Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast - Samsung's Stacked Unpacked Event and the Start of Smartphone Season
Episode Date: August 12, 2022Marques, Andrew, and David discuss the Samsung Flip4 and Fold4, the Galaxy Watch5 Pro, and assess their beginning of the year predictions. Catch our first impressions of the Samsung Flip4, Fold4, and... Galaxy Watch5 Pro here! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuWF9G6SSi0 Twitters: https://twitter.com/wvfrm https://twitter.com/mkbhd https://twitter.com/andymanganelli https://twitter.com/DurvidImel https://twitter.com/adamlukas17 https://twitter.com/EllisRovin Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wvfrmpodcast/ Shop the merch: https://shop.mkbhd.com Join the Discord: https://discord.gg/mkbhd Music by 20syl: https://bit.ly/2S53xlC Waveform is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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you know it. What's going on people of the internet? Welcome back to another episode of the waveform podcast. We're your hosts. I'm Marques. I'm Andrew and I'm David. And today
we're going to start it off by unpacking Samsung's packed unpacked event 2022. Thank you for the pun
David. I didn't think I'd get through that without breaking down,
but I got through it.
I'm impressed.
It's the beginning of our busy season two though.
So that's sort of how we think about
these Samsung announcements,
but we'll talk through them.
There's some good phones and a watch or two watches.
And then we're gonna sort of revisit
the beginning of our year,
in which we made a bunch of predictions
about how the smartphone year might go and see how accurate we think we were. Maybe we're still
on track. Maybe some of it's been thrown off. I will just throw a spoiler in here. I already have
a compact smartphone of the year. Easy front runner. You guys probably already know what that
is. But without any further ado, let's just start with the event. Let's start with Unpacked.
Kind of we're saying the word packed is what we're going to use
because we did get a bunch of stuff.
There were two phones.
Two phones.
Two watches and a pair of headphones.
Where should we start?
I guess we start on the phones,
unless people want to wait until the end.
They have the best for last.
I think the phones.
I mean, the phones are actually pretty simple.
Yeah.
So let's just do the phones.
Okay.
Two phones, Flip 4 and Fold 4.
My summary is Flip 4 and Fold 4,
which both start at the same price as last year's model,
are incremental refinement type upgrades
from the Flip 3 and Fold 3.
I think the biggest improvement to the Flip is going to be battery life.
We have yet to test these, so this is just my prediction, but it's getting a Snapdragon
8 Plus Gen 1, and it's going from a 3400 to a 3700 milliampere battery.
So for a small phone, either way, it's getting a bump to 3700.
So it should be a nice usability improvement.
I've used other phones with Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1s
and they've had pretty great efficiency.
So I'm looking forward to testing that.
And then the biggest improvement,
or at least change with the Fold 4,
to me seems to be, I mean, it's a lot of minor things.
It's three millimeters wider on the front cover screen.
It's got some slightly thinner bezels on the inside.
It also has a Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 and the same size battery as last year,
but it also has a second generation under display selfie camera.
And that camera to me, we actually have another phone in the studio
that has the second generation under display selfie camera.
And we haven't made a video about it yet, but we've tested it.
And the amount of times you actually notice the camera under the screen is way less
it looks much better there isn't any pixelation when you drag things over the display
it looks really good but the pictures that come out of it uh look the same at best sometimes worse
do you remember when we put the uh i think it was the one plus seven pro underwater with the pop-up selfie camera and it came out, I feel like it's hazed over like,
like that before the phone totally broke. It kind of is what it looks like. Yeah.
It sort of has like a de-haze effect that applies afterwards and you can see it go from
being very hazy to processing and then applying. Yeah, it's funny how dramatic it is.
You can see it happen in the impressions video.
We have a clip of it and it like snaps into being processed.
Yeah.
Yeah, I don't know.
Video calls are going to be kind of hazy.
I'm very concerned about how video calls will look on that phone.
Yeah.
Which is funny because that's the phone you want to do video calls on
and you want to take a conference call
and like set it up like a little mini laptop and all that stuff.
So yeah, that's the phones. I don't know. Do you guys have any thoughts on
them being incremental upgrades? It seems like though they did like one kind of cool feature for
both of them, which was they made the flip for the front screen more customizable. Right. And I think
like the biggest increment from flip one to flip two was like actually making that front screen
usable and having some things in
it so that feels kind of cool and then in terms of the fold four like you said it's very incremental
it seems much more polished and and the form factor feels better that outside like screen
but then also this is the first one shipping with 12l android 12l which is like the uh android for
larger screens for fold foldables, yeah.
Yeah, and so you have like dock on the bottom,
which there's a lot of new,
or there should be a lot of new features
to make that inside screen feel hopefully much smoother.
I think the dock's pretty sweet.
The dock looks really cool.
Like it makes total sense.
Yeah, it just lives at the bottom
and just has whatever recent apps you've used
and whatever favorite apps you want to keep down there.
And then you just just swap back and forth
between apps super fast. I wonder if I
switch to navigation gestures, how that will work.
Because when I used it in the impressions
event, it was with the button
navigation. So they put the buttons over to the
side and then the dock was in the middle.
But I typically immediately switch Samsung phones
and every phone to gesture navigation.
So if that's at the bottom,
then where does the dock go? Like right above
that? Probably underneath it.
You're saying that... Because you'd have to swipe
anyway, so if you're swiping from the very
bottom versus like tapping on the dock,
I feel like it would be able to... Well, you're saying if you added
the old three-bar navigation, right?
It currently has that.
It has it? Really?
So by default, three-bar navigation, they put the
three buttons all the way in the corner.
Oh.
And they put the dock in the middle of the bottom.
My thought is, isn't the middle of the bottom usually where you swipe up to do go home and multitask?
So if I try to switch to gesture navigation, where does the dock go?
Sounds like it'll just sit right on top.
That's just my guess.
What did the Fold 3 do?
It still had gesture navigation, right?
Yes, but it didn't have that dock, I guess.
It almost sounds like
they brought back the three buttons
onto the dock.
I can only assume it still has gesture and navigation
and it's just also going to be there.
I mean, that's the first thing I'm going to try.
Yeah.
I'm really interested in kind of holding the Fold 4
and comparing it to the feeling
of the Fold 3 because of the fact that they changed the aspect ratio slightly.
Like both phones have a 6.2 inch display on the front.
But I'm imagining that the slightly wider phone is going to feel more like a regular phone.
I think that a lot of reasons that people really liked the Oppo Find N or maybe like some of the huawei phones is because the aspect ratio feels more like you're holding a regular phone and the folds have
always felt like a candy bar especially the original one but over the years like they covered
the screen the front with a screen but it's still so narrow so even the slight change where they
like shrunk it slightly and then moved that height to the side
so that it has the same width and not width.
Like pixel density?
Yeah, it's the same 6.2 inches diagonally.
Okay.
It's just a very slightly different aspect.
I do think-
It's really, really subtle.
It's very subtle when you look at it,
but I agree when you hold it,
I'm sure it's going to be far different
because you talk about the
oppo find n people liked it more they thought this was too tall then think about also the duo
feels way too thick like yeah there's something about we're used to holding a phone and the
closer we can get to that normal phone normal phone and so you add that little change with
end height and you also add this smaller uh hinge now it it looks so much more like when you look next
to them it's easy to look online and say like that's so much little of a difference but in hand
i bet it feels totally different so i only had the phone for like an hour for my impressions and i
didn't get to hold it next to the old phone but in hand as i just looked at it it looked like a very
tall rectangle like the old ones usually do.
But that is one thing you can say about Samsung's like fold upgrades year over year is some things stay the same.
The camera systems are similar usually every year.
The battery is the same from last year.
But the one thing that they always do is they make the outside screen a little bit better to use as your normal phone so you don't have to open it.
And that's sort of the big advantage of the fold over the flip is you could just use it like a normal phone and never even open it and you're fine
uh but yeah i think just just a small subtle i think the find n is a much bigger difference
i think that's a pretty dramatic relatively speaking difference in aspect ratio versus this
three millimeter wider versus the old fold it's stepping closer it's would would you prefer
find n over from what you held with the fold for it's a good question they're very similar i think
i would prefer the fold for slightly because i like the inside screen better i thought the inside
screen of the find n was not big enough if you, okay, when you unfolded it, okay.
