That was true for the A54. But, fortunately that’s not the case with the A35. Samsung has even managed to squeeze a bit more performance out of the exynos 1380. According to the reviewer there was no slowdown and it also smooth across the review.
Don’t worry. There’s a better smartphone for you. It has not one but two headphone jacks. One 3.5mm Jack and another balanced 4.4mm Jack. Here’s the link: moondroplab.com/en/products/miad01
True. But, do they support the limit charge feature of Samsung smartphones? While my 20w dual Port Mi charger can fast charge my samsung phone at 15w. If I enable the limit charge(85%) feature it continuously tries to charge my phone. My phone ends up in a state of charging and not charging repeatedly. Only the original Samsung charger stops charging on its own at 85%.
Last I heard was all Android tablets are garbage. It’s been a minute, so maybe that’s changed. But I doubt it.
It’s just not a product segment that’s been particularly profitable so no one is really putting in the effort to make a good one, and bc of low volume, margins are bad, so prices are bad, so profits are low…… it’s a self reinforcing situation.
It’s a lot more expensive than independent repairs (depending on how often you break or loose your device during that time, I guess), and if I read it correctly, spans a maximum of 36 months after purchase. Don’t think it’s that good a value for the average buyer.
Edit: Also, do device batteries usually dip below their set threshold within 36 Months, let alone multiple times?
Valid question. They set 79% as the threshold. Depending on your usage and environment factors it could dip once or twice in 2-3 years.
But, it’s cool they include this as the new metric. Previously, according to the article it was mechanical failure only (whatever that means). With 5-7 years of updates a replacement in the 2nd/3rd year of your phone can increase its longevity a bit.
I mean, it’s definitely better than not offering it at all, and if people use the service anyway, than it’s an added Bonus for them. I also do get that not everyone decides on such things due to the monetary value vs having it done independently, and might instead want it for the peace of mind.
I still think that it wouldn’t be worth it for me personally.
I am a little nervous to install a major update from Samsung. With the 6.0 update it got into a boot loop and I had to completely reset the phone. I might wait a week and see what other people say about it.
I disagree. You have the built in Samsung cloud backup (search for “backup” in settings). You can temporarily backup your entire phone and the data is available to you for 30 days for free. Have you tried this yet. It does a phenomenal job restoring when things go horribly wrong with an update.
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