I went through my late teens as the initial smart phone boom was happening. I had a Motorola q that could get TV channels and had a keyboard. I had the enV that flipped open. And many androids/blackberries that I loved for their unique form factor and functionality.

I have never balked at spending money on a phone and for a long time i felt locked into generic flagship devices. With the debut of folding screens I feel like my appetite for unique devices rekindled. I think the power of android lies in its diversity of implementation.

So what features and functionalities would you choose over the next flagship release?

  • Margot Robbie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Oh I forgot, a clamshell folding phone but with only one screen and the other side is a physical keyboard, like a mini-laptop.

    Nobody seems really know how to do a folding screen well, so why have the screen fold at all?

      • Margot Robbie@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, that’d be pretty cool, but I’m thinking something modernized, like the Lenovo Yoga but smaller, that they can fit a bunch of USB-C and even audio jacks to. Modern phones are big enough to fit a real keyboard anyways, and you can probably do something even crazier like have mini-OLED screens inside programmable buttons a la one of the Mac Pros.

  • CoderKat@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    I know some phones had already did this, but I always liked the idea of support for using your phone as a TV remote. The phone has replaced so many pieces of hardware that it feels silly that TV remotes haven’t been replaced yet.

    I also specifically wish Chrome supported extensions on mobile. Firefox does it. Why can’t the biggest browser do it?

    • SilentStorms@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      2 years ago

      I miss the innovation of early 2010s phones. Using the IR blaster to mess around with bar TVs was a ton of fun. Not to mention headphone jacks, SD card slots, and removable batteries.

      I wish Firefox mobile supported desktop extensions. I know its doable with Nightly builds, but that’s a pain to set up.

  • kippidashira@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    Ability to use the screen as a display through the USB port so I can debug a lot of my systems at home without needing to carry a monitor around.

  • Drewelite@sopuli.xyz
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    2 years ago

    A phone without the actual phone part. Just SMS/MMS. Maybe a notification that someone tried to call

    • spicy pancake@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      that’s called having a Sony Xperia XZ2 Compact and living in the US where they shut down all the 3g towers and all the carriers, including MVNOs, blacklisted its VoLTE capability >:[

      —passive aggressively typed on the dinner plate of a phone that i had to replace my nice tiny XZ2c with

  • Astigma@feddit.uk
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    2 years ago

    I miss the IR blaster. Being able to control my TV and other set-top boxes was amazing. Now that functionality has been replaced by each manufacturer having their own control app that needs an internet connection and all your information. Bring back the IR blaster!

  • funnyletter@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    Plastic back and a removable/user replaceable battery.

    Yeah yeah I know it “feels cheap” but honestly I LIKED when phones were made of more plastic. Now they’re heavier and both sides are breakable. Like, the metal backs were fine, but apparently metal backs suck for NFC and wireless charging so instead of giving us some classy Nokia Lumia style plastic they went with glass backs.

    Also I keep my phone in a case because otherwise the back is so smooth it shoots off the couch if someone walks across my apartment. It’s legit only in the case to add some friction.

  • ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I was looking into smaller form factor phones awhile back, and an interesting feature I noticed some of them had was a programmable button.

    I don’t know that programmable buttons on phones are that niche, but it’s certainly not common either so far as I’m aware, so this super simple feature would be wicked imo. I’d also really like if more phones just stole Motorola’s gesture interactions (e.g. quick twist for camera, firm double-shake for flashlight, etc.).

    Also, uh…Speaking of small form factor phones, I don’t know if that counts as a feature, but it’s one detail I’d like to see come back, or flip phones with separate screens (clunky, sure, but better than the screen eventually creasing imo).

  • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    A phone built somewhat like a desktop PC. All parts replaceable or even upgradable. Choose the components for your needs and budget, or buy a pre-built.
    But let’s get to more standard smartphone concept.
    On software side, no bootloader locks, or easily unlockable bootloader (not requiring internet) and root access that could be enabled in developer settings.

    On hardware side:
    IR blaster - Control your AC, TV, etc.
    Front-facing stereo speakers - could give a better stereo sound. And bezels aren’t a big problem. Actually they can be positive as you can hold your phone better with them.
    Headphone jack - Obvious. Would be cool if it had mode for composite output, but that’s quite extra.
    Dedicated fingerprint scanner on front - I had this on Moto G5s Plus. It allowed awesome gesture navigation, much better than using whatever on-screen.
    Trackpoint - Early Androids used to have that. Would definitely be useful with large screens.
    FM, HD Radio, DAB, DAB+, DVB-T2 Lite receiver - Radio is pretty useful. AM would also be nice, though you would need external antenna better than cable from earphones. I think FM radio is the minimum here.
    TV Receiver - Just like with radio, except now you’re saving much more on mobile data.
    Camera with optical zoom - We’ve been there with Samsung in the past. But I understand it makes things too large and heavy.
    Projector - We’ve been there with Samsung in the past, again. I think it was done pretty nicely on the projector part with Beam 2. It didn’t even add much thickness. Just the rest of the phone was meh.

  • Indépendantiste@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    sideloading is a requirement for me and unlockable bootloader, otherwise, some things like an IR blaster, headphone jack, removable battery (thx EU), RGB notification LED, front facing speakers would make a “good” phone become “great”

  • SuperSpruce@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    Late to the thread but here’s my thoughts:

    Hardware:

    1. Standard features like a 3.5mm jack and MicroSD slot.
    2. Multiple USB ports (especially on tablets)
    3. Thunderbolt port
    4. Here’s a simple idea: Instead of making a thin phone with a massive camera bump, you make a thick phone with the camera flush with the back, and use the extra space for a bigger battery?
    5. User-replacable battery
    6. Modules like the modo mods
    7. Battery passthrough when charging
    8. Upgradable RAM, internal storage???

    Software (here lies my hopes and dreams that will never be manifested):

    1. Starting off simple, a feature that lets you manually limit how much you charge your battery.
    2. Manual over/underclocking controls for the CPU
    3. Separate WiFi/data toggles
    4. More control over how big or small icons and text is
    5. Easy root access with app makers not getting all “you sus” over the fact that your device is rooted
    6. No data harvesting (duh)
    7. Better file management (and removing scoped storage)
    8. Multiple logins to a phone (like what you can do with a desktop)
    9. One app, multiple accounts
    10. Just having the software take less system resources.
    11. Open sourcing hardware drivers
    12. Multiple floating windows like with a desktop OS
    13. More than 3 split screen options
    14. I’m sure there’s a lot more I can’t think of now