We are well past the point where there is real marginal utility in an upgrade every 2 years.
I expect most people are moving to 3 and 4 year upgrade cycles.
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We are well past the point where there is real marginal utility in an upgrade every 2 years.
I expect most people are moving to 3 and 4 year upgrade cycles.
a colleague of mine has used his Galaxy phone for more than 7 years now, and i'm planning to use my Fairphone 4 for at least 5 Years. if you don't try to play the newest games on it, a phone will easily last that long. (if it's repairable, and the software support is there (props to google))
Yeah, I consider this a good thing. There's enough electronic waste as it is.
We're slowing turning smartphones into dumbphones again. Many of us used to rock 10+ year old phones, since phone calls and texting doesn't need anything fancy.
I have been on a 3 year replacement cycle of unlocked phones for most of the last decade on my personal phones. I buy whatever lower mid-range android phone looks the best at the time.
My workphone is a flagship due to the insane business discounts they get ($320 for a S23 at launch).
I am currently carrying a Nokia G50 and the S23. I honestly don't see much difference in daily performance. The G50 makes clearer phone calls. The S23 is a little bit faster.
I am debating going to a 4 year cycle now.
Aside from inflation and limited benefit of upgrading, subscriptions for every little thing are depleting discretionary income.
Smartphones are ridiculously expensive now. I usually get one of last year's refurbished flagships.
People just don't have the spending money anymore for phones. Especially given how expensive the flagships are.
It's because new phones are too big! I'm planning to take my reasonably-sized phone to the grave!
I need to replace my Pixel 6 Pro soon (cracked screen, issues with phone in general) and out of curiosity I checked iPhones. The last few versions all have very similar specs, I could get a 12 and wouldn't be missing too much. I can see why people would constantly upgrade.
I think market saturation is also a factor.