Next Jolla Phone should focus on battery and hardware durability
I did not buy a Jolla Phone for 2 key reasons:
1) I just bought a Jiayu G4 Advanced (with to smartphone standards a very good battery life) a few months before. 2) The battery of Jolla Phone is too poor.
Even though my Jiayu phone has a good battery to smartphone standards, in my point of view it is still for from good enough. This is because the phone I had before that was the Nokia 1600 ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokia_1600 ). Even after using that phone for about 7 years (indeed!), the phone only needed the power cable after 6 days! This feature was also the main reason why I delayed buying my first smartphone as much as possible to the end of 2013, and why I still have that phone as a backup.
The other thing I do not like about my new phone over to this old Nokia phone is its durability: I had a broken USB connector after 5 months, the software is sometimes buggy, and the phone is plagued by ghost touches after you drive by bike in heavy rain (I don't mind the rain and my phone shouldn't either).
I am certain many people would love a durable and correct priced smartphone with a battery life similar to the Nokia 1600.
This is my personal and ordered wish list for a next Jolla phone (if the first 4 items are met, I will buy it if it costs up to 400EUR):
- Durable hardware
- Superb battery life similar to non-smartphone Nokia phones
- Durable software
- Being able to use 2 SIM cards (good way to save on data charges using a different provider)
- 2 GB RAM and at least 32GB internal storage space with the possibility to expand storage space with a slot
- Good screen
- Slow battery friendly CPU
- GPS
- Faster CPU and more storage space
That why MTK processor is energy efficient and proven but as the gaming and development goes, MTK has H.265, not H.264 recorder and playback that seem not even production ready.
mikojoko ( 2014-12-19 14:14:31 +0200 )editI understand why you'd like to have the battery life of a Nokia 1600. But I don't think it will happen in the near future for smartphones. Screens use power, they light up, they show changing content. They show more and more content, displaying it still costs energy. This will not change. Battery technology is advancing, but not at the speed that the 'next phone' will be able to meet the amount of days a Nokia 1600 lasted. And you can not just add 'power' to a battery. You'll have to make it bigger, or more complicated, or.. well, new things have to be invented.
But durability when it comes to hardware is something I think would be really really nice. I like the Jolla phone, but it feels like it is cheaply built. The volume rocker buttons feel like they are slightly loose. I think there is enough room for improvement, but the battery life of a non smartphone is not something you can compare to a smartphone.
Simon de la Court ( 2014-12-19 14:21:00 +0200 )editPlease check my feedback to Okw to read a more in depth explanation of what I mean with 'focus on battery life'.
22sander ( 2014-12-19 15:20:00 +0200 )edit- and 9. are contrary. 5. asks for 32GB, 9. for more storage.
What is a good screen? Durable software? Don't you mean stable software?
400 EUR is not that much compared to competitors. They sell mainstream phones at that price tag.
Anna ( 2014-12-19 15:49:28 +0200 )editI think 400 EUR is very much for a smartphone that onlymeets the first 4 feature wishes. For instance, I can buy the cheapest dual-SIM Samsung smartphone for 150 EUR and the most expensive dual-SIM of this brand costs 355 EUR (check http://tweakers.net/categorie/215/smartphones/producten/#filter:Tc3LCsMgFATQf5m1hWve5AMCCXTVZcnCRheWvNBQCsF_77UpoSvlOM7seDg161Z71HdJVPQCi9PGNdaMGjVWZ58eP7wtbmNTfjhlNUPLuYsUMTqYq51Rk4Dnh8aOm3HcvENmMo3nS408hLSSOfog2Ck_HZ0CW1mUkabYBElJ9sWy-kOen9Q73pKKiGIgkce3o6nIeS-E8AE ). This 355 EUR Samsung phone is much more featureful than what I need for 400 EUR.
If more wishes are met, I am obviously prepared to pay more than that.
22sander ( 2014-12-19 16:30:38 +0200 )edit