It's not really that complicated, people expect high end phones to have all day battery, which is hard to do with a small phone.
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It would stand to reason that a smaller screen would lend to less power draw both for the screen's power usage and being able to use a lower resolution keeping the CPU draw lower too
75% of your battery cycle, the screen is off. So a smaller screen can only win battery in that 25% window. A bigger battery on the other hand can be applied to 100% of the cycle.
Unless you go oldschool lcd, a smaller screen does not gain as much as a bigger battery for battery cycle time.
However, the 25% on-time use a lot more than 25% battery.
I don’t get what the obsession with big phones is. Is it that most people really want big phones or that companies can charge more for them?
Two main reasons I think:
- it’s easier to make a big phone as there’s more space for all the components
- the average consumer doesn’t use computers as much anymore, so people start using their phone for all kinds of things where they benefit from the bigger screen
Second option.
I just want one with a removable battery and a headphone jack...
...and a qwerty keyboard.
Wait until 2027 and buy a Sony then, I guess. They're the only manufacturer who consistently includes a headphone jack and starting in 2027 all phones sold in the EU have to have removable batteries. Yeah, it's pretty sad that that's the only option...
Guess I'll be moving to the EU in a few years ;-;
You don't need to; the Brussels effect has you covered.
It's cheaper to sell phones with replaceable batteries worldwide than to design the same phone twice for different markets. So most major manufacturers will probably just sell EU-friendly phones everywhere just like when the EU required USB charging ports.
Mainstream ruined everything. Like it always does.