New Phone!

Apr. 24th, 2015 09:03 am
yendi: (Default)
[personal profile] yendi
As some of you might know, for roughly the last two years, my cell phone has been the Kyocera Rise.

If someone had told me that Apple has initialed a false flag operation to make people hate Android, the Rise would be the result. It's awful. Horrible. On a hardware front, it's unresponsive to touch, it's slow, it's hard to read, it has trouble getting signals even in good locations, and its battery life is about two hours. On the software front, it crashes in almost any app, it has trouble running updates, and even basic apps tend not to work. Even basic tasks like dialing a number take minutes, not seconds.

I stuck with it because I'm using Virgin Mobile, and I refuse to pay more than $35 a month for my cell service. I don't want a $60+ bill (which is generally the only way to get a free or low-cost iPhone or Galaxy), because I want a phone primarily for texting, MBTA bus tracking, Twitter, occasional web access, and occasional phone calls. Oh, and taking the occasional picture of the dog or cats, of course.

But I finally hit a breaking point with that piece of shit, and have now upgraded to, of all things, a Nokia 635.

Yes, I'm on a Windows phone. And I fucking love it.

No, it's not high-end, but it does all the things I actually expect a smart phone to do. And it does them quickly. It gives me alerts. It lets me text (and has a swype-style interface that's much better than the Rise ever did). I can actually read the screen. Hell, I was able to actually check Mets scores on the bus yesterday!

Yeah, the ecosystem's small, but I really don't give a damn about that. I use my iPad for games, so only need one or two time-killers here. I use the same iPad for productivity (along with my Android Tablet to a lesser extent), and the few productivity apps I'd want on a phone (like Evernote) exist. I've got no real interest in streaming audio or video (and years of dealing with Android's well-known audio latency issue haven't helped), but most of the apps I'd consider on that front exist.

I'm still getting used to the interface changes -- it's not quite the "do they even have a usability team?" stuff you see in Android, but it's a noticeably different thing from the other systems. The tile updates are nice, but I'll need to spend some dedicated time this weekend ensuring I've got the right stuff on the front screen.

Anyway, I have a smart phone that's actually somewhat smart, finally! And I'm still on my nice Virgin Mobile monthly plan, meaning I'm not tying up more of our bank account than we can afford. Yay!

(no subject)

Date: 2015-04-24 02:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] greylistening.livejournal.com
I am still defiantly using a flip phone. But I might be won over by an actual effective smart phone...

(no subject)

Date: 2015-04-24 03:10 pm (UTC)

(no subject)

Date: 2015-04-24 03:44 pm (UTC)
minkrose: (geeky)
From: [personal profile] minkrose
There's clearly a degree to which the phone manufacturer changes the Android presentation. For example, there are significant differences between the Samsung and LG phones I've looked at. I really, really love my Samsung phone, which is ancient and barely works anymore. I really, really hate the size of all the new Samsung phones, so I am just non-stop complaining and not solving this problem at all. I'm basically waiting for the Saygus V2 to come out so I can decide if that's what I want.

I'm really glad you have a phone you like! It makes a huge difference.

(no subject)

Date: 2015-04-25 07:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] boutell.livejournal.com
Congratulations on a phone that makes you happy!

For some time now I've been on Republic Wireless and suggesting it to others, because they are on Sprint just like Virgin Mobile, but it's only $25/month, and they act like grownups. With Virgin Mobile, I felt like I was making their heads explode just by paying automatically every month with a credit card; I could see the smoke coming out of their website every time I logged in.

Republic is able to hit the $25 price point because of their software which routes your calls and texts over wifi if you are on wifi, and over Sprint if you aren't.

However, their phones are Android phones. They are nice Motorola Android phones with no horrible cruft added by the carrier, but they are still Android phones, and if that's not your cup of tea it's not your cup of tea.

Profile

yendi: (Default)
yendi

February 2024

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
1819 2021222324
2526272829  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags