• @N4CHEM@lemmy.ml
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      532 years ago

      I want a smaller smartphone but not an iPhone. It’s sad that Apple is the only manufacturer still producing reasonable sized phones. Small phone gang unite and push for other manufacturers to follow Apple on this one!

      • eric
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        452 years ago

        Unfortunately even Apple has announced they are discontinuing their smaller phone, citing poor sales, so it seems the small phone gang is too small to have any market power.

        • @EdibleFriend@lemmy.world
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          322 years ago

          Small people want small phones. Small people have small hands. Small hands can’t carry very much money.

          It’s simple economics.

          • eric
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            12 years ago

            Lol. You would think that, but I’m a small person counter example, and the market is proving there are more like me than those who want small phones.

        • @N4CHEM@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          I don’t believe the small phone gang is small, we just have one option: a pretty expensive iPhone mini.

          I want a small phone but not an iPhone, I have no option therefore manufactures assume I want a humongous phone. That’s flawed logic.

          • eric
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            2 years ago

            If it is actually a larger demographic, then it would be huge opportunity for any of these other phone makers, especially those that are struggling. I highly doubt they are all unaware of the opportunity to make a smaller phone, so I suspect they have stayed away because they don’t think it will be a profitable market.

            As production quantities go down, costs go up, and with the lower prices that these vendors sell at compared to Apple, their margins are already much thinner, so they have much more risk than Apple in introducing a smaller phone unless they are confident there is a large enough market for it. They simply have much less wiggle room than Apple in which to create a profitable product out of a smaller phone. Since Apple is pulling out and the others haven’t even bothered to try to compete with them in the decade that this big phone trend has been trending, I don’t think there’s any other conclusion that we can draw other than the small phone market is not large enough to pursue, but I’m open to other possibilities.

            Edit: Someone else mentioned the small Asus Zenphone, which was also discontinued due to poor sales. That means at least one other manufacturer tried to make a small phone, and they came to the same conclusion that Apple did, so I see even less reason to doubt them.

            • @Zerfallen@lemmy.world
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              12 years ago

              ZenFone isn’t small, it’s the same size as a regular iPhone/Pro, not the Mini, so I can’t see it proving anything about small phone demand that couldn’t equally be applied to a regular iPhone or S23 etc. It also isn’t discontinued.

          • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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            2 years ago

            I don’t believe the small phone gang is small, we just have one option: a pretty expensive iPhone mini.

            You have it backwards. You have no options because your gang is too small. You used to have options but the market has moved far far away from that.

          • eric
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            32 years ago

            Right, but I’m pretty sure they never said anything about discontinuing it altogether when the iPhone 14 came out, and most people just assumed they were just skipping a year on it. It wasn’t until right before they released the 15 lineup that they said the smaller phone was actually discontinued.

            • @Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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              32 years ago

              They never officially discontinued the mini line in the first place. They just didn’t release new models after the 13. The announcement that they discontinued it was that they were discontinuing production of the 13 mini, which they had kept making alongside the regular 13 after the 14 lineup was released. Up until the release of the 15s, you could still buy the 13 mini new from Apple. Discontinuing the 13 mini killed off any way to buy one new.

              There’s still strong rumors that they might use the mini frame for the next SE model. It has pretty close to the same external dimensions as the 3rd gen SE, but would bring more screen real estate in the same package since it would be edge to edge instead of have the bezels. And it would also fit the rumored “release a mini every few years” strategy since they only release an SE every couple of years anyway.

              The SE cannibalized mini sales because, for the most part, people that wanted the smaller size cared more about price than features, and the SE was the same size and quite a bit cheaper. Replacing the old iPhone 8 based SE with an iPhone mini based SE would kill two birds with one stone. It would let them use up a bunch of the excess stock they have laying around due to the poor sales, would bring the mini to a lower price point which would make it more popular, and would remove the competition between the SE and the mini.

              • eric
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                22 years ago

                Yeah, we’re saying the same thing, but for the sake of brevity, I might have spoken in a way that led you to believe I’m saying something else. I did not know about the rumors of the new SE using the mini frame, so that is some slightly good news for the small phone gang.

          • eric
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            32 years ago

            What’s your alternative theory?

            • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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              32 years ago

              What do you mean?

              They don’t want to make a product. They say “consumers don’t like it”. You ask for evidence. They say it’s confidential, or they deliberately sabotage the availability of the product and say, “see?”

