The Vergecast - Zooming in on weird cameras
Episode Date: August 26, 2025This week on The Vergecast, Chris Niccolls and Jordan Drake of PetaPixel’s YouTube channel join The Verge’s Allison Johnson and Vjeran Pavic to geek out about the last half-decade of camera adv...ancements — the good, the bad, and the Sigma BF of it all. Then, Allison is joined by Verge News Editor and fellow phone nerd Dominic Preston to help answer a boatload of listener questions from people contemplating which smartphone to buy next. They help navigate the intricacies of living in a mixed iOS/Android household to the best options for someone who wants a headphone jack (spoiler alert: there aren’t many). It’s a mega-hotline-turned-therapy session for iPhone Mini owners reluctant to let go of their tiny phones in a world where phones come in two sizes: big and bigger. Further reading: Sigma BF review: Beautiful Foolishness — PetaPixel The Fujifilm X half is Just Plain FUN! — PetaPixel Fujifilm X Half hands-on: whimsical, refreshing, and simply fun Sigma BF review: the perfect camera for a minimalist In pursuit of a viral, five-year-old compact camera Samsung Galaxy S25 review: incredibly iterative Nothing Phone 3 review: flagship-ish If you really want a smaller phone, try the tiny Jelly 2 Oppo Find N5 review: the final evolution of foldables Honor launches the ‘world’s thinnest’ foldable Motorola spoiled a good budget phone with bloatware The Xperia 1 VII is a greatest hits of Sony R&D The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra isn’t so ‘ultra’ anymore The Fairphone 6 no longer feels like a compromise (except in the US) My first DIY phone fix made me a self-repair believer Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold review: in great shape Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 review: stunning, bendy, and spendy Ditching my phone for an LTE smartwatch was a humbling experience I took my own advice and bought a last-gen iPhone — I regret nothing How Samsung’s Galaxy Z Flip failed me without actually breaking Email us at vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11, we love hearing from you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to the Vergecast, the flagship podcast of small phones that are very tired and just want to take a little rest.
I'm your host, Alison Johnson, and on today's show, I'm talking about two of my very favorite things, small phones and weird cameras.
First, I'll be joined by some old friends at Petapixel who are going to talk to me about what's been happening in the camera industry over the last five years.
Then Dominic Preston's going to jump on, and we are going to tackle a huge pile of listener questions in a
a mega hotline segment.
All that is coming up right after the break, so stay tuned.
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Welcome back.
I am here with some of my very favorite kinds of people, which is to say camera nerds.
I am joined by the Faces of Petapixel's YouTube channel.
We've got Jordan Drake, of course, you know, co-host, editor, videographer.
Hello, Jordan.
Occasionally show up on camera.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Important to know.
Doing all the post to make the other person look fantastic.
It's the important job.
Already looked fantastic right from the start.
I twist a couple knobs, you know.
I dial some dials.
You're putting polish on a diamond ring.
Come on.
Oh, my goodness.
Okay, so this is setting the tenor for our show.
Thank you guys.
That is Chris Nichols, you know, host, photographer, kind of man about town.
Oh, I appreciate that.
That's true.
That's true.
Yeah, thanks for coming on.
And I'm joined by Viren Pavik, who's our supervising producer here at The Verge.
Also a camera nerd and tests the weird cameras we get in.
Is that fair?
I guess.
Some of them are flying.
Most of them are flying if you can get them in the U.S.
Oh, I see.
Apparently, a lot of harder nowadays.
Good if you can get them.
Those cameras.
It's been a big year for weird cameras.
We'll have to touch on that.
I am so ready to talk about weird cameras.
Maybe that's, I'll back up just a little bit.
and like set the context for how we all know each other.
So the two of you are at Petapixel now, you know, long-running photography website.
Previously, we all worked together at D.P. Review.
So we've been nerding out about camera stuff for a while now.
You guys have been doing this for forever, you know, camera store TV.
You've got like 15 years of making videos about cameras under your belt.
So I have lured you here under the guise of hanging out.
and just like catching up.
I feel like we are usually under extreme duress when we all hang out.
It's like at a live event, we're running around.
It's like very sweaty and hard to catch up.
Yes.
And I've been kind of like out of the camera game for like the last five years and I need a little bit of a refresher on what has happened.
So you three are the very people to talk to about this.
Nice.
Well, thanks for having us.
This is great.
I'm so excited.
Give me kind of like your takes on what have been some of the kind of like landmark or standout launches or maybe just innovations like in the camera technology space, you know, in the past maybe five years.
Like, Viren, do you have like a first thought on this?
Five years. What has happened in five years?
Olympus went away, but they're still making camera under a different brand.
Yes.
Fuji became like one of the hottest cameras out there in Wix 100,
and the last two have been insanely popular, and that's been a lot of fun.
We've also just went all the way back to the 2000s and are now taking photos with like Olympus Mew
and, you know, point in truth with a lot of just like high-key flash photography.
But no, a lot more has happened.
All of the cameras can now film like incredible video to,
For sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think to add on that, yeah, I mean, video is certainly a huge thing that's happened in the five years,
which makes Jordan happy and me indifferent.
And then I would say also another big change is just how everybody's caught up.
You know, five years ago there was more variety and how good people's auto-focusing was
and what their capabilities were.
Now I feel like the sensors are all very similar.
Everybody's got good dynamic range.
Most players have very comparable auto focus now at this point.
Everybody's rocking subject detection.
Like, you know, it's kind of like all the trends that one person has started,
everybody else has caught up to and jumped on.
So, yeah, it's kind of a time now where camera design, I think, is more important
and has to be more exciting than anything else.
We've definitely fixed the image quality issue like a while ago.
I'm going to blame about image quality anymore.
No.
It's forbidden.
That's what's so interesting.
Like, the image quality thing is,
something every year we looked at as the primary thing, like, oh, we got more megapixels.
It's better in low light now.
We're actually seeing the opposite thing happen over the last five.
If you look at the higher-end cameras, they're like, look, we can make our picture quality
a little bit worse in exchange for speed because the speed is going to be better for that
auto-focus and burst shooting and all that video stuff that's happening.
So, yeah, it's kind of funny.
I still look back to cameras, you know, from back when you were working, Alison, like a D-850 from
icon, and I'm like, that still takes better pictures than even top of the line pro cameras at this
point. But the new stuff does way better video, way better focus, much faster burst rates,
that kind of stuff. So that's kind of a compromise they've been willing to make.
Yeah. Can someone explain to me what global shutter is? Does that tie into the like speed thing?
Like with the autofocus? It does. But I would say in our world of photography, only one place.
has actually incorporated it properly.
So, you know, the Sony A-93 is a very cool camera, has global shutter.
It means you can fire a full electronic shutter, no rolling shutter issues whatsoever,
no flash sync problems either.
Yeah, none of the wibbley-woblies and stuff.
And, of course, it unlocks insanely fast burst rates.
And Sony, of course, have fantastic auto-focus.
So it's very much a purpose-built sports and action camera.
But, you know, kind of like what Jordan was talking about,
you do sacrifice a bit of dynamic range,
pixel count, that kind of stuff.
Really, it's made for a specific goal, and that is to get as many shots.
Even with flashes fly, like, it's a great paparazzi red carpet camera, you know, great video
capabilities.
But we're seeing that also with stack sensors in general, which don't quite get there,
but do a lot of what that does.
And that's probably another big change in the last five years, just the proliferation of
high-quality stack sensors.
Okay.
And stack sensor is like BSI, right?
Like there's layers of pixels and...
Beyond the BSI, I would say, yeah.
I was just going to say like the BSI is what we saw previously.
And then these stacked sensors, they've just put the electronics right on the chip.
And that's, again, giving us that faster readout for that other stuff.
But again, a slightly worse image quality than we have before.
Okay.
That's so interesting that image quality is like a thing people are fine with kind of sacrificing a little bit.
Everybody's kind of caught up to this.
idea that image quality isn't the Beal Lendall
because they're all good.
And now people are, as we've talked about,
preferring bad image quality, right?
They're preferring cameras with tiny sensors
and they're going analog.
And we've seen a real resurgence of lenses
that are designed to look like old vintage lenses
along with all the flaws and failures
and issues with those lenses.
For a little while there, it was like an arms race
to get the greatest, latest and greatest mirrorless camera.
out on the market.
Yeah.
It's an arms race to make the image a little bit shittier now is where we're at.
Yeah.
It seems like it.
Yeah, let's talk about compact cameras because I am, I think, just as confused as anyone
about what is that.
I mean, you guys sold compact cameras to people many, many years ago.
And all of a sudden, they're back.
Yeah.
Not even used on eBay.
It was brand, like someone actually came in and gave us $900 for this tiny, crappy little
camera.
And they loved every second of it, and it fit in an altoids mint container, and they were so happy.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, those are the days.
Viren, what was your, did you have a crappy little digital camera, like, back in the day?
Back in the day, I had a lot of Sony cyber shots.
Okay.
If you give me, like, 12 seconds, I can grab two of them.
Yeah.
Hold on, sorry.
It looks like a tape recorder.
No, I had one that did that, too.
I had that, like, super thin.
Yeah, there's another one which is probably a year later.
Okay.
Like, these companies were making cameras like a constant.
So many.
This is maybe the one.
Oh, look at that.
Yeah, that's the one that Sidney was rocking.
Yeah.
