As a latin american the only reason People upgrade phones is Your phone is broken. Your phone is stolen. Your phone is a crappy low end phone and you can finally afford something better.
So true. Mine is a crap phone with 2 gigs of RAM that I only bought because my previous (mid-end and also nothing special) phone broke. If I'm listening to music and I open the Amazon App, for example, the youtube music app running in the background closes! Now I'm finally able to afford something that doesn't leave me enraged, so I bought a Galaxy S23 this week. I don't plan on upgrading for at least 5 years, because this is the first time I have a phone that is able to hold up for that long. Let's just hope I'm not robbed omw to work or something.
Still rocking a Galaxy Note 9. Does everything I want it to, is fast enough, takes decent photos, has wireless charging, and rocks a 1440p AMOLED. Not much else that I need.
I'm using this too but man the curved edges are a pain inn the ass, I've broken the front twice because if this shit. and the rear glas also jas seen some shit. I'm planning to buy an Iphone 13 next: just to see what apple has to offer first hand. than I'll probably settle with s23 base model.
Same here..although mins is slowing down. I don't want to upgrade because I really feel this is the last phone with no compromises. I'll definitely hold on for another 2 years. I think a factory reset might put it back at top shape.
@@mehmetgurdal My rear glass cracked too and I replaced it myself for 2$. It's been 6 years but my front glass is still doing alright despite a few drops. We'll see if that changes anytime soon...
I have all the money to upgrade, but there isn't anything new on the market that could be comfortably used with one hand. So I'm sticking to my 8 year old iPhone SE 1.
I have an S21 ultra. I can tell you that after 3 years of heavy use, I now have carpal tunnel syndrome. I did not ever have it before I got this phone.
You have a phone that’s a year old and you decided to make an 8 minute long review about why you’re not upgrading anymore? My phone is from 2018, I want to see people with 5-10 years with the same phone and how it’s holding up today.
I’m still holding onto an iPhone 6 here. Still runs many apps including Discord, Reddit and even RUclips for me. The camera is basic but good enough for me. The iPhone 6 also has really good form factor. Besides that everything else like watching films or doing work I use my iPad mini 6 which is way faster.
I am upgrading my phone after 7 years because it will soon become incompatible with my countries cellular network and will literally stop working - and if wasn't for that I would happily keep on using it
@@jasonpapai That might be the reason for me to upgrade from J7NXT to a 5G compatible phone as the phone does not support it. It's good to know you wouldn't upgrade if it wasn't for this reason.
Still using the S10 here. Found ZERO reasons to upgrade! Looking to go to a dumb phone when this one finally dies 😂 only app I'd miss is banking and that's hardly a big deal! I have my GBA and my Sony NWZ-X1060 in my back pack at all times mind you! That's my games and music sorted. And then my phone is just a phone!
@@fabriclivermanufacturers make phones with the expectation that consumers will buy a new one at least every year or 2. after 3 years they purposefully make the phone slower and shittier to force people to buy new. so yea, anything more than 3 years is kinda "old" due to those issues
I cant imagine going to that big of a size difference. I just went from an S9 to an S20 Plus and its fairly uncomfortable to me (i only got Plus because i bought it off my friend)
To be honest, today computers last a lot longer than they used to before they get obsolete. Maybe phones too, but they have ALWAYS gone obsolete quite sooner than computers. That said, upgrading every year is pointless and an aberration. Even every other year is too little life to be got from a phone.
They are driven by commercials and they have their phones from a contract with their mobile carriers. Those are the major reasons I see why people constantly upgrade.
My iPhone 6S still works like a goddamn charm and I don't plan to update it unless it stops doing so. Eight years strong and about to turn 9 this year. If it makes it to 10 I'm gonna honorably retire him.
Mine is a OnePlus 7 from 2019. About to be 5 years. Works great, used to work even better before the last update OnePlus forcefully upgraded me to when I went to have the battery replaced, which is shitty considering they took my phone for 10 days and returned it to me without replacing the battery because the device was "End of Life", this was about a year ago. Had a third party battery put in and works great. Forced Obsolescence should not be allowed by these companies who use shady tactics to make user experience worse to "extend the life of the device" or "protect the environment".
OnePlus 5 still rocks to this day, even though it's quite old, the snapdragon 835 is really good and I can play any game without any problems. The problems is the battery but that's because it's the original one
I got the Oneplus 6T like 2 months after it's release and still using it up til today. The battery isn't what it used to be but I also do somewhat heavy gaming more now than before and the volume buttons are of no use (thank god for volume apps). But I'm looking to upgrade with the Oneplus 12 or the next flagship from Oneplus.
Completed 4yrs of my iPhone SE 2020. The charging cable is hanging on for life but the phone is still going strong. Did one battery change about 2years ago.
I recently picked up a Motorola G Play 2023 for $99.99 at Best Buy. I had about $40 on a gift card, so about $60 total. It's a phone. It does what I need it to do, which isn't anything special. "Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate to buy shit we don't need." - Tyler Durden
Just picked up the g power 2023 for $200 at Target myself. Can be had for like $100 with some prepaid carriers and absolutely does everything I need it to.
I took a risk on an unlocked 'Umidigi' smartphone from AliExpress. Paid $150 total for 64 64GB modal with an additional 256GB SD card. It's been a year and a half and I'm satisfied. As a bonus, it works beautifully with emulators. I basically have a portable Dreamcast, PS1, and PSP.
@MhmmdA3RI bro my s21 fe when it heats up sometimes the super fast charging ain't working. Sometimes i have to put my phone down to a ceramic floor so it won't heat much 😂 btw, hope you have a nice food at sahur
@@monkeyglory2905 alhamdulillah bro already get my sahoor just now. Yaa me too sometimes the super fast charging wont working tho and i need to unplug and plug it back again just to make sure got super fast charging or not🤣. Overall just fine. But im still considered to switch from S21FE to S23 base model, the compact one and great SD8G2. Would be a good switch?
Bought my son one at launch at a very reasonable price. Amazing phone on balance with a beautiful screen. Battery still good despite a mix of all types of charging, playing games and watching videos.
At 5:30 you tell about battery wearing out/heating through fast-, and wireless charging, so glad you did! Nearly ordered a wireless dock and 67 Watt wall plug... Great review, makes sense not to physically upgrade to a new flagship, or midrange for that matter. Thanks a million.
Same here. These things are far too expensive to just change it whenever you want. I am not spending this much money again and i hope this thing lasts 5 years or more.
Samsung Galaxy S10 here. I haven't upgraded my phone in many years. Still works just fine. Decent camera, decent battery. 1TB storage + 1TB microSD. Unless I break it or lose it or it gets stolen, I am not upgrading.
I would love to keep the same device for more than 3+ years but they become so unreliable most of the time. My phone ended up dying out of nowhere due to hardware issues from long time use. I wish I had upgraded the phone before it completely died and I lost everything.
I still use my 2018 Samsung Galaxy S9, but it's definitely showing it's age. It takes forever to open the camera app and start recording, and I'm havng trouble with phonecalls and sending texts. I'm "upgrading" to the 2021 iPhone 13 mini, but I'm also keeping my Samsung Galaxy S9 for using around the house. I'm tempted to get a 2020 Samsung Galaxy S20, but it only has one more year of quarterly security updates, and then nothing. So even though it could last a long time, it will eventually have issues supporting apps, just as is currently the case with my Samsung Galaxy S9.
I still use the v60 and I also have a OnePlus 5 for backup and it still runs pretty fast too. Also have my mom's old pixel 2. Also a snapdragon 835 and it works fine other than having a bad battery.
I wanted the V60, but I found a shop selling G8X's that were practically brand new for like $100, so I ended up getting that instead... LG was so awesome and the V series was so ahead of it's time. Them leaving the market really sucks :/ (I wish they kept the replaceable battery even after the V20 though)
I've been using my Xiaomi Mi 9T since May 2020, and it still holds up really well. Granted, the battery has degraded over that period, but given my fairly limited daily use, it's still good enough to last me for a day. One of my favourite features is the clean display with no selfie camera hole punch since it's one of those phones that had it motorized, and since there's no phone with a clean screen on the market anymore, I don't plan on upgrading it any time soon. Also, the later I upgrade, the better the phone that's going to accompany me for the next few years. :)
I am using the same one , I had changed my battery couple of weeks ago from an mi authorised service centre it costed me 1050rs but it was worth. Easily getting 9hr + screenontime. Now on EvoX Android 14. Ditch Miui and install some other rom , performance is top notch.
Also had that phone since 2019, sadly I broke my display so I upgraded to the Xiaomi 13t. It still felt good to use and without it breaking and the worsening battery I would have kept it, but I got the occasion to buy a newer one and so I did. Also the 4-5 years of updates and the new HyperOS do feel good and I will use it for atleast 5-7 years again, just like the Mi 9T. I do miss the front camera, sadly this design of a camera that just drives out isn´t really available.
Sony still makes phones without any screen cutouts, just small bezels akin to Samsung's phones before they got the holepunch. I'm still digging the Xperia 5ii I've been using for 3 years, no major complaints and no reason to upgrade.
do you have any problem lagging, stuttering and stuff like that? Because I want to buy a samsung s24 now, and i wounder if it would still perform well in 4-5 years. Thanks!
@@darkopesevski9829 To this point, I haven't had any major issues related to lag. Battery life is shorter than before but I am always carrying a cable with me.
I'm still using a Pixel 3a in 2024 😅 The camera is still quite good compared to most phones but the phone lags and feels quite slow in day-to-day use. I might upgrade to the pixel 8a later this year though if the price is decent
Uma coisa que torna os aparelhos lentos são os aplicativos. Fiz uma experiência, peguei os apps com versões de 2019 e instalei em um aparelho de 2019 e ele se comportou como novo! Vou guardar todos os apps do S24 ultra nas versões atuais e daqui há 5 anos farei a experiência de instalá-los novamente. Um fraterno abraço.
