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posted by martyb on Thursday August 10 2017, @08:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the do-the-jitterbug dept.

I'm just back from a holiday which included dropping my phone and cracking the screen. The phone is a UMI Super which has served me very well, with the exception of a spotty GPS. However I found myself with a very real problem. The crack was across the top right corner of the screen about 1/2 an inch in from the top. It had the unfortunate side effect rendering the whole right hand side of the screen 1/2 an inch in unresponsive. This prevented me from unlocking the phone with the PIN (the fingerprint scanner on the back worked fine, however I forgot that I had set the phone to shut down during the night and it requires the PIN when the phone wakes up).

This effectively left me without a phone for the remainder of the trip and while I will get the screen replaced and continue to use the phone, I'm also considering getting a backup feature phone, or another smartphone, or when I change phone in the future move to a feature phone entirely.

In examining what I was missing out with the loss of the phone, I realise I only use it to message (the very odd call), Internet, Navigation and Netflix. However, with Netflix now allowing downloading of many shows, I can use a tablet better for this, and I can consider using a phone with hotspot for streaming and messaging.

What feature or smartphones do you suggest as a move away from large flagship devices? I have unlimited 4G data and am living in Ireland. My understanding is that most feature phones are aimed at the older generation (large buttons, loud speakers etc) and not for "I just don't want something that breaks easily" people. Budget is in the 100-150€ range, though I will entertain more expensive devices if the recommendation comes with good reasons.


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  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Thursday August 10 2017, @03:36PM (1 child)

    by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Thursday August 10 2017, @03:36PM (#551677) Homepage
    And that is precisely why, despite having a couple of more modern phone models in my drawers, I still use my Nokia N900. I like it as it's not a phone, it's a computer that happens to have phone functionality.
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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday August 10 2017, @04:13PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Thursday August 10 2017, @04:13PM (#551701) Journal

    The obsolescence of my current device has been growing as an issue for a while now, and, also, I've grown so irritated with government and corporate overreach that I just don't trust a damn thing they have to offer. So I've been toying with the idea of rolling my own from scratch so it has the features I want and is something I completely own. Is that nuts? Have any Soylentils done that sort of ground-up project before?

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