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1984@lemmy.today 10 months agoIf your phone gets significantly slower, then it’s still a thing.
On my Motorola Edge 30 its still as fast as when I bought it a few years back. That’s now it’s supposed to be.
Comment on [deleted]
1984@lemmy.today 10 months agoIf your phone gets significantly slower, then it’s still a thing.
On my Motorola Edge 30 its still as fast as when I bought it a few years back. That’s now it’s supposed to be.
kautau@lemmy.world 10 months ago
That’s a phone with 8GB of RAM that came out two years ago. Of course it will still feel snappy. Apple agreed to a settlement in 2020 about the iPhone 6s, which came out in 2014, at the time, a 6 year old device. If your phone doesn’t feel snappy in four years then it’s the same playing field
1984@lemmy.today 10 months ago
Yeah true. I will probably keep it for that long since nothing excites me about mobile phones anymore.
jaybone@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Nothing excites anyone about new phones anymore. And that’s why this problem exists.
kautau@lemmy.world 10 months ago
Agreed, nearly every new phone release is just adding numbers to specs with little difference in how a phone feels or new features that improve user experience. Once you have 30 or 40 megapixels, 8GB of RAM, hex core processors, and 5G/wifi 6 etc, anything else just feels like marketing numbers