              It’s standard marketing.

              • eric
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                22 years ago

                I’m asking for your theory as to Apple’s reason for cancelling the small phone since you don’t believe the reason they’ve provided.

                • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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                  2 years ago

                  Deciding to make or not make a product is not a simple thing. Lots of decisions are part of it.

                  They just don’t want to talk about it and want you to buy one of their other products.

      • @kucing@lemmy.ml
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        52 years ago

        Yea i wanted iPhone mini as well but it’s hard for me to miss abilities such as using OG Firefox (not some stupid skinned safari) with ublock origin and NewPipe.

    • Zerlyna
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      92 years ago

      I still have an SE 2020 and now wondering if I can get a Mini. I had a 6+ and got rid of it because it made my hand cramp. I hate big phones.

  • 👁️👄👁️
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    462 years ago

    People have been saying this for the last 5 years and will continue saying this for the next 5 years. They make less smaller phones cuz people don’t buy them

    • verysoft
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      372 years ago

      That will be a side effect of them locking abitrary features behind the bigger and thus more expensive models, if there was feature parity smaller phones would probably still be the norm.

      • @nexusband@lemmy.world
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        112 years ago

        Yeah, I only got the Pixel 6 Pro because of the zoom lense…i would not have chosen it otherwise. It’s too big…

      • Amilo159
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        02 years ago

        There is simply less space inside smaller phones to add same features and battery as a larger model.

        And then they can’t justify small model having same, high price as pro versions, so they cut features to go along with reduced price.

      • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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        02 years ago

        Not true. Many of the smaller phones on the market have additional features that the bigger ones don’t. Or at least they used to when they existed.

      • @ayyndrew@lemm.ee
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        2 years ago

        There are some features that just can’t be equal between a bigger phone and a smaller one (or would require gimping the bigger phone) like a bigger screen (obviously), bigger battery and more size for larger camera sensors

      • hiddengoat
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        -62 years ago

        If you can figure out a way to cram all of the shit in a 15 Pro Max into a form factor the size of an iPhone 4 not only will Apple suck your dick in the form of a well-earned half million dollar salary but you’ll likely get a Nobel Prize for breakthroughs in quantum computing and also making atoms smaller.

          • hiddengoat
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            -42 years ago

            Are you that dense?

            It’s a very realistic example of what you would have to do to cram all of the shit from a large phone into a small phone. The features that are cut aren’t fucking “arbitrary” unless you want to classify every feature difference as “abitrary” thereby making your definition of arbitrary meaningless.

    • @amelia@feddit.de
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      2 years ago

      As a woman: I’d love to use bigger phones - as soon as they give me pockets I can fit them into.

      It’s one of the reasons I find foldables so interesting. The Google Pixel Fold has the perfect form factor. If only it wasn’t so expensive…

    • cannache
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      12 years ago

      I feel like hopefully with a potential paradigm shift, maybe one SIM card and number shared between several devices, one large phone or tablet for work or movies and a smaller feature phone for on demand urgent communications, we’ll hopefully see the market for OEMs open up a bit wider and allow for further competition/collaboration across the whole portable electronics sector

  • @nouben@lemmy.ml
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    432 years ago

    There was a time where 7" was a damn tablet (looking at you, my old pal nexus 7)

    • @ayyndrew@lemm.ee
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      102 years ago

      Using diagonal screen size to measure phones doesn’t work because of bezels and taller aspect ratios. The 5.5" iPhone 6 Plus (2014) is pretty much the same size as the 6.7" iPhone 15 Pro Max

    • @anakin78z@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      I actually carried a 7 inch tablet in my pocket before it was cool, bezels and all. This was back on Android 2.3 when people would moan about tablet UIs and say that it’s just a giant phone, to which I would say: Yea, and having a giant phone is awesome.

  • @Swarfega@lemm.ee
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    432 years ago

    Personally, the Pixel 5 was the perfect size and weight for a phone.

    No bulky cameras. No thick chassis. No glass adding pointless weight. Very usable as a one handed device. Symmetrical bezels.

    • @PaalUltra@lemmy.world
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      102 years ago

      Typing this from my pixel 5. The best sized phone ever. I think imo the use case for big ass 15 feet phones is a little overkill. Most people are just buying it because it’s “premium”.

    • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      Currently using an Essential Ph1 running Lineage (Android 13) and I’m about to switch to a Pixel 4a of all things, because of size, weight (its plastic), cheap as hell (so I can keep a hot spare around and do testing for a low cost), and it has one of the highest NIT ratings of any unlockable phones.

      The 5 looks good too, just not as bright, slightly larger, and a little heavier.

      Edit:spelling

        • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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          12 years ago

          From what I’ve seen online, the 5 is trivially larger (like 1mm each way).

          What drives me to the 4a is the brighter screen, slightly lighter, and plastic. So when I drop it (not if), it’ll bounce better.

          Also, they’re cheap as hell from Walmart of all places, about $100, lol. So I can afford 2 or 3 of them for the cost of a newer phone that has performance and features I really don’t care about.

    • @rambaroo@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Yeah I wish my 5a was a little smaller, it’d be perfect. Still been a great phone so far. But my screen is scratched to hell because I forgot to put a protector on it.

      • @gnate@lemmy.world
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        22 years ago

        Nexus 5 was a good size for me, this 4a is too big to be comfortable. If rather have the bezels back, too. Much easier to use without 100% screen coverage.

        • @Thann@lemmy.ml
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          22 years ago

          Yeah, its super annoying that you can’t grab phones without touching the screen

          • @gnate@lemmy.world
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            12 years ago

            Puts the virtual keyboard uncomfortably low, as well. I didn’t mind the buttons having a dedicated space.

    • PHLAK
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      22 years ago

      I recently busted out my Pixel 5 (currently using Pixel 7) to try out Lineage OS and absolutely love how it feels in my hands. It’s light and easy to reach all of the screen with one hand. Man I miss that phone.

      • @BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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        12 years ago

        Nice. And with Lineage its fast, root and add Kernel Adiutor to really tweak both performance and battery life.

    • cannache
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      12 years ago

      Pixel 3 and Samsung S4 and j series were good

  • sebinspace
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    332 years ago

    Ooooh nexus

    My Nexus 5 and 5X were the best phones I had ever owned, period

    • RBG
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      272 years ago

      Hey, your Nexus 5X has called… actually it can’t because its still stuck in a bootloop.

        • RBG
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          52 years ago

          Same for me actually. In my case it died during travelling, which was also super inconvenient. Then it got repaired, even for free although slightly out of warranty. Then it happened again shortly after. Such a dumpster fire of a ticking time bomb.

      • @eatfudd@lemm.ee
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        22 years ago

        My 5x was the best phone I owned because I paid 250 for it and got that back from my credit card warranty and then another 450+ from a class action against LG.

    • @swag_money@lemmy.world
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      32 years ago

      my first ever smartphone was the 4. it was my favorite for the longest time. i kept using it as a backup and i have 2 others I’ve harvested for parts. i love how easy it is to take old phones apart :D

    • Phoenixz
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      12 years ago

      6 was the best, period. Could still be on sale today and be an awesome phone

  • trainline
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    222 years ago

    I believe the (old but still decent) best small Android is the Samsung s10e

    • LennethAegis
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      102 years ago

      That’s still my current phone. Newer phones just look so absolutely massive.

      • danielbln
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        92 years ago

        Same, holding on for dear life with my S10E. It’s the best form factor, great power button finger print reader, dual SIM, I mean, what’s not to love. (battery is kind of meh, but I’ve added a halo ring and a magnetic induction battery).

        • @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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          -12 years ago

          What’s the point of a small phone if you’re going to stick a big battery to it?

          My phone is big, but I don’t need an external battery. I’m curious to see the size and weight comparison between my phone with a big built in battery, and your phone + battery combo.

  • @kaputt@sh.itjust.works
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    212 years ago

    What irks me about the larger phones is that there is so much wasted screen real estate. The phone doubled in size, but can only show me half the number of items on my shopping list?

    • @A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      62 years ago

      I just wish phones would get thicker, instead of longer. So they can fit beefier batteries.

      I’d love to be able to charge my phone like twice a week

  • @0x2d@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I bought an unlocked pixel 7a because of lots of custom roms once it goes out of support

    It’s huge and doesn’t have a headphone jack or SD card slot but it’s very fast and has a good camera

    My dream phone would be:

    • Unlocked bootloader

    • Replaceable battery

    • Small

    • Expandable storage

    • Good camera

    • IR blaster

    • Updates provided for a long time

    • Stock Android

    • Very durable

    • @eee@lemm.ee
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      22 years ago

      The Samsung flagships (s22, 23) are the only “small” phones, but they’re actually pretty good. I’ve been using Samsung for a few years now and it actually improves on the things that annoy me with stock android.