Same observations about my pixel 3a XL. I upgraded recently, but the pictures were still better in some ways than my OnePlus open because of Google's software. However, considering we're entering the age of "every image is AI fakery", the blurry action shots of the Open are weirdly nostalgic and comforting. I guess a "real" digital picture is the new Polaroid!
@@thewalkertalkspodcast3494I've noticed that people complain if the photos look different compared to what something like an S24U or latest iPhone capture. Those are over sharpened, over saturated social media cameras, which is a plague of modern phones. I couldn't be happier with what OnePlus is doing with Hasselblad. One of the things that really gets me is the really terrible lens flare on iPhones. But it's not an issue, it's a feature, don't forget :D Funny thing is I tried out the S24U before I got OnePlus 12, and my old Pixel 2XL took better photos than the Ultra... But I guess the "social media" approach to photos is desired nowadays.
Me too, it's still such a great phone. I still haven't seen any new phone that looks good enough for me to bother switching. I noticed that mine got slow after updating to Android 12, so I wiped it and reinstalled Android 11, and it's been perfectly fine since. Runs just as well as the day I got it. The only problems it has is the fingerprint sensor isn't as reliable as it used to be (takes a few tries sometimes), and the battery doesn't last as long, but it's still good enough for me. I'm hoping I can keep it another 2-3 years.
Sophie Wilson the inventor of the ARM instruction was asked at the end of a lecture on improvements in ARM processors whether people should change their phones regularly to take advantage of the features that she had been talking about. She answered no. She said that you would never use all of that extra performance and so should not upgrade your phone until you stopped getting security updates.
@@Aryan-yg2qq in 2020 Sophie Wilson gave a number of almost identical lectures entitled the future of microprocessors. I have not yet found the one in which she gave this answer in a question and answer section at the end of the lecture.
@@Aryan-yg2qq here is one of the lectures. I will carry on trying to find Sophie’s response to the question “is there any point in upgrading the arm processor in your phone by buying a new phone” at the end of one of these lectures. ruclips.net/video/htXvfaDJOx8/видео.htmlsi=k1qmcuHIDV7Uydse
I'm 21 and have never bought my own phone. My first phone was a used iPhone 4 my mum bought me for Christmas. It was pretty terrible, so I replaced it with a hand-me-down S5 from my mum. And my current phone is a Samsung A8, again a hand-me-down from my mum. It's 6 years old now and still going strong. No intention to replace it at the moment.
Still using S7 Edge. During Covid got into photography as a hobby and bought a proper camera. Since then, I always carry my camera everywhere I go. At this point I realized upgrading phones for their camera performance was a complete waste of time and money. Since I never liked mobile gaming, my phone is just that now, a phone, my communication device.
@@AK_Catholic_Traditional Funny enough i bought an used Samsung NX10 (550g)...pair it with a vintage lens and you are ready to rock with under 900g of TOTAL weight and an compact mirrorless system :D
I remember when I used to buy a new iPhone every year, like an obedient consumer drone. Then I got bored and switched to Android. Now I only get a new phone about every 3 years. I thought I was just getting older and didn't care as much, but your explanation really made sense to me.
tbh, for me it's the other way round. Apple doesn't have enough variants to make you want to change. Android on the other hand, has way too many for you to be curious 🤣
I'm using OnePlus 7 Pro, i'm using this from the last 4.5 years ... 4.5 years ... And this handset is just not giving me excuse to change it. Certainly an amazing device. Everyone wants to hold something more flashy .. expensive as status symbol but one should do ask themselves a question... "Do they really need to spend such huge money especially when their existing device can serve the purpose". #Respect!
yeps, same here OO 7 Pro and a OO 5T. The 5T isn't as fun as the 7 Pro, but the camera is really good for panoramas. With 8 gb ram, when it breaks it costs 100 euros/dollars to get a new one. And it does most what I need. Moreover it can easily be rooted and run Linux :)
Those LG phones are brilliant. I wish they were still making them. I think LG discontinued phones? Not sure. All I know is that I discovered an LG V60 and thought wow what a device! The dual screens! That blessed AUX port is there. Card slot storage is possible. Good cameras. Really it rivals phones now.
I have a 3 year old phone with SD865, it flies through everyday tasks with zero performance issues running Android 14, 6GB RAM and 128GB Ufs 3.1 storage. The battery still lasts a day, I don't play games on my phone, so it helps I guess. As mentioned in the video, the amount of innovation has platued over the last few years, while the benchmark scores of flagships are crossing 2M (Antutu), the user experience remains largely the same even on a flagship chip from 2020. Good video!
@@mahinahmed2316The 865 is still capable of running solid emulation. Most new midrange chipsets are at the same power level, the only difference is better efficiency due to smaller transistors today.
Ive been swaping my phones every 5 years or so, not gonna change that. By the time i get new one, its always been on the market for at least a year, so i know what im getting. Keeping to that strategy.
There are no real reasons for users to buy new phones & hence the companies are doing their bit to make sure we do. Not just the marketing campaigns, but also the software updates that slow down the phone, use of tech which makes repairs unviable or very difficult if not impossible..
not to mention the way they scare you about security updates. Samsung always says "update to Android blah.blah... the security of your device is at risk...." words like that.
3 yrs on OnePlus 9 pro here. And when considering upgrading to something newer I just can't justify it to myself. This phone is everything I need really
I still have that phone in my drawer. I already swapped thebattery and back panel but the back panel came in slightly larger than it should have, but works good
I had to change mine because the battery was not working anymore and being in Senegal I didn't find the spare part. To this day I think it's the single best form factor in my opinion, one that works for me. I know the S24 is not that much bigger but I still think the S10E hit the sweetspot for my needs.
Year? I'm keeping my Exynos one for at least 3 if nothing proper arrives that makes me seriously want to get a new one. Kept an Xperia L for 8 years, then a Z5 Compact that lasted me 1 year because of it being an Aliexpress rebuild. I see no reason to downgrade to something with that stupid no headphone jack and SD slot BS or something annoyingly enormous.
I never comment on any of your take on tech although, I'm compelled to do so. I appreciate your practical attitude towards using an older phone as your daily driver. It's common place that many folks are still using cells 4-5 years after purchase. You don't seem swayed to upgrade to a brand new device simply because of availability. I complete concur.
I've got a Pixel 6 Pro and I was just about to upgrade to the 8 Pro. After watching your video, I'm seeing sense again and have decided to keep the 6 Pro. Cheers mate!
Such a fascinating and calming personality the host has! Just great to listen to ❤ I think it makes sense to keep owning the device that 'gets the work done' for you. I definitely will.
This is why I got a Pixel 8. I was on the 6 and was planning on keeping it for longer, but my carrier was pushing a $10/mo (for 2 years) sale for the 8 on my already cheap as hell plan, so I couldn't resist knowing I'll have full support for it until 2030. I have a perfectly sized phone, that's fairly repairable, that will only cost me $240 to fully own, and I'll be able to enjoy future updates 7 years from now. Phones have gotten so good that the two/three-year upgrade cycle no longer needs to exist.
@@jamessmith99731 I've replaced a Pixel 3 battery that took me 40 minutes, and they've rated it a 4/10. It was bulging, which popped the back off and saved me from the hassle of needing to get the tools necessary to get it off, but otherwise it was very easy. I'll change it if I have to.
I miss so much my Nokia 3210... That removable/replaceable one week charge battery, a case that can be easily a cheap replaceable if broken, that amazing monophonic ringtones everyone with 40 years old will remember, and that simple snake game for that boring days and situation...
@@PModesto In your comment you said "everyone with 40 years old " and this the way a german speaker will treanslate his thoughts to english and because of that I assumed you are german. I would have said "everyone in their fourties" or "everyone who is 40 years old"
@@shoby110 It's only a German who would say that in that specific way? Sorry to disappoint you, but I'm not German. I'm Portuguese. My English isn't perfect, i know, but It's enough to communicate.
@@PModesto possibly other languages too, but German is one of them, my comment wasn't meant to offense you in any way, your English is good. Stay safe my friend
Just ordered a new Pixel 9 Pro to replace my 1 year old Pixel 8. I think my bad habit of annual phone upgrades will stop here. Your video makes total sense! Just found your channel and subscribed.
Had the (at the time) incredible Optimus L70 and later an K8....best user experience ever in a smartphone, premium feel, nice UI, and for me most important - incredible stability over a long usage period +also nice screens
I remember the days I begged a new phone for every birthday, and my parents would pay for like half of it, and even when it came out of my savings, I would be happy to replace it. It was a joy to set up a new phone for me. Now my phone, Galaxy A72, kind of broke down (doesn't charge with any cable), and I am devastated (I was also on vacation in a small village where I knew no one, so that was strassful). I was so happy with this phone, I even for the first time in my life went to a repair shop, and they couldn't help. I even reset it hoping it was some kind of software bug, losing everything because of my misunderstanding with backups. I still don't want to replace it, even now that it basically a defective new phone with no info or settings I had for so long. Two and a half years, and no joy to replace it at all. I would have been happy to keep it for 2 or 3 more years until my OS becomes outdated enough to run into problems with casual app downloads. I still hope against hope that it will start working and it will only ever stay an unpleasant memory of how I wiped everything for nothing.
Been rocking my S20 FE since 2021 and it's still so incredibly solid. That SD card slot is such a blessing to have! 85% battery limit, power savings mode while at work, dark mode everything and just being a casual user of the generic apps has kept it in good shape
still rocking my OP6T. never had my battery or panel replaced; only recently has the volume rocker stopped working. a 100% battery charge lasts me about 2 and a half hours of screen on time and ~5-6 hours of backup. saving up for an upgrade around cristmas time, and this video might've convinced me to go for S21 FE!
Still using my Galaxy Note 10+ I bought at release in 2019. Aside from my Spen battery being dead, and needing to replace my phones battery for all day performance, it's still holding up pretty well, specially since it has 12GB of ram, more than many phones have even today. I'm thinking of replacing it next year, to get neat features I don't have such as refresh rates over 60hz, folding screens, 5G, and better cameras. But unless it breaks or there's a great deal for a Galaxy Fold, I'm in no rush to replace it.
