- Jan 1, 2009
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While I personally prefer having an SD card slot, I would agree that 90% of the consumer base has no use for one. We sometimes forget that we are the geeks; the ones likely to need an SD card and since we probably surround ourselves and work in environments populated with similar people it seems like everyone is like us but it's not the case. My GF just swapped out her old phone for a Nexus 4 hat had a 512MB SD card and while making the change over I noticed that it was only about half full. Now I'm wishing I had saved the $50 and just gotten the 8GB version instead of the 16GB. She had the old phone for 3 years. There's no way she'll fill the new one. You know what there's far more people that use their phones like she does than like I do. Not to mention the advent of high speed LTE and the push for cloud storage makes local storage on phones almost useless for the casual consumer.
It's impossible to pin down what percentage of people truly use their SD card slot. I would argue however that Apple sells many iPhone's in a 32 and 64 variant. I think the market is much stronger than you are implying for phones with larger storage beyond 16 GB. I truly don't think only geeks use SD cards with their phones. If Android phones started adopting 32 or 64 across the board then perhaps an argument could be made stronger for the lack of SD cards in the future. But far too many Android smartphones come in either 8 or 16 variants.
LTE and cloud storage help makes things easier for storing media and burning through data but not for consumption. Most of us have data caps and unless you are lucky enough to be in wi-fi areas most the time or have a great amount of monthly data to use then it isn't a true alternative. Even wi-fi isn't a clear solution. I was on an Acela train last month and when I agreed to their terms to use their wi-fi it clearly stated that I would not be able to stream music or video.