Yeah, I went back home.
I got the chargers.
I got the memory sticks.
I got a memory card reader.
Sony memory sticks.
Yeah, pro duo as well or pro or duo.
Oh, no.
They still work.
There was like another.
another Sony camera that I had to use reverse image search to actually find out the real model of it.
It was, I don't know how to describe it.
I just don't know how to describe it.
It was like a tiny little thing about like a pillbox and then you can rotate the lens.
Oh, yes.
The lens was only.
Yeah, Nikon on Sony did those?
So here's a question.
Did you guys actually use those back in the day or did you kind of rediscover them now?
Right?
Because, you know, we sold those in the store and we played with all those cameras and tested them out.
and like, yeah, they're garbage.
Like the menus are terrible and everything's slow
and the screens are bad.
You know, and the image quality is fun, sure.
But it was funny, but the designs were so interesting.
Like that was the time where manufacturers
were just throw everything at the wall
to see what would stick.
And it was really exciting, all these wacky, strange designs
you would never, ever take risks on nowadays.
Although I would say that, you know,
some of the companies are now starting to come around
and try some stuff again, which is kind of cool.
I wonder how much of the digital camera
Renaissance is about people discovering that it's like nice to hold a camera and you're when you're
so used to using a smartphone. Yeah, the weird factor is pretty good too, but.
It's just the novelty. Is that what people are loving now? It's like the novelty because we had to,
we were in the trenches, you know what I mean? And it was horrible. And now I think people like
rediscovering are like, oh, this is so different and it's so like novel. But no, it was just
garbage at the time. But like, yeah. I did carry around my little cyber show.
shot and took pictures of friends, and it was just like, that was the only option.
You know, it's just weird to think of it like that.
Jordan, you have a camera in your hands.
I don't want to see it.
The last time I saw you, Allison, I was waving this thing around.
I've put a video out since.
But if you look at it, I think this is really cool because this is a Kodak V770, and it is
kind of the origin to the smartphone camera solution.
So they had this super thin thing.
They're like, well, we can't make the zoom any bigger, the lens any wider, or any
brighter. So they just put two complete cameras in here. So it's a zoom lens and then an ultra-wide
and there are two separate sensors in there as well. So it's kind of, they came up with the solution
before the smartphone manufacturers did. Well, even this, this is my favorite camera. This is the
Panasonic GM-5. It's the greatest camera of all time. We just made it. Yeah, we just made a video about
it. And that was like one of our biggest first-day views. Like, it's crazy because everybody
loves this stuff again. It's like a Renaissance. I love it. Yeah. Let's talk about.
about weird cameras because I feel like there is kind of a natural, like, synergy.
Yeah, these are all weird.
They are all super weird.
There was kind of like a smushing where, like, every camera design sort of, like, became the same.
And I think that's happened with smartphones, too.
Yes.
Yeah.
But in the very recent past, we have seen some, I would say, really weird out there kind of camera designs.
And I'm all about it.
Like, I don't know.
What is your guys' feelings about some of these?
I don't know.
I think we're going to fight.
I don't know.
What should we start with?
Like, you know, I think it's, as an overarching theme, I would say, I think it's great
that manufacturers are trying different designs.
Again, like the Fujifilm X half is a good example of like a really cute, really
adorable design with some fun features on it that harken back to the days of nostalgia.
And I will admit, like a camera like that did make me feel nostalgic for like a couple
days. And then after that, it wore off. And I'm like, this isn't really there, right? Like,
it's kind of just a basic point shoot camera with this sort of film experience. But I get it.
If somebody hasn't had that, it would be super fun to look at a contact sheet again, whatever.
But it's fun that the manufacturers are taking these risks. But how often do they hit, right?
Because the Sigma BF is another example of something that was beautifully designed. Sigma always make weird
cameras. They always have. I've always thought they're kind of trash. And I kind of thought this last one
was too. It's beautiful trash. It's a really gorgeous trash. Oh, no.
Trash. Okay, I know Viren has something else about this. We can come back to the Fuji
bud. Like, I got to defend Sigma here. I think about this a lot. The camera that I missed the
most is the Sigma BF. Like the one that I'm like, oh man, I wish I had like a little bit more time
with it. I really enjoyed using that camera. Like truly loved using it. It's like this,
Unibody, kind of unibody metal slab of a camera.
It is a Sigma full frame camera that does some video.
It's not really good at it.
It has a built-in storage.
It doesn't have any card slots.
It has a microphone, but, like, you wouldn't ever use it.
It doesn't have a hot shoe.
It can barely take photos in fluorescent light because of the electric shutter only.
You're selling me on it.
Yeah, this is not going to.
I know, right? This is just like a list of comments.
And then there is the, hey, I went to use this for a little while, and I absolutely loved it.
I thought, the lenses are pretty good and everything, but I thought, you know, we live in a world
where film simulations are everywhere, everyone's trying to kind of do it. I thought they did
pretty good with those. Yeah. But, you know, I really enjoyed how, okay, it has internal
storage, which makes the camera super fast. Like, turning it on, saving the photos, operations
in general, just, like, feel snappy.
there's barely any dials on it, right?
You have one main dial, but in that dial, it's also a D-pad.
That's a real problem.
You can set what you want to change on it left and right,
and then use the click wheel basically to change the settings,
and it all shows on a little sub-monitor,
and it made me kind of cycle through two to three options
that I would use a lot, and I ended up using them a lot more.
Like the film simulation
and crop primarily.
And I thought the photos
were actually beautiful.
I thought as we said earlier,
the autofocus is like not a problem
with these cameras anymore.
And I thought they did a pretty good job there as well.
Yeah.
You said it right there though,
and the thing is it made you do stuff
because the Sigma BF is designed
in such a way that you don't have
alternative ways to control a camera.
And one of the things that really drives me crazy
as a photographer is if I have a camera
or any product,
I mean, even the iPad makes me mad for this same reason.
Nothing to do with photography is if there are not multiple ways to control something,
you know, logical intuitive ways, if you're kind of forced to use it a certain way,
I find that a little obnoxious.
And like the BF has got this weird thing because it's got a touch screen,
but you only use the touch functions for certain things.
Otherwise, you're back to you using the dial,
and it's kind of a lot of clicking to get through things.
I felt in stressful, like, high-paced scenarios,
it's too slow to adjust and get set and get set.
changed. The body's gorgeous, but that block of aluminum, I mean, they did such a great job
machining it, but those edges are so hard and sharp that, and I've been hearing now feedback,
like, people are bumping this camera onto things and chipping chunks off those sharp edges,
like your gorgeous jewelry camera's not going to look so gorgeous after a while.
You know, there's no EVF, which is a huge strike for me. I know not people don't care.
but like when I played with the Panasonic S9
which is a compact little full frame camera
that also was limiting in a lot of ways
but had that same idea
like functionality goes more towards color modes
and casual shooting and fun stuff
and then I played with the BF
I was like give me that S9 back
because that thing actually is like
that thing is a professional monster compared to this
so I mean I get it
as a beautiful camera that you wear in your shoulder
that can take nice photos
and that can kind of be navigated
once you learn it, great.
But I would never, like, trust or rely on it to be, like, an everyday camera.
And I feel like Kazito Yamaki, the CEO, just made it because it looks so beautiful.
And he's like, this is what I want to carry around myself.
Yeah.
And truly, it was my everyday carry.
Right.
Take photos of stuff that I see around the street.
I brought it to a press event.
I think it was a Google event.
Took one photo with it.
And I was like, this is that.
This is not in.
Let's go back to me.
So definitely.
This was like, I'm going to carry it around, bring it places, and take pictures of what I see.
Professional setting, absolutely not.
Jordan, did you, was the, like, video just a non-starter for you on the BF?
Or, like, what are your BF feelings?
Basically, they're pretty similar to Chris's.
Like, it's not a great video camera.
The microphone thing came up, which is super weird on it to, like, have Bluetooth support,
which I could never get to work anyways.
There's no ibis and the rolling shutter on.
It's really bad.
So again, it's those wibbly wobbly situations on it.
And I'm terrified of it.
The whole time I'm holding it, I'm like, what if I accidentally put it down the wrong way and cut my stomach over?
Like, it's, there were people who put it in their jacket pockets and they like shredded the inside lining of their jacket pockets.
The one attribute it has is whenever I'm doing anything on my own time, I have a camera with me because we're always testing stuff.
And everyone ignores me.
But this time, the one time I went out with the BF, I had like a half dozen people walk up and just be like, that is cool. What is that? Is that? Yeah. So that's the appeal of it. If you want to meet people and don't like joining clubs, like the BF is a small investment to make new friends. But as a photographic tool, I just found it. Yeah, very difficult. It is an unapologetic camera that owes everybody an apology.
for hurting them physically, it sounds like.
For all sorts of stuff.
Okay, so on the, like, also unapologetic, but with a different, like, ethos, I think.
You know, we brought up the Fuji film half.
I'll be honest, I think it's adorable and fun, and I want to carry it around.
Also, not, I don't want it to be the camera I have every single day and look back at photos of my kid in 10 years.
and be like, yeah, sorry, son, these are all, like, crappy, like, film stock simulations.
So, yeah, Chris, what's your take on the Fuji?
Yeah, like, look, I, you know, I kind of sound like no fun nickels all the time,
but I've actually come around a lot on film simulation modes of all sorts, right?
