- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
Fairphone sales jump 83% as the memory crunch makes longevity look better than ever.
Just got mine with e/OS and have to say that I am really impressed with how well everything works. Of course you have to look for alternatives for some stuff if you want to really put privacy first. But it feels and looks like a good phone. Honestly looking forward to my first repair
We are winning, Gracie!!!
It just makes me so damn happy that Fairphone is gaining traction, Wero is expands on EU coverage and generally the Sun shines and its a good day.
My alma mater recently switched to Fairphone for all personel, which makes me very proud.
I am so happy, maybe they will have enough revenue to make even better products
I wish they had a flagship. I would be able to accept compromises of course - thicker, more expensive… But still with top notch components.
There are two things stopping me:
The first one is that for the first time ever, I have a phone that I can just about take on a holiday, not take my DSLR, and not regret the decision. I reckon different people have different thresholds for this, but for me this bar sits at the recent crop of 1" camera sensors (maybe from 1-3 years ago, like Xiaomi 13U/14U, Vivo X100, etc).
The second one is that I tend to get flagships as a way to guarantee some longevity when doing some resource intensive tasks. I consider myself a power user, and while it’s true that phones have plenty of horsepower these days, there are tasks that are quite demanding. For example, I use Ente which does local indexing on the phone for the ML image search (which isn’t an “easy” task) and I do run small edge-type ML models (such as whisper, of re-train the transformer model in FUTO)… Now I know probably I could do those things on a 2025 mid-range processor, but I worry that by 2027 I will want to replace the phone because the things I want to do will have rendered the phone obsolete. A faster processor allows me to go for an extra year or two without suffering a painfully slow phone, so I’d also want this before making the switch.
FP doesn’t need a flagship. There is only one line. That’s the flagship. Don’t like it? Don’t buy it.
Right, and so anyone who wants an actual flagship phone should skip Fairphone because they’re not going to like it. I’m glad we agree.
Unless you are an elite mobile gamer, you don’t need a flagship phone.
Even midrange will cover everyone’s needs.
Flagships are nothing but marketing bullshit.
I’ve had some midrange phones for a few days. They’re fine until I take photo and show it on a display that’s larger than a phone screen.
I mean, if showing pictures from your phone on a big screen is something you do so often that your phone absolutely has to do that and do it flawlessly, then yeah, I guess a midrange phone is not for you. But that’s such a specific requirement, I can’t exactly blame a company like Fairphone for not catering to those needs.
What do you use a camera for? If it’s only for scanning QR codes or whatever, fine. But if these are the photos that you take as memories of events in your life, why would you be content with them being grainy and low quality? I suppose it’s a question of what you’re used to.







