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A year after Google convinced me to give up my iPhone 6S for a Pixel 2, he was lucky enough to win me back with Pixel 3. That did not make it possible to conclude. ;case.
Pixel 2 is so good, and the Pixel 3 upgrades I want most will soon come to Pixel 2 – everything else seems incremental. After watching the Google event on Tuesday, I know I do not need a new phone.
The functions of my next phone should make all the difference and once I'm ready to jump, I'm not influenced by loyalty to my brand. And the Pixel 3 just did not cut it.
I may be a special case when it's easy to move from one brand to another or from one operating system to another, but I'm one of them when it comes to keep my phone longer.
"I think a lot of people think the same thing," said Tuong Nguyen, a senior smartphone analyst at Gartner, an analyst consulting and consulting firm. "That's why [smartphone makers] have trouble convincing consumers to get a new one. "
Last year, smartphone sales worldwide registered their first decline, under the impetus of the increase in the time between the purchase of a new device.
Regarding the Pixel 3 offers, the wireless charging is nice, but I can wait. The Pixel 2 camera is one of the best on the market. Night Sight 's enthusiasm, which enhances the appearance of photos under a dim light taken without flash, but that concerns the entire Pixel range next month. Playground, Google's updated AR stickers, also arrive on their other phones. I get so many fraudulent calls that Call Screen has aroused my interest, but again, it happens to Pixel 2. My Pixel 2 already has the Objective function that allows you to call a phone number on an object seen by the camera, although in a more diverted way. . To top it off, the Pixel 3 starts at $ 799, while my Pixel 2 was at $ 650. (I'm not a fan of phablet, so I do not dive into the XL offers here.)
I may not be ready for another phone before Pixel 5 is running. (Gasp!) And who knows, by then, Apple could win me back or some could find a new customer.
"We've come to the point with technology and smartphones where it's better than most people need or notice."
Progressive updates will continue until the next big deal in smartphones, Nguyen said. And that next big thing is not going to be slightly faster speeds or slightly better cameras. There will be better AI for more intelligent personal assistants and computer vision (a sophisticated way of saying that a device can see something like the human), he explained. These may appear to be software updates, but we will need better hardware to perform the charging features. And we will want these new phones because they will be more intuitive and make our life easier. At the moment, I do not need better hardware to run my new favorite Pixel features.
When we get all this, it's the million dollar question. It's around the corner, but in years, said Nguyen, refraining from setting a timetable.
"We've come to the point with technology and smartphones where it's better than most people need it or do not notice it," he said. Agree, I will buy a new phone when mine will be broken or I think an upgrade will improve my life. For example, Pixel 2 being waterproof, the needle has moved.
But phone manufacturers will continue to monitor incremental updates, as it is part of the process to reach this next milestone, Nguyen noted. Indeed, I've seen glimpses of these building blocks during the Google event.
When I was ready for a new phone after my 6S phone, Apple could not keep me because I found a suitable alternative somewhere else, cheaply.
When I was ready for a new phone after my 6S phone, Apple could not keep me because I found a suitable alternative somewhere else, cheaply. At the time of the announcement of the iPhone X, I had no desire and Memoji did not matter to me. I was sad to lose the headphone jack when I got rid of the 6S, but the new iPhones did not have either. And I was not about to go to Samsung, where uncompromising people claimed to have taken refuge. I did not want to get stuck with Bixby and a bunch of bloatware. I overcame the depression of the dongle.
The 6S was my first iPhone. Thinking back to why I bought it, jealousy comes to my mind. Almost everyone I knew had an iPhone, and this iPhone took pretty pictures and went into something other than black. I've finally cracked for the FOMO iPhone.
When I improved, I was on the moon. The battery life! Live photos! Speed! L & # 39; gold! Fast forward a little over a year, and things have changed. I abandoned my phone too often for another AppleCare patch, and after buying a new car, I learned that at the time, I could not use Waze or Google Maps anymore. and that I hated Apple Maps. (Apple did not host third-party applications in the CarPlay universe before the iOS 12 app, launched last month.)
Apple feared, I thought, so I went for the Pixel 2. Again, I loved my new phone. The perfect size! The camera! Google Assistant is so much smarter than Siri!
When I came back to Android, one thing worried me: I had some accidents with the 6S during our stay together. The look of the iPhone store was a comfort. What would happen if I broke my Pixel 2?
And then, a month after the acquisition of my Pixel 2, I was in an airport and my phone was doing well. The airport did not have public phones. It was a nightmare.
Upon my return home after 10 pm, I called Google – with the help of Google Hangouts on my laptop. In a few minutes, the customer service agent told me that he would send me a new phone (I had bought the Google equivalent of AppleCare when I was going to be there. had the phone). He arrived about a day later. Not bad! I had to wait all day to get an appointment at the Genius Bar.
The Pixel range of Google is in no way in competition with Apple.
And yet, despite all its praise, the Pixel range of Google is in no way in competition with Apple. Last year, Google sold only 1 and 2. In comparison, Apple sold 216.7 million iPhones during the same period.
Nguyen does not think Google is worried though.
"I think [the Pixel line is] more on one way to say, "Look, we build this platform, Android, and here's how we think Android should be applied to hardware, listen to others [manufacturers]Nguyen said it was a way to test Android as smartypants at Google tinkering with update ideas.
But Google has sprinkled Apple's subtle nuggets throughout his speech, and if all the leakage of Pixel 3 before the event were intentional, some would think that Google is trying to attract attention. Too bad these leaks have not revealed anything impressive.
I hope the next big thing to come, as Nguyen has suggested, will be taken, no matter the manufacturer. And I hope it happened when I'm ready for an upgrade.
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