Like, you know, Lumix Lab, Panasonic did that with Lumix Lab,
and Fuji Films always done it, and now Sigma's doing, like,
all the companies are kind of building up on this,
your own preset kind of business, do your own customizations, make a vintage aesthetic,
make a warm tone, you know, anything you want to do. And I think that's great.
And actually on the X-half, I really enjoyed all the silly stuff, like the light leaks and,
you know, all these kind of features that it had. So you've got this tiny little camera with
like a cropped sensor down from micro fourth third-sized. You know, image quality is fine.
It's fine, but it's basic. And it's this, it's this cute little, I mean, the design is
beautiful. It works in basically two modes. It's like two cameras and one. So first mode is you have a
very basic point-and-shoot digital camera, but you can do film simulations, you can play around
with some of the stuff. The second mode is where it really kind of tries to draw a nostalgia and
give you a film shooting experience. So it shoots in a vertical format. I think we should mention that,
which is kind of cool right off the bat. Not that it needs to. That's just what it does, which is
adorable. And the camera has a thumb winder on it. So you can go into a film mode. And you can go into a film
you choose a role of film,
like basically a Fuji film simulation,
you choose it,
and you're stuck with it
for the next,
however many shots you're going to do.
You can choose 24, 36, like 48, 72.
And then at the end of doing that,
it develops that role of film.
It gives you a contact sheet
with your negatives,
all laid out like that,
right, as a positive image.
And it's cute and it's fun,
and I get it.
And you're using the thumbwinder
in between every shot.
It won't let you shoot
unless you crank,
the thumb winder in this second mode.
Oh my God.
But the thumb winder doesn't always register.
If you go too fast with that camera,
you're do,
you have to, like, I started treating
like an M3 double wind. I'm like, I'm double
winding this thing every time just to make sure.
And like, the novelty,
I think it's a super fun thing to do.
And then after like, I don't know,
what your threshold will be.
But after like three or four fake rolls of film,
I'd just be like, forget it.
I'm going back to the regular camera.
Because I want to be able to have the option
to just change things afterwards
and not have to, you know, go through 36 shots in black and white
when I desperately see something, I want to shoot color.
So I found myself just saying, you know what?
And the Thumb Winder was kind of silly and superfluous.
So after a while I was like, I just used this as a basic point and shoot camera.
But then why did I pay for that whole film and Thumb Winder's situation?
I mean, I don't know.
That's my feeling on it.
I'm no fun.
It's a gorgeous camera.
It's like gorgeously designed.
What is the price tag on it?
We should say that out loud.
Like $800?
Bucks?
800 U.S., yeah.
It's,
I know,
we were really
surprised.
The one thing
I will say about it
is Chris may not
have enjoyed
doing like the
film mode thing,
but as an
outside spectator,
because I didn't
shoot photos on it.
I had the
terrible experience
of shooting
some video on it,
which I can
briefly address.
But, but it
looked like,
the whole time I'm
like,
that looks like fun.
I want to do that.
I want to go
take the AFF.
Yeah.
So there might be
some appeal there.
I want to
actually try it out,
shoot some photos,
see if I do enjoy that.
But like Chris mentioned, you know, the image quality is decent.
It's smartphone decent, you know.
It's like a type 1 sensor with a slow lens.
So your smartphone will do the same quality.
But the video is hilarious because they have light leak effects, which, you know, in photo,
just sit in one static place.
But in video, if you've got a leak, it'll move based on where the light is coming from.
But this doesn't do this.
So it looks like you just put like a piece of glass in front of the lens and painted,
like an orange smear on it.
and then it's just stuck in front as you wave the camera around.
It looks hilarious.
It's like early David Lynch when he was figuring out digital cameras,
but it's weird as hell.
Ruins the illusion a little bit.
Yeah.
So, Viren, you wrote the review for us,
which seemed very positive.
Is this another, like, Sigma BF situation for you
where you're like, yes, it's limited, but I love what it is.
I think he's a masochist.
I think that's what it is.
I think you're just a mascus.
I'm just thinking,
Optimist. No, it was mostly positive, but so hard to justify, right? We already talked about the price. The price is just ridiculous. If you look at the comments on any of the videos or articles, everyone is like, this is insane. What I did enjoy about it was actually using it until you hit what was also mentioned. It feels slow. You know, when you take a photo and you crank it and it doesn't.
register. You found that too. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It was very slow to like right onto the card and I had a
fast card in it. The processor in it is actually like really good. It shouldn't be the case that it's so slow.
Those are the things that like bother me. What I did like about it is that it felt like some thought
went into. Oh, 100%. Designing the hardware and software in tandem for the experience of using it.
It didn't feel like, you know, hey, here's a trend. We're going to make something really.
quickly.
It, like, you know, at these press events, they give you the R&D story behind it.
And I was like, you know what?
Yeah, I can kind of buy it.
I don't think it's quite just a cash grab, although the price is ridiculous.
So using it was fun.
I did not try the video with Light Leaks.
Oh, you got to.
If you got some time this weekend, enjoy.
I'm good.
No, no, no.
This was, and just for reference, like, it wasn't a review.
It was like a hands-on.
I had, like, a couple of hours with it.
So it was just, like, a pretty brief experience with it.
And yeah, I think software, hardware design was interesting, fun.
It was fun to use, but it is, like, I would never buy it because of the price,
even if I do buy it.
I am a little bit sucker for, like, high quality, beautiful, high megapixel, everything.
Sure.
I don't think I would actually take it out as much.
You know, it would probably be the camera that I leave behind.
I use a lot more of, like, you know, the Pocket, the Osmo Pockets and one of these cameras,
and I just want to cover every basis.
The base that I don't want to cover is fun one-inch sensor camera that's just extra.
You mentioned the Osmo, and I have questions, actually.
I noticed this, like, this was starting to ramp up when I was leaving Deep Year Review,
but like every camera company launching their, like, vlogger camera.
And I got kind of a glimpse of.
Of this, I reported a little bit ago on the Canon Powershot GX7, 3, the 3.
Oh, lucky.
Have these, like, vlogging-focused cameras panned out for the manufacturers, or did, like, the Osmo just win?
The Osmo killed them all.
That's funny.
Yeah, the Osmo killed them all.
I was thinking about this, though, just today.
Like, all these companies that we were going through started making vlogging cameras, right?
Panasonic did.
Nikon did.
Sony, of course, really came out of the gate first.
Canon then started to.
And it was like, no camera viewer that I really knew of super enjoyed these cameras, right?
We're all complaining about the same things.
It's like, oh, they're expensive and, like, they're kind of silly.
And I don't know who wants these.
And I'm convinced because there's so many people that do so many other interests
that we're just not interested in that are looking for a very basic kit to get started.
I guess if I was somebody starting out and I didn't know what I was doing,
I just wanted to like get something at Best Buy, put it in front of me and make it work.
Well, then that might do it, right?
So I think that's why they were so popular.
But I think now as more people catch on to the Osmo, the beauty of the gimbal, the fact that, again, it's very simple.
The fact that you can add microphones to it like seamlessly, that makes it even more convenient.
And I think as more and more people figure out what the pocket cameras do for them, we're going to see even less and less vlog cameras.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have those been hard to get like the drones?
It's not hard to get except the price has gone up.
Yes.
By 40%, I think it's about 900 bucks to like get the whole thing and it started with 500.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, even at $900, it's still probably worth it.
But yeah, like when they were $500, what a steal.
Yeah, what a great little camera.
And yeah, image quality as we've talked about is plateaued, nobody cares anymore.
We want it to work and we want it to be easy.
And we want to know that when we get home, everything's okay and it's all set for us.
Like, yeah, it's great.
Yeah.
Well, on the subject of making YouTube videos, I have questions for the two of you, Chris and Jordan.
You guys have been at this for so long, and I'm curious on your perspective on how it's changed.
You know, like, there's just a lot in that question.
There's like the camera market has changed.
The technology has changed.
Like making the videos has changed.
But I don't know.
How do you look at the change over the past, like, decade that you've been doing this?
The style that younger creators make now is very different.
We still stick to our same style.
We shoot a lot on location.
And as you said, Jordan with like nicer cameras.
You know, Jordan's looking for more cinematic results
and control over depth of field.
And so whereas now I think a lot of young creators
are looking more at presets and more extreme color grades
and faster cuts and stuff.
But I know, what do you think, Jordan?
And I think the big difference is when we started,
it just had to be passable.
And you could build a map.
audience. Like, basically, our early stuff is unwatchably bad.
No, it's not.
But fairly quickly we got to a level where, yeah, it was better than, you know, something
that someone with no background in video production could put together, where now, you know,
the bar is so much higher if you're starting. But I think it almost puts us in an interesting
place because it's not so much about like, how is your production value? But it's like,
what are you producing? And if that's compelling, like, I think if you're, like, for us specifically,
hey, if you want to review camera gear,
you better back it up with some
interesting photos or interesting shoots
or an interesting experience or something like
that. Like pure brute
technical know-how is not going to get you as far
as it used to back in the day.
So, you know, we learned very
quickly to just start injecting more of our personalities
into the video and that's, I think,
why we're still doing this all that time
later. The tools have definitely,
like editing is faster now. On location,
they've given us a lot of stuff.
You know, more dynamic range in a camera means I can
shoot in more locations without looking for a place with easier light to work with.