I think it's the question of like,
do you want a big phone or do you want a small phone?
It's sort of the same idea
because when the Find N is closed,
it is pretty small.
Yeah, it almost looks like a Zen phone size.
The Fold and the Fold Pro Max.
Yeah.
Samsung, any ideas, please?
Yeah.
Two prices on both of these.
We have $1,000.
They basically didn't change, right?
Same price.
Same price as this last time.
The battery didn't change on the Fold 4.
Like, it really is refinement, like you said.
It's very rare that in smartphones we get phones that year over year look almost exactly the same.
Every single year they're at least slightly different.
Samsung has slowly transformed their lineup.
least slightly different samsung has slowly transformed their their lineup like yeah in samsung world i feel like it's pretty common for them to just change things all the time
like we're used to like apple going yeah that this is the s year it's gonna look the same you just
have to just see the s badge on the back but yeah in samsung world that's a little less common
so whether it's changing materials on the back this one looks like the same satin as last
year, or if it's changing camera layouts or whatever it is, they didn't really do too much
of that this year. They're just like, yeah, settling in. Yeah. I definitely do it more than
other manufacturers. Like the S20 to 21 to 22 all look more similar than most other phone
manufacturers do. But they always change something about about it I think like for their regular
phones they need to like have something a little different to cause a little more hype where this
is still a folding phone with an under display fingerprint or a selfie camera it's like it's
pretty wow factor already so they don't have to do as much but like the s21 looked so good and
then the s22 ultra they're like let's just screw it up a little bit.
So it looks different.
They're like,
they do change it,
but they don't change it.
It's confusing.
But I like that they're keeping this there.
I like that they're refining this because this is,
this is a new form factor that they have to refine because it hasn't quite.
Yeah.
This is,
I've,
I've been thinking about like,
if this is a whole video that I want to make or not, sort of what's happened like the state of foldables basically because we've
we had the first generation where we got oh this is a cool idea it folds in half okay now what are
they going to do better and the first to second generation jump was okay we get to see what we've
learned about these foldables and what we actually want to make better and for the fold it was like
we made the outside screen way bigger so you can use it more as a regular phone.
We learned all these things about durability. So we got all these big changes. We've got generation
three, smaller changes, generation four, even smaller changes. And now we're just sort of like
set on like what a galaxy fold is. Same thing with the the flip like we had a tiny screen and then we
want like more information on the outside screen so that got bigger and then the next one was
pretty close was there no screen on the first it was very small it was really small it was like it
showed you like the time yeah it showed you the time and it could show you little notification
badges okay so it's like dot pixel or whatever it was an actual it was a screen it was it wasn't very useful
and then immediately samsung and everybody using them realized oh we still want to be able to just
glance at the phone like when my phone buzzes and i look at the phone and i just don't know
what's going on and i have to open it okay we want a little bit more functionality on the outside so
we got a bigger screen on the outside yeah and now samsung's settled in yeah like it just looks
the way it looks and then you look at the rest of the foldables out there and they're kind of settling
into the same form factors. Yeah. And I just wonder what that says about where we are at
foldables. Is it like we, we want, we want things to fold in half and be practical, but are we out
of ideas already? What didn't we just see all these trifold concept phones and all these other
interesting ideas
that might not have a spot yet,
but may be doable in the future?
I don't know.
But it seems like we have like two
or maybe three total versions of a folding phone
that you could buy.
I think with how many other companies
are seeing coming out with them,
like Razer just announced they're redoing,
they're doing their Razer 3, right?
Yeah, the Razer 3.
Then was it Huawei?
No, Xiaomi just released their doing one, I believe.
It's the Mi Fold 2.
Okay, like we're seeing a lot of other companies doing these.
Okay, you know what's funny about those two phones you just mentioned?
They're the same.
Yeah, they're the same.
The Razer 3.
The Razer is a flip.
Remember the Razer looked like kind of different.
Like it had this sort of retro vibes and it looked like that old Moto phone we remember from a long time ago.
The Razr 3, they've gone, hey, okay, turns out you want a big screen and you want it to be flattened up.
Here's a Flip 3.
Yeah, it looks way more like a Flip 3.
Like when it's opened.
I'll pull it up for you, Andrew.
I think I looked at it earlier.
Yeah, it's funny because when it's opened, it almost looks like...
The back still looks more like a razor,
but that could almost be like just a colorway or a skin.
Yeah.
And then you look at the inside and it looks like a wider flip.
Yeah, yeah, it does.
Which at least it's wider, I guess.
It's funny.
It definitely is like ditching the nostalgia aspect of the razor
with that like slim fur.
Yeah, the really slim top part that is very
iconic. Which is fun. I think everyone's given
they realized the nostalgia wasn't
selling that thing correctly. Yeah, I'm guessing it didn't sell
super well. But the other one too,
the Xiaomi Fold 2,
the Mix Fold 2,
also looks very similar
to a Fold, just thinner.
Yeah, I think the, but then there is
the like XS,
the Huawei Mate XS, XS2,
which is different style.
And I think my argument
is that one might die.
Yeah.
If I were to pick one to die,
it would be that.
Well, sorry.
If I were to guess one would die,
it would be that.
I'm not picking it to die.
You can always pick one.
No, that's the one
where you fold it around
the outside.
It would be the most fun to break.
It's the easiest to break.
It's the easiest to scratch.
Yeah.
Scary.
I think it'd be interesting, like,
think back to when this first Samsung Fold came out.
Like, we were all pretty, well, okay.
Let's say the 1.5 Samsung Fold came out.
Sure, oh yeah.
Like, when that came out, what, three years ago now?
Four?
Did you think at this point, like we would be this far along,
like we would only be, we would be refining at this point.
We wouldn't still be,
or did you think we would still be in this very prototype-y feeling?
Like no chance you ever see this.
Because I've seen a couple of Folds in the wild.
Like they're out there.
They're out there.
I wouldn't have guessed that quickly.
I think Samsung, because they're the only one like in the u.s making foldable phones besides like the
motorola razor um which they didn't make a three of this year i think it's coming out next year in
the u.s so nothing even shipped in 2022 from china only it's china only for a bit it'll come out in
the u.s eventually i think samsung is like
way way way ahead of everybody else at this point and i see folds and flips more flips than folds
but i i saw like a 65 year old dude with a fold in my cafe the other day and i was like nice you
rock sick but at this point they're like four years ahead so i think that most companies look at the entire landscape with a safety measure in mind and it's clear that the small that becomes big
idea is a safe idea at this point you can either do really small that becomes big or regular that
becomes bigger and those have proven themselves and nobody else wants to be like the trifold one
that has no idea if anyone's
going to buy it. Yeah. I think the two basic concepts are small that becomes big or big that
becomes small. So like small that becomes big is you're using a small phone, but you want this
crazy tablet thing in your pocket. That's the fold. And the other idea is you have a normal phone
or like a sort of a big phone and you want it to be smaller in your pocket when you put it away and that's the flip idea yeah um i think we're still it's the jury's still out on if we're
gonna see like a pixel fold yeah or an apple folding phone or someone else might be jumping
in eventually someday but to your question about like you know once we saw the first gen how long
do we think it would be till it stagnated maybe i also look at the other big
like phone form factors like i think four generations in is when we got a nice holding
point when you look at galaxy s1 2 3 and then 4 galaxy s4 was like oh the identity is set it's a
smooth android phone with samsung software and an oled display and like flagship spec and like iphone 4 was like
square edges home button small screen ios phone like you got that identity with iphone 4
and then it was pixel 4 i'm just kidding i don't know i'm just kidding not a very strong legacy
google had a really strong identity with pixel up until the 6. Actually, until the 5. You mean Nexus?
Well, yeah, it'd be kind of weird because
especially the Pixel 2 through 4
felt like a cohesive
family. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But then it changed. When it got to the 5,
they were like, we're going to make it cheap, and
it's just going to be plastic, and then the 6
is like, hello, I'm here.
Good morning. How are you doing?