    • cannache
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      12 years ago

      Nah personally I would trade SD card support for headphone jack any day, but hey I get why they got rid of it, something to do with the environment

  • Pxtl
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    192 years ago

    I just want phones that are shorter. They keep getting longer, which means more risk of breaking, and means the keyboard is unusable in landscape since it blocks the textfield.

    • @A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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      52 years ago

      Conspiracy part of my brain wants to say thats by design… To artificially increase sales by replacing broken ones.

      Same reason they sealed up the phones so you couldnt replace the batteries/repair them.

    • Gloomy
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      22 years ago

      Jtlyk, you can use a custom keyboard, like Swift Key. Many have the option to scale according to your preferences.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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    182 years ago

    I’m currently in the market for a new phone because Samsung ended security updates for my current one, not because there’s anything wrong with it. And I’m noticing that my choices seem to be buy a phablet or buy a total POS.

    Remember when Samsung made a flagship phone in multiple sizes, and then also made a giant phone so big it had a built-in stylus? It wasn’t that long ago. Now the flagship phone comes with a stylus.

    • noughtnaut
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      42 years ago

      Look into rooting it and putting a different Android rom on it, I’m sure there’s something for your phone to extend its life quite a bit.

      …unless you’re tired of that phone.

      • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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        12 years ago

        Yeah, I’m still weighing that as an option.

        It’s dumb, but I’d sort of hate to take a nice, private rom and then sully it with Google Play services so I can get the apps I have to use for work.

    • Dremor
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      22 years ago

      You may want to take a look at Fairphone if you want a phone that gets updates for a long time. The current one will be supported at least until 2028, maybe 2031.

      • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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        32 years ago

        I’d love to get a fairphone, but the 4 is only available on T-Mobile (or it’s MVNOs) which doesn’t work for me, and the 5 has no plans for a US release.

        • Dremor
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          32 years ago

          'merica, land of the free, and of shitty carriers 😅.

  • MrScottyTay
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    172 years ago

    I’m still on my pixel 3 which is line at the cusp of the size i can handle. I want smaller but every new phone is bigger. It’s so infuriating.

      • @olmec@lemm.ee
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        62 years ago

        Plastic will get scratched, but won’t shatter. I honestly think a plastic screen with a glass protector is the ideal option.

        • @Waldemar_Firehammer@sh.itjust.works
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          42 years ago

          I actually went opposite on my Pixel 8. A matte tpu screen protector gives you a self-healing protective layer that feels like paper and doesn’t have glare. A beautiful bright display with a high refresh that feels like a kindle.

  • @daltotron@lemmy.world
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    152 years ago

    I think the main smartphone market is kind of like the market for cars. The only people that can afford to buy them, can afford to keep up heavy consumer traffic, are the ones who are convinced they need to swap to the top of the line model with some sort of trade-in payment plan, where they want every new trendy thing, and every piece of bullshit technology that’s not going to last even to the next flagship model. Basically, stupid people who are rich and are insecure about it. I’m certainly vulnerable to that to, just as I’m vulnerable to the unbearable lag on even just like a 6 year old phone, which should really not be that old, and then security updates and support are always a concern, I suppose. I think maybe the solution, individually, might just be to root my phone, or install some linux alternative operating system, cause I don’t wanna keep up with this bullshit anymore. I’m trapped in a world of large 19:9 and 21:9 smartphones, unusable with one hand, and with screen space that’s useless 90% of the time. I’m stuck without aux ports, and without any physical style keyboard, no nothin. I also want stuff like the DS stylus port and the flip camera they had on the zenfone 7, that shit is cool.

    • @morrowind@lemmy.ml
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      202 years ago

      On the contrary, poorer people tend to buy oversized phones since that’s the only device they have

      • danielfgom
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        32 years ago

        This exactly. If you’re spending anywhere from €250 - €350 on a phone and this is a big spend, you’ll want to keep the device for longer and have a bigger screen because it seems like you’re getting the most value for money.

        The majority of phones in the world which make up the bulk of sales are exactly these types of phones: Samsung A07, Xiaomi, Realme, TCL, Motorola etc

        Which is why I keep saying about Flip phones that if the OEM wants to see more sales, they need to price them in this range. Not at 1000 bucks+. At that price it will remain a niche product for the few.

