A frustrating realization I had a few years ago- Verizon and AT&T offer ridiculous “trade in value” allowances that are priced in to monthly bill. If you keep a phone longer than 3 years, they are pocketing that money. Find an MVNO, a 13 month old phone, and get off the treadmill.
Well, not necessarily. I’ve had my phone for almost five years now. The battery is at 78% of it’s original capacity and still gets me through the day without problems, even on heavy use. The only times I need to charge during the day is when I’m on a long distance train and listen to podcasts or audio books for hours.
Chances are that something else will fail long before the battery. And even if not, the local phone repair shop offers a battery replacement for about 50€ which is more than reasonable for something that will get me another couple of years.
Sure there are phones that have enough capacity overhead to still be usable despite a 20% reduction, but thats not most phones.
Also they just stated “No” in response to a question to which the answer is unequivocally “Yes” and that pissed me off.
You will get rid of that phone long before the battery dies.
Why? There was a time where smartphone tech was improving fast enough that there was a large benefit to a new phone every 2-3 years, but that time is in the past for most use cases.
Short answer No….
Long answer no….
Longest answer no….
All the talk about battery life is silly. You will get rid of that phone long before the battery dies.
If you are wasteful idiot yes.
A frustrating realization I had a few years ago- Verizon and AT&T offer ridiculous “trade in value” allowances that are priced in to monthly bill. If you keep a phone longer than 3 years, they are pocketing that money. Find an MVNO, a 13 month old phone, and get off the treadmill.
Well, not necessarily. I’ve had my phone for almost five years now. The battery is at 78% of it’s original capacity and still gets me through the day without problems, even on heavy use. The only times I need to charge during the day is when I’m on a long distance train and listen to podcasts or audio books for hours.
Chances are that something else will fail long before the battery. And even if not, the local phone repair shop offers a battery replacement for about 50€ which is more than reasonable for something that will get me another couple of years.
Sure there are phones that have enough capacity overhead to still be usable despite a 20% reduction, but thats not most phones.
Also they just stated “No” in response to a question to which the answer is unequivocally “Yes” and that pissed me off.
Why? There was a time where smartphone tech was improving fast enough that there was a large benefit to a new phone every 2-3 years, but that time is in the past for most use cases.