So all of that is just making us more productive.
And that's what I love to see is just like, hey, we can actually do more now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Does that resonate, V?
Yeah, but I actually wanted to ask a question.
I feel like in the last couple of years, especially, you know, with the rise of short form video content,
especially when it comes to camera, every release of a camera, everyone has a video about it.
Everyone has something ready to go on a more ago.
It's more saturated than ever, honestly.
And we've seen reports of just like influencer marketing budgets are like, you know,
over-acting everything.
Is there anything else that you kind of do or think differently to stand out to remain yourself?
We've always tried to do a lot of the videos that we do with the cameras that we have, right?
And we try to do them on location.
So we're not really in the office talking.
We're out shooting on location because we want to get.
give the viewers the idea like, look, this is how we're using the camera. This is how you might
use the camera. Weather ceiling might be a factor, you know, where you're actually going to be
out there and, you know, things like that, auto focus, all these kind of things. And you see, though,
I think a lot of creators are making really good stuff, but they're showing a lot more of the
end result of that video camera, for example, or photographic camera, you know, after editing,
after compiling it together. And they're often shooting themselves, speaking about it with different
camera gear, because it's more convenient and it's quicker and it's easier. And it's easy.
if you're just one person, whereas we have the benefit of the two of us.
So, but yeah, it's just a different dynamic, hence Jordan's shirt.
And we've always tried to do that.
Like, be on location, using the cameras as real world as we can, not only for the photography,
but also for the video.
Yeah.
That one right there, yeah.
Film on location, you cowards.
I love it.
Yeah, that's where that comes from.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, thank you all three of you for joining me.
And I'm sure we're all going to be together IRL.
you know, soon enough.
Yes, in the fall.
One way or another.
So thank you.
That season's coming up.
Yeah.
Thanks, guys.
We've got to take another break,
and after that we're doing a mega hotline.
Stay tuned.
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Welcome back.
I am joined by my colleague Dominic Preston.
Hey, Dom.
Hey, Alison.
Good see you again.
Good to see you.
He's our news editor based in the year.
UK and also a big phone nerd. Yeah, guilty is charged. Yes, I know this. So which figures into our
exercise today. I put a call out many months ago at this point for our listeners to write in or call in
and let us know the phone buying conundrum they're having if they're considering a new phone and
they're not sure which one to get, if they just need some, like, philosophical advice, if they own an iPhone
mini, which you guys showed up. Anyway, we'll just jump right into it. Are you feeling ready?
Ready as I'll ever be. I've done a little work on my European phone market, so I can answer some
of that side of things, hopefully. Yes, please, because the Jammis of the world are a mystery to me.
So great.
Okay.
So our first question came from Brendan and he called in so we can go ahead and listen to it.
Hi, this is Brendan from Rochester, New York.
I have a pixel 6 that is starting to get a little slow and nearing its end of guaranteed security updates next year.
And so I was looking to buy a new phone.
I want something that's going to last for a while and have OS updates.
security updates, but I also want something that's kind of on the smaller side. The pixel
six is kind of heavy and big. So I was tempted by, you know, phones like the AISIS
Zenphone 9. I want something that's kind of around that size, which I know it's really hard to find.
So if you had any suggestions, that would be great. Thanks. I am so sorry, Brendan, but we have
nothing but bad news for you. My heart broke a little bit,
especially that mention of the Zenphone 9.
I know. I missed that one.
Yeah, I know. So the quick answer, I think, is you're probably going to want a Samsung Galaxy
S-25. That is the last small-ish phone that is, like, you know, widely available in the U.S.
The Azus Zen phone kind of went away. They, like, only make a big version now.
And I don't think they even sell it in the U.S.
Are there options in the UK that we just don't get here?
Weirdly, no.
This is one area where still even the rest of Europe,
and even if you look at China, there's not really a big difference
other than going into really tiny oddball things,
like the UniHurts jelly star, which is this minuscule phone with a minuscule screen.
That Zenphone-9-esque form factor has pretty much gone.
The S-25 is probably the best bet.
The kind of the big one you might get in the rest of the world
is the Xiaomi 15, but that's basically the same size as like a pixel 9, pixel 10.
It's still a little bit bigger than an S-25.
So if the main priority is sized, the S-25 is going to be the best.
Yeah.
So we've failed, Brendan.
I'm sorry.
But, yeah, S-25 is probably going to be it.
And our hearts are with you.
Yeah, we have this perverse thing now where, like, even if you look at the Chinese brands
and what they're putting out, even within China, not the stuff that comes to Europe,
We're seeing phones that are branded like mini or compact, and they're still 6.4-inch displays.
And, you know, they're bigger than an S-25, way bigger than an iPhone mini ever was.
It's kind of strange.
Yeah.
The phone beginning has happened, and it's not going to let up, I think.
So the next question we have, and we got this kind of a lot, is from Nate.
Hey there.
This is Nate.
I've been an Apple, like, iPhone user and Mac user forever.
I'm definitely in the walled garden of Apple.
Like I have the AirPods Pro Apple Watch.
And I'm just getting a little bored.
And I'm curious what the other side is like.
And I don't really know, you know, with the Android phones and even the watches and the headphones,
is there that much of a difference?
It would be nice if they were similar.
But yeah, that's my question. Thanks.
So this was kind of a theme, people being bored with their phones.
And I don't know if I'm just being a bummer, but I kind of think that's because phones are boring now.
What's your read on this, Dom?
I think if boredom is the motivator, there are basically only two ways you can go, which is buy a foldable,
which are maybe a little bit more interesting if you're not already on one.
or buy something from nothing, which is still ultimately just a phone,
but at least it's going to look kind of fun before you put your case on it.
Yeah, something from nothing took me a second, but yes.
The phone brand nothing.
I'm kind of thinking of your traditional pixels and galaxies,
and there are things here and there that are a little different.
There's definitely more AI features throughout the OS,
If that's something that interests you, I don't think a lot of people are motivated by AI at this point.
But yeah, I think a foldable is, that's really the best you can do as far as like it's going to feel different and you're going to use it differently.
That changes your experience with the phone, whichever foldable phone factor you go for, whether you're talking like a flip phone, which kind of can reduce your screen time, you can leave the phone closed and engage with it a bit less, or obviously, the book style gets you more of that, you know,
tablet that fits in your pocket kind of thing. Either way, there are a different way of having a phone.
I mean, the other thing I'd say to that question with the kind of the broader, what is there on the
Android side of that question from Nate? One big difference, this is definitely a rest of the
world thing, I'm afraid, not the US thing. But there is this whole kind of space where cameras
in the flagship Android devices from the big Chinese OEMs like, like, Xiaomi and Honor and
AARPO and Vivo, those cameras are really, really wild, and they are nothing like you're
going to find on any iPhone right now.
Both in terms of the design, these are very big, almost DSLRs camera rings that dominate devices
and make them very top-heavy.
But, you know, amazing telephoto lenses, really big sensors, really great depth of field
from shots and kind of a lot more processing options as well sometimes.
That's one thing I think that the Android side has that just there isn't an option on the iPhone.
And the frustrating bit of that is then there's no option for that in the U.S.
because I think what Samsung and Google are doing is much more in line with what Apple are doing,
which is kind of more modest camera bumps and very impressive cameras,
but not really completely pushing the boat out there.
Yeah.
I feel like there's other companies in the world that have been like,
what if hardware and the Samsung and pixel phones are kind of like,
we've locked in on the hardware and we're just optimizing the shit out of everything.
with software. So that's kind of where we are. I will say some of those, is it a phone,
is it a camera phones are so much fun to use. And I'm extremely jealous that you get to do that
more than I do. Well, they're great fun. But I mean, I think there's definitely like,
there's a big aesthetic trade-off as well, which I think is part of the reason the big US players
haven't opted for it because you're already basically saying, I'm willing for my phone to look
quite a lot uglier in the name of having a way better camera experience.
And I don't know that that's the mainstream U.S. or European phone buyer, right?
Most people are not willing to make that swap.
They want a really good camera, but they still want their phone to look like a normal, attractive phone.
Yeah, you got to choose.
You got to make your choices, and the U.S. manufacturers have made that choice for us.
So our next question is kind of relates, because Brian wants to know about foldables, so we can listen to that one.
My name's Ryan.
My thing that I run into a lot with phones, at least for the last year or so, and what will be the next year, is battery life.
And I am really contemplating some of the folding phones that are out there on the market right now.
Obviously, what will be the pixel pro 10 fold is really appealing.
But I don't know, just based on what I've seen, if battery life on any foldable right,
now is that great? So I guess like battery life inside of foldables or do I just stick to my good
old candy bar options and get the biggest and baddest battery life? So that's kind of what I'm
running to right now. Maybe others are too. Thank you so much. And hopefully you talk to you
here for you soon. Right. So I'm curious your thoughts on this. But I think my general take is
the foldable, like the bigger book style foldables.
have just kind of like the battery life was not great,
and they've kind of gotten to a place where you have parity
with a decent slab style phone,
but you should not expect it to exceed,
like your average slab phone for battery life.
What do you think, Dom?
Yeah, I broadly agree with that.
I think one thing I'd say for the big foldables
is so much if it's going to come down to how you expect to use it,
which is what I mean by that is how much are you going to open it up.
I'm a very boring foldable user when I'm reviewing them because I actually don't find that many uses for the big screen personally.
