darkoshi: (Default)
Darkoshi ([personal profile] darkoshi) wrote2017-05-06 02:26 am
Entry tags:

phone shucks

Back to my quest for a newer cell phone.

Based on my criteria:
- should support a fairly recent version of Android
- removable battery
- support reading very large microSD cards - at least 256 GB
- not too big or heavy
- preferably under $200, so a used but working phone (though some of my possible choices ended up being < $300 used)

I had previously come up with these models: LG G4, LG G5, LG V10

Now I found out that all 3 of those models have a hardware issue that can cause a bootloop. If I buy a used phone, besides the increased risk of getting a bad phone to begin with, if it only develops problems later on, I wouldn't be able to get any warranty support for it.

Now what do I do. There really were very few models I found that had removable batteries.

There was another model, the Moto G, which I previously read conflicting info about the battery. I think I've figured it out now. The regular Moto G4 doesn't have a removable battery. But the Moto G4 *Play* does. But it only has half a gig of RAM. Surely that's not enough for a good experience? Seems I misread the specs. The page I was looking at said 1 slash 2, which must indicate it comes with either 1 or 2 GB RAM. But the GSM Arena page says 2 GB.

Ah, phew. GSM Arena lets you search by features such as the battery, and it shows a lot more than I saw before.
marahmarie: (M In M Forever) (Default)

[personal profile] marahmarie 2017-05-07 03:53 am (UTC)(link)
But if the phone specs say max 32GB, I'll take their word for it.

I don't know, that's a good question. This was the best I could find on that (but your search mileage may vary):

https://superuser.com/questions/892401/if-a-device-specifies-that-it-can-support-sd-cards-up-to-64gb-would-larger-size

I kind of take it that depending on which file format the phone supports you can try a bigger card than the max 64GB or 128GB the phone says it can handle, but success rates seem to depend on what the OS lets you do so are relatively unknown from there.

Windows phones...I know I've said this before, but app support/available apps on the phone itself are really terrible. For people like me. You're a bit more tech-inclined, though, so you might have more luck. While Windows apps were supposed to all be compatible with Android by now (which might've gone better than the reverse case) Android apps - afaik - still have to be sideloaded onto Windows phones. But from Win10 up (possible 8.1 Update has this, too, but I can't recall) there's a menu where you can turn on sideloading and take it from there. Never tried it, myself.

I did try to use BoA's official Win10 app, and it couldn't even correctly take pictures of my checks to deposit (which could be down to "my phone has a crappy camera" - which it does - or could be the app), which was when I pretty much gave up on the Win app ecosystem.
Edited (typos, clarity) 2017-05-07 03:55 (UTC)