Android is struggling to keep its market share in the United States, as Apple continues to take over in the market. But, despite Android as a whole losing ground, Google Pixel phones are becoming a bigger slice of the US market.

Counterpoint Research reports that, in Q2 2023, US smartphone shipments dropped by 24% year-over-year. That includes both iPhones and Android phones, and virtually every brand saw a drop in shipments. Samsung saw US shipments drop by 37% while Motorola saw a 17% drop. TCL saw the biggest decline at just shy of 70% year-over-year, and even Apple saw a 6% drop.

  • @[email protected]
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    611 year ago

    I use a pixel and I have a hard time justifying a different phone.

    Maybe things have changed but the last Samsung I had was an S7 and I didn’t like it. It suffered from bloat and didn’t last all that long. Battery issues and the screen started to lose sensitivity.

    I’ve used iphones and they aren’t bad, but I really dislike apple’s app store and effort to control everything on my phone. Also everytime a new phone came out my old phone became next to unusable for a month.

    I got a pixel 3 and loved it, now I have a pixel 6 and don’t see changing my phone any time soon or going to a non-pixel phone. They last a long time, they work well with everything and the camera is excellent.

    • @[email protected]
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      241 year ago

      I have a hard time justifying a different phone

      A pixel doesn’t have SD card slot or 3.5 mm jack. My Xperia 1V has both. There. Justified.

      • @[email protected]
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        121 year ago

        While I understand the appeal, those are 2 features that I don’t need. Having the option would be nice though.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago

          I think more people should have this kind of view, and less of an all or nothing approach.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        I’m looking to switch from Samsung to a non-Google phone, It’s too bad no networks seem to carry the Xperia in Canada. Really don’t want to shell out $2000 up front for a phone.

      • @dingus
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        21 year ago

        You know I used to be with you on the SD card slot thing because phones used to have barely any internal storage. But now we’re seeing phones with hundreds of GB of onboard storage and having an SD card expansion on top of that feels wholly unnecessary.

        I’m with you on the 3.5mm jack tho.

      • SokathHisEyesOpen
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        51 year ago

        What does Fairphone offer for the car infortainment interface, or are you stuck without one?

          • Cris
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            211 year ago

            Lmao, god I’m so jealous of Europe sometimes. I have to assume you don’t live in the US.

            There are some places here you can get away with not having one, but its basically a non-option for the vast majority of the US

              • Cris
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                11 year ago

                All good lol. There are things I appreciate about my country, but definitely also things I don’t 😅 city planing and viability of bikes & walking are 100% the latter

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          I mean, Fairphone runs Android. So the same Android Auto that a Google Pixel would have

          • SokathHisEyesOpen
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            21 year ago

            That is by Google though. Right? They said their phone is de-googled. So maybe the question isn’t what does Fairphone have, but what does a de-googled Android phone use?

    • @Eldritch
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      81 year ago

      The maddening thing is how much effort Samsung wastes duplicating basic gapps. Their contacts manager, calendar, etc has no real advantages over the Google ones. Just focus on the hardware and overall experience? Stop wasting time reinventing the wheel. Same with their app store. I’ve had an S20 for the last 4 years. Used Samsung since the S2 which I still have. And am looking at a pixel to replace it since my security updates are running out.

    • Very_Bad_Janet
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      41 year ago

      Can you explain what you mean by bloat with the s7? I have that and like my phone, just wondering why others don’t.

      • danielbln
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        41 year ago

        I don’t know what OP is talking about, by the time the S7 came around the bloat was already heavily reduced, I’m on an S10E still and think it’s one of the best phones ever, apart from the lackluster battery maybe. But current day Samsung Android I don’t consider bloated.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      They’re right at the top in the battery department, there’s still a little bloat but you can disable things. Maybe 5 garbage games and FB

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Still using an S7E to this day as the battery seems basically indestructable…

      The one single weak spot? I actually had to replace the glue.

    • newIdentity
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      231 year ago

      I FUCKING LOVE FLASHING CUSTOM ROMS WITHOUT VOIDING MY WARRENTY

  • @ocassionallyaduck
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    411 year ago

    Google keeps locking tons of Android features away behind their own privatized software stack.

    Better for Google, but they are cutting their nose to spite their face here, as Android as a whole suffers for it.

    Stuff like call screening in the android dialer would be possible on any brand of device. But no, pixel only.

    The pixels have the very best android experience. It comes close to iPhone. But pixels aren’t the whole market. Overall Google is trying to claw back control of the entire platform and I hate it.

