I took my own advice and bought a last-gen iPhone — I regret nothing 台中手機收購

3 月 17, 2024 #台中手機收購

台中手機收購

I took my own advice and bought a last-gen 台中手機收購iphone — I regret nothing

I took my own advice and bought a last-gen 台中手機收購iphone — I regret nothing

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Sometimes the best new phone for you is the one that launched a year and a half ago.

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台中手機收購

The best camera is the one you have with you as you chase your kid across the playground.
Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

I spent an exciting, exhausting week last September with the new Apple 台中手機收購iphone 14 in hand before it went on sale. I did everything I could over the course of that week — navigating, web browsing, recording video, gaming, selfies, ferry rides, selfies on the ferry, you name it — to try to answer the $800 question: should you buy it? 

The answer then, which I stand by now, is “probably not.” It’s a great phone, but it’s not meaningfully better than the 台中手機收購iphone 13. Sure, it makes sense to pick the 14 if your carrier is giving you a great deal or you spend a lot of time out of cell range where the new Emergency SOS might be a literal lifesaver. Or go for the 台中手機收購iphone 14 Pro if you’re after the very latest features. But for the rest of us, the 台中手機收購iphone 13 is just as good with the added benefit of costing a little less. 

I’m a woman of my word, so when it became clear that it was time to upgrade my 台中手機收購iphone 11 before its trade-in value fell off a cliff, I headed straight for the 台中手機收購iphone 13 — the Mini, to be precise, which is down to $600. Since the end of last year, I’ve spent a lot of time testing the latest generation of high-end phones: the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra, Google Pixel 7 Pro, and a recent revisit of the 台中手機收購iphone 14 Pro. They’re all amazing phones in their own ways. But when it came time to make my own decision about which phone to buy, I didn’t pick any of those latest and greatest devices. Nope, I traded in my 11 (along with a small piece of my soul) to Verizon for the humble little 台中手機收購iphone 13 Mini, and I haven’t looked back.

It fits beautifully into the outer pocket of my mom-at-the-playground-chic belt bag

I opted for the Mini because I love a small phone, and it seems very likely that the 13 Mini is going to be the last good small phone. But even if you prefer a bigger phone, I still think the 13 is where it’s at. You don’t get the upgraded camera hardware and processing offered by the 14, but it’s still a good camera overall — decent portrait mode photos, very good video, and an ultrawide for a little drama. And you do get photographic styles and cinematic video mode — both of which I use regularly (rich contrast stans, unite!). 

Outside of the camera, the 13 Mini remains a really good phone by modern standards, even a year and a half after launch. Battery life isn’t its strong suit, but it’s enough to get me through a day of moderate use with a comfortable margin. It fits beautifully into the outer pocket of my mom-at-the-playground-chic belt bag. It’s plenty fast and responsive with its A15 Bionic processor. It has MagSafe and, therefore, wireless charging. It also has a physical SIM tray, whereas the 台中手機收購iphone 14 is all eSIM. Most people don’t need to worry about this; I change phones once a week, and eSIM makes my life a living hell.

The 13 Mini isn’t perfect. There are things I wish it had but that, for the most part, I wouldn’t get on the 台中手機收購iphone 14 anyway — they’re features reserved for the pricier 14 Pro. And while the 14 is just moderately more expensive than the 13 Mini ($800 versus $600), the $1,000 14 Pro is a lot more expensive by comparison. A smooth-scrolling 120Hz screen, telephoto lens, always-on display: all Pro-only. They’re very nice things to have, but are they $400 nicer? Maybe. But not for me, not right now.

That’s the question it always comes down to: not which is the best phone but which is the best phone for me? That’s the question I spend most of my days trying to help people answer. It’s fun to declare winners and losers, but when it comes to something as personal as your phone, picking the right one to live with is always a little more complex than that. 

