Finally! Have been using Obtainium for a while and was wondering why F-droid didn’t have auto update as well, to the point that I moved almost all apps to Obtainium…
Finally! Have been using Obtainium for a while and was wondering why F-droid didn’t have auto update as well, to the point that I moved almost all apps to Obtainium…
Expected, since Hisislicon doesn’t have access to advanced process nodes, like 5nm equivalent and 3nm equivalent. They are stuck at 7nm equivalent.
For me, it is impressive they are only 2-3 years behind at this moment.
I’m happy I bought S23 since it is the only one released with Snapdragon as it seems… Unfortunately Exynos just isn’t there…
I don’t see the point in reading this article instead of the GSMArena one tbh, it’s just a summary of that
Excited to see these irl numbers, I hope we will see it in fhones available to Europe
I have almost never liked any PD phone to be honest
I know John from way before he started DSOGaming or english articles. I do not agree that he is particularly clickbaity, nor do I agree that he does 0 reasearch on his articles. I am not reading DSOG often, but I remember a lot of well written and researched articles from him
I really wanted YotaPhone to succeed. Both a normal screen and a very very battery friendly e-ink for reading etc for hours…
My only issue with Spotify Wrapped is just how inaccurate it ALWAYS is, comparing it to my Last.fm account
While I agree, a keyboard is always included in a phone
Super interesting! Would love to check it out in person, and to see how the screen compares to a normal one
I had the S8+ and moved to an S23 Ultra, the difference is huge to be honest. The S9 surely is better in that regard thanks to the extra gb of RAM, but still you will see a big difference compared to an S24 Ultra (which doesn’t mean that you phone isn’t perfect for your needs as is)
It really is super impressive though. There are only a handful of fabs internationally and I think all of them outside of China use machinery made from 1 company only for advanced processes.
It does not. There are tens of great Open-source gallery apps. There are even some with AI tools, albeit much more basic
Personally, I use Photoprism on my NAS for photo management
Since at least 15 years ago, a ton of SMS were included in the contract or add-on packages for your phone, and data were much more expensive comparatively. In my country specifically, unlimited data has only been a thing for 1-2 years, and we have cheap data for less than 5-7 years. But we always had something like 1.500 SMS included in even the cheapest contracts for 10+ years
Well, then use literally any other app as a gallery?
They didn’t take off just because SMS was expensive, but because they offer a much better experience with many more features
Good to see companies working together for such things, but that’s a weird one at least to me. Neat anyways
The language has nothing to do with what you describe in your last paragraph. There are a lot of reasons what that was happening, and using Java is not one of them. Just the openess of the OS and how it was written was enough to justify such a difference vs a closed OS with a fraction of the possibilities
Also Android is not using just Java, otherwise you would be able to run any normal Java app without “hacks”
This is not something you can choose. It chooses the apps for you itself