    • @bob_wiley
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      • @[email protected]
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        171 year ago

        The problem of android is that it is “fake opensource”. The OS itself is open source but google locks it down with GMS so google still controls everything.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        There needs to be a 3rd mobile platform that isn’t tied to Android

        There wont be a 3rd platform for the same reason that America wont have a 3rd Political Party.

        You’ll never edge out the incumbents.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Hello, it actually exists and they started developing it with crowdfunding (now it seems like they are self-sustaining with sales)… Do you know Puri.sm?

        They started some years ago creating a new Linux phone, the Librem 5, and they are developing firmware support and a mobile GNOME interface around it that also other project, like PinePhone, is using.

        • @bob_wiley
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          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            thank you for the link…it’s speaking a bit fast for me as English is not my main language but I got the point. I would be curious to ask directly to Purism people what they think about this.

            Also I would consider /e/os with Murena Fairphone 4 as a good compromise and a safe choice.

            • @bob_wiley
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              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                Yes, I watched it with subtitles and understood the 2 points explained…thank you anyway for the recap!

        • @bob_wiley
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      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        If you have any corporate backing wouldn’t it turn back into same situation as Android? Maintaining the app store, build tools, making new features, patching vulnerabilities e.t.c all require massive amounts of capital. Why would a company openly take initiative to do that? Meanwhile all others could free ride on it? Also any OEM’s coming in and customizing it to their liking and not following the standards because they are not bound too like in Android, wouldn’t that cause massive fragmentation. Back in the Symbian days this was the case where you need to customize your app slightly for each Symbian device, which meant you had to have the physical device. I remember back in the back in the day your office would be filled with these devices.

        • @bob_wiley
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          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            First of all major corporations contribute to Linux kernel and there is very little contribution to a distribution. Why are they doing it? Because they benefit from their hardware being supported by Linux kernel(e.g Samsung contributing to Linux Kernel for SSD drivers) and now they can sell more, they can do this because it works with their business model. That is not the case with smartphones, in the smartphone world they are selling directly to a consumer and they need to do everything they can to differentiate themselves from other Smartphone makers. Mozilla tried the business model you mentioned but it didn’t catch on. Lastly you forget to understand the number of apps available on Google Play vs on Flathub. Google Play has ~3.5 Million Apps vs ~2000 Apps on Flathub. We are talking a different scale here

            Also speaking about Flathub, Flathub solves the issue of fragmentation by building an entire OS on top of another OS just to avoid the challenges of backwards compatibility. This has implications like huge app sizes because you are basically downloading the runtime and everything it depends on for each app. It works for most people because storage is cheap and can be upgraded at least in PC world. But still you will have issues with RAM because most flatpaks don’t share the runtime and you need to need load each runtime to memory and this implications like higher memory usage, slower app start times because you need to load the entire runtime first before even you start the app.

            • @bob_wiley
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    • @[email protected]
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      81 year ago

      Stuff like call screening in the android dialer would be possible on any brand of device. But no, pixel only.

      Other OEMs also have their own features that are exclusive to their own phones. They can also implement them into AOSP, but they don’t. Instead, they keep the features to their own devices. A lot of times when there’s a new feature on Android in general, more often than not you’ll see comments like “Samsung had this since years ago”.

      So if other OEMs are allowed to have platform specific features, Google is allowed to have theirs too. Or in other words, if you want to hold Google responsible for holding back Android, you have to also hold other OEMs responsible too.

      • @ocassionallyaduck
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        31 year ago

        Google owns the platform. You’re not really comparing like to like.

        It’s like saying since Google can modify some files in Windows that Microsoft doesn’t control the platform.

        Sony upstreams many of its changes, but you’re right that Samsung does not. This is both because of differentiation, but also because often the changes are in defiance of the “official” Google spec in android and merging is refused.

        One plus for example offers further customization on gesture input that is missing in Android 13, allowing corner bottom swipes, hiding the little nav line, etc. But this cannot merge.

        Google has decided a “solution”, to hell with if your features are better. I would love to see these features in android mainline. But Google won’t allow it. Sony made a theme system years ago, but Android wouldn’t fully merge it, and took another 5 or so years to make something.

        • @[email protected]
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          It’s like saying since Google can modify some files in Windows that Microsoft doesn’t control the platform.

          You complain that I’m not comparing like to like, yet you’re taking Windows, a closed sourced operating system, as an analog to AOSP, an open sourced one?