Yeah. Yeah. It just looks like an alien or
whatever interesting yeah we could right i think yeah full you know four generations in we even
we know what we have yeah but i think there could be some stuff on the horizon that's way more
interesting i really want to see a company come out and just make something that none of us are
even thinking of like that we haven't even thought of before. I yell. Well, that's the problem is that they,
they like prototype things and they get people excited and they're just like,
and this is why we scrapped it.
And I'm just like,
okay,
but I just want to use it.
I mean,
that's what there was like Vivo for a while that felt like they were the ones
doing that with like the fingerprint scanner and everything.
And they,
they walked so everyone else could run.
Vivo has done that for a lot of stuff.
Yeah.
They always felt,
they felt like the prototype
company for like a while. However,
I did go to China for a Vivo event
where they had no buttons or ports on a phone
and I'm just like, please don't do this.
Stop Vivo. You can stop now.
Whatever you're doing there, please stop.
Yeah. I do
think I'm excited for someone to come out with something
we've never seen before, but I'm kind
of excited we're hitting a stagnant point because that means they're doing a good job on something
already and that it's hitting a stride probably and they're like okay we don't need to make
drastic changes on this because it's working yeah um i think the biggest thing next will be
starting to get the price down because eighteen hundred dollars that's what i was saying okay
that's what i was hoping would be the thing. Because remember when the Flip finally got to $999
and we're like, oh, what's going to happen is
we're going to have these folding phones
and they might not get like dramatically better,
but the price will slowly get down
so that it's alongside all the other phones you can buy
and you can just pick the one that folds
instead of the one that doesn't fold.
And $999 is like the very highest end of that.
There's lots of really good phones for $999, but the fold is still $1799.
Yeah. Way too much.
Which in the US, you know, people get a contract and they'll pay $35 a month or whatever it is,
but it's so much money compared to what you could get for $1799. You could get two of the best
phones. I think the reason that I see flips a lot is imagine you walk into a carrier store
and there are multiple flagships
that are all $999
and you're a regular person.
And one of them folds in half.
That's like cool for everybody, right?
It's cool for everyone and it's still got
flagship specs. Do you think it feels risky
if you go into a flagship store
and you're like, oh, there's a $999 iPhone.
Oh, there's a $999 Pixel. There's a 999 iPhone. Oh, there's a 999 Pixel.
There's a 999, you know, S22.
And then there's a folding one.
Maybe it did for the first two generations, but I feel like I've seen a lot of flip threes.
And maybe it's just because enough time has gone by where people have gotten used to seeing them in the carrier store.
I think there's also a lot of people who just don't use iPhone and Samsung's generally that default.
So they're like, I want a Samsung.
I'm choosing between two Samsung.
This one folds.
Yeah.
Like a Galaxy S21 plus or a folding Galaxy S21 plus.
I'll take the folding.
I'll take the folding one.
Cool.
Yeah.
And your friends are always like,
wow,
that's interesting.
True.
Talking point.
Talking point.
Don't underestimate the value of the talking point.
It's like the Rivian yesterday.
Dude,
we'll talk about that eventually,
but I'll,
I'll say it now. I said it in the video, actually. I have never, we're using this Rivian truck, right?
I've never in any of the cars we've tested had more people like wave me down, ask me about the
thing in the McLarens, in the supercars, in the other trucks, in the electric stuff we've tested.
the mclarens in the in the supercars and the other trucks and the electric stuff we've tested none have come close to the rivian the rivian is the most attention-grabbing vehicle i've ever
driven by a lot yeah i'd ask about the rimac but we weren't a lot of the parking lot but even the
rimac kind of just looks like an r8 from if you squint well it's just really it's like a rc car
the height of it yeah it's like a little sports car i guess if you pulled up in a like a RC car. It's the height of it. Yeah, it's like a little sports car. I guess if you pulled up in a grocery store parking lot,
people would be like, what is that noise it's making?
What are you putting in there?
What is happening?
It's really hitting the car.
But it is definitely, yeah, the Rimac's gone crazy.
But we'll talk about it another day.
I want to also just mention the recyclable materials.
Yes.
Because that is, it's a good note.
And it's sort of a question mark in the way it's
being presented versus the actual facts because i haven't dug into it but basically the way samsung
presents it is they are taking fishing nets out of the ocean and using that plastic in the plastics
in the phone cool great keep doing that please and inspire others to do that because i hate fishing
nets do you know we were talking about. I think the best green thing that
Samsung does is have like one of the best
trade-in programs ever.
That's also really good. I really, really
appreciate that. You have
really, really good trade-in deals.
It feels like you can almost get a new
phone for free at this point.
I think Samsung's like, please trade it in so your battery
doesn't start swelling and we realize that.
Okay, maybe.
Get the old Samsungs out the streets. I retract Please trade it in so your battery doesn't start swelling and we realize that... Okay, maybe, yeah. That's true.
Get the old Samsungs out the streets.
All right.
Every Samsung phone.
I retract everything I just said.
No, it's good.
It's a good thing.
I don't want grenades in our closets.
All right, let's go to trivia before we get sued.
It's real.
You know we have the smartphone closet.
Honestly, who else just tweeted recently
they had Samsung phones?
Arun, right?
I thought Saf may have.
Saf or Aroon or both
probably just if you keep a samsung phone long enough that the odds are much higher with a samsung
phone i go find it swollen especially during the summer i remember uh i had a studio with michael
fisher and david kogan like a couple years ago we all the studio together and there's a lot of old
phones in there there was a lot of samsung phones there. And I went in during a summer day one time
and Michael had this like rack of phones
and it was like a Note 5 and a Note 8
and a S20 or something.
And it was only the Samsung phones
that literally the batteries were popping out.
Well, it's crazy.
I don't know.
It was bad.
It's only Samsung phones.
Yeah.
Well, anyway.
Recycle your phones, folks. That's how you get ahead of phones. Yeah. Well, anyway, recycle your phones,
folks.
That's how you get out,
get ahead of that.
Yeah.
Uh,
we're going to talk about the watch and the watch pro after the break.
But before we get there,
let's get to trivia.
Trivia.
Oh,
I forgot to record.
Oh, wow. oh I forgot to record oh wow alright it's time
for trivia Adam
is gone this week it's just me
which means hard questions
only nobody to
rain Ellis in on these yeah exactly
no one to check me alright first
question who owns arm to rain Ellis in on these. Yeah, exactly. No one to check me. All right. First question.
Who owns Arm?
And it's not a person.
Okay, I was going to say it's a company.
Who owns Arm?
Okay.
Wait.
Oh, yeah, I know this.
What company owns Arm?
Ha.
All right.
Ha.
Ha.
And we're also doing
our point system
when we come back
is David has points, but he hasn't been on as many
episodes of Trivia, so we're doing points per game.
Oh. We're still working on
a lot of things. Maybe. Yeah. Theoretically.
I have
how many points David has written in front of me.
I think it's tied with me. I don't have
how many games we've played written in front of me.
Oh. Well, it's only
one, I think. Or no, two.
Is it two? It's like two and a half. Since we reset. Andrew in front of me. Well, it's only one, I think. Or no, two. Is it two?
It's like two and a half. Since we reset.
We'll figure this all out.
I don't know.
Through the magic of video editing,
we'll figure this all out later.
Which I'm editing, so I guess I'll figure it out later.
Yeah, we'll be
back after the break.
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You know what's great about
ambition? You can't see it.
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Okay, welcome back. So Samsung Unpacked is more than just the phones, of course. I actually low
key think that the things that weren't the phones were the most interesting announcements. So we got
the two phones out the way. What we also had was the Samsung headphones, which were,
I'll just say they were the new Samsung Buds Pro, active noise cancellation, slightly new design,
much better quality focus. I haven't gotten a chance to handle them or listen to them,
so we just have to fully wait until we get to use them. But we also got two new watches,
Watch 5 and Watch 5 Pro.
Galaxy Watch 5, Galaxy Watch 5 Pro.
This is interesting to me for a lot of reasons.
You've been testing,
you've been using one of the Galaxy watches, right?
So funny, funny story.
I have the Watch 4 right here,
the regular Watch 4, not the Watch 4 Classic.
I've been using it for like four or five months
and we were like,
I wrote a script for a bit rate for the studio channel and we were
shooting like Yaddo
and I were setting it up and
David like messaged me on Slack like hey
we're in the briefing right now they're announcing the watch
five and I was like
okay I guess we won't
do this yeah it's the life of a reviewer
so it will we will be looking at that
I'm very excited though because I've been using this watch
a lot and I really really, really like it.
I have two main gripes with it.
One is a terrible bug with it right now,
where if it loses connection with your phone,
you have to reset the entire watch and lose all of your data
to reset it back in, unless you did a backup.
But I have it right now.
I can show you on my phone if I go to...
If it loses connection as if you leave the house without your watch?
If it like somehow the Bluetooth connection has to be like reconnected, essentially.
I can go away from it and come back, but if it ever like blips in that...
And this is something...
There's a Reddit thread I found that's nine months old and people still to this week
are commenting like
I just had this problem
how do I fix it
that sounds
like a big problem
more like a lack
of a feature
than a bug
yeah so if I go
into my Galaxy wearable
right now
looking for devices
it doesn't show it
uh oh
it's an airplane
which still should show
is your Bluetooth on
it is
you better go catch it.
This might not be on.
Anyways, I'll try and reconnect it,
and it'll just say,
it'll say,
we found it.
In order to add a new device,
you need to reset the device from your watch.
And then on your watch,
it'll say, do you want to reset this?
That's really bad.
It's awful.
But other than that,
my biggest gripe is battery life.
The battery life on this is terrible.
I would say I'm okay with it
because I don't use sleep tracking
so I can charge it every night,
but it will not last two days.
And I've seen that a lot of other people
with that same issue.
That's what I was going to say.
So how bad is terrible?
Because I've been an Apple Watch person
for the better part of like four or five years.
You'd call that a two-day battery life, right?
I would call it a one and a half day battery life.
Very specifically because I cannot
get to the end of two days, but I can
always get past one day.
Yes, this can get past one day.
If you use sleep tracking, I would say by the time
you wake up, you're under
40% and like
I would not expect it to
last more than that. Like this would never last a
weekend as far as I use it. Um, so you'll be happy to know one of the new features of the watch five
is it has a larger battery, 15% larger battery, I believe. And the other gripe, the other way to
get around bad battery life is faster charging. And this does have fast charging um specifically what do we have 13
larger battery on the watch 5 and uh the watch 5 pro will get to in a second but i think that
should at least help with the battery life we'll see we'll get it in hand i think if you're someone
who does a lot of things during the day and also wants to sleep track you're gonna have to find
that perfect time maybe the fast charging will help so you could do it maybe while you're showering or something like
that. It really becomes a habit of like, you know, when you end the day, you look at your
percentage and you're like, this won't make it through the night or this will. With Apple Watch,
it's like 25%. I know if I go to bed anywhere around 30 that I just need to find time to charge
before I put it back on.
I hate that.
Just, yeah, just part of the downside.
The design is very similar,
but it does have sapphire glass now on the outside,
which is much better.
I love this design.
I think this design looks good.
And the sapphire glass, which is stronger.
I tested three watches.
This is the only watch where the screen didn't crack or chip when I was rock climbing.
My Apple watch has a big chunk taken out of it.
Yours does as well.
The screen?
It's not a chunk.
It's more of like a star.
Yours is like a crack.
Tim's has like a chunk.
Multiple stars.
Actually, I do have a little chunk.
But that's the metal or the screen?
The screen.
The screen has like a bunch of scratches down here.
But rock climbing holds are so coarse that they will just destroy.
But if you look at mine, the outside edge of it got really scratched.
But the glass didn't get touched at all.
Maybe because it's flat.
Well, it's going to get even stronger.
I have a Garmin Venue 2, which I love, and it got really messed up climbing.
Those are the ones I expect to be super strong.
I agree with you.
One thing about these, though, is I debated
using the Watch Classic because of the dial
has a little more of a lip,
but I didn't really love the spinny part
in that. This Galaxy Watch 5 Pro
has that new lip and doesn't have
the thickness. Let's talk about the Watch 5 Pro.
I'm really excited for that one.
The 5 is great, but the Pro, well, first of all,
I guess we could speak about this at any point, but there are lots of rumors that we might see an Apple Watch Pro. Yeah. Let's talk about the Pro. I'm really excited for that one. So the 5 is great, but the Pro, well, first of all, I guess we could speak about this at any point,
but there are lots of rumors that we might see an Apple Watch Pro.
And I think Samsung has a tendency to go,
they're going to do what?
Okay, trust me, we're on that.
We'll beat them to that.
Trust me.
We got it.
So we got the Watch 5 Pro.
The Watch 5 Pro is a larger, thicker, stronger,
more activity-focused version of the Watch 5.
So it's, like GPS related stuff,
much longer battery life. It's a 60% larger battery life. And it also has a thicker,
I believe it's thicker. They say stronger Sapphire glass on the outside. I don't know
how you have different strength levels other than just making it thicker. It's probably thicker.
So it's, it's stronger, probably thicker Sapphire glass on the outside. And it's also
inlet or inset underneath the bezel.
So you have a little bit of protection there for the glass.
It seems if you can deal with the larger size, it's a 45 millimeter size only, to be like the best version of what Samsung can make as far as a smartwatch that has a long battery life and actually deals with like heavy, long GPS loads.
Maybe you're going to go...
I heard there was actually a golf version of this watch,
but if you're going to go play golf with just your watch,
there are GPS apps that will tell you
for the entire four-hour round of golf
exactly how far you are from all of your targets
and the bunkers and the hazards and everything.
Biking, hiking, just going for a run,
all that sort of stuff.
This seems like the way to go for
that stuff so watch five pro is real um did we get it confirmed that the golf version is real
it's in the notes that they sent us it is a golf version yeah it's all it is is they never told me
bring it up at the briefing yeah and then someone told me about it and i was like what are you
talking about i think that we don't have to put this part in, but I think it's 329.
I think it's more like the regular one.
Wait, the 5 Pro Golf version is 329?
It's just the 5 Golf version.
I don't think it's the 5 Pro.
I think it's the regular 5.
All it is is custom watch faces,
a free lifetime subscription to Smart Caddy app or something,
and it has a different watch band, a two-tone watch band.
Oh, okay. So that's pretty much it. It's more like a two-tip watch band oh okay
so that's pretty
it's more like a
what's the
it's just like a
brand partnership
yeah
is it PGA branded
no I think it's
just a cat
they're probably just
partnered with
that app
LIV
LIV though
oh my god
no you can't even
use GPS
for the golf fans here
yeah
well
that was a good reference
but no no it's just a probably just a catty app You can't even use GPS. For the golf fans here. Yeah. Well, that was a good reference.
But no.
No, it's just probably just the Caddy app.
It's basically the Caddy app for an extra $30, it seems like. And limited watch faces with it.
And a different band.
And a different band.
Okay, well.
It's more of a limited edition thing.
Are you interested in that?
No, because I could just turn the Watch 5 into the Golf Edition.
Just buy the app with the Watch 5 Pro and then get way better battery life.
I'm really excited for the Watch 5 Pro because I love hiking and stuff like that.
I like outdoor stuff.
And when I was using my Garmin, it's incredible for really long hikes and stuff.
It's got great GPS.
All the different apps for it are fantastic.
But wearing it every day, it just felt clunky.
And the watch for is so much nicer.
So to have, in my mind, and we'll see how they execute it,
but to have a watch for that feels more like Garmin activity ruggedness with it,
that's really, really exciting for me.
I think we talked about this in the foldable space earlier, things like finally coming to the point where they feel like very cohesive products
but i feel like we're in a little bit of a wearables renaissance or golden age right now
when it comes to both smart watches and then also earbuds because the earbuds have anc now it seems
like you can get a ton of different earbuds with anc and it just depends on what company you want want. There's the Pixel Buds Pro they have ANC now. Just like pick your company.
And then the other thing was when Apple announced all of the additions to the Apple Watch tracking,
whether it was like tracking the little micro movements of your run and your stride height and
all these things. And now there's possibly going to be a Pro Watch and then there's going to be a
Pro version of this. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it seems like this wearable tech
is getting really good now.