Galaxy A71 user here and I don't see a reason why I should "upgrade" to a device with less features like missing SD card slot, no headphone jack and no FM radio. That's ridiculous!
+1 here. I use a 2022 Motorola edge 20 lite because it has all of that. I would also include a true notification light in the requested features (or a functional always on display or something like edge notification lights in an amoled screen). I rooted to be able to use the reset led to do that. I use all of the above features daily, so only a choice of low to mid range phones is available if we look to upgrade.
I'm using an S7, bought it refurbished in 2020 for $200 Canadian. The only reason I'm considering a newer phone is the mediocre battery life and capacity (3000 mAh). Looking for a more modern phone with an SD card slot and headphone jack.
@@mahinahmed2316 big screen, snapdragon, lots of storage, AMOLED screen, 6 gigs or more of RAM. I'm using a Moto g stylus 2022 now, but I will get a new one eventually, in 2 years probably
@@mahinahmed2316 good example for me was the Fold 3. They finally made it waterproof and hid the selfie camera under the screen for the first time. I was basically waiting for foldables to be "ready" to try, Fold3 was the sign. Going to get 3 years out of it by the time I switch to the Fold6, I think that's plenty
I have a Galaxy S10 Plus with 12 GB of RAM and one terabyte storage MST pay and a headphone jack I will happily upgrade to a new device that has the same specs as this one but I haven't found one yet I'm starting to think that this phone is the last of his kind
I have a S21+ and my friend has a S23 FE. Our daily experiences using both phones are virtually identical. Including in power/what it can handle apps wise, as well as camera quality. Photos taken on my phone or her phone are almost identical that I can't even tell the difference.
Love my galaxy S8. But I'm being forced to upgrade cause mobile banking and a couple other apps will no longer run on android 9 sadly. I refuse to have a phone without a 3.5mm headphone jack.. not many options out there with them still.
Sammy got it right on the S21 Ultra, the 888 chip is still a beast 3 years later, camera still rocks compared to the s23 Ultra! And the battery life is still amazing, hitting 5 to 6 hrs ost. I've got both Moto RaZr + 2023 & the S23 Ultra, I still favor my S21 Ultra over both the newer devices. The size, the snappy speed & overall experience still works best for me.
Got mine this year with the Exynos 2100, which was the closest to the SD chip samsung has got in a while, and damn this thing still is solid, everything is fast
Rightly said. I used a OnePlus 3 for almost 5 years(adding the Custom Roms to stay till Android 11 from Android 6). Recently changed its battery. Although it cannot keep up today in terms of speed, but I kept it as a camera phone, because the GCam mods+OnePlus 3's main sensor does some real magic there, still impresses me today.
I’ve been going down the RUclips video rabbit hole that has gotten me very close to buying a new phone, but honestly the only issues with my iPhone 12 Pro Max are that the battery is down to 78% peak capacity and my telephoto camera doesn’t focus properly anymore. Both are minor enough inconveniences and I could get a battery replacement for about a hundred bucks to have it close to new. Think I’ll hold out on upgrading another year or two until the next big jump in battery life or camera.
What a fantastic video my dude, you are spot on about everything! Old is gold! We should only upgrade when our current phones break and even then, just replace the battery when you need and you’ll be fine for years and years. Also love the chill vibe of this video! 📱
@@CyberSystemOverloadIf you send your phone to the company they’ll replace it with genuine battery’s compared to if you take it to a random shop. Unfortunately it’ll be more expensive
@@WhateverWhenever888 I rolled the dice and a week ago the replacement batt arrived from Amazon. So far so good. I get about 17 hours from a single charge (this is without watching any videos). With that test done I'll stress it and watch a lot of vids with max screen brightness. I do have to give the F1 5 stars for one thing - its very easy to access the battery, i changed it myself.
Still using a Note10+ that I bought on it's launch yr and has served me well to this day doing what I need it to do, won't be upgrading until it breaks and beyond repair
What about security updates? I had the exact same phone (Samsung Note 10+) and upgraded because security updates stopped. The last update was August 2023.
@@akin242002 honestly I stopped caring about it, just exercise common sense, don't download unknown APKs and you're good. If I really do want latest security patch, there's always the Custom ROM route.
S10e is a beautiful device. I use it for 3 years now, and it still perform great and please my needs. The only downside that it has looked bootloader (G970U1 model), so i can't install custom roms.
LG V60 owner here. While I'm not receiving more OS updates now and the USB-C port is a nightmare, this phone has been amazing. I'll probably upgrade it with the dual display case and I might get one of the newer Motorola or OnePlus phones of this year, while keeping the V60 as a secondary.
Same! Thankfully the USB-C port on mine is still working great. Looking to upgrade to a phone with better cameras tho but planning on keeping the V60 for the audio jack.
still using my iphone se 2016. replaced the battery recently. perfect size for me, small, fast enough for daily usage. most of the apps still getting updates and ios 15 is still getting security updates.
I miss ten years ago when you could go "oh my phone's getting a bit old" and you spend $20 on a new battery, pop the cover and slap it in and it's like you have a whole new phone good for another three years. And you even get to keep the old battery as a bootleg battery bank, phone goes flat just slap it in. For a good few years phones were also 100% waterproof before they realised it hurt sales, back then I would just have my phone in the shower with me playing music.
Also not upgrading from my iPhone 13 Pro. I was on a 2-year (or even less) upgrade cycle and also switching back and forth between Android and iOS, but now fairly unimpressed with the latest new phones 🤷♂️
onto your last question in the end, the S10 was the last time when I had to buy it immediately. And I did! 5 years later I am still with this yellow S10e diamond! (yes the battery was bad, I changed it with new one and it's rocking now).
I believed in this philosophy for several years and stuck to re-purchasing the pixel 2, which was the best phone i'd ever had and actually went back to it from a pixel 4. Unfortunately what I've encountered is and endless cycle of my phone becoming too slow to run and breaking down faster and faster each time. I'm not sure if it's due to outdated firmware or OS, but that's most likely. It's landed me in a place of wasting a lot more money than I would have otherwise. So be wary following the philosophy in this video, it's not an unwise philosophy, but just bear in mind it only extends to a point. Eventually, you will find diminishing returns and need to upgrade. -but spending four figures on a phone is just unneccessary, that I will stand by.
I’m still holding onto the iPhone X from 2017 as I’m waiting for Apple to get rid of the notch - which they may not do for another couple of years. After 5 years, I got Apple to change the battery as it was struggling to last all day despite my low level of usage. Changing the battery didn’t make much difference, and now, 7 years later, the poor battery life is the main issue. Can I go another year or is this the year I finally cave? 😬🤳
Up until february this year, i had been using a galaxy S9 since launch. Main reason why i replaced it with an S23 Ultra was the battery barely lasting me 4 hours, and then the camera a couple places below. I tried changing the battery 6 months ago but that didnt work out as well as i thought it would. There is also the fact that new original batteries havent been a thing for like 4 years now. Regardless of poor battery health, the little S9 still does everything i throw at it with relative ease. The S23 Ultra on the other hand feels like i got to run full tilt again after 3 years. Such a good device and i definitely plan on using it for a very long time (unless we get that "i have to get that device no matter what" moment some time on the near future).
The sad thing is that it can be pretty hard to find a decent battery for an old phone. Unfortunatelly, batteries age chemically even when they are not used. When manufacturers stop to produce new batteries and the only option is to buy 2+ years old "new" battery, you will most likely get sup-par performance even with this new battery due to raised internal resistance. That means that when the battery goes below~40% charge and the CPU/GPU needs to draw high current, the phone starts to throttle performance to keep itself from shutting off suddenly. This fact makes the phone feel even more outdated. Not only do apps get more power hungry but also the batteries are no longer able to supply peak power unless fully charged.
8:22 broooo, I'm rockin a OnePlus 7t pro. After 4 and a half years it's still a solid and fast phone. It's holding on so well that i will replace it only when there is going to be the perfect phone for my standards. By the way, the pop up camera it's working perfectly fine and the display with no camera holes is just soooooo good looking... I will miss it when I'll replace the phone.
I upgrade my phone about every five years or so the thing that gets me is transferring all the information from the phone and setting it up like the old phone. It’s such a pain when not all information goes across and you’ve got a search through the phone to get it.
Using Note 10 Plus since 2019 and it is still going strong. No plans to upgrade unless it completely falls apart, regardless of numbers of years. Repairability is endless.
same here but using the S10. im planning to upgrade to the S25 next year as I want to maximise my trade-in and student discount value. My goal is to use my next phone for 10 years!
It is hard to go to any other phone if you're a Note user. Stylus is more useful than people think and that "Note" branding in Samsung's lineup is now extinct. Having a Note feels special, man. I must say.
I had my A71 for four years until ATT forced me to upgrade since they were shutting off their 3G network. Even though it was a 4G phone. Still bitter about that one.
I am running a Pixel 4a and try to keep it as long as possible because of the small form factor. I don't know any new phone that is so small in my pocket.
I'm rocking a iPhone 11. It's still performing well and receiving updates. Only the wide-view camera is starting to suck. The other to are still good enough for me though ...
i have an iphone se gen1 back in 2016 if im not mistaken and initially in 2020 i upgraded to a red magic 5g but upon reviving my iphone se (replacing the battery) ive gone to like it again. Theres just something about having a smaller phone that u can type with one hand thats appealing to me. Its just a true definition of pocketable. Phones these days are so heavy on the pockets and can be a drag.
I held on to my Pixel 4 XL until the Pixel 8 came out. If I wasn't already on the second battery and needing a third for the 4 XL that would have cost 300+ bucks, I would have stuck with it. With the 8 getting many more years of support, I'm planning on hanging on to it for another 7 years.
Rocking the S22 Ultra here, jumped from an S7 then before that, an S4. I upgrade only when something goes truly broken and can no longer be reasonably fixed. Wifi receivers, audio receivers (for calls) were some of my previous reasons. Seeing how the S22 Ultra is performing still to this day? I hope to keep it for at least 2 more years, if not longer.
@@miguelmontoya1320The good thing about android is that you don't have to rely on the manufacturer or Google. Custom roms maintained by individuals can prolong the life for years after official support is over.
I LOVED my S21. I was having a hard time upgrading, but I decided to ultimately upgraded to now a P8 (was 150$ out of pocket with S21 trade in) as a backup, and an S24U as my daily. Just like my S21, I'm having a hard time seeing why even upgrade. I just saw the poor battery performance on the S21 and wanted all day battery. I'm taking a better approach for battery health and cycling to hopefully extend these phones for many years to come. The value proposition just isn't there anymore for annual, bi-annual upgrades at the higher costs. The S21 was still just as fast as my new phones, just degraded battery.
how is the new battery life? I still own a S21 with th exynos chip - just went to the gym for a longer session with some reading via browser and instagram including listening to music on spotify ... 92% drop in 4h ... so ... is that normal for such "heavy" usage or is my battery just not on the good side ? :D
6 years ago I got an LG Aristo for $94. I have just replaced it with a Samsung A15 5G for $99 which is likely to be around for at least the next 6 years. I can't imagine paying 4 figures for a cell.
I don't usually leave comments, but this just hit! I got myself a Samsung S21FE about two years ago now; I remember feeling quite anxious if it would hold up well or if it would satisfy my standards for photo and video. It was also technically the first smartphone I would get myself, so it was such an important decision for me. Fast forward to today, and I have to say it has served me well! It truly isn't the most high end of smartphones, but for the value for money, it's def not a bad deal. Imagine my surprise when I clicked on your video😅Never was the type to want to keep upgrading my phone and thanks to the S21FE, I didn't have to! Thanks for affirming and validating my purchase from back then!
The only Problem are the Security Patches and planned Obsolescence by demanding more Hardware for the same Application, example WhatsApp disables support for older Android Versions.
Still rocking the OnePlus 7T no issues whatsoever. Haven't changed the battery so that might be a problem in the future for now it's giving me like 4-5 hrs of SOT but still planning to use it for another 1-2 yrs.
same, i had to upgrade from onelplus 5 becuase it's small screen size and 64gb storage without sd card slot. In 2019 i bought one second hand which was just some months old at great discount. i can easily rock it next 5 years. i still rock oneplus 5 as a secondary small phone.
A friend of mine is still using his iPhone 3 I’m so impressed and environmentally it’s so much better than upgrading all the time. The two year thing is ridiculous.
So, secretly this is a S21 FE review.
Should he not have reviewed it since it's the phone he is using? 😂
My S21 plus is better
@@IgnacioFlores.good for you? my s24 ultra is better, what's the point of your comment
😂😂
To be more precise "Is the s21 fe still worth using in 2024?" Review 😅
"Smartphones are getting good at getting old" pure poetry right there. Love the video. Couldnt agree more.
Incredible
I have my A50 phone still
Almost five years now until college
@@nathanielportillo1593 wow what a phone💪
@@nathanielportillo1593Same here. Even if the back of the phone is about to fall off, it’s still working.
As a latin american the only reason People upgrade phones is
Your phone is broken.
Your phone is stolen.
Your phone is a crappy low end phone and you can finally afford something better.
Your phone has 2 or 3gb of ram and can't do **it anymore.
@@keithbrown7685 exactly what happened. Now I bought a Redmi note 13 pro in fucking happy.
So true. Mine is a crap phone with 2 gigs of RAM that I only bought because my previous (mid-end and also nothing special) phone broke. If I'm listening to music and I open the Amazon App, for example, the youtube music app running in the background closes! Now I'm finally able to afford something that doesn't leave me enraged, so I bought a Galaxy S23 this week. I don't plan on upgrading for at least 5 years, because this is the first time I have a phone that is able to hold up for that long. Let's just hope I'm not robbed omw to work or something.
@@opassarim my god. You just upgraded the equivalent of a SEGA génesis to a ps5 hahahaha. Good for you bro. I hope you enjoy your new phone
That’s so true 😂😂
I feel like you can't sincerely make an "I refuse to upgrade" vid with a two-year-old phone. Shoutout to my homie still rocking a s7.
My dad still rocks an S7 edge for work too...
I would have done the same with my J7 Prime but I jumped into a pool with the J7 in my pocket Lmao
I still use an S5, Moto E 2nd Gen, Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet sometimes.
My daily driver is a Sonim XP8.
Exactly
All I need these days, really, is a Note 9 with a new battery
What about 4 year old phone?
Still rocking a Galaxy Note 9. Does everything I want it to, is fast enough, takes decent photos, has wireless charging, and rocks a 1440p AMOLED. Not much else that I need.
I'm using this too but man the curved edges are a pain inn the ass, I've broken the front twice because if this shit. and the rear glas also jas seen some shit.
I'm planning to buy an Iphone 13 next: just to see what apple has to offer first hand. than I'll probably settle with s23 base model.
Same here..although mins is slowing down. I don't want to upgrade because I really feel this is the last phone with no compromises. I'll definitely hold on for another 2 years. I think a factory reset might put it back at top shape.
@@mehmetgurdal My rear glass cracked too and I replaced it myself for 2$. It's been 6 years but my front glass is still doing alright despite a few drops. We'll see if that changes anytime soon...
@@mehmetgurdalCurved edges are kind of going awaybatvthis point. Current gen Samsung has left it aside
Had that phone too, the curved edges and 60hz screen are pretty noticeable differences once you upgrade.
Are we gonna pretend that the absurd increase in prices is not one of the main reasons for not upgrading?
I have all the money to upgrade, but there isn't anything new on the market that could be comfortably used with one hand. So I'm sticking to my 8 year old iPhone SE 1.
There is no price increase in fact the S24 is the cheapest S phone in a decade in the UK. Been as low as £269 brand new as the current gen model LOL.
@VeedoCapone are you brain damaged? Video is purely and exclusively about this brits decision. Nothing else is relevant.
@VeedoCapone it's amazing how you think the purchase decision of a Brit has anything to do with the international price
@@GuillermoPaulman is it still working good? Man I love the SE 1 size
My main reason for refusing to upgrade is the ridiculous weight and non-ergonomic designs of new flagships.
Agreed. And the awful camera cut outs.
Phones these days just can't lie flat wtf
I have an S21 ultra. I can tell you that after 3 years of heavy use, I now have carpal tunnel syndrome. I did not ever have it before I got this phone.
@poopyab01 The weight of new flagships contributes to them feeling dense and premium though
You can try Zenfone 10
You have a phone that’s a year old and you decided to make an 8 minute long review about why you’re not upgrading anymore? My phone is from 2018, I want to see people with 5-10 years with the same phone and how it’s holding up today.
I’m still holding onto an iPhone 6 here. Still runs many apps including Discord, Reddit and even RUclips for me. The camera is basic but good enough for me. The iPhone 6 also has really good form factor. Besides that everything else like watching films or doing work I use my iPad mini 6 which is way faster.
I've been using Galaxy J7 NXT of 2017.
I am upgrading my phone after 7 years because it will soon become incompatible with my countries cellular network and will literally stop working - and if wasn't for that I would happily keep on using it
@@jasonpapai That might be the reason for me to upgrade from J7NXT to a 5G compatible phone as the phone does not support it.
It's good to know you wouldn't upgrade if it wasn't for this reason.
Still using the S10 here. Found ZERO reasons to upgrade! Looking to go to a dumb phone when this one finally dies 😂 only app I'd miss is banking and that's hardly a big deal!
I have my GBA and my Sony NWZ-X1060 in my back pack at all times mind you!
That's my games and music sorted. And then my phone is just a phone!
"It's impressive for a phone of this age" it came out 2 years ago...
some phones are starting to get bad when it turns 2/3 yrs old
In the real world, OLD means 7-8 years old, not 2-5 yo.
@@fabricliver WDYMMMM having "years" next to a number is old
@@fabriclivermanufacturers make phones with the expectation that consumers will buy a new one at least every year or 2. after 3 years they purposefully make the phone slower and shittier to force people to buy new. so yea, anything more than 3 years is kinda "old" due to those issues
lol true, i'm rocking my 4 year old redmi
I got you all beat... I went from an S8 to a S24 Ultra. Now that's an upgrade! I do miss how insanely light and thin the S8 was.
Hold on, I will beat your record. I'm still holding my note 20 ultra, not going to upgrade anytime soon 😏
S24 ultra is massive. S23u or S22u was better
S8 had the best form factor period
So why didn't you get regular s24 if you like thin and light
I cant imagine going to that big of a size difference. I just went from an S9 to an S20 Plus and its fairly uncomfortable to me (i only got Plus because i bought it off my friend)
I honestly never understood the reason why people upgrade phones every year even now but still use 5/6 year old laptops
clout
To be honest, today computers last a lot longer than they used to before they get obsolete. Maybe phones too, but they have ALWAYS gone obsolete quite sooner than computers. That said, upgrading every year is pointless and an aberration. Even every other year is too little life to be got from a phone.
They are driven by commercials and they have their phones from a contract with their mobile carriers.
Those are the major reasons I see why people constantly upgrade.
It's cheaper if you maintain a carriers free upgrade promo
@@BilisNegraI can still use my 15 year old laptop if i want to. It also runs well, not too great, but definitely well
my wife loves the form factor of her S10e, which surprisingly received a new OS update today (15 months after the official end of support)
Sometimes if there is a critical security flaw the unsupported phones will get an update to address whatever it is.
S10 and Note 10 flagship series was done dirty by Samsung with planned obsolescence . They still hold up really really well to this day
still usung it
My iPhone 6S still works like a goddamn charm and I don't plan to update it unless it stops doing so. Eight years strong and about to turn 9 this year. If it makes it to 10 I'm gonna honorably retire him.
yeah but thats a iphone , not android , android is unusable if 8yo
I disagree, Using 6 year old redmi note 5 pro , that costed me around Usd200
@@Tetrathegod debatable. Still depends on the user.
