I am picky about the features I look for in a smartphone. Hopefully this post can be a good resource for myself and others who have similar preferences. For reference, I am using a Oneplus 7 Pro with a non-functional camera and flashlight.
It should handle a day’s worth of general usage before charging. Heat kills batteries, so decent heat dissipation is important too.
I recently bought a Google Pixel 5a, a phone I greatly enjoyed before I dropped it 5 feet and the display decided its work was done. My top priority is to have a useable device for ~5 years before needing an upgrade.
I like storing my music collection (30 GB and growing) and expandable storage would save me from having to carry a DAP (mp3 player). Without expandable storage it should have 256 GB storage.
Electronics aren’t meant to last a long time; I’d prefer devices costing ~300 USD, but I would gladly pay a little more for reliability.
Please let me be intelligible on phone calls. Please? Pretty please?
OS updates for 3+ years or resources on XDA for flashing a custom ROM. Ideally LineageOS.
It’s a bit dated nowadays, but I really do appreciate having that extra bit of control. This also ties into custom ROM support.
I loved the dedicated fingerprint sensor on my Pixel 5a. Power button fingerprints are worse, but better than nothing. Typing in my passcode every time is a bit of a pain.
Preferably dual front facing stereo speakers. Having some decent output for videos when I don’t have anything else with me would be nice.
Makes stuff WAY easier to see when the sun’s all sunny.
I don’t play phone games. I watch a lot of media and I message people. Must be capable of simultaneously running muliple apps and background services.
It’d be pretty sick if I could bring it with me in the shower without worrying about water damage.
Won’t always use it, but it’d be great to have.
I don’t need a 4K display. Hell, I don’t need a 1080p display. If it cuts costs, 720p is just fine so long as it looks okay.
It can be big or small, thick or thin. Not picky.
The phones I am looking at right now are as follows
EDIT: As of 4/13/24, I decided to pick up a Samsung S20 FE. It’s been treating me well, and for the low low price of $280 NEW, I’m very pleased with what I got. My complaint is that the vibrate is seriously weak. Use it on sound mode if you don’t want to constantly miss notifications.
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If you are looking to use it for 5 years, I’d say go with Fairphone. They actually have a 5 year warranty and committed to providing software updates for 6 years. All other phones will lose support in 2 or 3 years, leaving you vulnerable to security vulnerabilities.
Came here to say this. I love my Fairphone!!
Jup, Fairphone. Enough phone for anything you need to do. Repairable and fair. Best thing
Definitely a strong contender due to the replaceable battery and other parts. If I cannot find a phone that performs as well in my ideal price range this is probably what I will end up doing. Thank you for the input!
As another happy Fairphone user, I’d caution against getting one though if you don’t see the hefty price tag as also being a way of subsidizing right to repair and fair trade. The long warranty period and support duration, the repairability, and the SD card slot might not be enough positives to offset it being bulky, heavy, the camera being terrible, security updates coming with 1-2 months of delay, the specs being generally under what you’d find around its price range and you going 300 USD over budget.
Personally, I’d only ever owned a low-end smartphone that was 4 years past its end of support before getting the Fairphone, so I’ve been very happy with it, but I can see the drawbacks mattering more to other people.
The Fairphone for a long time was sort of my “dream phone” due to the philosophy of repairing it. However recently I have stumbled across the Rog Phone 7 by Asus. It does not have the repairability that I desire, and it is too expensive for my current financial situation. But the battery far surpasses Fairphone’s and although it is not as readily repairable, a teardown video reassured me that i would be able to at the very least attempt diagnostics. Also, it is a newer model so I know there will be support for it for a while. I am not completely convinced that it suits my needs better than the fairphone, and both are too expensive.
Perhaps by the time I can comfortably afford one or the other, the winner will be more clear.