So I use it 90% of the time as a regular phone closed, and the battery life then is pretty comparable.
You're not really getting a difference.
Obviously, people listening will be, well, why on earth would I buy one of these if I'm not going to open it up all the time?
So that's a very fair point.
The battery will go down when you open it up.
But you should think about, like, do you want it to be something that you can open up for half an hour on your,
commute in the morning and occasionally when you're sitting on the couch and just want to
want to read? Or is there something where you think all the time you're using this, you're going to
open it up and use the big screen? Because the more you use the big screen, the worse the battery
is going to be. So there's a bit of a trade-off there. I have a similar experience where I'm just,
I don't know if it's because I just use a slab style phone all the time, but I sort of have to
remind myself like, oh no, this phone opens. I need to open it and like try it that way.
and I'll inevitably like download Diablo Immortal or something to it to like really play and test it out.
And I'm like, A, I think I would do this more because it's so much nicer on a big screen.
And B, wow, does that kill the battery life?
Like so fast.
So yeah, it is it is so variable.
And I wouldn't discount like your phone habits may be changing once you have the option of a bigger tablet.
experience, but I don't know. I did read a lot of comments recently on something I wrote about
foldables where foldable owners were saying that they rarely opened their folding phone.
Oh, interesting. I've always thought that was a me problem. So it's interesting. You know,
people who actually own them kind of feel the same way sometimes. Yeah. I guess there's two other
things I'd say to Brian on that question. First, I think you are right that a flip phone is probably
not for you from the description of what you want, and especially if battery life is the concern.
I think the flip phones still struggle there.
Like you said, Alison, you can kind of the book style give you parity with a decent slab on battery life.
The flips are definitely still behind.
And they're good enough right now to run for a day, but, you know, if you're going to use it for four years,
I wouldn't trust it will be good enough to last a day in four years' time on any of the flips, really.
And the other thing I'll say is the little the rest of the world perspective, because this is a different story outside of the US.
though it's only beginning to change.
This year, we've seen a lot of big foldables coming out with silicon carbon batteries,
which are, meaning they're getting bigger capacities.
So I reviewed the Oppo FindN5, which was at the time, the thinnest around,
and that had a, I think, a 5,600 milliampower battery.
Vivo just put out a foldable, and I think it's just in China and India, the X Fold 5.
That's got a 6,000 milliampour battery, though I haven't tried that one.
It's wild.
Honor, I have announced the Magic V5 in China,
but they've also announced it's getting a European release, at least, very soon.
That one is, I think, 5,800 million pounds.
If all those numbers sound like nonsense to you,
all three of those battery capacities are bigger than an S-25 Ultra by some way.
Yeah.
So these are all big foldables that could beat most slap phones.
Yeah.
So this is happening.
It's changing.
Like I said, those aren't even all out in Europe.
I think the honor will be out in Europe, but the other two aren't.
But if you're in Europe, if you're in India, if you're elsewhere in Asia or somewhere, look at those brands because you might actually find that there are some recent models from this year that really are up there with not just an average slap phone for battery life, but up there with the best slap phones for battery life.
Yeah. And there's been a real hesitation from at least Google and Samsung from what I can tell about adopting the silicon carbon batteries. So I wouldn't expect that to change anytime like,
super soon, but you never know. I don't know. Maybe we can have nice things too.
Yeah, I think this is a change that's going to roll out faster and faster elsewhere,
but I don't expect either Samsung or Google to be jumping on this just yet, but we'll see.
It'd be nice if they did because it really is going to be, you know, both in foldables and
in regular phones. It's going to be a big driver of bigger batteries and smaller phones.
Yeah. Maybe we can have it all. Smaller phones.
Maybe we can have small phones again because we can have big batteries in our phones.
small phones. My God, please. Okay, now I am rooting for silicon carbon and I want it now. Next up,
we have just a very charming question from Smiley. Hey, my name is Smiley Rojas Noe, aka a Smiley,
no really, singer-songwriter. I'm calling in because I have a Pixel 4A5G that I refuse to upgrade from.
long story short the pixel 485g has a headphone jack and i like to go and perform music in
little clubs and open mics and it's so useful to have that headphone jack also it's one of
the last pixels with the unlimited photo storage i don't feel like paying for a plan first photo
storage so that's another reason why i haven't upgraded but now it does feel like it's getting in my
way when it comes to using instagram which unfortunately is a tool that i need to
use to promote myself and my artistry. So I'm thinking of upgrading. I know that the
one plus 13 is the best Android phone available right now, but sadly, it's huge. So I'm like,
what to do, what to do. I don't know that I need this year's latest model, but yeah,
appreciate you listening to this message and help a brother out. Peace, peace. I'm just very
charm my smiley. And I love that he's held on to the pixel 4A 5G, like way to go, way to milk Google
for the unlimited photo storage and hold on to that headphone jack. But I think this is another, like,
bad news kind of situation. I'm, I'm, like, racking my brain for a, like, flagship-ish phone
that has a headphone jack
and I'm trying to figure out
if Motorola sells one
no. Yeah, I feel like some of the
cheaper models might
still have headphone jacks.
I don't think anything higher end
does. Even in Europe
they have the whole edge
series which is kind of mid-range
bordering on flagship and some of those come out
in the States under different names but none of those
have headphone jacks I think. I think you need to be looking at
the MotoG
kind of budget
couple hundred bucks models and I feel like some of those still have a headphone jack kicking around but
yeah that's right I don't know how much of a performance bump that will feel like even coming from a
I guess the four years old so they would they will feel better than a four eight but not not like a giant
jump forward yeah that's what okay the Moto G stylus I believe has a headphone jack and like a very
nice kind of vegan leather back panel the thing that I am
am a little hesitant about is that it is just loaded with bloatware, a lot of which you can
opt out of and uninstall. So if you're willing to do that, it's a nice little phone. I also worry
a little bit about longevity. If you would, I feel like Smiley kind of wants to hold onto a phone
for a while, given that he's still rocking the 4A5G. And Motorola, especially for the budget, you get
maybe two or three years of upgrades and then you're done. So you're shopping for a new phone again.
But that might be the only option with the headphone jack. Yeah, my other hesitation on the
motor roller would be the camera because Smiley mentioned, you know, being interested by the
opo, which is the find x-A-S, I think is the phone that the mini ended up being, yeah, call that out
for being smallish with a camera, but the motto is not going to have a great camera. If anything,
that might be one bit where it really does feel like a
downgrade from a 4A because I think any pixel camera almost is going to beat sort of what you find
on a cheap Motorola.
Motorola's cameras are good on some of the higher-end models, but not on, I doubt the G-Stylis,
is going to be a real winner for that side.
Yeah, yeah, that's a good call-out.
There sort of is one phone that kind of exists that does this almost, but I don't think,
I don't think somebody can buy it in the U.S., and I don't think he should, which is the
Sony Xperio 1-Moc7.
which is kind of compact-ish.
It's got a headphone jack.
It's got pretty good cameras, not the best, but they're not bad.
I don't know how great they are for longevity,
but it's not out in the US.
That particular model has had some issues.
They've had to do a recall for a lot of units across Europe.
I certainly wouldn't trust Sony on the longevity
in terms of their commitment to the smartphone market.
They actually just said in the recent quarterly earnings
that the experience of phone business is very important to them.
but I don't know how much I believe that.
They're putting out one or two phones a year and barely releasing them at all.
Even if you could buy it, I think it would be about, you know, one and a half grand is the price.
So it's crazy expensive for what it is.
So that is the phone, but also don't buy that phone.
It exists, but also, yeah, don't.
Yeah, I, you know, a couple years back, I think I was still reviewing Experia phones.
And, yeah, it was that kind of like, this is very price.
and I'm only hearing like two years of software support promise.
So just like the math just doesn't work for me there, I think, among other reasons.
But yeah, I don't know. Let us know, Smiley.
I hope you find something or maybe I'm just going to have to join the rest of us in the world who lost the headphone jack and we mourn it every day.
So I've got another one here.
This is from T.J. Huddleston.
he also message me on threads or blue sky one of those and I kind of hinted at what I think
he should get but here's T.J. explaining it.
Hey, my name is T.J. Huddleston. I am considering switching from iOS to Android and I'm not
really sure if that is the right move for me. I use Android from its inception up until the iPhone
12 and one of the reasons I switched to the iPhone 12 is I just wanted my phone to work. I was
use my phone for work more often, and I got tired of all the slowness and uncertainty when it came to Android.
But now I'm just getting bored.
But here's my issue is that I work in a construction-related field, and so I always need access to my phone.
My phone is a tool, and so I need really good battery life, but also I need a good warranty service.
One of the things I really like about having an iPhone or Apple device in general is that I can go to an Apple store,
and I can have my phone fix most of the time the same day.
And so I really want that capacity whenever I switch to an Android phone.
Heart of me just wants to get a Samsung, maybe the S25 Ultra,
because it has that nice stylus and I can annotate on pictures and stuff like that.
So my question for Allison is if you were focused on repairability or maybe service
when it came to maintenance and repairs, who would you choose?
Thanks. Love the show.
I love that T.J. and I agree because he names the phone I think he should get, which is the S-25 Ultra. And there's a few reasons for that, some of which he mentions. But I'm curious if that was your instinct too, Dom.
