• Dick Justice
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    541 year ago

    Maybe stop charging twelve hundred dollars for a fucking phone.

    • Greyscale
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      141 year ago

      It’d be nice if they’d stop being terminally boring too.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        I’m glad they aren’t just copying the mainstream garbage. Change for the sake of change is a blight on the market.

      • Dick Justice
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        41 year ago

        YES!!! I miss my Motorola Hint and my HTC Surround! The Xperia play, the Lumia 1020 even. All phones look the same now and they all do the same things. All you really pay for these days is a little more speed and a few more pixels but they’re 4 times the cost.

        • @Couldbealeotard
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          21 year ago

          Because now a phone is just a touchscreen with a processor behind it. It’s up to the software developers to bring the value, and they don’t dare change that because any deviation will prevent the next flappy bird from running on their hardware.

          • Dick Justice
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            11 year ago

            Very true, plus I very much miss seeing manufacturers put their foot out there with hardware configurations. Naturally there were plenty of flop products like the LG Wing with it’s marginally useful T shape, but examples like the HTC Surround with extensible surround sound speakers was really cool. Today’s phone companies won’t even consider those kind of attempts at producing something different than a rectangular glass slab.

    • @fne8w2ahOP
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      -161 year ago

      1 grand max for a flagship is the sweet spot rn imo.

      • @ErikDegenerik
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        1 year ago

        As someone who hasn’t paid more than 500€ for a phone I can only laugh at this. 1000 is still outrageous.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            In some aspects, cameras have even become worse. They started optimizing their software for the wrong metrics, which leaves you with heavily over-processed images that always look a little off. This can make otherwise boring images seem a bit more interesting, but if you’re actually trying to take good pictures, it can seriously ruin your shots.

            I think Sony is one of the few manufacturers that allows you to choose less aggressive processing.

          • @AA5B
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            11 year ago

            Exactly! I’m mostly hoping for a better camera, but I’m always interested in any new health features. I don’t upgrade watches bpvery often, but if they do deliver blood pressure sensors, I’m in.

            Admittedly my primary reason for upgrading phones this year is my kids. We’ve gotten into the habit of giving them our old phones (with new batteries) so we’re all relatively current but we only need to buy two new ones at a time and I’m not as upset if they break an older one. However Apple is dropping support for my kids’ current phones, plus the kids have been dropping the phones left and right, so it’s time. They’ll get phones that are still supported with updates and that have no physical damage yet, and I’ll get new and shiny

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            I’d push to around 300€ there is that stupid artificial gap in low and medium like 64GB storage?

            I think the only thing I’d pay more for would be a good camera (good and fast).

        • @drekly
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          11 year ago

          Paid £500 for an S22U on FB marketplace and couldn’t be happier

  • @Lag
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    81 year ago

    The Xperia 5 V can’t come fast enough. My current phone is falling apart and I want to support Sony.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I desperately want a Sony but there are so few carriers that offer them that I have to finance them the old fashioned way, or buy them used, which is hard since there are so few of them available that one may pop up every few months. Ever since LG dropped their phone division, there are zero options for phones at any carrier in my area besides the big 3. LG was the only company fighting the software “cloud” subscription phones, with real hardware that people like me want and need, that was available to finance with a contract (which in my area is a big deal. The service area here is still horrible no matter who you choose, of which we have maybe 4 SP’s)

      Either way, Sony needs to simplify their naming scheme. It doesn’t matter much for people like me that will always research phone purchases, but even then, it’s confusing. Looking up Xperias that are solely pro models that don’t relate to their 1 and 5 models only to see they are for some reason cheaper will confuse a majority of buyers, especially when they seem at a glance to be nearly identical and both being sold on their company site. The lineage of their offerings is just convoluted and they could do away with all of the nonsense if they used letters for the naming of their devices and left the numbers for their iterations rather than the opposite, and then left their pro series phones to be just that. Looking up Sonys phones nearly requires a history lesson.

      • @Lag
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        21 year ago

        I agree their naming is too confusing, it’s like they’re intentionally trying to limit themselves. When I started searching for phones I was definitely confused and I only understood their naming on day 2.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    Really good that the sales number is low. Replacing a phone every 2 years, with every next being less and less user friends is not a good sign.