Poll: Which abandoned Android phone features do you miss the most?
-
This post did not contain any content.
-
This post did not contain any content.
At this time, the 3.5mm jack is top with 27%
-
This post did not contain any content.
Open bootloaders, ir blaster, 3.5mm jack, sd card slot, replaceable batteries. The list goes on.
-
This post did not contain any content.
Android 4.4 lockscreen widgets
-
This post did not contain any content.
3 way tie between 3.5mm jack, easily removable, and now that microSD Express is finally becoming mainstream, a microSD Express card slot. It'd be nice to see in a flagship or at least a Mediatek mid range chip like the dimensity 8400
-
This post did not contain any content.
I'd forgotten all about the notification LED. I wonder, could you flash a small part of an OLED display to achieve something similar while still being low power?
-
This post did not contain any content.
The physical fingerprint reader on the back of the phone.
-
This post did not contain any content.
Built in IR blaster
-
This post did not contain any content.
Restriction of Network access per app
-
Built in IR blaster
I've got a oneplus 12 which has it. Random thing for them to bring back but welcome
-
This post did not contain any content.
Removable battery is #1. My old Galaxy S3 (not even my first phone-yes I'm old) has absolutely godawful battery life but I had I think 4 total batteries around to make sure I could always have it even on a heavy use day. That sucked, but at least it was doable with a really easy process (peel off plastic back, pull out and swap battery, snap the backplate back on).
I keep an old phone around and sometimes use it to play like a video for my cats to watch if they're laying on my bed when I'm not in there. But it has to stay plugged in because it loses the first 20% in about 15 minutes.
And that phone in particular (a pixel 2) is particularly a pain to replace the battery in the first place.
-
Open bootloaders, ir blaster, 3.5mm jack, sd card slot, replaceable batteries. The list goes on.
Is any of that an android feature? It's mostly hardware, I think you can still get devices that have some combination of those (maybe not the IR blaser).
-
This post did not contain any content.
The smaller size phones (I hate these Phablets,) 3.5mm jack and back finger print reader, (although my Pixel 4a5G has them, it will be the last,) replaceable batteries, and selfie camera that doesn't take up screen real estate.
-
This post did not contain any content.
Everybody misses their IR blaster it seems. And why not? randomly turning off the neighbors TV is good wholesome fun.
-
This post did not contain any content.
I miss controlling the volume on a per app basis. It gets unwieldy, but it was nice sometimes.
-
The smaller size phones (I hate these Phablets,) 3.5mm jack and back finger print reader, (although my Pixel 4a5G has them, it will be the last,) replaceable batteries, and selfie camera that doesn't take up screen real estate.
Pixel 5 has a back fingerprint reader. Think it's the last Pixel with it.
-
The physical fingerprint reader on the back of the phone.
Lots of android phones have a physical fingerprint reader
-
This post did not contain any content.wrote last edited by [email protected]
Notification led that is separate from the display. Custom per-app colour and blink pattern.
-
Is any of that an android feature? It's mostly hardware, I think you can still get devices that have some combination of those (maybe not the IR blaser).
Most manufacturers dropped all or most of those features.
-
The smaller size phones (I hate these Phablets,) 3.5mm jack and back finger print reader, (although my Pixel 4a5G has them, it will be the last,) replaceable batteries, and selfie camera that doesn't take up screen real estate.
there's this awful venn diagram of circles with no overlap, where you cant get a smallish phone that gets updates. Even asking for it to be well made is a pipe dream.
Add onto the desire for an unlockable bootloader and your only options are the phones designed to be thrown into a river after the job is complete.
I wish those unihertz devices were serious whatsoever. They ship on old android versions and get maybe one update in their life cycle.
Android is such a clusterfuck of an OS too. kernel/driver space is an absolute mess so every OEM has to basically ship their own kernel. Qualcomm is the devil and hides everything behind NDA's so you can't really write an open OS from the ground up on any hardware that can do any real processing.