Still using that note 7
@fuzzywuzzy0549 you completely missed the point of the video then
Mine is a OnePlus 7 from 2019.
About to be 5 years.
Works great, used to work even better before the last update OnePlus forcefully upgraded me to when I went to have the battery replaced, which is shitty considering they took my phone for 10 days and returned it to me without replacing the battery because the device was "End of Life", this was about a year ago.
Had a third party battery put in and works great.
Forced Obsolescence should not be allowed by these companies who use shady tactics to make user experience worse to "extend the life of the device" or "protect the environment".
i got a oneplus 6 and the only thing letting me down is the battery life and maybe a 120hz panel would be nice.
Why not downgrade your phone?
Even I'm having my OnePlus 7 still as a secondary device now 🙌🏻. Pure oxygen OS is the best thing. It still works as it used to.
OnePlus 5 still rocks to this day, even though it's quite old, the snapdragon 835 is really good and I can play any game without any problems. The problems is the battery but that's because it's the original one
I got the Oneplus 6T like 2 months after it's release and still using it up til today. The battery isn't what it used to be but I also do somewhat heavy gaming more now than before and the volume buttons are of no use (thank god for volume apps). But I'm looking to upgrade with the Oneplus 12 or the next flagship from Oneplus.
I use an LG G8 , Snapdragon 855 is still powerful. LG's HDR Cine-Effect video recording is simply AMAZING
6 years?
I also still have mine, I recently bought the Galaxy A54, but I still have my LG G8, now as a secondary smartphone.
bruh LG doesn't even make phones anymore.
Criminally underrated gem 💎
How is the battery holding up?
Completed 4yrs of my iPhone SE 2020. The charging cable is hanging on for life but the phone is still going strong.
Did one battery change about 2years ago.
@SoulAndDustI used it heavily for gaming in the first 2 years. Took the capacity down to 76.
I recently picked up a Motorola G Play 2023 for $99.99 at Best Buy. I had about $40 on a gift card, so about $60 total. It's a phone. It does what I need it to do, which isn't anything special.
"Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate to buy shit we don't need." - Tyler Durden
Ur a W
Just picked up the g power 2023 for $200 at Target myself. Can be had for like $100 with some prepaid carriers and absolutely does everything I need it to.
I got an a 14 for 150$
@@fedde69how???
I took a risk on an unlocked 'Umidigi' smartphone from AliExpress. Paid $150 total for 64 64GB modal with an additional 256GB SD card.
It's been a year and a half and I'm satisfied. As a bonus, it works beautifully with emulators. I basically have a portable Dreamcast, PS1, and PSP.
Dude I just got myself a S21 FE and I was like 'whaaaat lol' when you mentioned it. This phone still rocks!
what variant are you using? mine is exynos and i have to be honest, the biggest gripe is the battery life
Exynos or the Snapdragon? Mine is Exynos back in my region Malaysia
@@monkeyglory2905 yep same as mine. The battery not doing so well eventho we have 25w adapter
@MhmmdA3RI bro my s21 fe when it heats up sometimes the super fast charging ain't working. Sometimes i have to put my phone down to a ceramic floor so it won't heat much 😂
btw, hope you have a nice food at sahur
@@monkeyglory2905 alhamdulillah bro already get my sahoor just now. Yaa me too sometimes the super fast charging wont working tho and i need to unplug and plug it back again just to make sure got super fast charging or not🤣. Overall just fine. But im still considered to switch from S21FE to S23 base model, the compact one and great SD8G2. Would be a good switch?
Bought my son one at launch at a very reasonable price. Amazing phone on balance with a beautiful screen. Battery still good despite a mix of all types of charging, playing games and watching videos.
you're my childhood
At 5:30 you tell about battery wearing out/heating through fast-, and wireless charging, so glad you did! Nearly ordered a wireless dock and 67 Watt wall plug... Great review, makes sense not to physically upgrade to a new flagship, or midrange for that matter. Thanks a million.
I plan on keeping my current phone for the longest amount of time I've ever had a phone. The one after that will be even longer.
Me too
Take it easy
Same here. These things are far too expensive to just change it whenever you want. I am not spending this much money again and i hope this thing lasts 5 years or more.
Me too!
I have a 5 years old Huawei Mate 20 lite
I planned on doing so , but I damaged it :(. Bought on May 2023
Damaged in 2024 :(
Samsung Galaxy S10 here. I haven't upgraded my phone in many years. Still works just fine. Decent camera, decent battery. 1TB storage + 1TB microSD. Unless I break it or lose it or it gets stolen, I am not upgrading.
I loved my s10 until the charging port was giving me problems
I would love to keep the same device for more than 3+ years but they become so unreliable most of the time. My phone ended up dying out of nowhere due to hardware issues from long time use. I wish I had upgraded the phone before it completely died and I lost everything.
I still use my 2018 Samsung Galaxy S9, but it's definitely showing it's age. It takes forever to open the camera app and start recording, and I'm havng trouble with phonecalls and sending texts. I'm "upgrading" to the 2021 iPhone 13 mini, but I'm also keeping my Samsung Galaxy S9 for using around the house. I'm tempted to get a 2020 Samsung Galaxy S20, but it only has one more year of quarterly security updates, and then nothing. So even though it could last a long time, it will eventually have issues supporting apps, just as is currently the case with my Samsung Galaxy S9.
lol anyone can use a flagship for years
@@shashwatjange3802 intelligence chases you but you are faster...
Pixel 3 here. No complains. Great photos, super light and the right size 5.5"
#metoo
Pixel 3a here, things a trooper. Biggest bottleneck is 64GB of storage, otherwise zero complaints.
Wow how long have you been using it? I want to get a pixel 5 because of the small size
@@just.fisayo I think I bought it in 2016
@@just.fisayo My Pixel 5 is having overheating issue, otherwise; great phone.
so this is your daily driver and you have no sim card installed?....
He is probably testing a phone
@@OnlyCitrus testing a phone without sim card ,?
😂😂
@@90AlmostFamous The sim would be in the phone he's testing.
they offer e-sims now
There are a ton of people still rocking their old LG Devices like the V60.
I still use the v60 and I also have a OnePlus 5 for backup and it still runs pretty fast too. Also have my mom's old pixel 2. Also a snapdragon 835 and it works fine other than having a bad battery.
I wanted the V60, but I found a shop selling G8X's that were practically brand new for like $100, so I ended up getting that instead...
LG was so awesome and the V series was so ahead of it's time. Them leaving the market really sucks :/
(I wish they kept the replaceable battery even after the V20 though)
I am one of them using older LG device, a LG V50s (G8x in USA)
I'm still using my V30+ from 2016. The battery's still good. I feel enough.
I'm rocking with my LG V30 PLUS
I've been using my Xiaomi Mi 9T since May 2020, and it still holds up really well. Granted, the battery has degraded over that period, but given my fairly limited daily use, it's still good enough to last me for a day. One of my favourite features is the clean display with no selfie camera hole punch since it's one of those phones that had it motorized, and since there's no phone with a clean screen on the market anymore, I don't plan on upgrading it any time soon. Also, the later I upgrade, the better the phone that's going to accompany me for the next few years. :)
I am using the same one , I had changed my battery couple of weeks ago from an mi authorised service centre it costed me 1050rs but it was worth. Easily getting 9hr + screenontime. Now on EvoX Android 14. Ditch Miui and install some other rom , performance is top notch.
Same, I have mine since Oct 2019 and it's still as good as new.
I still have that phone. Super underrated, love the pop up camera
Also had that phone since 2019, sadly I broke my display so I upgraded to the Xiaomi 13t. It still felt good to use and without it breaking and the worsening battery I would have kept it, but I got the occasion to buy a newer one and so I did. Also the 4-5 years of updates and the new HyperOS do feel good and I will use it for atleast 5-7 years again, just like the Mi 9T. I do miss the front camera, sadly this design of a camera that just drives out isn´t really available.
Sony still makes phones without any screen cutouts, just small bezels akin to Samsung's phones before they got the holepunch. I'm still digging the Xperia 5ii I've been using for 3 years, no major complaints and no reason to upgrade.
Proud owner of S10e since May 1, 2019!
do you have any problem lagging, stuttering and stuff like that? Because I want to buy a samsung s24 now, and i wounder if it would still perform well in 4-5 years. Thanks!
@@darkopesevski9829 To this point, I haven't had any major issues related to lag. Battery life is shorter than before but I am always carrying a cable with me.
I have s10. S10 series was the best..
Same here, S10e still going strong!
Same but i bought mine as a second hand phone in 2023
This falls flat when the phone is just two years old. 4-5 years old phones is something people would consider old.
I'm still using a Pixel 3a in 2024 😅 The camera is still quite good compared to most phones but the phone lags and feels quite slow in day-to-day use. I might upgrade to the pixel 8a later this year though if the price is decent
Uma coisa que torna os aparelhos lentos são os aplicativos. Fiz uma experiência, peguei os apps com versões de 2019 e instalei em um aparelho de 2019 e ele se comportou como novo! Vou guardar todos os apps do S24 ultra nas versões atuais e daqui há 5 anos farei a experiência de instalá-los novamente. Um fraterno abraço.
Same observations about my pixel 3a XL. I upgraded recently, but the pictures were still better in some ways than my OnePlus open because of Google's software.
However, considering we're entering the age of "every image is AI fakery", the blurry action shots of the Open are weirdly nostalgic and comforting. I guess a "real" digital picture is the new Polaroid!
@@thewalkertalkspodcast3494I've noticed that people complain if the photos look different compared to what something like an S24U or latest iPhone capture. Those are over sharpened, over saturated social media cameras, which is a plague of modern phones. I couldn't be happier with what OnePlus is doing with Hasselblad. One of the things that really gets me is the really terrible lens flare on iPhones. But it's not an issue, it's a feature, don't forget :D Funny thing is I tried out the S24U before I got OnePlus 12, and my old Pixel 2XL took better photos than the Ultra... But I guess the "social media" approach to photos is desired nowadays.