    • Tefinite Dev
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      112 years ago

      Every 5th grader I know has a phone (I’m a parent not a creeper). So it’s not just the rich and stupid. Cell network companies give these things away under 2 year plans that most can afford. And it’s not just two year plans, my kids have $50 phones from Motorola that are +6". I think most people like a big phone and it’s only us few that want to see sub 5" phones.

      • @Zerfallen@lemmy.world
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        42 years ago

        It’s not so surprising they all have +6" phones, since there are no smaller options available, irrespective of price.

  • nostradiel
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    2 years ago

    I wanted small phone after 4 years with op7t and went logically for S23. But few years back it would be massive phone. Nowadays I found it like a perfect sweet spot of size, weight… Performance, software and camera wise it’s the only option.

    • @anakin78z@lemmy.world
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      22 years ago

      I got the S23 because it was smaller, then returned it and got a bigger phone. I guess I’m one of the people that only thought they wanted a smaller phone.

      • @lemmyBeHere@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        I did the opposite.

        I always found big phones very hard to use (even though I have big hands), so I preferred small phones.

        Then I got an S21, which was borderline too big (relative to the S10e), so I was looking for a solution and found phoneloops. Using this is so comfortable, I figured I don’t really need small phones anymore.

        I dropped my S21 and a couple of things went broke, so I figured I would try an S23 ultra with phoneloops.

        It was comfortable to use with the loops. I liked the huge screen for consuming content and I found the pen pretty handy at times. But I just couldn’t get used to the thickness and weight. I didn’t like using it because of it. After two months I grabbed my old phone and was blown away by it’s small size and weight. I ordered some replacement parts and switched back (daughterboard, loudspeaker, battery, glue). I appreciate it’s size even more now.

        I guess if they would make a 170g, 8mm thick phone with a 7 inch display (FLAT), I would definitely give it a try.

        • @anakin78z@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          I didn’t try the S21, but I always thought the S8 was a very comfortable phone to hold. It was tall, but narrow, and very thin. I’m not sure I’d go back to that now, but I did like it a lot at the time.

          • @lemmyBeHere@lemmy.world
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            22 years ago

            The S21 is wider by a lot (71mm vs 68mm)

            There are just a handful of flagship phones coming out in the last two years that are sub 69mm wide: the zenphones, and the xperia 5 IV and V (and the apple iphone SE 2022)

  • @pavnilschanda@lemmy.world
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    132 years ago

    I remember the last time this got brought up and I complained about my thumb not being able to reach the other side of the iphone 3 mini. Well, I tried the Samsung Z Fold the other day and I really like how narrow it is to the point where my thumb can effortly reach the other side when the phone is folded. Perhaps I’ll get that phone in the future when my current iPhone 13 mini dies. At the same time, I do enjoy my Apple Watch though and I appreciate the longetivity of the iPhone compared to other brands.

    • @squirrelwithnut@lemmy.world
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      92 years ago

      It’s a nice idea, but I’d be worried about the wear and tear on the folding screen. I can’t imagine it would hold up through the years of use I put phones through.

    • pancakesyrupyum
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      52 years ago

      This is the angle that makes me reconsider folding phones. Either fold direction, and you’ve got a smaller screen that’s usable in one hand.

    • Jojo
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      42 years ago

      My friend got the original galaxy fold and kept it until this year when she bought a fold5. She still has the original fold as a backup phone, too. I’m not sure longevity is necessarily a worry, by that metric.

      • @Mr_Dr_Oink@lemmy.world
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        42 years ago

        I got the fold 3 and the one thing that suprised me above everything else is how sturdy the phone is. How durable it is. Ive had it for just over 2 years and i domt think i will upgrade when the contract ends. Its exactly what i need and is still working perfectly without a scratch on it.

    • @gsfraley@lemmy.world
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      32 years ago

      Have the new Z Fold after years of owning borderline-phablets and the usability is much better. My previous phone (Galaxy S20+) felt too big and painful to use one-handed, yet typing with two hands felt awkward. This splits the use cases. Slim one-hand phone on the outside. Mini-tablet typing monster on the inside. 🤌

    • @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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      22 years ago

      I appreciate the longetivity of the iPhone compared to other brands.

      I used my galaxy 4s mini for literally a decade.