Apple has forced its US users to switch to eSIMs without any real benefit. Google, on the other hand, has kept the tried and true SIM slot.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Man, I have over 256 gigs of music on my phone.

    I’m not at the end of the outlier range either.

    Taking pictures and video, keeping such things, requires expandable storage the better the cameras get.

    I’m not bitching at you, playing devil’s advocate is awesome. I’m countering that advocacy in the same spirit (and, I hope, not in a seemingly a dickish way, it certainly wasn’t intended that way).

    Phones has stopped being just phones, and the people making them want us to treat them like a more portable device akin to a laptop, where we use it for everything (mainly so they can figure out a way to profit from that use). Can’t do that if we can’t store what we need on them lol.

    • 9point6@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      To be fair I’d forgotten about the local music use case, I’ve been streaming music for so long.

      Pictures and video, in my opinion, are too valuable to not be backed up, so IMO people shouldn’t be shooting enough to fill half a terabyte before moving them elsewhere.

      But very good point about it being people’s main device more and more—I guess it says something about my assumptions that I just assumed everyone has a bigger main device to offload content off to

      • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        I don’t know if it’s a problem anymore, but there’s something in wasting write cycles on a disposable SD card instead of unchangeable drive and also dedicate SD for demanding processes like recording a 4k video while the system drive is free for other processes. Does it make sense today?