I do think it's kind of funny that Blue Mountain has had the same phone for seven years and still complains about being on the "upgrade treadmill" now that it's finally starting to become legitimately obsolete.
Like, dude, seven years with the same phone? You're living the dream. That's not the treadmill at all. That's a leisurely stroll through the park, stopping to smell all the flowers and watch all the birds. Enjoy your success!
If I'm reading correctly, because you want to run some app from "Github."
And I'm still not very clear on what he's complaining about since, according to him, it still does everything he wants.
Of course, if he wants to play Fortnite at 1440p and 120Hz he'll probably need an upgrade.
I do think it's kind of funny that Blue Mountain has had the same phone for seven years and still complains about being on the "upgrade treadmill" now that it's finally starting to become legitimately obsolete.
Like, dude, seven years with the same phone? You're living the dream. That's not the treadmill at all. That's a leisurely stroll through the park, stopping to smell all the flowers and watch all the birds. Enjoy your success!
I admit my complaint is difficult to parse because I'm split on the issue myself.
First, my smartphone at seven years old is becoming obsolete, yet I'm getting razzed for complaining about it. I want to ask you people,
what other $600-plus things do you have in your home that are considered obsolete and in need of a replacement after only seven years? (I chose $600 because that's about the price of a new phone, and I realize I can get a used one for much less money. ) Your fancy amplifier? Your dining room suite? TV set? Refrigerator? Dishwasher? Laundry washer and dryer? Bed and mattress? The fancy BBQ on your deck?
I suspect none of these, with the possible exception of the TV set. Yet for some reason we're expected to shell out one to two hundred bucks or so a year to keep our smartphones current and find a new home for the old ones. I hate simply discarding functional devices; the phones I've retired over the years have gone to programs that re-purpose them for vulnerable people, like women's shelters.
I'm on a limited income with some medical expenses and would prefer not to spend the money, nor go to the hassle of having to port everything over every three years. I have to do the port manually because I'm NOT going to back up my Android device to Google. I simply do. not. trust. them with my data.
Yes, my current phone does (almost) everything I want it to do. Except this app, this time (the COVID tracking app.) Tomorrow, who knows what else won't work? Once the phone turns ten years old I probably will be forced to upgrade it because likely every newly released app won't run on it.
Yes, upgrading to Lineage OS is an option—most of the time. By design, it's not easy to upgrade the OS on the phone. Unlike, say, a ten year old computer where upgrades are routine. In addition, just because because the phone says "Galaxy S4" at startup, it isn't guaranteed Lineage OS will run on it. Samsung releases several different variants of each generation for different markets. The one I have here in Canada is different from the ones in the US. My phone says it's an SGH-I337M, while Lineage says its download is for SGH-I337 devices. Is that 'M' important or not? I'll have to do some digging to find out.
Another problem: neither Samsung nor my carrier will upgrade the OS for me, despite the fact that, officially, the phone is locked down and they're the ones responsible for keeping the OS up to date. Yet they've abrogated that responsibility and left it to the device owners. But if the owners brick their devices trying to install Lineage OS they won't offer assistance! That's such a sweet deal for Samsung and the carriers.
Now here's the schizophrenic part: new functionality is great, and it's wonderful to see the incredible improvement in what smart phones can do over what they did when they were first introduced. The improvements to Android itself are good, too, especially with updated security features. And I recognise these do come at a price: not all the older hardware will run the latest OS.
More schizophrenia: Code written for the IBM 360 over fifty years ago will still run on the IBM z mainframes (after a recompile), and object code compiled on the original IBM AS/400 from the 1980s will run
unmodified on latest IBM i operating system. That's because IBM designed them that way, and the users paid for it, handsomely. I haven't shelled out the really big bucks on my smartphones, so I shouldn't expect that level of commitment. Yet I'm complaining about the fact I don't ...
If you don't understand my position any better after this post, it's probably because I'm just as confused as you are as to what it is.