Lol. Dropped my phone. The screen is destroooooooooooooooooooooooyed. You guys should've heard me screaming in my backyard. Never been so angry at gravity before.
Oh God I can imagine. I've never meant "I feel you bro" as much as I do now. Is it insured, or are you looking at a repair/new phone?
Personally, I think its kinda dumb to NOT get the insurance. No matter how gorilla that gorilla glass is, and no matter what type of build it is, you still have a good chance of breaking it if/WHEN its dropped.
Eh, I've owned 3 smartphones over the last few years. The worst I've done is a couple scratches on the bezel of my S2 in a drop that couldn't have broken the screen, only scratched it, more of a slide. Most of the deals here are at least £5 a month for insurance, generally a little more, so over the last 5 or so years I've saved at least £330. If I have to buy a new phone now then I've already saved the cost of it, and that's not even counting the fact that I'd have to pay an excess on an insurance claim. Dumb is dropping your phone EDIT: Also if I really cared then I'd invest in one of those phone condoms, one of the better ones of those will protect against the vast majority of drops, and isn't £5 a month. I'm just too hung up on how sexy my phone is without a case. Ooh nice, how is it? I've never used a Toshiba Android device, what do they do to Android compared to stock?
Insurance doesn't cover a discounted phone upgrade, it covers a new, retail price phone. 60/year, or 120 over the life of a phone (given you upgrade every 2 years) to cover 400-600 new phone is a MUCH welcomed insurance. You're comparing it to the wrong price. Its a great deal, and foolish to not get it, IMO. And a great case that will actually save your phone from drops will run you at LEAST 50, if not more... and won't even guarantee safety. You could still be out the price of a new phone at any moment. It only takes one small slip-up.
Phones here don't really get up to £600, but £400 is a fairer price. But still, over 1/4 of the price of the phone over it's life, when my odds so far don't dictate that I have a 1 in 4 chance of totalling it, still not worth it. And again, this doesn't factor in a ~£50 excess charge. And where the hell are you paying AT LEAST £50 for a good protective case? The most I'd ever pay is £35-40 and I could turn my phone in to a tank for that. A ~£20 rubber case will protect against the vast majority of drops. With the kind of case I would buy if I were going to, unless it gets run over by a car I'm gonna be fine, so I really don't know where you're getting this from. Now liquid damage, that's another thing entirely. The vast majority of my friends who've totalled their phones have done so by dropping them in the toilet or other liquid damage, very few of them have done so by dropping them. But then they're also all pretty careless with their phones, which again I am not. I think dedicated phone insurance is a rip off for my purposes. I'd much rather tag it on to my house insurance since it rarely costs any extra, and I'll be paying that anyway. But even then, my parent's house insurance will cover it even though I don't technically live there any more, I just pay them the cost of the excess and bam, new phone without forking out £60 a year.
Perhaps the real root of what insurance is has slipped through the cracks for you, then. Because insurance isn't about what's happened in the past, its about what could happen in the future, under your control or not. By your logic, why should Healthy Guy ever hold medical insurance if he never gets sick? Why should I have home owner's insurance when my neighborhood has always been safe? Why should I have auto insurance when I never drive over the speed limit and haven't ever been in any accidents? Its not a waste of money, its INSURANCE.
Sigh dude, I know precisely what insurance is, and you still haven't pointed out the flaw in the maths that applies to me. It's about weighing likelihood against cost, and if you're asserting that you should pay whatever something costs just because "it's insurance" then that's stupid. The fact is that I've already saved enough to buy a new phone without paying an excess, you can call me lucky but I think in large part I'm just careful. I know there are factors beyond my control which are also part of the point, but you know damn well that the vast majority of claims on this kinda insurance are going to be for things like people dropping their phones or water damage. You have much less control over getting sick than you do being careful with your phone, same with home insurance and auto insurance. Even if I'm a super careful driver, insurance also exists because of how likely someone else's carelessness is to affect me. Who crashes phones? I'm not saying insurance is pointless. I'm saying that the major benefits of insurance are more based on carelessness or not investing in a solid case than they are random chance which is out of your control. I've got a track record of babying the **** out of my electricals and it's done me well. I'm fine just shelling out of my own pocket for a phone is mine ever does bite the dust (also, repair hasn't even been brought up yet, if I break my screen I'm not forced to buy a new phone, people need to start remembering that repairing expensive electrical goods is an option, and often the best one), because overall I think that'll cost less. Sure, maybe two bad accidents are going to befall me in the next year or so and I'll have to fully replace my phone twice and I'll regret not having insurance, but I could also get hit by a car tomorrow, doesn't mean I have to bank on it. Again, what I was essentially arguing against wasn't the principle of insurance per se (since, again, I am insured in a sense, just not a dedicated phone policy), but the fact that I think phone insurance in particular is over priced. If you compare it to home or auto insurance, it's more expensive in comparison to the value of the item. Why? Because they're more likely to have to pay out. Why? Because there are enough people who are more careless with phones than they are with locking their house or driving safely, because frankly those latter two things matter more. I'm not saying "if you drop your phone then you're stupid" by any means, just that phones are in an interesting position of being expensive enough to care about and insure, but not expensive enough to get cut up about in the same way you do a car crash or your home getting robbed, so people are a little more happy to take a "**** happens" approach.
This is the thing that gets me. You're basically saying your insurance is several hundred dollars that you've already saved, rather than just $60. By getting insurance, you've freed up that several hundred dollars to use elsewhere. Its no longer "**** happens" money. Rationalizing $5/month by saying you've saved several hundred doesn't make it a good choice by any means. It just doesn't make much fiscal sense, IMO. Use a small fraction of that money you've saved and treat yourself to 'free', actual insurance. You can be careful all you want, but eventually, that phone comes out of your pocket and is exposed not only to other people but the environment.
No. No insurance. Sad day. I don't really want to get a new phone at the moment, contract aint up for another year, and the S3 isn't up to my standards. I'll live with the massive spider web crack over the screen for now.
Nova Launcher Prime is on sale today for $0.25. I use Apex free, but have heard from most people that Nova is better in terms of paid versions. I bought it and am loving stuff like finally have app drawer folders and tabs, recommend it to anyone using ICS or above since it's so cheap.
Is it basically just a more organized Home screen? I have ICS, rather content with mine, just want to know what my quarter will get me. lol
Basically, it's stock ICS with customization options. So ability to change apps icons, unread count on SMS and email, tabs in dock, etc. Also Swiftkey is/was on sale for .99 cents..far better than any keyboard including JB keyboard
Hello, android friends, I have another question for you guys! How does the Galaxys camera compare to other smart phone cameras, in terms of quality, audio, etc?
I bought Nova and have been messing around with it. It has some really nice organizational features and options. Is it a replacement for HTC Sense? because whenever I press the Home button it asked whether I want to do it through Sense or Nova, and Sense, at least for me, is a bit more smoother. Or is Nova only just acting as a tool to customize/organize the apps and widgets that will that I can then see and interact with on Sense? Halp.
Nova is a launcher. Pressing the home button basically equates to opening the launcher (or rather switching back to it), which is why it asks you if you want to use the Sense launcher or Nova. A launcher basically amounts to your homescreens, dock and app drawer. If you like the way those are set up (based on the fact that Nova offers a lot of customisation for all three aspects) more than Sense then stick with Nova. Which bits of Sense are smoother, though? Transitions between homescreens etc?
I'm personally not a huge fan of launchers, but Nova pro for .25 cents can't be beat. It's worth it alone for unread count and if you don't make any changes it is basically trebuchet. Though I find launchers crash..meh. @RST: SGS2? The camera is pretty decent but iPhone cameras are better. Bout the only thing going for the iPhone. SGS3 is good but I honestly don't recommend getting an S3..wait for the next nexus(es). Speaking of which, what one of the next "rumored" nexuses do you guys think sounds the best? http://www.geek.com/articles/mobile/what-do-we-know-about-the-next-nexus-20120928/ Personally, I like slightly smaller devices so I'm sad that there likely won't be an SGS2 sized one.