I agree.
It's kind of amazing looking back what all of them do.
Like you mentioned the watch tracks all these things.
It has a slightly different shape
with the bottom of the watch.
It's a little bit flatter
so that it has more contact area on your wrist
so that your blood oxygen levels
and all the things it's tracking
can be even more accurate.
It's like, that's amazing. Half the stuff I didn't ever think i'd need to know about myself but here we are
and also true like back in the day i remember in like 2013 2015 the jaybird earbuds that i love so
much like to picture something that small having active noise cancellation i was like never no way
of course not yeah but now yeah pixel buds pro come out it's like the exact same size no wire
long battery life popping your ears ears, active noise cancellation,
and transparency mode.
It's not that good, but it's still got it.
So that's pretty impressive.
I have a question though.
Yes.
About the Watch 5 Pro.
Do you think now,
let's say it has a one and a half times longer battery life.
Is that enough for you to say it's not terrible?
Here's, here's, I will, listen.
So the Venue 2, it's like an eight day battery life
and I tried that and it works and I'm still kind of confused how that can have eight days and this
can have a day and a half. Describe the functionality of that watch. I mean, it still has
notifications. It still has like my calendar comes into it. My text messages come into it,
tracks steps, it tracks heart rate, all all that stuff like it's constantly tracking but generally when i'm using it it's on a long trip somewhere where it's it's
also uh like i was hiking eight hours a day and like i wasn't plugging in at all it was crazy
so battery i mean clearly the screen is not as good but still like we're talking about a
this the watch 4 is like 450 by 450 it's not anything wild and it is getting a fifth or a sixth of the battery life.
So the screen is always, the screen and processor are always going to be the biggest draws of power.
And I haven't used this eight day watch battery life,
but when I picture a one and a half day battery life watch having a 60 FPS OLED display that gets bright outdoors
and is like very responsive
and feels like a tiny smartphone on your wrist.
I picture an eight day smartphone battery life
being like on the Kindle end of the spectrum
where you don't really spend any time
interacting with it.
It just shows you stuff
and that's good enough.
Is that accurate?
I don't think I use my watches,
both of them that much differently though.
I don't know. Then that's better both of them, that much differently, though. I don't know.
Then that's better for you.
Then it's better for me, but the thing is I still use the Watch 4 the same way
and don't use it as much and mostly use it to just check the time and some notifications,
and it's still only getting a day and a half.
It's not as efficient.
I'm sure there's some things.
I think what you're talking about, you mentioned it the other day when we were talking about it is probably android wear os
versus whatever the garmin stuff is they're probably doing far far less but that's still a
huge gap that baffles me a little bit well when you're based on android though it's like there's
it's so complex like here's an analogy right The entire reason that ARM devices have such insane battery life comparatively
is that you had x86 for this long period of time
that had to do all of these functions.
And the more that PCs could do over time,
the more that architecture had to be able
to be built out to handle.
But that also made it have more processes
going on at the same time
and it just made it such a battery hog.
So ARM,
which is Advanced Risk Machines,
it's a reduced architecture
and RISC is reduced...
RISC is another
acronym? Yeah. Inside of R?
Yes. It's an acronym inside of an acronym?
So ARM is an acronym
and R is RISC and RISC is another acronym. Yes. R an acronym and R is risk and risk is another acronym.
Risk is reduced instruction set chip.
And chip is an acronym for what?
And that's a backronym.
So reduced instruction set, right?
So you reduce the instruction set to only the core things that you have to do
and then they built out from there.
So that's why ARM devices have so
much better battery life. So it's kind of the same
thing. If you build something
on Android that's supposed to be on your watch,
you know,
it's going to be like an Android phone.
All Android phones run ARM processors
already. These are ARM processors just in
watches. You already have
the most efficiency that you can have, but when you build
an OS that is only made to be a a very simple smartwatch and you only target it to these specific things, then you can make the battery life way better.
I was.
It's reduced instruction set computer.
Right.
And what does computer stand for?
Anyway.
Oh, it's R-I-S-C?
Yeah, RISC.
Oh, yeah.
Got it.
Which would still be the case with chip,
but I got the C wrong.
Right.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Yeah, yeah.
To go back to the question,
for me to not consider it to be a bad battery life
and like good, not great, eight days is great.
That is what I would go for.
Once you use that for a month, you don't want to use it today. Everything else is great. Yeah. That is what I would go for for every once you you once you use that for a month.
You don't want to use everything else feels terrible.
Right.
But if I could leave work on Friday and go out for the weekend, say like I'm going on a trip and it's still alive on Sunday when I get back to charge it to go to bed.
That would be.
Two full days.
Two good full day.
Maybe even two and I would call it.
I would call it two and a half I would call it I would call it
two and a half
to where some days
it might go a little under
but
I would be very happy
with 2.5
like leaving for a weekend
and being able to make
maybe track a hike
forget your charger
and not have to worry about it
the whole weekend
yeah that would be really nice
that's ideal
I'm gonna guess
that would be
the absolute limit
of this watch 5 pro
60% is big
that's a guess 590 million hours is that
what it is right yeah 590 that's pretty big that's it's big but i'm just saying like okay it's 60
bigger yeah okay 60 more battery versus the one and a half we already get out of the watch
four then you're looking at 1.9 days maybe maybe so which is close to what you want close
yeah quick math yeah i always i always
agree though like all these watches are adding sleep tracking and everyone keeps talking about
how amazing sleep tracking is uh but if i have to charge my watch every night then i can't use
the sleep tracking and a lot of people say oh charge it while you're showering i just googled
it real quick uh-huh 1.6 times 1.5 because you had one one and a half days 60 more so 1.6 times 1.5 because he had one and a half days 60% more so 1.6
times it's actually 2.4 so let's
say 2.4 days
it seems promising
it seems promising okay
promising 2.4
yeah I mean that's like one of my biggest gripes
but the other one is that challenges app
let
Android people count more than just steps
count calories for android watches
or google fit or some connection in there and the challenges app would be the best app ever we would
recommend it all the time to everybody you will get free shout outs from us if you count calories
for android already they're not yeah so there you, wait, wait. Can I say one more thing about the Galaxy Watch though?
Yes.
Does this look familiar to you?
Yes.
Okay.
Yes, it does.
I have an argument here though.
The original.
Okay, so.
No, this is Samsung's rings.
It's just three rings.
But it's in a heart instead.
So it's pretty much like Apple rings.
I think this is better than Apple rings.
Oh, why is it better? You know why rings. I think this is better than apple rings. Why?
Because the third ring is not stand hours, which is
the dumbest metric in the world.
It just adds steps to it.
It just shows you your steps along with it and
gives it as a third. So it's activity ring
as the first ring? It's calories,
time, exercise, and steps.
And then steps. Oh, nice.
Because standing for
one minute every hour is the dumbest
metric ever. I agree. No one cares.
But I think the reason they chose it is because
if you are sedentary
and you sit for long extended periods
of time, that's bad for
you. I want to ask David a question here.
I just saw your app say you wanted to stand
up. Did you want to stand up and walk around or did
you want to stand up and get the notification away and sit your ass back but that's the point though it's gamifying it
but it's not accomplishing anything sometimes i'm working i think it does i think just not being
seated what is the whole argument for like standing desks it's like you you spend so much
time sitting and if you sit all day, isn't sitting down bad for you?
Yeah, I think that if you don't stand up and move around a little bit,
then you need to get the blood flowing around all the time.
Yeah, stand up once in a while.
Standing for one minute doesn't accomplish that.
But it's better than standing for zero minutes.
Sure.
I am not advocating for either.
I just want you guys to be aware. I'm not advocating for either just I'm not gonna get involved but but uh I do
think that it's sort of like when you're like oh I'm gonna do five push-ups that's it and then you
end up doing 50 well I could obviously do that I don't know where we're going I guess the point is
like the point is that it's getting you moving and then you will probably do more than one minute
if you do the one minute
yeah
hopefully
hopefully
whereas I just wave my arm around
until it goes over
what if it did
you had to do
um
a hundred steps
every hour
that'd be kind of hard
that'd be really hard
so the thing is
when you get to like
50 minutes on the hour
the watch tells you
you gotta stand up
well it would give you
a better
a better time
that would be nice I'm trying to I don't know how many steps 100 steps is i like walk around
the room once i bet i bet from your i bet from your desk to the bathroom back to your desk would
be about 100 100 actually maybe it is 100 no that's a long way like i would wait there and
back going up the steps in in my, it's like 12 steps or whatever.