Yeah, I mean, definitely if we're talking about the US and even really outside the US, it's got to be Samsung.
If your aim is serviceability and you want to be able to get quick, easy, reliable repairs for a device and you don't want it to be an Apple, then yeah, Samsung is absolutely going to be the next best thing and Google third best.
It is one of those cases where the big brands that play in the US are absolutely the best options.
And then, you know, the S25 Ultra, it sounds like, you know, T.J likes the sound of the stylus and the big display.
He talked about wanting a foldable for the big screen, so going for the ultra mixants.
Yeah, and I would steer him away from a foldable in this case.
Yes.
Just for the, yeah, the repairability things he mentions.
And, like, I can see how the big inner screen would really come in handy.
But I guess I think that's a situation where you, you, like, also have a tablet if you need that kind of thing.
But the S25 Ultra being a gigantic phone is the closest you're going to get on a slab style phone.
Something else going for the Ultra is that, and it doesn't get talked about enough, I think,
is the anti-glare coating on the screen, which is really good.
And especially if he's working outside with it a lot and if the, you know, sun's shining,
we're sort of used to like casting a shadow over your phone and like hunching over it.
then you can see it outside.
You have to see it to believe it,
but the ultra really is, like,
better to use outside, I think.
Yeah, that's a great shout.
Yeah, we've seen all the brands over the last few years
sort of competing on claims about how bright the displays get
with that focus on use out doors,
and it almost doesn't matter
because the ultra is there with the anti-glyar coating
that does a much better job than just pumping up the brightness in the screen.
Yeah, yeah, it's kind of wild.
So I think it's a good choice for that.
And like you mentioned, just the availability of places you can walk into, you know,
Samsung has an agreement, I think, with, it's called like, you break, I fix it.
Not I fix it.
Something along those lines.
But I see enough of those around that I sort of file it away in the back of my head.
Like, yeah, I could bring a Samsung phone there if I needed to.
I say this with a little hesitation because I'm not 100% on the U.S.
market side of this. But I'm pretty sure Samsung has some sort of subscription care service
a little like AppleCare Plus, you know, one of those sign up and pay them a certain amount
per month, and it gets you a guarantee of a certain number of repairs or easier access to repairs
or something like that. So that would be something to look at as well if you know that that
worry that you're regularly breaking your phone. If you have that concern. The wild cut,
I'd say, again, with my little non-US hat on, is a fair phone, which is a very different take
on repairability and serviceability
because you fix it yourself,
but they are very easy to fix
for that part.
I was just reviewing the Fairphone 6,
the latest model,
and I am a complete idiot with this kind of stuff,
but I managed to take the phone
completely apart to its parts
and put it all the way back together,
and it still worked at the other end of it all,
and they sell their own, you know,
replacement displays, USB ports,
speakers, individual camera modules,
things like that.
You can get the fair phones in the US,
but they're only sold through this company
called Moreno that makes this,
privacy degougled OS makes them quite expensive.
And the OS is a little specific and limiting.
I don't totally dislike it, but you've got to want the degougled side of it.
And if that doesn't appeal, I think you'll find it quite frustrating,
especially if TJ's hesitation was that he'd been in the ropey early days of Android
and was hoping it was a lot better and more polished.
EOS is good, but I don't think polished is like the word.
It feels a bit like going back to Android five years ago.
But if you are outside the U.S. or in the U.S. and willing to import, you can get a fair phone with their own software, which is kind of closer to stock modern Google and works pretty well.
And, you know, they give you years of software updates. You can fix the phone easily yourself, get spare parts.
So that's a very different take on wanting a phone that's serviceable, repairable, but that's an option elsewhere as well.
Yeah, the DIY option.
I took an HMD skyline apart and not like really apart.
It's one of those like ultra repairable phones.
Yeah.
And replace the battery myself.
And I felt like I was unstoppable.
I was like, I want to take every phone apart.
I know.
It was so much fun dissembling this fair phone.
I surrounded by tiny screws and I only got two bits wrong when I put it back together.
And it still worked once I figured that out.
So anyone can do it if I can.
TJ, let me know what you bought, what you plan on buying.
And good luck to you.
So last kind of call in here, we have Sean with, I think, a conundrum that I hear a lot from people.
So we'll listen to Sean.
Allison, I am kind of torn.
I have been into Android ecosystem for a very long time.
Then I switched to iPhones because my company switched to iPhones.
Then I ended up getting my own personal iPhone.
So now I have two phones.
and I'm kind of debating, do I want to go back to Android?
You know, my whole family is now on iPhones, and so it's like that's really the struggle, right?
Is they all have iPhones.
So now we've got eye messaging.
Now we've got shared calendars.
Now we've got all these different pieces that kind of integrate to each other.
So when I used to have an Android, it was a huge problem because we couldn't have a shared family calendar.
We had to try to make it work between Google Calendar and Apple Calendar, and it just never great.
So did I just stick with Apple and it just keeps the ecosystem harmonized together where the whole family is on the same thing?
Or if I do switch, what are some of the apps that maybe I could use or should use to try to keep that same compatibility going across all of the family's devices?
Thanks a lot.
Have a good day.
A family divided.
This is always, when I see a couple and one of them has an Android, one of them has an iPhone, I am always.
always asking them this question. I'm like, how's that going for you? I feel like my like big answer
is like, how much do you want to keep the piece? And also generally, it has gotten better being a
mixed OS family these days than maybe it was, you know, five years ago. But do you have a go-to answer
on this, Tom, when people are grappling with us? I have no useful practical advice because
when I first started dating my current partner five years ago, she was using an iPhone,
and I basically kind of forced her to switch to an Android because she kept getting jealous
with the cameras on my phones and eventually switched, and it was like, oh, that's better.
Now we just think up and everything's easier.
So I haven't had to live that life of moving between them, at least not in the last few years.
I agree it's a lot better than it used to be.
If Sean's experience is from a few years ago and kind of comparing five to 10 years ago
that process to now it will definitely be better.
80 to 90% of the time, everything will just work and it'll be fine and it won't matter that
you're on an Android phone and your partner or your kids are on iPhones.
And there'll be that one time where some calendar bit goes a bit screwy or, you know,
the messaging app gets annoying or something like that.
And then you'll all be really irritated by it.
And how invested are you avoiding those sort of sporadic irritations is the question.
And it will be your fault.
It doesn't matter if the Apple products are not getting it right.
It doesn't matter.
It's your fault.
I have lived this in my own household.
Yeah, and I will say, like especially in the U.S., we don't tend to use the third-party messaging apps like you all do.
So having RCS support on iOS now has been huge.
When I'm on an Android phone now and I'm on a flight, I can still message.
my husband on his iPhone because we're just doing RCS over Wi-Fi and all that. So that has been a
really big, like help, I think, to the people in the mixed ecosystem situation. Something I will
add is that the very recent Pixel 10 phones come with Chi-2, which is a wireless charging standard,
but also has the magnets built in and it's basically mag-safe. So if your family is using
mag-safe accessories, they have things around the house that, you know, you would not normally be
able to plug into like a magnetic charger. You could look at the pixel 10 and you'd be able to
just like slide right into that ecosystem there. But yeah, I think that your point of like,
something is going to go a little sideways. You can, I certainly have been fine with calendars,
you know, switching between iPhone and Android, I think I've gotten, it takes a little bit of
fuzzling around, but you can get, you know, all the Google calendars you're supposed to see
on iPhone and vice versa. Something goes weird sometimes. And I don't know, you just got to own it.
If you're cool with that, then the world is your oyster on Android. So we have a bunch
more questions. We'll get into some emails, but we're going to take a really quick break.
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Complex and unprecedented, the Spanish authorities are calling it.
Antisembarco asymptomatikas.
Passengers who'd been stuck aboard the Hanta or maybe Hanta virus-stricken Dutch cruise ship
disembarked in the Canary Islands this weekend,
prompting the highest stakes game of where are they now since maybe COVID?
Some of the evacuees, American and French,
have since tested positive for the virus.
And yet public health officials seem remarkably calm.
We do have one individual who was,
taken to the biocontainment unit early, early this morning. And we assess that individual.
They are doing well. Possibly because this is not the one to freak out over. Today, Explain,
drops every weekday afternoon. Welcome back. We are going to get back into some more listener
questions, and we have some emails to read. My favorite thing, reading emails. But these are
delightful. So this one is from Izzy. And I'm going to kind of paraphrase.
is the best I can. She says, hi, I'm Izzy. I have a Samsung S24 plus and I own it outright.
Congratulations, Izzy. That is a big deal, actually. So she's rarely on social media, but does a lot of
texting for her main job. The main use case she's interested in, she calls herself a reader with a
capital R. I love this. Reads books and comics and has like 10 different apps for different kinds of
content to read. Reads two to three books a week and also says she doesn't care about AI until it
stops hallucinating or has a killer app or something. Amen to that. So the conundrum is because she owns
her phone, she's under no pressure to move, but she wants to make the reading experience better. Does she
look at a books device or a kind of premium reader? She says, while in e-reader is in
She's more of a one device type of girl.
So, yeah, this one is interesting because I know more people who definitely have a dedicated device for reading on the go, like a Kindle or like our favorite, our books, Palmas.
The really oddball one I'll throw out there, and I don't actually think because he should buy it.
I'm testing this TCL 60XE that has an E-ink-ish mode where it just brings the screen to monochrome.
