Does the higher storage and ram drain the battery faster than the 256-12gb version? I read somewhere that it does but can't find the reference now.
It technically uses more battery, but you would not notice it because the difference is minimal.Does the higher storage and ram drain the battery faster than the 256-12gb version? I read somewhere that it does but can't find the reference now.
It technically uses more battery, but you would not notice it because the difference is minimal.
Not true at all I have the s20 ultra 512Gb and 16ram and the only reason I'm upgrading is because the Uktra s20 focusing is horrible. This is by far the worst camera samsung has put out ever.
did none of the many camera updates not fix you focus issues??? i thought all those problems were dealt with when the updates went out
Samsung made some improvements since launch. The auto focus continues to struggle in some situations such as low light, anything close to macro and when using the 108MP sensor. I'm hopeful the S21U resolves this serious issue.
It doesn't feel costly when you roll the cost into your phone bill....you're just paying your phone bill....deleted
why they don't get more upset customers is beyond me. i guess the answer is that we all have better things to do.
really unacceptable for such an incredibly costly phone (the S20 Ultra)!
It doesn't feel costly when you roll the cost into your phone bill....you're just paying your phone bill.
From a cost perspective, I don't understand how people can spend 1k every other year (or more often) to replace a perfectly good phone. We don't do that with our computers, or TV's and they come out new every year. I really think a lot of it has to do with the painless financing through the carriers.
Out of curiosity is it the ram or storage that would consume more and why is that?
its the ram that would use more battery because there is more of it to power. im not sure if it makes a huge difference though.
Is RAM always in a constant power-on state when the phone is on?
It's been decades since I thought about this stuff but smartphone ram is low power because each state is stored in a capacitor, memory being a collection of capacitors. So in generalized simple terms, once you turn a bit high you don't need power to maintain it, that is accomplished by the capacitor it's stored in.
It's been decades since I thought about this stuff but smartphone ram is low power because each state is stored in a capacitor, memory being a collection of capacitors. So in generalized simple terms, once you turn a bit high you don't need power to maintain it, that is accomplished by the capacitor it's stored in.
Well there is some power overhead but it's minimal as compared to the power used by the CPU et al.That makes sense that there isn't a battery drain.
Does anyone have a best estimate of the drain of an additional 4gb of this ram? The little I can find in a search is that on this newer ram it's negligible but no hard data.