It took a few years but now that there are a number of Chinese makers and that they have a huge percentage of the worlds biggest market it's not hard to see how the market for everyone else would have declined. Add to that the bite Apple took out of the high end Android market with the two iPhones in the 4.7 inch and larger sizes. And finally, the total market hasn't grown much in the last year or two as we've reached a saturation replacement market.
So, total market flat, Chinese makers grabbing a significant share and Apple eating some of the high end market and ....
Brian
I don't know. I honestly don't know one single person (personally, forums are another matter) that pays full price for a cell phone. Not one. Almost everybody in the US market at least is paying the same $200 subsidized price for whatever flagship phone they fancy when their upgrade comes up. I would be interested to see what the numbers for the S6 are in the subsidized market. I have seen one person with a S6, but a ton with the iPhone 6.
Don't a bunch of MOs have the "pay full price over your contract through $30 monthly payments"?
It's not surprising really. Anyone who is willing to be violated to the tune of nearly $1000 for a frickin phone is already bending over and taking fruit up their rears. Android is for the $49-$250 phones.
The S6 is close except Touchwiz and battery.
I'll keep the Touchwiz if you make it waterproof.![]()
Exactly! There isn't a perfect device in Androidland that works for everyone, but that doesn't mean we aren't willing to pay the price for a device that meets our needs. Up until this year (since 2013) we have had a lot of good options, and after Qualcomm dropped the ball in 2015 maybe we will get more diversity in the ecosystem for SOCs.
I bet you feel good about that 805 S5 now, still the best normal sized device if you really care about a SD slot and battery replacement. That was a good buy in retrospect.
Saturation of "good enough" hardware. Many people aren't going to upgrade until they have to.
It seems like waterproof stopped being a feature, so I don't blame you for staying put.
Plus that 805 is still probably Qualcomm's best SoC, with a 1080p screen it can't be beat in power per pixel. It should last another year plus really at a high end. Samsung is good about updates for their Galaxies.
Honestly almost all these flagship Androids are good enough on some parts of the hardware, we hit good enough a while ago. I like being an Android enthusiast but at some point that becomes less about a new device every year and more about the platform.
Honestly more than anything I want that reversible plug Lol. That is my favorite thing about the iPad. I am always plugging my stuff in in the dark.
World domination?Where does Android go from here?
I would have to point here. I would probably point at the S4/G2 era of android phones and say "Here is where phone speeds no longer mattered, and the only thing people look at now is screen size, quality, and the look of the phone". Obviously phones did get much faster but frankly we don't have anything like apps or games that need to be faster than a snapdragon 800. These 800 level phones can be had for $200 off contract, or for the more stupid people, "Free after signing 2 years of your life away paying $80 a month."
I was close to buying an S6 on prepaid because I was unable to find a good mid range upgrade, and in the end an S6 on prepaid would still come out cheaper then any of the post paid plans and contracts. I ended up jumping prepaid carriers though and found my lg g flex for $200 on another and happy I saved $450. ^^
I would pay $600+ for an Android phone today that gave me what I wanted. Hell even if it only gave me 80% of what I want. We don't have the perfect device yet, and there are people who want a nicer phone.
The S6 is close except Touchwiz and battery.
I would have to point here. I would probably point at the S4/G2 era of android phones and say "Here is where phone speeds no longer mattered, and the only thing people look at now is screen size, quality, and the look of the phone". Obviously phones did get much faster but frankly we don't have anything like apps or games that need to be faster than a snapdragon 800. These 800 level phones can be had for $200 off contract, or for the more stupid people, "Free after signing 2 years of your life away paying $80 a month."![]()
If Samsung took Sony's plain Android OS, added the SD card slot and water-proof rating of Xperia Z3/Z4 lines, made the phone 8mm and shoved a ~3300mAH battery in there, pretty much they would have made all Android phones besides the Note 5 irrelevant for 12 months.
If Samsung took Sony's plain Android OS, added the SD card slot and water-proof rating of Xperia Z3/Z4 lines, made the phone 8mm and shoved a ~3300mAH battery in there, pretty much they would have made all Android phones besides the Note 5 irrelevant for 12 months. I think a lot of people would have been more willing to accept the non-removable battery if the battery life was closer to Note 4/Xperia Z3/Z3 Compact levels. It would be interesting to see how many consumers would prefer a thinner phone (<7mm) with iPhone 6/S6 battery life vs. a thicker 8-8.5mm phone with 50% more battery life. I still think the iPhone 6 and S6 went a bit too far since their cameras have protruding lenses which look kinda ugly. I think a lot of customers would been OK with an 7.5-8mm phone even as long as the battery life increased. In LG's case, they lost the message completely making a phone nearly 10mm thick that has worse battery life than a < 7mm phones. Yawn.
I've used iPhone 5/5S and 6 back to back. They feel exactly the same to me in snappiness without using a stop-watch. For light tasks, I can't tell the difference even though 5S's CPU is 2X faster and iPhone 6 is 1.25X faster than iPhone 5S. All 3 phones fail when it comes to hardcore Internet browsing as 1GB of RAM just isn't enough (i.e., Safari starts reloading Internet pages you have saved).
For the most part, the biggest advancements in phones have come in screen IQ (Samsung S5/Note 4/S6 really elevated the IQ against crappy screens like LG's G3 or Sony's Z2's). Also, obviously for iPhone users the move from tiny 3.5-4" screens to 4.7-5.5" was revolutionary. The other major change that's happening is in the camera space. Cameras are constantly improving to the point where unless you are rocking a Canon S95-120 or Sony RX100 I-III series (or similar), don't even bother with a compact Point and Shoot. In that sense, the latest gen of smartphones (LG G4/S6/Note 4) are doing to P&S cameras space what Intel's IGP/AMD APU's are doing to the sub-$100 GPU space - making them irrelevant. It also cost a lot of $ to get a camera that can record 4K and many expensive cameras still can't even record at 1080P @ 60 fps or slow motion 120 fps. Speed wise, we are slowly reaching a point of diminishing returns though. Once phones adapt UFS 2.0/faster flash memory to mimic SSDs on the PC, it's going to make a lot of mid-range next gen 2017-2018 phones feel snappy enough to probably start lasting 4-5 years.
I mean honestly for the average user an iPhone 5/Samsung S4 (without the bloat) is still snappy and those phones are approaching 2.5-3 years old.
Honeslty the biggest issue is the jump from s4 to s5 to s6 has all been less than minimal. I see people using the g2 that cant tell the difference between the g2 and g4 other than screen size.
You just described the iPhone experience. No one complains there.
Only Android phones get the same old tiring comparison. Same reviews process and everything is claimed to be a compromise.
You get big battery, but it's too heavy.
You get good optics, but it's not Android.
You get beautiful construction, but no swap-able battery.
You get pure Android, but it's too big.
You get big sensor, but no OIS.
You get a fantastic phone, but it cost too much at $350.00
You get a cheap phone, but it's not expensive.
Bottom line is, it's not an iPhone.
Honeslty the biggest issue is the jump from s4 to s5 to s6 has all been less than minimal.