Apple is surrounded by hysterical news reporting. Doing the logical thing would end in disaster for the company.
Doing the logical thing and making the battery user replacable (at the expense of making the phone half a mill thicker) would actually be a selling point for some.Apple is surrounded by hysterical news reporting. Doing the logical thing would end in disaster for the company.
Doing the logical thing and making the battery user replacable (at the expense of making the phone half a mill thicker) would actually be a selling point for some.
I'm fairly sure most people would prefer their phone remain the same thickness for a couple of generations of device and gain an hour of extra battery life, or be able to replace it than this utterly stupid race to make the slimmest phone possible at the expense of usable life.
I don't know anything about Samsung so I can't comment about them but what you say about Apple is true. It doesn't matter what they do, people will complain about them because it's cool to hate Apple. I'm fairly sure that if Apple were to invent a cure for death that some people would find a way to knock them.Apple are damned if they do, damned if they don't but everyone just loves to stick the boot in to them.
*snip*
Apple are the same as most large companies, they are trying to make as much profit as possible but thats how every company works. Apple are better than most. Samsung are an utterly scummy company in pretty much every way but people still buy their phones. Apple are just cool to hate.
Sounds like a sensible engineering solution. The battery is the weak-point in any modern phone's hardware.
It makes technical sense, but the way they've handled it is not great.
They should make it clear to the end user what is happening and why so people can make an informed choice in regards to what they do about it.
Agree entirely. If there were an option in the settings to turn this off or on, it would certainly help. I wonder if that'll be added....It makes technical sense, but the way they've handled it is not great.
They should make it clear to the end user what is happening and why so people can make an informed choice in regards to what they do about it.
We're back to the 'damned if they do, damned if they don't' thing again.Agreed. But let’s be honest, people would also be complaining bitterly if Apple actively told them that the performance of their device had been dialled down due to a failing battery.
Agree entirely. If there were an option in the settings to turn this off or on, it would certainly help. I wonder if that'll be added....
Isn’t the point that the failing battery simply *cannot* supply the power required and hence the clock speed has to be dialled down? It’s like having a PSU that’s slowly failing and unable to power your CPU at max speed anymore.
Do phones have a power pass-through like that or do they always operate off the battery?If that is the case, it should be quite easy to test. Plug your phone in on charge and then the phone should work at full speed
A worn battery just doesn't hold its charge for as long.
There is absolutely no need to try to fool the customer into thinking he needs a new phone when just a new battery would suffice.
This is just all sorts of wrong. No idea how they get away with it.
Do phones have a power pass-through like that or do they always operate off the battery?