Now I'm like, oh yeah, so maybe it's 10 times that amount of distance.
Maybe that's 100 steps.
I would say going from your desk to the bathroom back would be 100 steps.
I'm going to try it after this podcast.
But we do need to take a break.
And do trivia.
Yeah, let's do trivia real quick and then come back.
Pricing for everything really quick since we didn't say any of that.
It starts at $279 for the Bluetooth-only Watch 5 and $329 for the LTE Watch 5.
And the Watch 5 Pro only comes in 45 millimeters,
so it's a little bigger.
But that starts at, remind me, $350?
$449.
$450.
Pretty expensive.
$450 for Bluetooth. Okay. And $499 for LTE. $4.49. $4.50. Pretty expensive. $4.50 for Bluetooth.
And $4.99 for LTE.
$4.99 for LTE Watch 5 Pro.
There you go. Ellis, hit us
with the trivia.
Alright, back for Ellis' reign of
trivia terror.
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All right, we're back um i have a little game i want to play at the end of this episode before we figure out our trivia answers and how wrong we were because
ellis's questions are way too hard um okay so we're like we mentioned we're getting into like
the the start of smartphone season kind of the start of our busy season so we've seen quite a few phones get released already
and we're about to see the rest of them to the point where we've probably seen a rumor about
everyone right like we've seen a pixel rumors we've always seen pretty much like we're seeing
iphone rumors um so i thought it'd be fun i went you and i did a um we guessed the smartphone
awards the first episode of this year. I brought those
guesses up. I think we're, let's just look at them really quick to remind ourselves. And then
let's see if we change your mind at all. And you can make some predictions with us now from what
we've seen and what we're about to see and, and maybe see if we get any right. We'll check them
again in December. How right we think we are yeah um okay real quick and
if you guys want to hop in and make any comments about any of these guesses here um i'll just go
through them real quick though okay so for best big phone marquez guessed the s22 ultra i guessed
the rog phone 6 for small phone we both picked the z flip for camera we both picked the iphone
budget value we both picked the zenenfone 9 wow best battery sorry sorry
okay um best battery iphone pro max for you i said the legion duo 3 just because i made a bad
joke that it would have three charging cables which i heard that back and i was like i used
to be funny that was pretty cool um design Design, I had the Find X4.
You had the Pixel 7.
Most improved, we both...
I had the Pixel 4.
It ended up being a 5.
Oh, yeah.
They don't do 4.
That's our fault.
That's on you.
That's on me.
Pick the non-existent phone.
All right.
Most improved, we both picked the Pixel 7 Pro.
Bust of the year, you picked the s21 fe and i've wait for god no
22 no no it's right that's no that's exactly what i did you're gonna win you might win that you
probably gonna win because that it was out by the time that we recorded that episode actually
because it came out right in the beginning how much of a downfall would that be from from the year there is no like least improved award but that was yeah yeah um i
picked the razor 3 which doesn't look like it's coming out this year but and then mvp you picked
s7 pro pixel 7 pro pixel 7 pro sorry And I picked the S22 Plus. Wow.
Which seems like a terrible guess.
But yeah, that is a very boring guess.
Wow, I've got a lot of thoughts about this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You want to start from the top then?
Yeah, do you want to go like over,
you want to pick what we are thinking are coming up?
Should I pick apart your thoughts?
Is that what you're saying?
You can pick apart thoughts.
You can pick what you think is going to come up
now that what we see.
I dissected.
Best big phone. I mean, big phone i mean so i had s22 ultra
andrew had rog phone six i think we now have both of those phones are out between those
i mean they're pretty close the cameras you give the edge to samsung
the performance you give the edge to the 165 hertz rog phone
i i listened and i specifically picked the ROG 6
thinking like cameras are the last thing
they really need to prove and they would
and they improved, but they didn't do it.
Like I was hoping.
It's a step down in camera,
but it's also the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1.
They always wait to have the higher end chip in this.
So the S22 Ultra still has the 8 Gen 1, right?
I forgot.
So that i think also
leans rog i feel like there's going to be more big phones coming out this year too oh definitely
we're still gonna get the big iphone the big fold the big regular iphone could really be a good big
phone because it's going to be a cheaper version but big and has a lot of benefits from it so
that's something we were not thinking would happen.
Yeah.
I think that'll be really interesting.
For small, you guys both put the Z Flip,
but I think it's going to be the Zenfone 9.
Yeah, I think, was that the thing
in the beginning of this episode?
You said there's something we'll all agree on?
I think I'll say now that I think Zenfone 9
is the best small phone
and it's not particularly close right now.
We could get a great, no, because we're not
getting a mini iPhone and we have the Z Flip and we see what it is already. I think it's a clear
best small phone of the year. For sure. Zenfone 9. Camera is probably going to swap to the
Xiaomi 12 Ultra. 12S Ultra. 12S Ultra. Interesting. You know, well, we'll see what the iPhone comes
out with. The thing about the camera award and people always like to dissect my camera award is it is a versatility award too, because you take
photos and videos. And when I looked at photos from the 12S, the ceiling of the best photos it
could take was clearly higher than any other smartphone I've ever used. But as far as
consistency, it would also constantly churn out photos that were worse than the iPhone. So if you're ping-ponging back and forth between best and worst, it's kind of
a preference thing. Like, do you pick the consistent A or do you pick the one that's an A plus sometimes
and clearly has a better, higher ceiling, but sometimes it's a B plus. And then on video time,
like iPhone is so consistent. It's so consistently an A to an A plus as far as smartphone cameras.
You know, ProRes already like 4K.
I wish it shot 8K, but even without shooting 8K,
it's great videos.
And so the Xiaomi also shoots really good videos,
but it's not as consistent.
So I'm just like, it's hard to not pick the iPhone
as the favorite for an incoming video or camera winner,
just based on what I've seen from Apple. They could screw it up, but what are the odds? That, uh, me 12 S ultra though. What about
the pixel seven? Those were pretty fire. Pixel seven could be if they freaking fix the processing,
I will beat the drum on this until the day I freaking die because they got
a big old sensor and they're still processing
it like it's a tiny one.
They did their magic for like five
years in a row with that small sensor.
And now that we give them much more capable
hardware, they're sort of just leaning
back on what they've been doing with the smaller hardware.
Pixel 6 Pro photos look almost exactly the same
as Pixel 6a photos.
And I feel like that's just a big problem. They've got
the field. Almost reminds me of how we
always talk about how Toyota started making
like EVs and batteries and now they're
so far behind in the EV game. It
feels like that's what Pixel's doing.
Like they were so good for so
long and they just like are sticking
with what they're doing and now we're behind.
The Prius, the smartphone camera. Don't you guys
love this Sony sensor
that we've used for five years?
Yes, in your budget phone.
Please.
Yeah.
We have best value and budget also as Zenfone 9.
This phone came out at $699.
More expensive.
Can it be a budget value phone at that price?
The comment section says no.
Comment section, if I gave it that award,
I could immediately see the entire comment section blowing up and saying,
$699 cannot be a good best budget award.
But I think it's a value award.
I think we tried to make that award both ends of that.
It's like budget or bang for your buck.
Bang for your buck.
Pound for pound.
It does have the best processor out there.
And it has a really nice 120 hertz display.
Very fast.
Pretty cool cameras.
The gimbal camera.
Excellent battery.
Small, really good battery.
I mean, yeah, value wise, I could see it inching into there.
But I definitely know that people will disagree with if
if that phone was $599, I'd hand it to them right now. But $699, it's $100 more than it was last
year. So there is that. Right. So we're going to get some other phones that are like very extra
budget. You know, we have the 6A, we have the SC, we have phones that are hanging around $300,
$400, $500 that are always going to be options there. So I don't know if it's a clear winner
yet. I don't think we can say we have a winner for best budget.
