• HidingCat@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I get the criticism, but the Fairphone really shouldn’t be compared to other (especially Chinese-made) phones in the same way. It’s about sustainability and fairer labour (hopefully anyway).

    So far the main issue I see is with the battery life, 4200 mAH battery on a 778G-class SoC should be doing better than this.

  • gamer@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Despite the issues, and knowing that a different phone would get me a much better value at a lower price, I was going to buy one of these.

    …but then I saw it wasn’t available in the US. So I went with a (used) Pixel 7 on ebay instead. Considering this is the 5th iteration and they still don’t have a US variant, I’m not going to get my hopes up. I know Murena sells a US variant of the Fairphone 4, but apparently it uses the same exact modem, so using it in the US will result in connectivity issues.

    at least I’m recycling!

  • sol@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Anyone know how well the Fairphone 5 compares against the Samsung Galaxy S10? I know the specs are pretty public but I don’t follow this stuff that closely so find it difficult to draw comparisons between different chips etc.

    My S10 is on its last legs so I think a bit about what I will buy to replace it. I really like the idea of the Fairphone but of course you pay a lot (relatively speaking) for the ethics. One of the worries is that the phone will become unusable in a few years anyway, either because parts are unavailable or because software has become too heavy. The other option I am leaving towards is a second hand Pixel.

    • n2burns@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      What is the reason your S10 is on it’s last legs? If you see yourself needing a lot more power, maybe the FP5 isn’t the best bet for you because you’re right, it might not be useful to you in the later years of it’s life. However, I’m not sure what people are doing with the current top-of-the-line SoCs to justify that much power (if people want it to play games or for non-practical reasons, that’s fine too). As an S10e user, I feel like we’ve come to a point where my current phone should be powerful enough for the foreseeable future. My only issues are I’m no longer getting official software updates (I’ll probably go with a Custom ROM soon), my battery life is a bit shorter than I’d like, and parts are getting hard to come by with most being “new old stock” at best.

  • ka-chow@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Always like the idea of the Fairphone but I always find the chip to be a bit lacking.

    Like if it had (at least) last years flagship chip then I feel like it’d be less of a compromise and the switch to a more sustainable phone would be a much easier sell.

    Can’t imagine using a chip that’s deemed ‘lacking’ now is going to feel any better 4 years down the line.

    • HidingCat@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I don’t get it, what’s wrong with the 778G? It was a highly competent SoC that was still relevant last year (Samsung’s A series from 2022 couldn’t come close to it with the Exynos line, save the A73 which came with the 778G), and there are gazillions of comptent phones using slower SoCs that work just fine.

      Do people really use their phones or do they look at spec sheets and go, too slow in their mind, like some kind of reverse placebo?

      • Polar@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        or do they look at spec sheets and go, too slow in their mind, like some kind of reverse placebo

        Yes. People hate on the Tensor chip in the Pixel 6/7 because it’s “slow”, despite day to day performance being literally no different than any other phone.

  • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    I’d be sold if it wasn’t literally 2.5x the price of any other phone I’m looking at. Sheesh. Yeah and I’d love to change out parts and tinker with the possibilities, too. What’s that gonna cost me?

    Edit - also other major brands might have removable batteries by the time I’m buying again.