SheHadMANHands

SheHadMANHands t1_iu5g3p3 wrote

I just find it hard to believe most people are taking advantage of that extra processing power. Surely some are. Unfortunately there's no hard evidence one way or the other. I don't personally see a noteworthy number of people playing graphically intense games or running large, sophisticated computations on their smart phones. Most are playing very basic games, streaming Netflix, and/or swiping on Tinder. lol

Battery life... okay. I have a big power pack for that. You really just need the battery to get you through the day (and power pack suffices for traveling).

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SheHadMANHands t1_iu53th7 wrote

IPhone SE Gen1 was objectively designed to fit your hand (dimensions of your hand). That's not an opinion; it's a fact. And I'm not the only one to make that observation. Go and research it. The designers have talked through their process and the reasoning behind it. Thank you though for your brilliant contribution.

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SheHadMANHands t1_iu532z8 wrote

Wonder sometimes if there's some kind of overcompensation thing going on with these bigger phones. I just don't see most people using them in any practical sense that outweighs the fact of how awkward it is in your pocket and in your hands. Join me down the rabbit hole...

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SheHadMANHands t1_iu52otu wrote

Just picked up a Gen 2 off of ebay. It's bulky, awkward, and I don't understand why the average person needs such a big screen (unless perhaps you have an astigmatism or similar). Want to play video games? Get a Nintendo Switch. Watch movies? Get a much bigger screen with an ipad rather than carrying around a clunky awkward phone. Edit spreadsheets? Use your computer. I can appreciate that some people are editing docs on the go, but is that that many people?

Sad an actual intelligently designed phone has gone out of style.

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