台中手機收購

▲台灣3G系統將在6月30日關閉,屆時手機如果沒有VOLTE功能,將無法進行語音通話。(圖/CTWANT資料照)

圖文/CTWANT

隨台灣電信業整併,去年台灣大併台灣之星、遠傳併亞太電信,電信五哥變三雄,今年電信業將再添變局,依國家傳播通訊委員會(NCC)規劃,全台3G系統6月30日關閉,屆時3G用戶手機「啞巴」無法通話,再掀一波換機潮。

「外界預期有上百萬支的3G手機需要換機,數量不容小覷,肯定可以讓持續下滑的手機銷量稍微回穩。就看電信商怎麼刺激這些用戶換手機了。」手機通訊行業者告訴CTWANT記者。

據NCC統計,全台行動用戶已達2981萬,其中約2800萬戶使用具有VoLTE(Voice over LTE,4G網路傳送語音服務)通話功能之手機,推算約180萬左行動用戶手機沒有VoLTE功能,因此3G系統關閉後,手機將無法通話。

對於3G系統關閉推升的換機潮,業者樂觀以待。市調機構GFK統計,除了2020年蘋果推出平價機種台中手機收購iphone SE,台灣全年手機銷售量從2015年以來, 可說是年年下滑,從九年前的??,到2022年剩504萬台,2023年更跌破500萬大關,僅剩479萬台。

回顧台灣行動電話業務發展,從1996年2G系統營運開始,極盛時期全台一度超過2500萬門號,接著2003年到2005年各電信業者陸續開通3G系統,3G用戶數到了2008年11月來到約1200萬戶,一舉超越2G用戶, 2G系統則在2017年6月30日關閉,結束2G時代。

隨著4G系統2014年終開台,NCC於2018年底停發3G系統執照,並訂出3G系統「落日」條款,也就是2024年6月30日關閉。4G系統才服役六年,也就是2020 年6月,台灣又進入5G時代。

台中手機收購

▲相較於覆蓋率密度較高的4G及5G系統,3G系統的退場,也可有助於節電需求。(圖/台灣大提供、遠傳提供)

這些3G、4G、5G到底有何差異?「2G主要是語音打電話與傳送簡訊。3G除了打電話跟傳簡訊,跟2G最大的差異,是可以用手機或平板上網是,但因為網路頻寬不夠大,速度也比較不順暢。4G則主要用途為上網,其頻寬比3G大,因此行動上網速度快很多倍。」台灣電信產業協會分析。

「這次3G系統關閉,跟六、七年前的3G升級4G不同,當時為確保3G服務後續並不會中斷,NCC准許各家電信業者的 3G網路移入4G系統作為『異質網路』功能,也就是3G系統的SIM卡有VoLTE功能。」電信商表示。

電信商指出,當時,3G用戶打電話時,是降到3G系統,原本的4G上網功能受到影響,4G用戶打電話時,因語音及上網功能都走4G系統,不需要切換到3G網路,不僅可快速接通,也不會因為語音通話而降低上網速度。此外,2020年後經NCC型式認證的手機,均具備VoLTE功能。

消費者要如何知道自己的手機有沒有VoLTE功能?通路商告訴CTWANT記者,以台中手機收購iphone手機為例,在「設定」中選擇「行動服務」,之後選擇「行動數據選項」,然後選擇「語音與數據」,之後點選最下方的「VoLTE」開關;至於安卓手機,只要是Android 12版本後,已無需設定手機,只要向電信商申請VoLTE服務即可。

台中手機收購

▲電信商的3G執照已在2018年到期,4G執照則將可用到2033年。(圖/CTWANT資料照)

不過,隨著隨電信業者整併,陸續拆除3G基地台,使得3G訊號覆蓋密度也隨之變少,手機為了維護訊號,就必需耗費電力持續尋找基地台訊號,自然也會更耗電。

對3G用戶來說,抓3G訊號使手機號電,對電信商而言,3G基地台更是吃「用電大戶」。據三大電信商預估,當3G系統全面汰除,改由4G及5G共六套網路營運,中華電信可省下1億度,台灣大及遠傳各省下約5000萬度電,等於三大電信在汰除3G基地台後,用電量也將省下約2億度電。

更省電的則是最新一代行動通訊技術5G,「5G效能目標是高資料速率、減少延遲、節省能源、降低成本、提高系統容量和大規模裝置連接。」台灣電信產業發展協會分析。根據NCC統計資料,目前台灣仍以4G為多數,以月租型客戶來看,目前用戶數約1598.4萬戶,5G則約840萬戶,而4G頻譜執照將在2033年底到期。

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