- cross-posted to:
- android@lemdro.id
- cross-posted to:
- android@lemdro.id
I wonder if there is something subpar about whoever Google is getting the batteries from for the A series phones.
400 cycles? So, a year? One year.
subpar? this is just capitalism ensuring we “need” a new phone.
yep - I was still happy with my 4a until they killed its battery. I bought a used 8 Pro. That was about 3 months ago, and it still feels too big.
My next phone will be a Fairphone 6, even though they’re not officially sold here in Brazil.
And when that one breaks… Maybe no phone at all.
how does one source such a phone to brazil?
Ask a friend to buy it in europe and send it to you
i barely have friends here, let alone a continent over.
Thats the cheap option. You can of course fly yourself to germany or netherlands and but it your self or even use a forwarding service.
do you happen to be brazilian? because i’m not aware of any forwarding service that can sneak around customs and id like to know one.
When that one breaks there’s a good chance you can replace just the broken part.
Yep
Ah the classic “I read the headline but not the article post”
Tldr because you’re lazy: oh a certain brand of battery, 400 recharge cycles because after that risk of fire increases so they nerf it. Only on the 4a and 6a series.
I own a Pixel 6a, and I’m not happy about the whole situation for several reasons:
- The update is mandatory and instant the moment it is received. You don’t get a choice in the matter.
- The only reason I am aware of my battery being nerfed is because I had read this article and because I paid attention during the update. There is no clear indication after the update that they might have nerfed my battery life.
- Google is not communicating clearly whether my phone is one of the so-called “affected devices”. There is a tool that allows you to check “eligibility”, but it only reports eligibility for a refund. My phone is not eligible for a refund, so does that mean my phone is not an “affected device”? It doesn’t say.
- After calling support Im not much wiser. All they told me is that “if my phone gets warm sometimes, or the battery drains too fast” that might mean my device is affected. But clearly they should know whether my device is affected otherwise they wouldn’t be able to determine whether I’m eligible for the refund.
This is also not the first time Google burned me with a bad quality battery. This just strengthens my resolve that my next phone won’t be a Pixel. Which is a shame, because I like these phones otherwise.
The Fairphone is looking quite interesting.
I got the nerf on the 4A because the battery replacement “option” requirement me to personally being my phone to a repair shop 250km away.
And calling it a nerf is flat out wrong, it’s borderline remote bricking. That patch not only slashed battery life in half, but the charge indicator was completely unreliable. I’ve seen it go from 80 to 30 in an hour (on standby, btw.), then from 30 to 25 in 2 hours.
I’ve installed CalyxOS, which comes without the nerf.
I wonder who chose the batteries that go in the phone designed by Google, what a mystery
Well there are multiple companies that make the batteries
I wonder who selected the companies to provide the batteries
Why is this your random go to? Kinda apple user of you.
Apple sources the worse lithium batteries known to man, they last a year and destroy themselves. I have no idea why you’re bringing Apple to this discussion.
I’ve dealt with Chinese devices with batteries that still worked fine six years after being bought.
Google loves to cheap out if they think they can get away with it, just look at the modem on the 8 series
- It’s a budget variant,
- The Pixel series are midrange, not high-end or flagship
This doesn’t seem like that big a deal, especially as it’s a software update. Easily fixable with a firmware update like GrapheneOS
GrapheneOS
Won’t they push this update?
Pixels of this generation can get up to $1500 USD. If that’s not flagship territory, I don’t know what is.
Even if they were cheap, the implication is that its okay to screw a customer if they’re not rich?
“You were warned. The a stands for a-splode.”
I don’t think the ‘a’ variants are ever close to that price.