Me too, it's still such a great phone. I still haven't seen any new phone that looks good enough for me to bother switching. I noticed that mine got slow after updating to Android 12, so I wiped it and reinstalled Android 11, and it's been perfectly fine since. Runs just as well as the day I got it. The only problems it has is the fingerprint sensor isn't as reliable as it used to be (takes a few tries sometimes), and the battery doesn't last as long, but it's still good enough for me. I'm hoping I can keep it another 2-3 years.
Consider installing custom firmware, but beware of play integrity, if you use phone to pay.
Using a LG V50 from 2019, actually purchased a second refurbished one for $100.
No camera bump.
Quad DAC
Headphone jack
SD Card
Smaller size
$100
Me too ❤️ Live this thing, just got it to factory reset a month ago, because I cluttered it. Now it's as fast as new and I love it even more
Lgz for life!
Yes, everyone knows, lg doesn't make phones anymore!
Ones they made are nice.
I might buy an LG V20 in the future, and put Android 6 on it with old games and apps
And slow, terrible cameras, zero support
@@harainic skill issue
Sophie Wilson the inventor of the ARM instruction was asked at the end of a lecture on improvements in ARM processors whether people should change their phones regularly to take advantage of the features that she had been talking about. She answered no. She said that you would never use all of that extra performance and so should not upgrade your phone until you stopped getting security updates.
Can you put a link for the video or article here if possible?
@@Aryan-yg2qq in 2020 Sophie Wilson gave a number of almost identical lectures entitled the future of microprocessors. I have not yet found the one in which she gave this answer in a question and answer section at the end of the lecture.
@@Aryan-yg2qq here is one of the lectures. I will carry on trying to find Sophie’s response to the question “is there any point in upgrading the arm processor in your phone by buying a new phone” at the end of one of these lectures. ruclips.net/video/htXvfaDJOx8/видео.htmlsi=k1qmcuHIDV7Uydse
I'm 21 and have never bought my own phone. My first phone was a used iPhone 4 my mum bought me for Christmas. It was pretty terrible, so I replaced it with a hand-me-down S5 from my mum. And my current phone is a Samsung A8, again a hand-me-down from my mum. It's 6 years old now and still going strong. No intention to replace it at the moment.
Still using S7 Edge. During Covid got into photography as a hobby and bought a proper camera. Since then, I always carry my camera everywhere I go. At this point I realized upgrading phones for their camera performance was a complete waste of time and money. Since I never liked mobile gaming, my phone is just that now, a phone, my communication device.
What camera did you get and isn’t it pain in the butt to carry heavy gear wherever you go? Plus you have to baby it…
@@AK_Catholic_Traditional Funny enough i bought an used Samsung NX10 (550g)...pair it with a vintage lens and you are ready to rock with under 900g of TOTAL weight and an compact mirrorless system :D
I remember when I used to buy a new iPhone every year, like an obedient consumer drone. Then I got bored and switched to Android. Now I only get a new phone about every 3 years. I thought I was just getting older and didn't care as much, but your explanation really made sense to me.
Same here
tbh, for me it's the other way round. Apple doesn't have enough variants to make you want to change. Android on the other hand, has way too many for you to be curious 🤣
@@blurkia84 From the iphone 2G to the 6 Plus, i'd say they had some cool upgrades in design and software. But yeah, I get your point ;)
I'm using OnePlus 7 Pro, i'm using this from the last 4.5 years ...
4.5 years ... And this handset is just not giving me excuse to change it.
Certainly an amazing device.
Everyone wants to hold something more flashy .. expensive as status symbol but one should do ask themselves a question... "Do they really need to spend such huge money especially when their existing device can serve the purpose".
#Respect!
same bro, no need to upgrade for atleast next two years
Earlier oneplus devices are absolute beasts
yeps, same here OO 7 Pro and a OO 5T.
The 5T isn't as fun as the 7 Pro, but the camera is really good for panoramas. With 8 gb ram, when it breaks it costs 100 euros/dollars to get a new one. And it does most what I need. Moreover it can easily be rooted and run Linux :)
Same Phone bro! that amazing screen and speakers. 12+256gb storage, android 12, and original battery costs only 25$ in India!!!
@@suhrudbangal7758 yeah, that screen is a dream, can't imagine having anything less :) :) :)
Still rocking my iPhone XS from 2018! Runs great and on the newest iOS, honestly couldn’t be happier
LG V30 user here from 2019, still going smooth and fine.
Bro the quad dac headphones jack had a special place in my heart
Those LG phones are brilliant. I wish they were still making them. I think LG discontinued phones? Not sure. All I know is that I discovered an LG V60 and thought wow what a device! The dual screens! That blessed AUX port is there. Card slot storage is possible. Good cameras. Really it rivals phones now.
Same here bro, bought LG V30+ in 2018. Still iys running like a new.
@@Starry_Night_Sky7455LG's Mobile division shut down in 2020.
@@oyeeHunterVelvet 2 Pro (sold only to LG employees) showed that LG will get rid of the jack after the Lg V60/Velvet.
I have a 3 year old phone with SD865, it flies through everyday tasks with zero performance issues running Android 14, 6GB RAM and 128GB Ufs 3.1 storage. The battery still lasts a day, I don't play games on my phone, so it helps I guess.
As mentioned in the video, the amount of innovation has platued over the last few years, while the benchmark scores of flagships are crossing 2M (Antutu), the user experience remains largely the same even on a flagship chip from 2020. Good video!
Same here 😋
I feel like the SD 865 on my phone is still just as the flagship as it was on Day 1.
For my light to medium task anyway
Must be a Xiaomi
@@mahinahmed2316The 865 is still capable of running solid emulation. Most new midrange chipsets are at the same power level, the only difference is better efficiency due to smaller transistors today.
Mine is SD870, but my battery is 3/4 day
Well mine is SD 845 Poco f1.. still run good still smooth
1:45 "no problem using it everyday" but no SIM card in the phone
Ive been swaping my phones every 5 years or so, not gonna change that. By the time i get new one, its always been on the market for at least a year, so i know what im getting. Keeping to that strategy.
There are no real reasons for users to buy new phones & hence the companies are doing their bit to make sure we do. Not just the marketing campaigns, but also the software updates that slow down the phone, use of tech which makes repairs unviable or very difficult if not impossible..
not to mention the way they scare you about security updates. Samsung always says "update to Android blah.blah... the security of your device is at risk...." words like that.
3 yrs on OnePlus 9 pro here. And when considering upgrading to something newer I just can't justify it to myself. This phone is everything I need really
I still have that phone in my drawer. I already swapped thebattery and back panel but the back panel came in slightly larger than it should have, but works good
S10e (snapdragon) user here .
Still going okay.
Feel like can use it for another year.
Best phone so far 🤞🏽 resold the Samsung 20 FE and turned back to my S10e
Same but the Exynos version, only the battery is slowing down
But easily my favorite phone I've had
I had to change mine because the battery was not working anymore and being in Senegal I didn't find the spare part. To this day I think it's the single best form factor in my opinion, one that works for me. I know the S24 is not that much bigger but I still think the S10E hit the sweetspot for my needs.
@@samuelschonenberger same as you. Only the battery has been a bit meh in the last year, but I don't feel the need to replace it anytime soon
Year? I'm keeping my Exynos one for at least 3 if nothing proper arrives that makes me seriously want to get a new one. Kept an Xperia L for 8 years, then a Z5 Compact that lasted me 1 year because of it being an Aliexpress rebuild.
I see no reason to downgrade to something with that stupid no headphone jack and SD slot BS or something annoyingly enormous.
man I can't believe how far you've come. used to watch your videos back then. keep it up!
I never comment on any of your take on tech although, I'm compelled to do so. I appreciate your practical attitude towards using an older phone as your daily driver. It's common place that many folks are still using cells 4-5 years after purchase. You don't seem swayed to upgrade to a brand new device simply because of availability. I complete concur.
I've got a Pixel 6 Pro and I was just about to upgrade to the 8 Pro. After watching your video, I'm seeing sense again and have decided to keep the 6 Pro. Cheers mate!
Yeah, got a 6 pro too. It's still perfectly good. Takes amazing photos and is super fast. Plan on keeping mine till it fails.
you can still rock it for around a year easily, or maybe 2 if you make your mind.
P8p is stuttery mess
Me watching this on my stock OnePlus 6 that I've had since 2018. It hasn't let me down yet.
I still use my OnePlus 6T and I have 0 incentive to upgrade.
I had that one T_T cpu died unexpectedly after 2 years of use, was forced to upgrade
I was too using ,but got Qualcomm crasdump error for my phone😢
Such a fascinating and calming personality the host has! Just great to listen to ❤
I think it makes sense to keep owning the device that 'gets the work done' for you. I definitely will.
This is why I got a Pixel 8. I was on the 6 and was planning on keeping it for longer, but my carrier was pushing a $10/mo (for 2 years) sale for the 8 on my already cheap as hell plan, so I couldn't resist knowing I'll have full support for it until 2030.
I have a perfectly sized phone, that's fairly repairable, that will only cost me $240 to fully own, and I'll be able to enjoy future updates 7 years from now. Phones have gotten so good that the two/three-year upgrade cycle no longer needs to exist.
Which carrier?
@@DarkPa1adin Virgin
ifixit gives it 6/10.
@@jamessmith99731 I've replaced a Pixel 3 battery that took me 40 minutes, and they've rated it a 4/10. It was bulging, which popped the back off and saved me from the hassle of needing to get the tools necessary to get it off, but otherwise it was very easy. I'll change it if I have to.
I miss so much my Nokia 3210...
That removable/replaceable one week charge battery, a case that can be easily a cheap replaceable if broken, that amazing monophonic ringtones everyone with 40 years old will remember, and that simple snake game for that boring days and situation...
someone is a german speaker probably 😀
@@shoby110 ?
