Hi Donna:

You mention not caring about camera and screen which I certainly agree
with. I suspect most of us on this list would agree.


I am likely not upgrading from my iPhone SE at this time, though were I
to upgrade I'd be giving a serious look to the foldables available on
the Android platform. Yes, I'm one of those people with both Android and
IOS phones.

For me bigger is not better, and the phones continue to get bigger. With
a foldable I could exchange overall height and breadth for some more
thikness. That would be a worthy tradeoff, imo.

What troubles me most about upgrading is how the user experience isn't
speeded up. I can easily overtype my IOS and Android phones and my M2
laptop. All that wonderful enhanced speed in the chips isn't being
harnessed to serve me, afaik. I find interactions take about as long as
they ever have, no matter the wonderful new CPU speed or capacious RAM
and nonvolatile storage. Frankly, over my several decades of using these
devices, I'd have to say this is my chief complaint. It's been true for
years and continues to be true, afaik.  I could do things faster, but
the machine won't let me. I find I have to wait on it far, far too much,
whereas I believe it should be waiting on me.

On the positive side I love that I now have an office in my purse. With
my phone, a folding bluetooth keyboard, and one of a couple headset
devices there's just not much that I do in my home office that I can't
do while out and about.  Of course it's not always convenient to open up
the BT keyboard. Typing via the on screen keyboard continues to be very
important for me while I'm out and about. I find my iPhone far better
for that than my Sony Android. This is a capability I will certainly
test when next I go shopping for a phone.

Best,
Janina





'Donna Goodin' via MacVisionaries writes:
> Hi all,
> 
> I???ve made my decision about which phone to get.  Thought I???d share, in 
> case it???s helpful to anyone else.
> 
> For a long time now, it???s seemed that new phones haven???t been all that 
> exciting.  Sure, there???s always a better camera, sometimes a better 
> display???which I don???t care about???and a faster processor.  But that???s 
> about it.  However, I think that that may be about to change, at least for 
> the next couple few upgrades.  I think Ai???and Apple AI???are going to 
> present some interesting, and potentially game-changing new frontiers.  But 
> those frontiers are still not quite there yet.  In general, AI is going 
> through a period of rapid development.  Apple Intelligence still hasn???t 
> dropped, and we don???t know exactly what it will bring when it does. It will 
> be new, and have bugs that need ironing out.  I???m in an unusual situation 
> in that, if I get the trade-in I anticipate getting from Apple, it will only 
> cost approximately $150 more to buy an unlocked phone, rather than upgrading 
> through my provider.  So, I???ve decided to do that, and preserve my option 
> to upgrade next year, if the upgrade is interesting enough to justify it.  
> I???m therefore going to go with the iPhone 16 this time, and save my $$ to 
> upgrade to a pro once Apple AI gets a little more sorted out.
> 
> I???d love to hear what others do if you want to share.
> Cheers,
> Donna
> 
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-- 

Janina Sajka (she/her/hers)
Accessibility Consultant https://linkedin.com/in/jsajka

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
Co-Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures     http://www.w3.org/wai/apa

Linux Foundation Fellow
https://www.linuxfoundation.org/board-of-directors-2/

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