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2024: Smartphone Options

I've been using a 2018 Samsung Galaxy Note 9. It meets all my needs. I use the stylus mostly for quick engineering technical drawings. I don't do gaming.

The battery was getting old and not lasting the whole day, so I changed it to one I ordered from AliExpress. The battery from AliExpress lasts about the same as the old original: no improvement. :-( Samsung does not provide replacement batteries, and the official Samsung service centers in Peru are corrupt.

My screen, while still usable, is cracking around the edges so I started wondering about a replacement. In 2023 I thought of replacing the phone with a small tablet, but the market for this is very sad. Now I'm looking over the rest of the market.

Should I hold my breath for smartglasses that would serve as a monitor screen for mobile use? Would this render the larger screen sizes of tablets and folding phones superfluous? Maybe not since it's nice to have extra viewing options.


Phone Models and Reviews

Flagship Phones:

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra, the Tech Chap
Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra, GSMArena

Folding Phones:

OnePlus Open, the Tech Chap
Honor Magic V2, the Tech Chap
Oppo Find N2, the Tech Chap
OnePlus Open vs Honor Magic V2, Tech Bandicoot
OnePlus Open vs Google Pixel Fold, Tech Bandicoot

Budget Phones:

Tecno Spark 20 Pro Plus, the Tech Chap
Tecno Spark 20 Pro Plus, Valor Reviews
Moto G Stylus 5G, GSMArena: not good.

Mid-Range Phones:

Xiaomi Poco: Reddit

Mediatek Dimensity 8100 or Snapdragon 7+ gen2

What I Want:

- Huawei Mate 20 X (5G) with 7.2“ screen. I ordered it a little overpriced at $440 shipped for a 5 year old new phone because I want the big screen.


Performance vs Budget

Do I really need a flagship phone when current more affordable phones offer the same performance as my Note 9?

One reason to get a flagship phone is that its performance will still be sufficient many years into the future. The Note 9 was a good choice in 2018. New phones haven't had any new features, just incremental improvements.

However, the industry may be reaching physical limits on performance? If the industry is backing itself into a corner, will it innovate or just continue creating artificial demand (like planned obsolescence) to fuel sales?

Looks like some innovations are in the pipeline:


Hold off as much as I can with the Note 9 or get a budget phone for the interim? Or get last year's flagship open box for half price on ebay?


Benchmarks

Benchmarks are useful even though they are crude at approximating real life performance: newer phones aren't as fast as the benchmark implies. I think maybe benchmarks are skewed to favor newer model years (to increase sales, of course). I compare benchmarks of other phones to the Note 9 since it meets my needs.

Update: This guy knows what he's talking about:


Screen Brightness

Outdoors, screen visibility is important, but there is no standard measure for this attribute. Manufacturers specify nits for brightness, but this doesn't represent daylight visibility. See 7 Misleading Assumptions About Sunlight Readable LCDs, Grunske 2017. Source: Ergonomic Backpacking with Your Device

My Note 9 has 1050 nits of screen brightness, the minimum for a sunny day (according to a quick Google search). My Note 1 was sufficient although I struggled in the shade of a very bright day.


LTE/5G Modem + Antenna Performance

https://www.wilsonamplifiers.com/blog/which-type-of-smartphone-gets-the-best-reception

His conclusion about Samsung and iPhone having best reception is wrong. If you follow the link to the research, the iPhone had the poorest reception. Also, very few phones were tested, and no mid-range or budget phones.


Aspect Ratio

The screen ratio for the Tecno Spark is 20.3/9 (length/width). That's too thin of a width. My Note 9 has a 18.5/9 ratio and an S24 ultra has a 19.5/9 ratio. The best was a Note 1 with a 16/10 golden ratio. I like more of a tablet screen.


8" Tablet as Smartphone

I was willing to go up in size to an 8” tablet for use as a smartphone. I was willing to only have 4GB RAM, a relatively weak CPU and chipset, and a lesser performing camera. But I couldn't accept 400-450 nits for maximum screen brightness. That just sucks. As reviewed in 2023 below, they just don't make anything good available.


Availability of Custom Roms

An attractive feature for me is the ability to use a custom ROM and gain ROOT to the device operating system. Manufacturers and possibly governments do not want added freedoms to the users. There are limited number of phone models where the use of custom ROMs is possible.

The most popular rom is LineageOS.

https://wiki.lineageos.org/devices/

My best option right now is a Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ PLUS SM-N975F/DS. Better performance than a Tecno Spark 20 Pro Plus and available open box on ebay for $275.40. But I look at my Note 9 and it makes me want to wait another year to see if something better becomes available.


Not Huawei

https://www.androidpolice.com/huawei-could-say-goodbye-android-apps-good-next-year/ (2023)

Huawei uses its own harmonyOS, which will drop library support for any Android apps (apk).


2023: Tablet as Smartphone

The Hunt for a 7-inch Tablet with LTE or 5G

To improve profits by market segmentation, corporations do not introduce a flagship 7“ tablet, as this would satisfy most consumer's needs and reduce sales from consumers purchasing separate smartphones, tablets and/or folding devices.

The meager Lenovo Tab M7 is the best I can find. The model TB-7306x has the processor MT8766 with LTE capability, but it is only sold in very few markets like the Philippines.


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information-technology/2024-smartphones.1721770723.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/07/23 21:38 by marcos