But I do love the Zenfone 9 at the price anyway.
It is what it is.
It's kind of funny that we saw it to the future for the
Zenfone. This is a January prediction.
That's kind of sad.
This is the first week in January.
I'm kind of happy with that prediction.
They've been pretty solid devices for the last few years.
Every year they surprise us.
We're like, oh wow, Asus is good.
Oh wait, we said the same thing last year. In the bracket
every year, I think they go to at least
quarters, possibly semis. Yes.
iPhone has never won in the
first round. Zenfone has never lost in the
first round. No, I think iPhone won first round.
Finally in the last round. But the Zenfone always
goes deep. It's always gone really
well. Okay. So we did have most
improved. We both picked Pixel 7 Pro, I think is interesting.
We have yet to technically hold and use that phone,
but we kind of see what's coming,
which is similar to the old phone.
The reason though it's most improved
is because how bad the experience was on the 6 Pro.
So like that's what they need to work on.
It's hard to tell that from the design things we're seeing now.
I mean, the fit and finish would be nice too.
It would be.
It did sort of feel like they just glued parts together with the 6 Pro.
Do you know what I really liked about the 6A is that the lip was not as protruded.
It's because of the smaller sensor.
I liked that.
I wish somehow they could get that into it.
Yeah, they can't physically do it.
They can't physically do it.
Here's another way of phrasing that.
Is there something else you would pick
as most improved right now
over the Pixel 7 or 7 Pro?
I'm like Zenfone,
but then the 8 was actually pretty good too.
The 8 was good,
but the 9 was...
That's the first thing I thought of as well.
The Zenfone is like...
It really killed it this year.
Obviously the Legion Duo 2.
Only two charging cables.
In terms of, if you want to take one step,
we didn't talk about design.
Zenfone could possibly be in design.
And I think the biggest thing taking away from it
is how messed up the paint gets on the back.
I can't give it, yeah.
It gets pretty beat up.
I think that's a big issue.
You had that for like four days
and it looked like you had it for four years.
Dude, two weeks into using the phone,
it looked like I had it for literally like a lifetime.
Yeah.
It's very easily scuffed.
A friend of mine had the black one
and all the logos and like Asus lettering
were gone after four days.
They literally wiped off his finger oil.
Dude, it's going to look crazy in a year.
Which maybe that's cool.
I like the design.
If it doesn't smell apart, it's a patina.
I would like to keep an eye on in a year, like what people using the Zen phone every day,
what those phones look like.
Yeah.
Because I mean, maybe they'll put a case on it.
Like I don't, I use my phone out of a case.
Yes, I'm a psycho.
I get it.
But hey, some people are going to do that.
What's that phone going to look like in a year?
Yeah.
I want to know.
Maybe you can just scrub it off with a toothbrush.
That's actually, I didn't try cleaning it.
I mean, I got the microfiber.
I tried like getting the scalp off of it or whatever,
but maybe there's some crazy hack out there.
Do you remember that?
Well, there's a pixel that everyone said
got messed up on the back.
And everyone's like, oh no,
you can just scrub it off with a toothbrush and it's fine.
And it worked
it worked but it was also like the dumbest
thing to tell somebody it was kind of insane
like you have an extra toothbrush right
it's always that
pixel toothbrush
man well
design I think we're both gonna find
our answers are incorrect there find
x4 doesn't exist because they skip straight
to the x5 sorry Andrew the x5 Sorry, Andrew. But the X5 is
a really pretty phone. The X5 is a nice phone.
We've got one. I think I like the X3
better, though. Really? I do, too, actually.
I think I like the X3 better.
But I picked Pixel 7, and I almost
guarantee that doesn't win the Design Award.
What about Oppo Find N?
I like that.
I like that design a lot.
I think there's a lot of design award candidates,
as there usually are.
That's one of the more subjective awards.
Yeah, definitely.
I like the Zenfone design,
but I can't give it a design award.
So it is what it is.
Bust of the year.
Yeah, you picked the Razr 3.
That's kind of a funny one
because it's not coming to the US
and it could be a super bust.
Also the OnePlus, what is it? 10T
kind of flopped. When I wrote this out
I was like I'm pretty sure everyone's going to say
10T. 10T is a pretty
popular bust pick I'm pretty sure
that we get a lot of votes if we put it to fan vote
a lot of disappointment in that phone
S21 FE
being my pick for bust of the year. That's a
good pick. It's a really good pick. It's a pretty good pick.
It's a really good pick.
It's a pretty good pick.
Big brain pick right there.
Yeah.
And then MVP.
My MVP.
Wow, I was really high on Pixels.
Okay, Pixel 7 Pro was my MVP pick.
And S22 Plus was your MVP pick.
Do you remember your logic behind S22 Plus as MVP?
Sort of an all-around champ at a good price.
I want to say it was
similar to that and being worried
about what was going to happen to the Ultra with
the impending Note
disappearing and like
not being exactly sure what was going to
happen with it and if they tried to do
like too much similar to
like remember when S20 Ultra
first came out and that was terrible because they
tried to do a million things with it. Then
they refined it. Then I was worried I was going to
go back on the route of doing a million things with it
by adding S Pen and everything. And it didn't
really. It's definitely not
that great. Like it's not anything
incredible. You could argue the S22 Plus
has a better design than the S22 Ultra
and therefore is the better of those.
I think I'll say two things.
One, I think it's probably going to go to an 8 Plus Gen 1 phone
because of how good that chip is.
But the other thing I'm going to say is,
and this is never going to happen,
but if it did, it would be great.
If Apple put 120 hertz ProMotion display
in the big cheap iPhone,
that could be an MVP.
That could be really cool.
In the 14 Max or whatever it ends up being.
And what pricing is on that will be very interesting.
But they're probably not doing that, which sucks.
Yeah, if it's not a pro phone, they're not going to put pro motion.
I think they're keeping all the pro names to the pro device.
What if they just do nice motion and do 90 hertz?
Nice motion.
Pretty good motion.
I feel like Apple's going to keep 60 hertz on the regular, the cheaper iPhones until it's brutal.
Cause cheaper is still $700 for a 60 Hertz phone.
Yeah.
That's insane.
The budget iPhone,
the budget,
the SE at that point,
actually just get the SE.
Yeah.
Just get the SE at that point.
Yeah.
I have to say,
I went to a Pink Floyd tribute band concert the other night and the amount of iPhone 8s and iPhone SEs I saw was unreal because everyone was over 65.
That's so funny.
And it was wild.
That's, I feel like a couple years ago, it was the 6 that was everywhere, which makes sense.
It's sort of a graduation of a flow of phones when people upgrade.
And the 6 and 6S are the best selling iPhones ever, I think.
So those people finally upgraded.
We got the iPhone 10, big upgrade cycle with the OLED iPhones.
There's a lot of 8s out there.
Yeah.
I think it was just a testament to people that wanted to keep the home button.
Yeah.
And because the lady that was sitting next to me was like 80 years old and I saw her
texting and she had like her texting size on
max and everything was on max oh that's such it's like one line my mom does this too where like
every letter she would type would be like tick tick tick one letter at a time just like yeah
yeah I love seeing the iPhone 8 with the massive font size yeah it's such a great that's such a
grandma vibe.
I love that.
Yeah.
Well,
I think we'll leave it at that.
We'll continue to see
what phones come out this year.
But like we said,
it's the beginning of busy season.
August,
that's kind of like
you hit the calendar
and you go,
all right,
this is it.
We're going to get a bunch of stuff.
I can feel it this week
because we're working on
two long form episodes
at the same time
and we haven't had
as much time to work on them.
We're being rushed around to all these other things.
Yeah, a lot going on. So I say
stay tuned. Stay tuned for all that because that's
going to turn into more videos for you so you're welcome.
But
that's all going to be
fun to keep track of so we'll see how well our predictions
turn out in the very end.
Let's end it with our
way too hard trivia part three.
Way too hard for someone.
Yeah. I don't know if I'm going to get any points
this week. Ellis.
Alright.
So, the first question was
who owns
Arm?
And with only two
points, I believe David gets to answer first.
I have my guess.
