a massive ponzi scheme. We need more devs like the creator!

  • HTC One M8: The Android GOAT, 10 Years On!
  • Plus the M7 had a nicer aluminum unibody. The M8 had plastic on the front. Still handsome, but not the same level of gorgeous macbook-style design the M7 had. Fuck, I'd rock an M7 today if they trimmed the glass bezel down, removed the hardware nav buttons, and tossed in some new hardware.

  • Google's plan is to annoy you relentlessly until you update Messages
  • If only we could get RCS with any app other than Google's. I wonder how long they can gatekeep those APIs.

  • Punkt rocks its minimalist roots with first smartphone
  • Minimalist with a 6.7" screen, eh? Now I really want to know how they define minimal lol. Minimal features? Minimal security? Minimal support?

  • I'm REALLY well read and I have a hard time finding new books to read. I need an audiobook for train ride->plane flight->bus ride tomorrow. Please halp!
  • Consider giving Steven Erikson a try. Malazan Book of the Fallen is huge and time-consuming, but his style of writing is worth the effort in terms of story and character development. His Willful Child series is Sci-Fi and might provide a way of sampling his very unique style without diving into Fantasy.

  • NBC is planning to reboot Battlestar Galactica for the second time. What do you think?
  • Someday we'll get that planned SGU conclusion. Someday...

  • Google Maps transit is still a frustrating experience despite the latest changes
  • Citymapper is the gold standard. Osmand is excellent, except for delays. Many countries have third party top-tier apps for transit and train navigation -- Trainline comes to mind in the UK, but it varies by region.

  • [article] Maybe Don’t Drive Into Manhattan | The Atlantic
  • Interesting points here. I hope things don't work out this way, but I think there is a very strong chance that this is exactly what will happen: the streets of Manhattan below 60th will stay mostly-as-busy, but with more ride shares and private car services, since clear streets means rich people can finally transmute money into quick, private transportation.

    I'm curious about this statement:

    There exist way more people in New York who would drive if they could, but they literally can’t fit.

    I believe there are a lot of rich folks in NYC who would rideshare even more if they didn't get stuck in gridlock. But I'm not sure we have sufficient evidence to say that "way more people" would drive if there was less traffic. When I lived in NYC (just before covid hit), none of my friends owned cars even though they all had the means. It was just too much trouble to park them and maintain them for the few days a year you need a car if you mostly hang out in the city. And driving is a pain if you're mostly in a city -- the NYC lifestyle is very alcohol heavy and for a lot of folks only spans a couple of miles on an average day. Not exactly a huge benefit from cars there.

    100% agreed that we should reclaim parking space and lanes from cars, though. Perhaps congestion pricing will temporarily empty the streets and give the city ammunition to reclaim that space? A smart city would enact congestion pricing, downsize the largest avenues before rideshares figure out a way to exploit the opportunity, and then use that reduced main throughput to justify downsizing and pedestrianizing streets across the city over the next few years. But I suppose they could have done that during the covid traffic downturn, too, like how Paris and London seized the empty streets to expand bicycle infrastructure and pedestrianize streets around schools.

  • Microsoft now thirstily injects a poll when you download Google Chrome - The Verge
  • The containers UI is damn near unusable, they've squeezed so many of those "offers" into the tiny addon manager popup.

    I wish Mozilla had management who understood their userbase. But instead they keep pulling this crap which only makes me (and likely most other power users) less likely to use Mozilla branded products.

  • Firefox for Android UI update? Material You?
  • Saw someone open a PR with this fully implemented a couple of months ago.

    Goddamned PM faffed about "UI research necessary before we make changes", linked them to a bugzilla post closed in favor of a JIRA ticket only internal users could view...

    And then closed the PR, denying the change. And we wonder why Mozilla has been struggling so much lately.