          This is both because of differentiation

          But why are other OEMs allowed to differentiate, and Google is not?

          Yes, Google has the “official control” of how Android should be, and not all OEM changes are in line with that. But contributing upstream is not the only way to make the Android ecosystem open.

          Take for example, Galaxy Watch with WearOS. There are multiple features that the watch can do, ONLY IF ITS PAIRED WITH A GALAXY PHONE. I have a Galaxy Watch 4. It has ECG and Blood Pressure sensors. But I can’t use it (officially), because I don’t have a Galaxy phone. Why? Because Samsung is keeping that exclusive with a software lock that totally doesn’t have to be there. Measuring ECG and Blood Pressure doesn’t need anything from my phone, it’s all on the watch.

          Another example also regarding using Galaxy Watch with a non Galaxy phone, which is even more absurd, is that if you’re using a Galaxy Watch with Galaxy phone, they will sync DND status between them, but if you’re not using a Galaxy phone, it’ll not sync. They literally added codes for it to not work on non Galaxy phone.

          Also, the example you used in your original comment, the call screening feature, uses language models that Google paid for the development and trained. I think it’s fair for them to uses that technology that they invested in to help boost their own profit instead of just giving out for free.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I think it’s beneficial for Google to distance itself from Android. By default, it’s way too entangled with Google services. It would be nice to have Google call screening on every Android device, but is it really that far fetched to expect manufacturers to develop their own suite of features? I wouldn’t expect iOS to have Android’s features of vice versa.

    • 𝐘Ⓞz҉
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      -41 year ago

      Watch the Louis Rossman video on YouTube about Graphene OS developer.

      • @Zak
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        261 year ago

        One of the Lemmy developers appears to be a militant communist who denies the Uyghur genocide, yet here we are. Quite a few open source developers are insane and trying to avoid software with problematic contributors is an easy path to follow them into madness. It might stop me from donating money or getting heavily involved with development, but it’s not going to stop me from using the software.

        I didn’t immediately reformat my ReiserFS partitions when Hans Reiser was arrested for murdering his wife either.

        • @Eldritch
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          61 year ago

          People defend capitalism too. Not that one justifies the other. People tend to cling blindly to ideals rather than compromise for the good of everyone.

      • TheHawaiianKoala
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        121 year ago

        I apply the rule of separating the Art from the Artist in this case. No doubt he is insane but Graphene OS is the most secure+private OS that he has build

      • newIdentity
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        41 year ago

        You should watch it again. He said that GrapheneOS is great, but the Developer isn’t.

  • @Hazdaz
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    381 year ago

    It’s still 45% marketshare Android vs 55% iOS. With the way the title reads, you’d think Android was down in the single digits and barely hanging on.

    Personally I just don’t see how anyone uses iOS. The iPhone I have is just awful. The UI is clunky and I’m absolutely baffled why this stupid phone weighs so much. That’s not a good thing, damn it. My Samsung is infinitely better device in my opinion. But I’d still love to see a third player come in. I was sad when Microsoft killed off their phone OS. It might not have been great at the time, but more competition is always better. And then if course there’s also PalmOS. So sad to see such a cool OS die off.

    • @dingus
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      21 year ago

      iOS seems to be meant for simplicity and ease of use. I mean, not that Android is confusing at all, but it seems that the less tech focused you are the more you gravitate toward iOS. I would never want an iPhone, but they seem to really kill it in the battery and camera departments.

  • @[email protected]
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    341 year ago

    Samsung and major carriers are shooting android in the foot with the bloatware. There are less and less viable android models that aren’t half filled with carrier or manufacturer specific apps that can’t be deleted. The pixel might be a tool of the Google devil but at least it provides the illustration of customization. iPhones are still Iphones. People they phone is pretty much the same butvthe hardware gets slightly better. Combine all that with messaging on Iphones essentially excluding android and ut becomes though to stick with anything but a Pixel or iphone. If I didn’t have lots of Google stuff setup for work I might reconsider iphones, but the pixel really has made my life easier via Google big brother. If work used apple big brother I would switch.

    • @Saneless
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      At this point google is pretty much the only company providing an Android experience that isn’t shit

      Anyone I’ve met that hasn’t liked it has used a Samsung. They try so hard to be apple but they don’t understand the parts that work and just create an overall bloated and shitty experience

      Doesn’t help that they have overpriced everything

    • danielbln
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      131 year ago

      I believe that’s true for most markets, it sure is in central Europe.