You can do it in two ways where it really like is sort of a focus mode thing if you want to like pay attention to notifications less.
Or you can just kind of mimic an E-ink screen and just have access to like all the normal stuff on your phone.
I've been carrying it around as a kind of second device in my, I'm not doing anymore, but when I was trying to use a watch, like an LTE watch as my phone, I had this on me so I would have a screen to read something. And it was all right. It was like surprisingly kind of pleasant for that. Not a great phone overall. So I don't think that's the answer. Yeah, do you have any ideas here, Dom?
I think Izzy should maybe look more closely at the bookstall foldable.
It seems to suggest this as an option and then hesitate about the aspect ratio and the price,
which is understandable.
I mean, I would say, I said earlier when I have a bookstall foldable, I don't actually open them up that much, except for reading.
Reading is what I find them really great for.
The aspect ratio, when they're open, is kind of squareish, usually, or like a little bit portrait.
that makes them odd for watching video or playing games and that vision of open your phone up to watch a movie doesn't really work because you don't get a lot more space.
But open your phone up to read a book or even just reading an article on a website or something.
I always do that.
That's when I want to open them because it just feels like suddenly the screen is so much more spacious,
so much more comfortable to read on, and I much prefer that.
So I do think if reading is the use case, that maybe it sounds like an unnecessary expense to get this sort of one and a half thousand dollar phone,
to read ebooks on. But it is better, and I do think that would be a nice experience. I really think
it will feel like worlds better than reading on a slap phone, and definitely better than reading
on a flip phone, which is sort of the other option suggested there, which I don't think getting a
flip phone solves any of the problems here other than that flip phones are fun. And I love flip phones,
so I do often recommend them, but that doesn't necessarily seem like the right thing here. So I would
look at a bookstore one. They are expensive, but you know, you can look at a last gen model or something.
you know, we've just had the pixel 10 pro fold.
You can look at the 9 pro fold
and see if that means you can get it at a little better price
and that kind of thing.
I probably wouldn't look at the last gen Samsung right now
just because they made such a big jump with the Zvfold 7.
And so the Zvold 6 is maybe a bigger compromise
compared to the pixels where I think the 9 is really giving you a lot
of what you get with the 10.
I like to look at the 10, but I don't think you're losing too much with the 9
unless you really, really want the cheat two charging.
I read this question and I think, yeah, buy a big foldable.
It sounds like that's going to solve your problem.
Yeah.
The more I hear you argue for it, I'm like, yeah, that does make sense.
And given that, Izzy owns her S24 plus, when those trade-in deals come around,
Samsung will give you a lot of money off a foldable for your S-24 plus.
Very good point, yeah.
Yeah, keep an eye on those.
That will really take the sting out of the price because they are super expensive.
but yeah, I think it would be a lot of fun for that use case. And when you're done reading, you can just close it. And that feels great. So, all right. Issy? I'm sorry we, you are resigned to spending $1,500, but that's what we decided here in phone court, legally binding. All right. So next up, we have a question from Sam. And also going to kind of paraphrase us. So,
Sam had an iPhone 13 Pro, got sick of it, and then downgraded to the iPhone SE2 to hang on to that home button.
But is struggling with the common complaints of spending too much time on social media and wanting access to like texting, email, calling podcasts, all that stuff, but has a hard time kind of moderating the social media and.
social media and screen time. So Sam is looking into dumb phones and thought about getting a flip
phone or the light phone, but hesitated because they might not have enough of the functionality.
I spent some time with the Unaherts Jelly Star, which we've kind of touched on Uniherts a couple
times, but Android phones that really lean into the hardware of like minimalism. And it sounds like
it was too small and her eyes started hurting from reading the small text on the small screen.
She says, I mostly used text and email on it so it wasn't putting too much of a strain on my eyes,
but my one vice was reading the news on the tiny screen, and I think that's what's trained my eyes the most.
I am sorry to hear that.
So it switched back to the SE2, but is missing a tiny phone.
So, oh my gosh, Sam, you've been on a journey, a journey that brought you to you and
hurts and back. I'm so sad that we finally have someone who like did go out and get the small phone,
the smallest small phone, the one everyone says they want, and it made her eyes hurt. And now
she's having to find a bigger phone. Yeah, I know. Oh, no. Yeah, that's a real bummer. Yeah,
I own an iPhone 13 mini. I love it. I'm not parting with it until it's a security risk.
I don't think I'd recommend someone go buy one second hand at this point. Yeah, we're going to talk a
little bit more specifically about that, but there is the, you know, the battery life is not going to be
super great at this point. So the one suggestion I'll throw in here is that maybe the answer is
a cellular watch because this is an experiment I just ran, you know, trying to see how much I
could get away with doing on the watch as kind of a minimalist phone or like a phone replacement.
And I had a little bit of trouble, you know, getting everything done with a watch.
But it gets you a surprising amount of functionality.
You can play your podcast.
You can type messages to people and it's a little fiddly, but it's not the worst.
So I would throw that in as an option.
It sounds counterintuitive.
You're like more screens and more notifications like buzzing me.
Won't that be more distracting?
But I'm kind of a believer.
So that's the one I'll throw in there.
Dom, do you have an idea here for Sam?
I have a different suggestion, but it's kind of along the same spirit,
which would be looking at a foldable flip phone,
which also is adding an extra screen into the mix
and adding a smaller screen into the mix.
But it sounds like the balance, I think Sam is trying to strike here,
is a small phone she won't use too much
that will stop her from constant phone use.
But one that when they do use the phone,
phone won't hurt her eyes. And I guess a flip phone for me, like there's, you know, Samsung's
ad flip or motor razor gives you a little of that because you can have it shut and you can
control what notifications and what apps you can have run on the outer screen. And it can be this
sort of minimalist phone experience when it's closed. And you just, I definitely found my
general screen time always goes down when I'm using a flip phone. There's something about
the psychological barrier that the phone is closed
that makes me much less likely to open it while I'm watching TV
and mindlessly scrolls social media or something.
It doesn't matter that it only takes a second to open the phone.
It's not like it's a hardship,
but there's some imperceptible barrier that makes me more likely just leave it be
and my screen time overall definitely goes down.
But when you do have that moment where you're given,
you have the device and you want to scroll the news for hours like Sam does,
you have a normal size phone that you can open up
and it's not going to give eye strain from using it.
You know, there's enough screen space to bump the tech size off
if that would be helpful in this kind of case,
whereas the Jelly Star I think is just too small
to even make that really practical.
So for me, I think those kind of flip phones
give you a bit of the best of both worlds,
lowered screen time, but a real functional, useful phone screen
when you want to get to it.
Yeah, totally.
And I, that's what I love about a flip phone
is you can do so much.
much and Motorola is like slightly better about letting you just do whatever the hell you want on
the cover screen. You have to jump through a couple of hoops on a Samsung phone, but you can
get there. But yeah, I run like apps that are by no means meant to be run on a screen that
small and you can get away with stuff like checking, like bus arrival times or glancing at
Google Maps and being like, okay, that's my next move. So that would be a super fun.
option. I hate to be like, I don't know, a mom, but I think we probably all need to get better
about focus modes. Like, you know, they're not perfect. But I think there's a lot I know I could
be doing to kind of like tailor what notifications are allowed to bother me at what time.
And that would help me kind of cut down on the, oh, I was checking my email and all of a sudden I've
been on Instagram for an hour or whatever. So that's like the less fun answer, but yeah, buy a
flip phone. That is part of it. Yeah. I mean, I think you and I have both given kind of the same
answer in a way. It's have a real phone maybe, but have some other smaller screen that you can
control and limit and make that the screen you use 80% of the time while knowing, you know,
there is a phone there when you really, really need it. And whether that smaller screen is on your
wrist or on the outside of the phone, it's kind of getting the same end result, right?
Yeah.
Little screen on a big phone is the way to go, I think.
All right.
Good luck with your flip phone.
Sam.
Next we have message from Alina.
And she says, currently I'm rocking a Pixel 6A running Graphene OS, but it was already
used when I bought it.
The screen glass is broken.
It has 128 gigabytes of storage.
and the touch gestures don't always work, probably due to the broken glass.
Okay, I think it's time for a new phone, Alian.
You know, she's concerned about a splash of water, destroying the OLED, and is looking
for a relatively cheap phone that meets her needs.
She says she wants to keep it to $500 or under.
You know, it has some questions about the Apple ecosystem, the iPhone mini comes up again
as a thought here. She says, I have all my music as MP3s and use a music player that plays
locally stored music, which is 40 gigabytes of stuff, but like way to go, is intrigued by
folding phones and a flip phone potentially. I think the boring answer is a pixel 9A.
And I do think there's a fun answer here. But I mean, the pixel 9A fits the price bracket
we'll get seven years of OS updates, so you don't have to worry about that.
It does mean you are embracing the Google apps and the Google experience.
So if you would like to get away from that, a pixel phone is not going to be the way to go.
But I think really for it's just my go-to for I want the most durable, the most long-lasting
phone I can get for the least amount of money.
it's kind of that like piece of mind phone to me.
Like I make my parents buy a pixel A series when it's their time.
Dom, do you have any other ideas or something more fun than my boring pixel suggestion?
I default to the exact same boring answer.
I think this is also, A, fits a lot of what Alina says.
She wants not everything but a lot.