@@PModesto In your comment you said "everyone with 40 years old " and this the way a german speaker will treanslate his thoughts to english and because of that I assumed you are german. I would have said "everyone in their fourties" or "everyone who is 40 years old"
@@shoby110 It's only a German who would say that in that specific way?
Sorry to disappoint you, but I'm not German. I'm Portuguese.
My English isn't perfect, i know, but It's enough to communicate.
@@PModesto possibly other languages too, but German is one of them, my comment wasn't meant to offense you in any way, your English is good. Stay safe my friend
Battery health is the number one reason for an upgrade. Mine has degraded a lot since I purchased it (iPhone 12)
Replace it
May as well upgrade, or at least get some other phone. That battery problem is only going to get worse.
Just ordered a new Pixel 9 Pro to replace my 1 year old Pixel 8. I think my bad habit of annual phone upgrades will stop here. Your video makes total sense! Just found your channel and subscribed.
I'm still using an LG v60. Why change? Headphone jack, expandable storage. All good. Looking at installing a custom rom fire additional privacy.
Plus the security updates are handy too.
I'm on /e/ OS and very happy with it.
Had the (at the time) incredible Optimus L70 and later an K8....best user experience ever in a smartphone, premium feel, nice UI, and for me most important - incredible stability over a long usage period +also nice screens
I remember the days I begged a new phone for every birthday, and my parents would pay for like half of it, and even when it came out of my savings, I would be happy to replace it. It was a joy to set up a new phone for me. Now my phone, Galaxy A72, kind of broke down (doesn't charge with any cable), and I am devastated (I was also on vacation in a small village where I knew no one, so that was strassful). I was so happy with this phone, I even for the first time in my life went to a repair shop, and they couldn't help. I even reset it hoping it was some kind of software bug, losing everything because of my misunderstanding with backups. I still don't want to replace it, even now that it basically a defective new phone with no info or settings I had for so long. Two and a half years, and no joy to replace it at all. I would have been happy to keep it for 2 or 3 more years until my OS becomes outdated enough to run into problems with casual app downloads. I still hope against hope that it will start working and it will only ever stay an unpleasant memory of how I wiped everything for nothing.
That's like a sweet story. Keep this cherished phone.
It was most probably a charging port issue, if a shop had just replaced the charging board, your phone would have gone on perfectly.
dont give up and trow it away. The data is still on there. You just need to find a good repair shop online.
Been rocking my S20 FE since 2021 and it's still so incredibly solid. That SD card slot is such a blessing to have!
85% battery limit, power savings mode while at work, dark mode everything and just being a casual user of the generic apps has kept it in good shape
how did you check your battery limit ?
@@nipun2961there is a protect battery setting...battery can only be charged up to 85% limit...
@@nipun2961 Settings --> Battery and Device Care --> Battery --> select "protect battery"
Im thinking about getting one too. How is the battery life?
@@indurangaw8259 2 years and a half later, still pretty good. Can last about a day and a half before charging
still rocking my OP6T. never had my battery or panel replaced; only recently has the volume rocker stopped working. a 100% battery charge lasts me about 2 and a half hours of screen on time and ~5-6 hours of backup. saving up for an upgrade around cristmas time, and this video might've convinced me to go for S21 FE!
same the volume up rocker doesn't works now, original battery still going good lasts around 3hrs of screen on time
Still using my Galaxy Note 10+ I bought at release in 2019. Aside from my Spen battery being dead, and needing to replace my phones battery for all day performance, it's still holding up pretty well, specially since it has 12GB of ram, more than many phones have even today.
I'm thinking of replacing it next year, to get neat features I don't have such as refresh rates over 60hz, folding screens, 5G, and better cameras. But unless it breaks or there's a great deal for a Galaxy Fold, I'm in no rush to replace it.
I loved my note 10+ and would still have it if Ashurion hadnt replaced it with a note 20.
lol anyone can use a flagship for years
S10e haver here, got this phone used last year and it's still going strong
Small asf
Galaxy A71 user here and I don't see a reason why I should "upgrade" to a device with less features like missing SD card slot, no headphone jack and no FM radio. That's ridiculous!
Exactly! I just can't see what's so great about losing essentials on a so called newer improved device.
Security patches or lack of thereof. Samsung will cease support for A71 this year.
@KrzysztofArentowicz what does that mean exactly. I've got an a71 too and don't really want to upgrade but if I have to ima get a s23fe
+1 here. I use a 2022 Motorola edge 20 lite because it has all of that. I would also include a true notification light in the requested features (or a functional always on display or something like edge notification lights in an amoled screen). I rooted to be able to use the reset led to do that. I use all of the above features daily, so only a choice of low to mid range phones is available if we look to upgrade.
Exactly! I find it so strange how people are okay with companies just removing features. I've even seen some people defending them 🤷♀
I'm using an S7, bought it refurbished in 2020 for $200 Canadian. The only reason I'm considering a newer phone is the mediocre battery life and capacity (3000 mAh). Looking for a more modern phone with an SD card slot and headphone jack.
I only upgrade when I find the exact specs I'm looking for.
What would that be ?
@@mahinahmed2316 big screen, snapdragon, lots of storage, AMOLED screen, 6 gigs or more of RAM. I'm using a Moto g stylus 2022 now, but I will get a new one eventually, in 2 years probably
@@mahinahmed2316 good example for me was the Fold 3. They finally made it waterproof and hid the selfie camera under the screen for the first time. I was basically waiting for foldables to be "ready" to try, Fold3 was the sign.
Going to get 3 years out of it by the time I switch to the Fold6, I think that's plenty
I have a Galaxy S10 Plus with 12 GB of RAM and one terabyte storage MST pay and a headphone jack I will happily upgrade to a new device that has the same specs as this one but I haven't found one yet I'm starting to think that this phone is the last of his kind
@@erwincooper434MST was a highly underrated and under the radar feature that a lot of people missed.
Old phones? I'm rocking a BlackBerry KeyOne (2017) for the keyboard plus it's BlackBerryness.
Interesting thoughts on the subject, thanks.
I have a S21+ and my friend has a S23 FE. Our daily experiences using both phones are virtually identical. Including in power/what it can handle apps wise, as well as camera quality. Photos taken on my phone or her phone are almost identical that I can't even tell the difference.
Love my galaxy S8. But I'm being forced to upgrade cause mobile banking and a couple other apps will no longer run on android 9 sadly.
I refuse to have a phone without a 3.5mm headphone jack.. not many options out there with them still.
Damn man you have come for a long way with your videos. Good job mate
Sammy got it right on the S21 Ultra, the 888 chip is still a beast 3 years later, camera still rocks compared to the s23 Ultra! And the battery life is still amazing, hitting 5 to 6 hrs ost.
I've got both Moto RaZr + 2023 & the S23 Ultra, I still favor my S21 Ultra over both the newer devices. The size, the snappy speed & overall experience still works best for me.
Got mine this year with the Exynos 2100, which was the closest to the SD chip samsung has got in a while, and damn this thing still is solid, everything is fast
S21 Ultra still gets really hot. That's my issue.
Rightly said. I used a OnePlus 3 for almost 5 years(adding the Custom Roms to stay till Android 11 from Android 6). Recently changed its battery. Although it cannot keep up today in terms of speed, but I kept it as a camera phone, because the GCam mods+OnePlus 3's main sensor does some real magic there, still impresses me today.
I’ve been going down the RUclips video rabbit hole that has gotten me very close to buying a new phone, but honestly the only issues with my iPhone 12 Pro Max are that the battery is down to 78% peak capacity and my telephoto camera doesn’t focus properly anymore. Both are minor enough inconveniences and I could get a battery replacement for about a hundred bucks to have it close to new. Think I’ll hold out on upgrading another year or two until the next big jump in battery life or camera.
What a fantastic video my dude, you are spot on about everything! Old is gold! We should only upgrade when our current phones break and even then, just replace the battery when you need and you’ll be fine for years and years. Also love the chill vibe of this video! 📱
My thoughts exactly. My only worry is the replacement battery quality. I've heard of the cheapo Chinese ones catching fire and such.
@@CyberSystemOverloadIf you send your phone to the company they’ll replace it with genuine battery’s compared to if you take it to a random shop. Unfortunately it’ll be more expensive
@@WhateverWhenever888 I rolled the dice and a week ago the replacement batt arrived from Amazon. So far so good. I get about 17 hours from a single charge (this is without watching any videos). With that test done I'll stress it and watch a lot of vids with max screen brightness. I do have to give the F1 5 stars for one thing - its very easy to access the battery, i changed it myself.
But nobody addressed the no longer getting security updates. What's the vulnerability?
Still using a Note10+ that I bought on it's launch yr and has served me well to this day doing what I need it to do, won't be upgrading until it breaks and beyond repair
What about security updates? I had the exact same phone (Samsung Note 10+) and upgraded because security updates stopped. The last update was August 2023.
@@akin242002 honestly I stopped caring about it, just exercise common sense, don't download unknown APKs and you're good. If I really do want latest security patch, there's always the Custom ROM route.
S10e is a beautiful device. I use it for 3 years now, and it still perform great and please my needs. The only downside that it has looked bootloader (G970U1 model), so i can't install custom roms.
LG V60 owner here. While I'm not receiving more OS updates now and the USB-C port is a nightmare, this phone has been amazing. I'll probably upgrade it with the dual display case and I might get one of the newer Motorola or OnePlus phones of this year, while keeping the V60 as a secondary.
Same! Thankfully the USB-C port on mine is still working great. Looking to upgrade to a phone with better cameras tho but planning on keeping the V60 for the audio jack.
I'm on the LG G8x and I've had it for 4 years now. don't plan to upgrade any time soon cuz I love my headphone jack too much
still using my iphone se 2016. replaced the battery recently. perfect size for me, small, fast enough for daily usage. most of the apps still getting updates and ios 15 is still getting security updates.
