this post was submitted on 22 Feb 2024
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I'm someone with relatively small hands, plus I want my phone to be on the smaller side since I prefer to use my tablet/computer/tv to watch content. But this trend where many manufacturers tend to keep futures away from smaller phones to drive people to bigger phones is driving me crazy and really makes it hard for me to buy a new phone. I can understand not having everything like maybe a periscope lens or something else that is cost etc. but not to this level. Like take Samsung for example: S24 lacks uwb, 45w, a 1440p display, has a lower amount of ram and storage. Why? Why can't the s24 have faster charging or uwb? Why is there no 512 version and why does it have to start with 128gb storage? Is it not a flagship? It costs 949€ in my place! Why do I have to give 200€ more to get the s24+ just to get these simple features? I don't want a bigger phone! Google does the same! No uwb, no thermometer sensor, no telephoto lens. And don't get me started with all the software features google is keeping for the 8 pro like they don't have the same processor. Why? Are they cheap? No they are not. I'm just really annoyed by this cause I really don't want such a big phone.

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[–] ByteMe@lemmy.world 13 points 8 months ago (2 children)

The problem is not that they are expensive. The problem is that even though they are expensive, they are still lacking basic features! Why can't the s24 have 45w or the pixel 8 have thermometer sensor or the video boost thing? Like, no reason at all

[–] ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de 10 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

On a nice technical level, heat and space. On a sales level, upselling. Larger phones dissipate more heat. Heat is bad for computers/phones. A 45w quick charge (which is dumb to use, fyi. Fast charging degrades batteries faster) has a larger amount of circuitry in the phone that takes up space to regulate and monitor the charge.

Beyond that, there's a nice little formula used for how fast you can safely charge a lithium battery, and that formula directly ties into battery size. Essentially, for every 1000 mah worth of battery, the battery pack can handle about a 1 amp per hour charge (roughly). So the bigger the battery, the higher the wattage and amperage you can somewhat safely go. This is the main reason the s24 won't have 45w fast charging. It has a 4,000mah battery. It's too small a battery to even use the 45w fast charge without degrading the battery too fast. The s24plus has a 4,900 mah battery. That's big enough to handle a 45w charge (though again, if you want your battery to last as long as possible, you want to disable it in settings.).

Now aside from just up selling, smaller phone= smaller parts needed. Your thermometer needs the hardware inside to support it and that has to go on the main board. Your smaller phone has less open space to fit it on there.

Then things like video boost while may be just an upsell, could also be because recording very high quality video is an intensive task on your phone so it causes more heat and drains your already smaller battery faster, which generates heat as well, and your smaller phones can't get rid of that heat as quickly.

Next, I had seen you mention 1440 screens. That means across the whole screen there would be something like 2,960 pixels/dots of light in one direction and 1440 in the other. The more dots, the more resources (processor use etc) you need to power them, so your battery drains faster and phone heats up more. But the smaller the entire screen is, the less dots you need to make it look the same to you from the one or two feet away from your face you hold your phone. Smaller screens don't really need a 2960 x 1440 screen. You can't tell much of a difference on a screen that size and it would just make the batt drain faster for almost no reason. I have a large screened Note 20 Ultra that has a 1440 screen and I don't even use it. I turned it down to 1080 because even on my larger phone the viewing quality wasn't enough of an improvement to trade off from how long my battery would last on a charge.

Ram is mostly a money grab, but each ram chip does also use more battery as well.

In summary, for some things it's a money grab, for others, there's good reason it's that way. But it's also become a niche market for people who want the high end stuff in a smaller phone. You're a minority. Cramming all the things in a smaller space is harder and therefor more expensive. There just aren't enough people who are willing to pay a premium price to get the highest end phones that want a small phone, so no one makes them. There isn't enough money in it. I believe you said in here you wanted to buy a phone for around $750, while top end phones are double that price, so not even you are willing to pay $1500 to get a 6" phone with all the best stuff packed inside.

Hope this helps. Cheers

[–] ByteMe@lemmy.world 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

I can accept the faster charging thing, that makes sense. They could have a bit bigger charging though, like 30w. Anyway. I suppose you don't know about pixel 8 pros video boost. It's really annoying cause it actually happens on the cloud. It's not on device processing. Plus what about uwb? Or bigger storage? Anyway, they should at least be cheaper

[–] ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 8 months ago

Just read up on video boost. So a 1080p video gets upscaled and tweaked cloud side. What a gimmick. Looks like the exchange of paying more or an 8 pro is what gets you the server compute time for your video editing.

As I said, there aren't enough people interested in paying more for a small phone to warrant a manufacturing run for bigger storage. They don't think the amount they sell would be worth the fab costs or logistics.

[–] Fake4000@lemmy.world 6 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Exactly, artificially limit the phone touch you to bigger phones.

Mind you, once you have many phones sharing the same hardware(for example the same 6.7inch screen), it becomes a question of adding or removing features (fast charging, AI, etc).

It makes commercial for companies to standardise on as many parts as possible.

[–] ByteMe@lemmy.world 1 points 8 months ago

Well, I won't buy another phone in many years anyway. (After this one)