- Nov 25, 2016
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I think what really good is the price point right now and what they offer
I agree with that.
I think what really good is the price point right now and what they offer
...right now. But does that still apply when it was $800 at launch?? I mean, if the Pixel 3 was on sale for $250, would he then say it's best phone???... IMO, price should be a nil factor on all devices.He did make a case. He said value for the feature set that encompasses both hardware and software features for the price.
...right now. But does that still apply when it was $800 at launch?? I mean, if the Pixel 3 was on sale for $250, would he then say it's best phone???... IMO, price should be a nil factor on all devices.
The essence of the review above was what that the value proposition of the feature set you get with the S9 and S9 Plus for their given prices is greater than other flagships.
...right now. But does that still apply when it was $800 at launch?? I mean, if the Pixel 3 was on sale for $250, would he then say it's best phone???... IMO, price should be a nil factor on all devices.
...right now. But does that still apply when it was $800 at launch?? I mean, if the Pixel 3 was on sale for $250, would he then say it's best phone???... IMO, price should be a nil factor on all devices.
Most of the OEM "flagships" start out at around that price (minus the Note and iPhones). If price wasn't part of the equation, then take a look at the combination of hardware and software experience. At the end of the day, these rankings should be based on the value of the device, basically do you get what you pay for. At base configurations, it should be clear what devices are overpriced compared with competitors and what devices do offer good value. Of course there is a lot of subjectivity thrown in there but what can be objectively measured are hardware specs, even if they don't matter to some people
Most of the OEM "flagships" base configured start out at around that price (minus the Note and iPhones). If price wasn't part of the equation, then take a look at the combination of hardware and software experience. At the end of the day, these rankings should be based on the value of the device, basically do you get what you pay for. At base configurations, it should be clear what devices are overpriced compared with competitors and what devices do offer good value. Of course there is a lot of subjectivity thrown in there but what can be objectively measured are hardware specs and features, even if they don't matter to some reviewers (which is opinion).
So Pocophone F1 is your 2018 Phone of the year, then?
No need to get flippant. If you want an average screen, mediocre camera, and a cartoonish software experience then sure. Hardware is not up to par with the flagships.
At the end of the day, these rankings should be based on the value of the device, basically do you get what you pay for.
I think that's the main issue I have with the review and I'm a huge fan of Dave Lee. He didn't even make a case for why, outside of "It's cheap right now" (more or less).
Not being intentionally flippant at all. Litereally trying to follow you line of thought. You just said,
Pocophone has been hailed by more than one as the best value on market right now.
I wouldn't trade my KEY2 LE for any glass slab, but if I wanted to dual carry it with one, I'd choose the Pixel 3 non-XL or Pixel 2 XL.
One excels at communication, the other excels at media capturing/consumption.
Best of both worlds can't be had with just one device.
Lol! You're really swinging hard for the KEY2...
Unfortunately as much as us forum folks may disagree, for most people price is a huge factor in deciding which phone to buy. Those monthly payments climbing higher and higher are having an effect... and even folks who like to pay their phones off outright are thinking twice. So it makes sense to me that it would be factored in to a phone of the year review ;-)
I developed "smartphone fatigue" lately as I started getting bored of them all looking the same and the boring iterative annualization.Lol! You're really swinging hard for the KEY2...
Michael Fisher (Mr. Mobile) voted for the KeyOne as his phone of the year in 2017 so there is precedent for a Blackberry.