If I get it right, do they not get to guess?
Yeah.
Should I say if you get it right?
I feel like I should just keep my lips.
No, I don't know.
I think you answer first, but you don't tell us if he's right or not.
And then the second most can submit a guess, and then the top can submit a guess.
But I only have one guess.
There is the thing.
David said he thinks he's right.
So we could very easily just guess what he's saying.
I have my guess locked in my head that I'm probably wrong.
We're working with a channel partner right now on the eventual solution.
The Wipes solution.
That's a great idea.
That's actually a really good idea.
So this might be the last archaic version. Sorry for the chaos. But what is yours? potential solution the white more solution that's a great that's actually a really good idea so i
guess we could this might be the last archaic version sorry for the chaos uh what is your
give it a couple weeks we'll see we're still getting the final sure okay yeah the points
don't matter right all right um softbank anyone else that's not what i was i was gonna just say
ibm i was gonna say amd so what's the answer? The answer is SoftBank.
Got him! Alright, very nice.
SoftBank owns ARM. I don't even know
what SoftBank is. I've never heard of it.
SoftBank's a megacorp. They're mega megacorp.
They make the robot. They're also a
bank. Everyone has a robot.
Yeah, but SoftBank, yeah, I guess everyone has a robot.
Yeah, that's a good point.
The SoftBank robot has a funny name.
Hyundai has a robot.
This robot looks like every robot has a funny name. Hyundai has a robot. Yeah.
This robot looks like every robot on the CES floor.
That looks like every robot on the CES.
Oh, no.
This is, what hall is that at CES?
Every single one.
South Hall.
This is South Hall, right?
It looks like a bigger RoboSapien.
Wait, did RoboSapien make the,
or did SoftBank make the RoboSapien?
Oh, it's called Pepper. Do you remember the RoboSapien?
No, that one's called Now, it says.
Now 6.
Now that's what I call a creepy robot 6.
God, we've gone so sidetracked.
Okay.
Question number two.
How many bytes are in a kibbeh bite
go ahead wait i have to guess again i think technically you still have
less points than andrew so yeah kibbeh it sounds small it's k-i-b-I, if that helps. Kibibite. But it's pronounced Kiba.
I've heard it said both ways.
How many bytes total?
Are in one
Kibibite. Not how many bits.
Alright.
How many bytes?
Oh, God.
I know what a gigabyte is.
I know what a terabyte is.
I know what a megabyte is.
I know what a kilobyte is
i'm going to go under kilobyte that's all i know kilobyte is 1024 bytes right i just feel like
it's got to be bigger than terabyte because bigger i've gone over the top because if interesting if
it was small like we use all of these common byte variables together these multi like versions of
bytes multiplied and we use them often we use byte kilobyte megabyte gigabyte
terabyte but back in the day very often this is either to be a current term referring to like larger than a terabyte or old terminology referring
to somewhere between
a kilobyte and
a couple hundred bytes. You ready for the wrench?
This term was coined in
1992. I think it's like
I think it's 128
bytes or something somewhere
in there.
That's my guess.
Marques puts in 128.
Okay, okay. Andrew? I'm'm just i'm gonna go higher i like i
i'm with you it's we have all these commonly used terms and we keep having those terms because we're
hitting a max where it's starting to get really confusing so we're adding another to it so i'm
going to guess whatever over a terabyte is so it would be a terabyte times a thousand right it's like
trillions of bytes now i was gonna say a terabyte time 10 terabytes is my guess but it's all right
this is in the 90s though how would they even because he said it was coined so maybe there
was a book where he was like in order to have an AI that is completely susceptible, like can be
just like humans, it would have to be one
cubabyte.
What's your final guess?
What is your final guess? 10 terabytes is my
final guess. How many bytes is that?
One E to the 15th.
Wait, we're
so wrong, Andrew.
Alright, let's see.
A hundred trillion bytes or something?
I'm ending this right now
so
here's
what a kibibyte is
here we go
so computers
work with base 2
all the time
hard drive manufacturers for whatever reason
or another like to measure their hard drives in base 10.
Why? I don't know.
You'll have to ask a hard drive manufacturer.
But Marques, when you said a kilobyte is 1024 bytes, that's both true and not true.
Until the 90s, if you asked a hard drive manufacturer, a kilobyte would be a clean 1,000 bytes.
And if you asked a computer manufacturer,
a kilobyte would be 1,024 or 1024.
Until the fall of the Roman Empire,
the 10th month was December.
So those 24 bytes don't seem like a big deal
until you're working with terabyte-sized drives, right?
Because now all of a sudden,
when you're buying what's advertised as a two-terabyte drive, but it's actually you're losing 24 bytes per kilobyte.
Right.
You're actually losing 180 gigabytes of storage.
So, in 1992, some very smart people came up with the term kibibyte, which accurately refers to 1,024 bytes,
saving kilobyte for the clean 1,000.
And nobody uses it.
Oh, that's hilarious.
Wow.
Yeah, so it was invented to make things clearer,
and no one adopted it,
and so now a kilobyte can still kind of mean either or. That is really cool.
But that's why when you buy a two terabyte drive
and it reads as 1.82 terabytes,
you don't have a... It's because they're not
terabytes. Exactly.
That's a fun fact.
Yeah, right? I feel fun
right now. Sounds very human to me.
We're all super wrong, but I feel like we learned
something today. Yeah. That's a win.
Adam will be back. Yeah. And maybe
we'll get some right. We won't learn anything.
We won't learn anything. We won't learn anything.
Spell Google.
The more Andrew and I were going down that rabbit hole,
I was like, wait, no.
I think the minute you saw me calculating on here,
you're like, shit.
I saw 1E to the 15th.
I was like, we're so wrong.
127 was a good guess because it's a,
or 128's a good guess because it's a clean 7-bit number.
Yeah, yeah.
Somewhere in the-
That's what he was going for?
Well, I was going for underneath 1024.
Somewhere in the, like, in the 90s where they were like, oh, your
hard drive has finally reached this
crazy 128 number. What are we going to call it?
We need an advertising term.
I thought it was going to be like
a theoretical, this is what an artificial
general intelligence would take up on
a platter. I don't know.
I don't know. They're cute sounding.
They go up all the way. There's a tebabite
and a gibabite
and a mebabite.
There's all of them.
Gibabite.
Yeah, exactly.
Next.
Next.
Final trivia.
Oh, that was the only two.
No, that's it.
Oh, that was it?
Okay.
I'll give you a third one
if you want.
No, that, I mean,
considering how many zeros
we just got.
I think this episode's over.
Yeah, I think we've reached the end of this week's episode.
I feel like this happens every week.
Thanks for tuning in.
Thanks for listening to Waveform.
It's been a fun week.
Welcome to smartphone season.
I'll see you in the next one.
Peace.
You know, David, you did the call out when I was gone.
Do you think you could do it again on the spot right now?
Yeah.
Do it.
Don't mess up.
Okay.
I'll fix it if you do.
So when I say produced by this week, still produced by Adam?
Yeah.
For a little, you know.
Pour one out.
He was a good guy.
Okay.
Yeah.
So it starts with way beforeer Man is produced by right
alright ready
one take wonder
Wayfarer Man is produced by
Adam Molina and Ellis Roven
our intro outro music
is by
I skipped the whole thing
it was supposed to be
it was supposed to be the Vox thing
at the beginning right
I usually do it
so
we are
you also don't know I can do it. So we are...
I can do it too. I was just trying to put you on the spot.
Waveform is...
Produced by...
Waveform is produced by Adam Molina and Ellis Rove.
We are a partner with Vox Media Podcast.
Okay.
I'm just making sure
I'm respected around here.
Respect. Okay.
Waveform...
Same. You sounded like Yoshi. I'm respected around here. Respect. Okay. Wait for me.
Same.
You sounded like you sounded like Yoshi.
You just reverse
the record player.
Wait for me.
Okay.
Wait for me is produced
by Adam Molina
and Ellis Robin.
We are part of the
Vox Media Podcast Network
and our intro outro music
is by
Vane
Syl. Well played. We are part of the Vox Media Podcast Network, and our intro outro music is by Vane.
So.
Well played.
Great job.