• 1 Post
  • 31 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: October 26th, 2023

help-circle











  • gregDev55@alien.topBtoSamsung@hardware.watchOne UI 6
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    There have been reports of burn in on AMOLED displays due to a glitch that disables burn in protection. I presume they are working 24/7 to fix this currently because it could send in thousands of devices for repairs and that is definitely something they don’t want. I have been using 6.0 for a few days now and it is fine. Just make sure to avoid static images if possible, particularly your taskbar. Make sure to switch to full screen frequently so the status bar doesn’t stay lit for hours with battery/wifi etc indications because this will cause the burn in.




  • I had the same dilemma with you, as 6.1 is not big enough for modern standards yet I didn’t want to spend an extra phone of cost for the plus. Then I realized something. I have a 34’ PC monitor, and I will soon have an 65’ OLED TV. Needless to say, my phone is NOT going to be my primary means of content consumption, but merely a highly reliable and snappy tool with which I communicate, take good pictures, and do my 2FA security stuff. So screen size becomes less important and suddenly, the more compact form comes at play. If your phone is going to be your primary means of content consumption go all the way to Plus or even the Ultra. If you are me the small one is clearly the better choice.






  • You need to get a few things straight. When you buy a phone, you don’t buy just the hardware of it, the camera is one of the many sensors. You primarily buy software support. If companies supported their phones indefinitely we would stay with our old phones until they stopped working but no. You wanted Android 13 & 14 and their new features because Android 9 wasn’t cutting it any longer. In addition you got security patches that is why you got a new phone, stop pretending that you didn’t know that in the first place. It will take more than 5 years for a midrange phone to catch up to a flagship specs-wise but that doesn’t mean that an old phone is better or secure to use.