      • arefx
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        61 year ago

        In western new York seemingly I’m the only one with “the poor man green bubble” even tho my phone was 1,600$ and nicer hardware and build than an iphone.

    • SRo
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      81 year ago

      Android is number one everywhere but the us. The us is apple centric. Their loss.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        The US in brainlessly-adoring-corporations centric.

        Which is exactly the reason while Android is shrinking in the US while Google is growing.

  • @HRDS_654
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    I feel like Google really hit their stride with the Pixel 6/7 series. The 7 series especially is just such a nice phone to use and doesn’t feel as cheap as previous iterations of the Pixel. It’s also great value for the money. I went with the Pro and would recommend against it honestly, because while I like the extra camera and the bigger screen it really doesn’t fit great in the average persons hand and the features don’t really justify the cost. If I had to do it over again I would get the 7 or 7a.

    • sloonark
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      141 year ago

      I honestly think the Pixel 5 is the best phone I have ever used. I have the P7 and I kind of wish I had stuck with the P5.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          I love all the input in this thread. I’m currently a Pixel 2 user, so it’s interesting seeing different perspectives

          • @DTFpanda
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            11 year ago

            Don’t be fooled. The 7pro is an incredible phone. I have nothing but positive things to say about it 1+ year later. And I also had a pixel 2.

        • @rDrDr
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          11 year ago

          You might like something from the a series, although the fingerprint reader on the 6a is still awful and the cameras are not amazing. The size and weight feel right though, closest ive come to a Nexus 5.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Pixel 5 user here and I have to say I am going to make it last as long as I can! Battery still keeps its charge all day even as a fairly big user too!

        • cloaker
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          41 year ago

          I bought the s22 because Google abandoned this size phone

          • @[email protected]
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            31 year ago

            My problem with Android phones other than the Pixel line is all the bloatware they have installed that you can’t get rid of. I’ve been a user of the more “pure” Google phones since the start, from the Nexus to the Pixel.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        For me it was the 2XL.

        That camera was just 5 years ahead of everything else, fruit included.

        Got a 5 after that, but the selfie cam was crap. And to some extent, it still is on current models. I wish Google did something about it, I can’t be the only one noticing.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I love the size and feel of the 7a. It was an adjustment to get used to a small screen again but honestly, so happy with that element of the phone.

      The battery life, on the other hand, feels worse than my 4 year old OnePlus 7 Pro’s is. I am not sure if it’s a me problem or a Pixel problem, but that aspect has me seriously worried about the longevity of the device. I guess you get what you pay for, but I’d expect a bit better for a mid-range phone.

      • @HRDS_654
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        41 year ago

        It’s, unfortunately, a Pixel problem. The Tensor G2 is notoriously bad with battery life, and the fact that every manufacturer thinks we want paper thin phones doesn’t help.

        • Die4Ever
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          The 7a is not a thin phone though, it’s noticeably thicker than my S9+, I think the 7a has a 4385mAh battery? A phone with such a large battery capacity should be better. You can tell the inefficient SoC is to blame because it gets hot easily.

          Just makes me appreciate how amazing the S9+ was for it’s time that the 7a doesn’t completely blow it away when it’s much newer and nearly as expensive.

    • @DTFpanda
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      31 year ago

      Respectfully disagree. I’ve been with Google phones since the Nexus 6p. Upgraded to the Pixel 2 which I still have and still works, then to the 5a which I hated, and now the 7pro. I didn’t think it would ever get better than the 2, but the telephoto lens on the 7 pro plus pretty much everything else still amazes me now over a year later. It’s perfect and I’m happy I didn’t go cheaper.

      • @HRDS_654
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        11 year ago

        Don’t get me wrong, I love the telephoto lens, but I have a strong feeling I would sacrifice the extra lens for a smaller screen. Then again I do watch a lot of videos so who knows. I think the biggest problem is there isn’t really a way to test the two side by side to see.

  • SokathHisEyesOpen
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    161 year ago

    As someone who switched to a Pixel from an iPhone, I’ll tell ya that I think the Pixel is a better phone. The only things iOS has going for it that are better is tap to scroll up, swipe to go forward, and a slightly better camera. Everything else works better on my Pixel.

    • @Astroturfed
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      121 year ago

      The camera is a bit subjective and varies by generation. The tech and algo on the backend has more effect on the pictures than the camera on most pictures these days. I think the pixel does much better wide angle and scenic type photos.