I've been a fan of Ryan's content from his own channel since a while ago. Nice to see him again in my feed.
I miss ten years ago when you could go "oh my phone's getting a bit old" and you spend $20 on a new battery, pop the cover and slap it in and it's like you have a whole new phone good for another three years. And you even get to keep the old battery as a bootleg battery bank, phone goes flat just slap it in. For a good few years phones were also 100% waterproof before they realised it hurt sales, back then I would just have my phone in the shower with me playing music.
Also not upgrading from my iPhone 13 Pro. I was on a 2-year (or even less) upgrade cycle and also switching back and forth between Android and iOS, but now fairly unimpressed with the latest new phones 🤷♂️
And iPhone 13 is the last accept sim cards
@@rickgauden, only in US
@@rickgauden eMBRACE the eSIM my guy.
@@rickgauden True, at least for the US. Fortunately, there are still slots on the German iPhones.
I have s21 for 3 years now and I don't want to change it ❤
It was released in Jan 2022. It has been released for less than 3 years.
@@LemonCream9 no its released in 2021 I mean the regular version
@omaralkalbani1035 Yes, the regular version was released in 2022 about a month before the S22 series. Check again.
What are you talking dude, the S21 FE launched at 2022, not the S21 standard@@LemonCream9
@@ltBanshiro that is what I meant. The video was about the S21Fe and I assumed he was talking about that. I read that wrong.
onto your last question in the end, the S10 was the last time when I had to buy it immediately. And I did! 5 years later I am still with this yellow S10e diamond! (yes the battery was bad, I changed it with new one and it's rocking now).
I believed in this philosophy for several years and stuck to re-purchasing the pixel 2, which was the best phone i'd ever had and actually went back to it from a pixel 4.
Unfortunately what I've encountered is and endless cycle of my phone becoming too slow to run and breaking down faster and faster each time. I'm not sure if it's due to outdated firmware or OS, but that's most likely.
It's landed me in a place of wasting a lot more money than I would have otherwise. So be wary following the philosophy in this video, it's not an unwise philosophy, but just bear in mind it only extends to a point. Eventually, you will find diminishing returns and need to upgrade.
-but spending four figures on a phone is just unneccessary, that I will stand by.
I’m still holding onto the iPhone X from 2017 as I’m waiting for Apple to get rid of the notch - which they may not do for another couple of years.
After 5 years, I got Apple to change the battery as it was struggling to last all day despite my low level of usage. Changing the battery didn’t make much difference, and now, 7 years later, the poor battery life is the main issue. Can I go another year or is this the year I finally cave? 😬🤳
Up until february this year, i had been using a galaxy S9 since launch.
Main reason why i replaced it with an S23 Ultra was the battery barely lasting me 4 hours, and then the camera a couple places below.
I tried changing the battery 6 months ago but that didnt work out as well as i thought it would. There is also the fact that new original batteries havent been a thing for like 4 years now.
Regardless of poor battery health, the little S9 still does everything i throw at it with relative ease.
The S23 Ultra on the other hand feels like i got to run full tilt again after 3 years. Such a good device and i definitely plan on using it for a very long time (unless we get that "i have to get that device no matter what" moment some time on the near future).
Similar case here. Only upgraded from my S9 due to battery, otherwise I'd still have it now
The sad thing is that it can be pretty hard to find a decent battery for an old phone. Unfortunatelly, batteries age chemically even when they are not used. When manufacturers stop to produce new batteries and the only option is to buy 2+ years old "new" battery, you will most likely get sup-par performance even with this new battery due to raised internal resistance. That means that when the battery goes below~40% charge and the CPU/GPU needs to draw high current, the phone starts to throttle performance to keep itself from shutting off suddenly.
This fact makes the phone feel even more outdated. Not only do apps get more power hungry but also the batteries are no longer able to supply peak power unless fully charged.
8:22 broooo, I'm rockin a OnePlus 7t pro. After 4 and a half years it's still a solid and fast phone. It's holding on so well that i will replace it only when there is going to be the perfect phone for my standards. By the way, the pop up camera it's working perfectly fine and the display with no camera holes is just soooooo good looking... I will miss it when I'll replace the phone.
I switched for a OnePlus 12. Finally it's worth of the upgrade
same, holding on to my OP 7T Pro as well and it's great
I upgrade my phone about every five years or so the thing that gets me is transferring all the information from the phone and setting it up like the old phone. It’s such a pain when not all information goes across and you’ve got a search through the phone to get it.
I have a Galaxy s10e, albeit as a secondary phone. It's still going strong!
I have it as a main phone lol. Battery issues are the only problem.
Thats my main phone.
S10e is my favorite android phone of all time. I loved the size and color choices.
S10e was my all time favorite phone aside from the note 8
Using Note 10 Plus since 2019 and it is still going strong. No plans to upgrade unless it completely falls apart, regardless of numbers of years. Repairability is endless.
same here but using the S10. im planning to upgrade to the S25 next year as I want to maximise my trade-in and student discount value. My goal is to use my next phone for 10 years!
Awesome!
My mains are S9, S10, Note10+. I baby the note. Use it for video edits. Precision with stylus. So good. Other two are my workaday.
It is hard to go to any other phone if you're a Note user. Stylus is more useful than people think and that "Note" branding in Samsung's lineup is now extinct. Having a Note feels special, man. I must say.
@@madhurjo.karmaker stylus is indeed very useful. And new samsungs are no good with buggy OneUI 6. Really nothing new worth buying right now. Be well
Samsung a54 5G, love how it has the touch id in the screen, and it runs great, good FPS, good screen color, etc etc
Amazing phone just wish it had more ai features and wireless charging
I had my A71 for four years until ATT forced me to upgrade since they were shutting off their 3G network. Even though it was a 4G phone.
Still bitter about that one.
@@TheMarioMakerMaster I added wireless charging and Ai features
@@darksaga80 your not a big phone guy huh?
@@king-zayy-tv How did you add ai features?, I added wireless charging on my old phone
I am running a Pixel 4a and try to keep it as long as possible because of the small form factor. I don't know any new phone that is so small in my pocket.
I'm rocking a iPhone 11. It's still performing well and receiving updates. Only the wide-view camera is starting to suck. The other to are still good enough for me though ...
i have an iphone se gen1 back in 2016 if im not mistaken and initially in 2020 i upgraded to a red magic 5g but upon reviving my iphone se (replacing the battery) ive gone to like it again. Theres just something about having a smaller phone that u can type with one hand thats appealing to me. Its just a true definition of pocketable. Phones these days are so heavy on the pockets and can be a drag.
The closest to that is the iPhone 13 Mini. Similar size, full screen and one hand use and extremely powerful for its size
I held on to my Pixel 4 XL until the Pixel 8 came out. If I wasn't already on the second battery and needing a third for the 4 XL that would have cost 300+ bucks, I would have stuck with it. With the 8 getting many more years of support, I'm planning on hanging on to it for another 7 years.
Rocking the S22 Ultra here, jumped from an S7 then before that, an S4.
I upgrade only when something goes truly broken and can no longer be reasonably fixed. Wifi receivers, audio receivers (for calls) were some of my previous reasons.
Seeing how the S22 Ultra is performing still to this day? I hope to keep it for at least 2 more years, if not longer.
I’m still rocking my iPhone 11. It does what an avg user needs photos msgs navigation emails payments!
Me too! I won’t upgrade until it’s no longer supported by Apple.
@@miguelmontoya1320The good thing about android is that you don't have to rely on the manufacturer or Google. Custom roms maintained by individuals can prolong the life for years after official support is over.
I LOVED my S21. I was having a hard time upgrading, but I decided to ultimately upgraded to now a P8 (was 150$ out of pocket with S21 trade in) as a backup, and an S24U as my daily. Just like my S21, I'm having a hard time seeing why even upgrade. I just saw the poor battery performance on the S21 and wanted all day battery. I'm taking a better approach for battery health and cycling to hopefully extend these phones for many years to come.
The value proposition just isn't there anymore for annual, bi-annual upgrades at the higher costs. The S21 was still just as fast as my new phones, just degraded battery.
how is the new battery life? I still own a S21 with th exynos chip - just went to the gym for a longer session with some reading via browser and instagram including listening to music on spotify ... 92% drop in 4h ... so ... is that normal for such "heavy" usage or is my battery just not on the good side ? :D
@@Jookken I never replaced my s21 battery.
Everyone should watch this.
6 years ago I got an LG Aristo for $94. I have just replaced it with a Samsung A15 5G for $99 which is likely to be around for at least the next 6 years. I can't imagine paying 4 figures for a cell.
I don't usually leave comments, but this just hit!
I got myself a Samsung S21FE about two years ago now; I remember feeling quite anxious if it would hold up well or if it would satisfy my standards for photo and video. It was also technically the first smartphone I would get myself, so it was such an important decision for me. Fast forward to today, and I have to say it has served me well! It truly isn't the most high end of smartphones, but for the value for money, it's def not a bad deal.
Imagine my surprise when I clicked on your video😅Never was the type to want to keep upgrading my phone and thanks to the S21FE, I didn't have to! Thanks for affirming and validating my purchase from back then!
The only Problem are the Security Patches and planned Obsolescence by demanding more Hardware for the same Application, example WhatsApp disables support for older Android Versions.
well, whatsapp is compatible with devices with android 5.0 onwards... its almost 10 years since android 5 came out
@@efecede22 But whatsapp has surely gotten more bloated.
Still rocking the OnePlus 7T no issues whatsoever. Haven't changed the battery so that might be a problem in the future for now it's giving me like 4-5 hrs of SOT but still planning to use it for another 1-2 yrs.
same, i had to upgrade from onelplus 5 becuase it's small screen size and 64gb storage without sd card slot. In 2019 i bought one second hand which was just some months old at great discount.
i can easily rock it next 5 years.
i still rock oneplus 5 as a secondary small phone.
A friend of mine is still using his iPhone 3 I’m so impressed and environmentally it’s so much better than upgrading all the time. The two year thing is ridiculous.