It’s not as comprehensive, but it still blocks ads. Personally, I’ve not noticed a difference. If you are a power user with custom rules and third party lists then your experience will vary.
It’s not as comprehensive, but it still blocks ads. Personally, I’ve not noticed a difference. If you are a power user with custom rules and third party lists then your experience will vary.
The whole concept is different. I’ve just started trying it and the gist of it is that it’s basically only the app drawer, but on steroids. There is no home screen to arrange, you simply set favorite apps that show up first. Anything else you select by scrolling through the alphabet, which seems quick enough if you know the app name you’re looking for.
I can already tell that I would love it more if favorites were redesigned a bit to use the initial space better. But this would betray the simplicity they are trying to achieve.
I didn’t know there were that many tech reviewers.
Until we figure out how that is possible outside of theory, it is just that. We have no plans that address actually keeping a spaceship working on such a timescale, and keeping the crew alive on top of it.
Considering we haven’t seen any generational alien ships visit, it seems like nobody else has figured it out yet, either.
It just means they’ve survived the first part of the bathtub curve. To me that’s a bonus.
I truly despise how simplified things have gotten. Interacting and modifying YouTube playlists is such a chore now.
Hardware can’t fix what’s broken in software.
As much as you can afford. When it comes to technology you can’t go for the budget options without truly feeling the consequences.
That was true when the modern smartphone was a new concept. Since then, cheap models (a little above the bare minimum) have steadily become better and these days, aside from photography, will do anything the more expensive ones can. Which have also gotten much more expensive than they used to be. Unless you need specialty features like folding or S-Pen, it’s not worth it.
Just an inherent consequence of capitalism. If people are willing to pay much more than the price that was set by the manufacturer, it’s their loss and a business opportunity for third parties.
Like others have pointed out, smartphone photography has improved leaps and bounds and continues to evolve. Bigger lenses enable this.
My main complaint is the off-center design, and lack of options (like a thick variant with a huge battery).