B, for me, the moment anyone says around 500 bucks, my brain is.
just fills in pixel 9a.
It's a very good default option to be looking at around that price.
I might throw in a second shout out to the Fairphone, which I think is very slightly outside
of this budget.
I think it's 550 euros.
And Alina says she's in Germany, so I hope that's a relevant number for her.
But she mentions not wanting too much of the Google side.
You can get the version running EOS.
You can get that in Europe as well.
So that's completely degougled as an option.
She mentions a long, long-time support and durability.
I think it's eight years of OS updates.
Fairfone gives you.
It's something definitely in that region,
so you're getting it for a long time.
It's around the right price.
She says she doesn't seem to have
too super demanding kind of performance requirements from it.
So a fair phone might be a nice option
just for meeting kind of that side of the demand.
And it really is going to give you that longevity.
And if you do break the screen again,
you can just replace it yourself.
Hey, it can be done.
No. Yeah, I've put that to the test.
All right. Well, I love that she's in Germany and therefore has more than like two options for phones.
But yeah, there's your safe answer and then the slightly more daring one. But I think two good options there.
So the last question I want to get to is the iPhone mini question. And I want to say this is a representative question.
I got so many iPhone mini owners reaching out to me.
People with the iPhone Mini 12 or 13,
I sort of brought this upon us because I prompted it
and I own an iPhone 13 Mini.
But I think a lot of people are at that point with these phones
where they're seeing like the performance is slowing down.
The battery life wasn't ever great to begin with
and is getting steadily worse.
So this is forever.
one who wrote in with the iPhone mini question. And, okay, get ready for this question because it
goes on a journey. This is from Zoe. She says, I am the iPhone 12 mini owner. I absolutely
love this phone and would take it to my grave if I could. Same. It's the only phone since iPhone 5,
5S, an original S, oh my God, iPhone 5 is such a banger that I can comfortably use one-handed. And the only one that
fits in the infuriatingly tiny pockets found in most women's clothing. Yes. Oh my God. I so feel this.
She says last year, it flew out of my pocket on a roller coaster and was smashed to oblivion.
This is heartbreaking. Unfortunately, my replacement 12 mini is now showing its age. So she's looking for
the upgrade path and it's considered a used iPhone 13 mini, but thinks that'll probably put her
back in the same position. The idea of something that folds down to a pocket-friendly size is very
appealing, but she says she's embedded in the Apple ecosystem, so we'll ideally stick with iPhone
unless there's a super compelling Android alternative. She ends this with, finally, if there's
no obvious alternative, are my tiny hands doomed to rely on pop sockets forever? Oh my gosh,
Zoe, this is extremely relatable. This is so tough. I just want to say it's probably time to embrace,
like, get the smallest iPhone that exists now, which would be like just a regular iPhone 16.
But I don't know. Do you have any other ideas for Zoe and all the other suffering iPhone mini owners?
Yeah, I feel like we're sort of ending here with another of these sad questions where we just can't give people the answer they
want to hear. There is no, there is no phone that solves this problem. There is no magical
Android alternative that fits the bill by the iPhone 16. It's, like you say, it's the smallest
iPhone you're going to get. It's the closest you're going to get to that experience.
The Android alternatives, like the S-25 or the Pixel 10, are basically the same size as an iPhone
16. So if you prefer iOS, you should stick with that. You're not getting a big benefit by
jumping to Android. And the only reason for someone in Zoe's position to jump to Android is a
flip phone. If that's a temptation, I think, you know, we've kind of mentioned them a few times.
I think they are getting really good now. I'm a big fan of them. I think they don't have to be
that expensive. You look like the Motorola razor, the base razor models. They're very affordable
for what they are well below a grand and still really solid phones. You do get that compact size.
They are big when they open up, though. I think people don't always realize that. They're small.
when they're shut, they're small in your pocket, they're lightweight,
but they actually have bigger screens than, say, an iPhone 16
to pick that as the point of reference.
So when it's fully open, it's not going to feel like a small, compact phone.
It might actually feel like a really big phone to you when you open the flip phone up.
And the last thing I just says, don't wait for the foldable iPhone.
We don't know what that will be.
We don't know if it will be a flip or a book style.
It's not going to be this year.
It might be next year.
It might not be next year.
It's not worth waiting on for.
Yeah, I would say,
say hold out, I think if you can to the, you know, we're so close to iPhone 17 season. And there's
rumors of like a slimmer iPhone. We're doing slim phones this year. The air might help if that
materializes the iPhone 17 air. I mean, it would be lighter if the weight is a big part of the
concern, right? It doesn't sound like it's going to be smaller in terms of screen size. Like we've seen with
the Samsung, you know, the version of a thin phone, the edge is...
Yeah.
It's not small, it's just thinner and lighter.
Yes.
And I think that's the way Apple's going as well.
So if weight is your problem, I know some people love small phones, and it's a weight thing.
I've spoken to people with wrist tissues and arthritis, and for them, it's not about
screen size, it's about phone weight.
And if that's you, then hold out the iPhone 17 or whatever it is might solve that problem.
I don't know.
But if it's that little screen you like and the sort of easy one-hand.
added use, then wait for the iPhone 17 just because it'll make the 16 cheaper.
Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. At this point, this is sort of like a moratorium on buying new iPhones
sort of starts right now where it's like, you might as well just wait and see, you know,
they'll take $100 off the price of iPhone 16. I use the Galaxy Edge a bunch, which is,
you know, in theory could be like what a potential iPhone 17 error would be.
being thinner and lighter is, like, makes it feel different. It was very nice. It did not feel like a small phone because it has a big screen. In the pocket thing especially, like, it's still a big phone. It's still like at the capacity for my like little pouch bags that I'm bringing to the playground. It will fit into an evening clutch, which I do not carry very often. But that was.
a data point. But yeah, I think it is popsockets forever, Zoe. I'm sorry. Our colleague,
Sean Hollister, I think, went through the exact same path that she's kind of mentioning. He had the
iPhone mini, ditched it for the, I think he got a Samsung flip phone and had that for about a year
and was not happy with it. I think, you know, the battery life was probably equivalent to the
mini, you know, all things considered. And it doesn't, like, it folds down into a square,
but it's a thick square. So it doesn't fit in a pocket the same way. Like, I can get the iPhone
13 mini into my front jeans pocket, and it's not ridiculous. Flip phones are, they're still a little
bulkier. And like you mentioned, when you open it, it is a big phone and you are still doing
the big phone, you know, kind of juggle of trying to reach something in the corner of the screen.
So yeah, I think my general advice for the iPhone mini owners is like, first of all, don't download beta software like I did because that has been a journey.
But, you know, the things you can try are like get the battery replaced.
I don't know if this is a real thing, but a suggestion I saw just for like older phones in general would be to back it up and do a factory reset.
And that might help performance a little bit.
It's like, I haven't tried it myself.
It seems, you know, unplug it, plug it back in kind of concept.
It's got that energy to it, yeah.
I remember that working a lot on Windows PCs back in the day.
I don't know how applicable it is to a phone these days, but it might help, yeah.
Right.
It's something to try.
It's like a ritual.
You know, you can light some candles to.
It feels like you're cleansing the phone somehow, getting rid of it.
all that junk you've filled up. So give it a go. It's like a juice cleanse for your phone. Yeah. Detox.
Yeah. I thought, I think about this a lot and it sort of just turns into a dance of like,
when do you feel like it's time to let go? When are you so annoyed with the battery life? It's just
not serving you anymore. I don't use my mini that much because I'm bouncing around from phone to phone.
But I did have my sim in it this past a few weeks.
And it is really slowing down.
And the battery life is kind of crap.
So, yeah, it might be time.
I don't know.
I'm going to hold on to mind.
But I think I give, if you're looking for, like, blanket permission to let go of your iPhone mini, I will offer that.
Yeah.
There's nothing to hold out for.
There's nothing on the horizon that will solve this problem.
Don't keep going thinking a year from now, the magical phone will arrive that fixes this.
Like, it's not coming.
So just make your peace with it and, you know, enjoy the time you've got left and figure out what the next step is.
This is so sad.
It's like, oh, my gosh.
It's okay.
Yes, yes.
Maybe we'll have a funeral.
Maybe we can have, like, sold some kind of service where people can, like,
could bring their minis and we'll just let them rest. They've done a lot. They've done probably more
than their little batteries and processors should have. So we'll let them go. Well, that's like a
super downer to end on, but that's what we have. Thank you, everyone who wrote in and called in. I listened
to all of your messages and read all of your messages, and it was so fun. It's so nice to
you know, no, you're not alone. And we're all going through this trying to to figure out our next
move. And hopefully we helped some people and didn't depress too many iPhone mini owners.
I feel we can ask for. Yeah. But thank you for joining me, Tom. No, of course. Thank you for
having me. All right. That's it for the Verge cast today. To read more about today's topics,
check out the show notes or go to theverge.com. As always, if you have thoughts,
questions, feelings. You can always email us at Vergecast at the verge.com or keep calling the hotline,
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And if you like what we do here, consider buying a paid subscription. The show is produced by Eric Gomez,
Brandon Kiefer, Travis Larcuk, and Andrew Marino. The Verge cast is a Verge production and part of the
Fox Media Podcast Network.
Jake Castranakis and the team will be here Friday to talk about the news from the week,
and I'll be back next Tuesday.
Thanks for listening.