  • Gleddified
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    151 year ago

    Can’t wait for the entire cell phone market to be a monopoly…

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    I got a pixel 7a about 6 months ago. It’s a brilliant phone, once you remove all the google shit / bloat and block all the trackers.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I wanted to try it out today. The install looked intimidatingly-complex to me, is there an ‘easy mode’ installation method?

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          The web installer is pretty simple.

          It may seem intimidating because they’re being super cautious. (Stuff like “You should avoid using a USB hub” is bordering paranoia.) But that’s not because they need to be cautious. The GrapheneOS installer is very safe. The reason they’re being so cautious is because they want to be more than 99% sure it works.

          If something goes wrong, like you use the wrong browser or fail to install the driver/package, it won’t break your phone; the install just stops and you can try again.

          The one thing that may break something is if during install the cable gets disconnected or the power goes out. That’s unlikely by itself, but even if it does happen, you phone will most likely be fine.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Thanks for the encouragement & advice. I’ll give the web installer a go once I’ve had some sleep.

            • @iturnedintoanewt
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              21 year ago

              iturned

              I was shocked how damn simple the whole thing was. You just click a few times, and before you notice, the phone is rebooting and installing the full OS. Takes almost no time and it’s all super automatized. That was the easiest “custom” OS I’ve ever installed.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      For me, it’s the lack of a replaceable battery and the lack of an SD card slot. Otherwise, it would be a perfect phone to tinker with software-wise with all the custom ROMs that are available for Pixels.

  • Madbrad200
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    121 year ago

    I bought my phone for £150 and it’s great. I don’t understand why people spend £600+ on a phone.

    • @[email protected]
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      I think the sweet spot is somewhere around the 300€ range. Below that you definitely already get perfectly reasonable phones, but you still have to make compromises. But at that price point you get most things and the missing features are not as important.

      Past that diminishing returns are hitting hard.

      The one thing that usually scales the most past that point is the camera. But a phone like the pixel 6a already takes amazing photos. And the only real difference you usually find are extra lenses (particularly zoom).

      The only time i could ever see those 1k top phones start to make sense is, if we ever get to the point where phones can replace our personal computers and you just slot them into a dock at home.

      • @VioletteRei
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        11 year ago

        You can dock a Samsung phone and it become like a personal computer

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Is samsung dex any good? I think my S6 lite actually got it with an update at some point, but i’ve not tried it out yet. Also not sure if the USB 2.0 would hold it back a lot.

          • @VioletteRei
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            21 year ago

            Honestly yeah! It’s compatible with the majority of apps, you can use it to game (emulator or native Android games), there’s also a lot of productive apps compatible with it, like Microsoft Office (don’t know if there’s open source alternative compatible) and the majority of video and photo editing software. Personally it doesn’t remplace my computer, but while travelling it’s really pratical

    • @Galluf
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      -21 year ago

      Take a look at how the median income in America compares to your country.

  • basuramannen
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    111 year ago

    Is there an Android phone that supports dual boot? I would like to have that so can use Lineage or something similar and only boot into Google android when I need to use banking app or government ID that requires the safetynet antifeture. This would free me from carrying two phones. But I suppose a locked down bootloader can not support dual boot and an unlocked will not support the safetynet antifeature.

      • basuramannen
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        11 year ago

        Tkank you. I already had magisk. I tried installing the safetynet-fix, bit unfortunately it did not resolve the issue on my Xiaomi Mi A2 phone.

      • @SeatBeeSate
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        11 year ago

        There’s risk in that. Unless you go through a bunch of other steps to hide magisk, there’s quite a few apps that will stop working or flag you just for having magisk, and some games may even ban you from playing. Namely Pokémon go.

        • @Nonononoki
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          11 year ago

          Hiding Magisk is just 1 click in the settings

    • Skull giver
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      [This comment has been deleted by an automated system]

        • basuramannen
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          11 year ago

          With a partially broken screen and weak battery it may be time for a new phone anyway. I will look into pixel and GrapheneOS. Thank you for the suggestion.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          To add to this: In GrapheneOS you can install sandboxed Google Play in a secondary profile for banking etc. This way you can keep your main profile Google free and totally isolated from their preying eyes.

          • Bloved Madman
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            11 year ago

            This, although the vast majority of users just use the one profile and just enjoy the benefits of a sandboxed and de-privileged Google.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            Just be warned if your work uses Google Chat that will not work on GrapheneOS even with sandboxed Google Play.