Cobravision
Well-known member
- Jul 18, 2010
- 1,271
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All of the devices with sealed batteries have a button combo that hard resets. Phones, tablets, etc. This has been solved countless times in the past. Even the iPod had this feature. I will miss a swappable battery, but the trade off for a slimmer form factor is worth it for me. The built in wireless charging also takes the sting out. But I loved having a fully charged spare around.No removable battery isn't very bright either. How do you reset a frozen device?
Google has been pressuring OEMs to get rid of external SD card support and Kit Kat made external SD a difficult to use add on. I understand how it works, but it's still a pain shuttling files to the extSD via file explorer because many of my apps won't write directly to it. SD cards cause all sorts of problems and this is probably the beginning of the end of extSD support on Android from the major OEMs. Samsung cheaped out by only including 16GB in their earlier models, leaning on consumer purchased extSD cards to take up the slack. Without apps2SD support and the changes made in Kit Kat, this became a problem. I can't wait to get 32gb onboard, even if it means I can't add more storage. I have videos on my S5 with jumps and skips on them presumably because they couldn't write to the Class 10 extSD card fast enough.But why? WHY? Somebody PLEASE explain why they would do this? What POSSIBLE advantage could this pose? Are they trying to save .20¢ per phone manufacturing cost?
Posted via the Android Central App
Had they actually had 32GB S5 models for sale at launch, I would have gotten one so I could ditch the SD card. With 16GB, the extSD was essential. I can easily get by with 32GB or even step up to 64GB and be very happy. If they really wanted to do this for cash, they'd follow Apple's route and make the entry model only 16GB and basically force you to upgrade to 64GB. 32GB is a nice sweet spot.