People considering ‘cancelling’ new iPhone order after seeing comparison between older generation::Some have noticed the new iPhone 15 is not as strong or as durable as the older generations of iPhones.

  • Dojan
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    221 year ago

    Maybe they have a six year old phone and are interested in upgrading? I don’t think that many people are doing yearly upgrades nowadays, it’s expensive and pointless.

    • Footnote2669
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      81 year ago

      Not even six. I switched from SE 2020 to 15 pro. The battery was awful. This one should easy last me till the next major change, which is replaceable batteries forced by EU.

      • @BertramDitore@lemmy.world
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        31 year ago

        This is my situation. My SE 2020 battery is complete shit, and the screen is getting more messed up by the day, with two permanent thin lines going down the center of the phone. I’m a reluctant Apple user, but I think I need to upgrade–and I’ve been eyeing the 15 Pro. I’d like it to last a while. How are you liking it?

        • Footnote2669
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          21 year ago

          So smoooooth compared to the SE. Night and day. I love it. The island is fun to watch (when music is playing the waveform actually reacts to it, it’s not a looped animation :3). Finally I don’t need the lighting cable. I charge the battery to 80% overnight, from 7:30am to now (11:43pm), without charging during the day, now I have 26%. Although that’s after 3h of screen time + AOD. No overheating so far, and idk if the back will break, I’m not planning on bending the phone lol. Can’t say much about the titanium as I’m always wearing a case (shoutout Spigen <3). Face ID is so much better than Touch ID. As long as you don’t wear sunglasses glasses (maybe I need to create another profile). The cameras are fun for a bit but they’re a gimmick after a while for me. The selfie camera is MUCH better and so is low light performance. I don’t like that it’s hard to reach notifications and control centre, but ig that’s the price of a bigger screen. Sorry for jumping from topic to topic lol. Let me know if you have any more questions ;)

          • @BertramDitore@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            Ahh thank you for all the details! You called out all the stuff I care about, I think I’m sold. I’m psyched about the USB C cable, that’s the main reason I haven’t just gone for a 14. I was and still am a little worried about Face ID though, I never had any problems with Touch ID and thought I might miss it. I don’t want my phone to have to look at me before it unlocks…seems weird. Whatever, gotta give up something. Might just switch back to a PIN.

    • @kaitco@lemmy.world
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      61 year ago

      I’ve got a 12 and will be upgrading to a 15 Pro mainly due to my current phone having a scratch and I really want the USB-C charging option so that I can finally have a single charger type for everything.

      Outside of the USB-C change, I don’t see much of a difference between my current 12 and the base 15, hence why I’m going for the 15 Pro. If not for the USB-C, I’d be sticking with my lightly-scratched 12.

      • JackGreenEarth
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        -11 year ago

        Why not use an Android phone? All of them have been using USB-C for ages, and they generally have more options for privacy and customisation.

        • @kaitco@lemmy.world
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          71 year ago

          Nah, that’s not an option. I’ve been on iOS since 2009. It’s not really beneficial to move to Android.

          Plus I’ve got an Android as my second phone and I’m not a fan of moving to the platform as my main device.

          Samsung is silly with their extra store that I can’t remove, I don’t find that the same apps are as polished as their iOS counterparts, I don’t like the way Android does app-switching, I don’t like that there are some apps like Facebook that can be disabled, but not actually removed from the phone, and on my previous phone (moved from an S8 to an S10e) I repeatedly received Samsung ads about newer devices being available. I dislike that the apps themselves are constantly running in the background and that I feel like I have to be conscious of my RAM usage or mindfully close out apps. On iOS, I can have 2 apps or 200 running with no difference in how the phone runs.

          There’s also a lot of work necessary to remove things that I don’t like on Android, like removing their extra “gaming overlay” that’s entirely unnecessary, and then there’s general things that I don’t like such as not having a “tap to top” like iOS has.

          I do like that Android let’s you sideload apps and choose/customize your launcher, but given that I’ve never really taken advantage of things like extra Home Screens on iOS and the only apps I sideload are emulators, those aren’t game changers for me. I’ve also got an Apple Watch and iPad and things all work best when they’re all within the same ecosystem.

          As for privacy, between the two, I would rather let Apple harvest and hold my data over Google. I don’t even like to use Google as my main search engine, and when I do, I’ve got on my VPN and I’m signed out of any account. Apple is selling the info as well, but their money-maker is more about hardware and less about data collection.

          I get why some folks may prefer Android to Apple and even make the switch, but I’m not one of them.

          • Spaz
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            41 year ago

            Might I suggest your next Android phone be a Pixel so you can avoid having that bloat to begin with? I only buy pure android devices as my primary phone so don’t need to deal with the crap preloaded and locked down. Not suggesting moving to Android as your primary due what you mentioned but there is a night and day difference between pre installed bloadware phones from 3rd parties and pure Android OS ones from Google. Pixel 8 will come with 7 years of OS updates too; Just my 2 cents.

          • JackGreenEarth
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            31 year ago

            I agree default Android is only slightly better than iOS, I would recommend a custom Android ROM like GrapheneOS or CalyxOS so no one gets your data, neither Apple nor Google, and you can fully customise the device, including getting root access and removing/sandboxing system apps.

    • danque
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      11 year ago

      Even then why have yearly releases if a phone release can last 2 years easily, but no they need the newest possible tech that only scales in increments.

      • Dojan
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        31 year ago

        Because with almost billion iPhone users you could still have several million sales even if your entire customer base for your new phone are upgrading from old phones?

        Or in short; it’s profitable enough to keep doing that.

        Though we’ve clearly gotten to a point where twice-yearly releases aren’t worth it.

        • danque
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          11 year ago

          True, but with a two year release people would just take that phone instead of the newly released one.

          • Dojan
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            11 year ago

            If year to year sales were to not be profitable enough they might do that. As it stands development of a new phone is clearly not cutting into the margins enough to make an annual release not worth it.