  • The Verge: So long, small phones / There are fewer choices than I thought — and I’m getting out before the end.
  • Yeah, the small car thing is a perfect parallel. The market doesn't necessarily fit preferences perfectly: instead, companies optimise for whatever MOST folks will buy that nets them the most money.

    They make more money selling a large phone with a bigger sticker price and a bigger profit margin, so they make big phones. And the most phone-hungry people, power users, who buy a new phone every year or so, tend to buy big phones. So they cater to that group.

    Think of it this way: when I bought my iPhone SE 2016 7 years ago, I cast maybe $100 of profit "vote" in the marketplace.

    Every time someone buys a $1700 folding phone, they cast something between $500 and $1000 of profit "vote" in the marketplace. And they do that every year, not once every 7.

    Of course, I'd be willing to spend a lot more on a really decent small phone. But nobody in the market has really experimented with that model yet. And it is admittedly harder to fit components into a smaller phone body (though not as hard as Apple would have you believe -- after all, the 14 and 15 literally takes up more space with a useless empty plastic SIM card spacer than the headphone jack used to take.

  • So long, small phones
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  • So long, small phones
  • I was going to say that the Mini should be pretty cheap now that it's two generations old -- the 13 is down to $629 new, after all, and the Mini ought to be $100 cheaper...

    But it looks like Mini demand has actually driven prices much higher than the normal 13. Strange, almost as if there IS demand for small phones...

  • So long, small phones
  • The Z fold is 67.1mm across in folded mode. The iPhone 12 & 13 Mini is 64.2mm.

  • So long, small phones
  • The iPhone Mini is a somewhat small, mostly one-handable phone.

    These are the sizes of the phones you just claimed are small, and the phones you claimed are not, next to the 13 Mini: https://phonesized.com/compare/#2261,2176,2301,2295,1863

    The Xperia is fucking massive. Every phone there is fucking massive except for the Mini.

  • The Verge: So long, small phones / There are fewer choices than I thought — and I’m getting out before the end.
  • I've looked at the Unihertz phones quite a bit, but the cell bands and camera have stopped me so far. Your Lemmy instance implies that you're in the EU, so you should give it a shot if you can stomach the crappy camera. I'm afraid no Unihertz phone has IMS or voLTE support in the USA, so it's an open question if you'll even be able to use them at all on our networks in a year or two :(

  • The Verge: So long, small phones / There are fewer choices than I thought — and I’m getting out before the end.
  • From the article:

    “The problem is Apple has exclusive rights to [the iPhone Mini’s] display — so, even with the line being discontinued, [Samsung Display] isn’t going to give us access,” he told supporters last month.

    Sounds like we're splitting hairs: no other OEM is ordering the Mini-sized display, and this line certainly implies some kind of exclusivity. I've been following the thread on the Small Android Phone discord as well, and what I've seen there aligns with that understanding.

    As far as I know, no small manufacturer ever gets displays built specifically for them. Even Pebble, which was a lot more popular than Small Android Phone, used preexisting displays. It just takes a lot of time, knowledge, and money to create a custom display.

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  • Thanks! I'm also trying a new Fi SIM, mine is pretty old and I know that older SIM cards can cause issues sometimes. So far so good!

  • Looking for new long-term Android with ability to flash (good, working) ROM
  • I'd go with the Fairphone if I were you, as long as you actually care about having the phone long term. I know the Pixel is very shiny and very nice, but Google really does have an awful history of QA. Fairphone isn't perfect either, but being able to repair things yourself is a huge benefit. Sure the CPU and camera and screen aren't as nice, but they're probably nicer than what you've currently got, and definitely nice enough unless you're a tech reviewer who's constantly looking at the new shinies.

    Plus, y'know, it is kind of cool that Fairphone tries to produce their phones without any slavery or labor abuses, and at least makes real attempts at sustainability. When you get burned by Google, you just feel shame because you knew they were going to screw you one way or another. If you get burned by Fairphone, at least you tried to do something better in the world.