A few months ago, as 2020 came to a close, it became obvious that it was "that time" again. Time to move on, in the every-changing world of cellphones. Our 2 year contract with Sprint was up, which meant that we needed to make a decision about whether to:
- Stay with Sprint (now T-Mobile), or go with another carrier.
- Keep our phones or move on.
- Some combination there-of.
As nothing has changed in Terrell and any carrier NOT-SPRINT still didn't have good coverage there was nonexistent; we stayed with Sprint/T-Mobile. Another question was easily answered (or so we thought) with me staying with my "paid-for outright" Moto G6 phone, but everyone else was up in the air. My wife of course wanted to stay with Apple's iPhone, and daughter is also in the "ecosystem", but my son wanted to jump ship and move to Android. So this is where things start to get interesting.....
This state of affairs set me off to do research on
the current crop of "mid-range", "unlocked", Android phones. My son
seemed uninterested in my long-standing use of Moto (Motorola of Lenovo
manufacturer) phones such as my G. After a bit of research, it looked
like much of the teens and twenties seem to be interested in the Google
Pixel phones. My original belief was that they were higher-end, but my
newer info indicated that Google had moved decidedly mid-range in the
last 2 years beginning with the Pixel 3a. And that the Pixel 4, leaned
in that direction as well. But I wanted to cast a wider net, so I looked at most everything.
This is the cast of characters as I began to do serious research into a replacement for his iPhone Xr and my aging phone G6 as well (more on that later). The cream that rose to the top ended up being the One+ Nord, the iPhone SE (which ended up being my daughter's replacement phone) and the Pixel 4/4a. So, we chased down a used Pixel 4 for him locally for $200 in good shape and it even came with a nice Spigen case. Then we got to spend a joyful 3 hours at the formerly know as Sprint store. In the end, my wife got her traditional near-top-of-the-line iPhone 12, my daughter the iPhone SE (because they were out of the 11 and not getting any more), and my son switched to the aforementioned Google Pixel 4. He was overjoyed as much as any 17-year-old teenager could be, meaning he talked about it a bit. What about me? I left with the same Moto G6 that I walked in with because it's me and I hate limiting myself to what the store has and I don't like to pay their retail price. .....but I was already looking! My G6 was decidedly long-in-the-tooth! Running out of storage (16Gb), slow and stuck on Android 9. What did I want to do? I was looking at the Moto Z4 pretty hard, because I'm used to Motorola and like it's adaptability. And since it was a top-of-the-line phone, it had been available with up to 128Gb of storage. After looking at it a bit, I realized that it was getting old, I really didn't want to run around with a bunch of "Moto Mods" parts to do things with and it was still expensive while push 2 years old.
While I was looking at the Z4, I had to decide on a price level I was OK with for a replacement phone. That came down to $250 plus or minus a bit, and within the upper end of that range, sat the Google Pixel 4a. The $350 de-featured, 6-8 month younger brother of the Pixel 4. I had become suitably impressed with my son's 4 and didn't care about the features Google took out, so I started looking. These things are less than 6 months old so the prices are usually still above $300, but I was able to find an unlocked one locally in mint condition for $275. So, after decades of use and 8-10 Motorola phones used, what made me jump? First and foremost, Lenovo hasn't done a good job of competing performance-wise with the competition in the mid-range phones. Their strategy seems to be to move down in feature-set and price, as well as performance. They are simply not part of the conversation when reviewers talk about the better mid-range phones. The other part, is the Pixel 4a is everything I want without anything I don't want (such as being an iPhone). The most important of these is a nice small size (sub 6" screen), fast for what I do, 128Gb of storage which is way more than the 16Gb that I came from, and an excellent camera. Although it doesn't have it's back covered in lenses like the iPhone Pro or Samsungs, it does have the single camera from the top-of-the-line 4XL This is a bit step for me who thought that I didn't care about the phone camera since I'm a real photographer who uses real cameras! I've finally given in and admitted that I use the phone as a camera way more than I a purpose-built one!
While I was looking at the Z4, I had to decide on a price level I was OK with for a replacement phone. That came down to $250 plus or minus a bit, and within the upper end of that range, sat the Google Pixel 4a. The $350 de-featured, 6-8 month younger brother of the Pixel 4. I had become suitably impressed with my son's 4 and didn't care about the features Google took out, so I started looking. These things are less than 6 months old so the prices are usually still above $300, but I was able to find an unlocked one locally in mint condition for $275. So, after decades of use and 8-10 Motorola phones used, what made me jump? First and foremost, Lenovo hasn't done a good job of competing performance-wise with the competition in the mid-range phones. Their strategy seems to be to move down in feature-set and price, as well as performance. They are simply not part of the conversation when reviewers talk about the better mid-range phones. The other part, is the Pixel 4a is everything I want without anything I don't want (such as being an iPhone). The most important of these is a nice small size (sub 6" screen), fast for what I do, 128Gb of storage which is way more than the 16Gb that I came from, and an excellent camera. Although it doesn't have it's back covered in lenses like the iPhone Pro or Samsungs, it does have the single camera from the top-of-the-line 4XL This is a bit step for me who thought that I didn't care about the phone camera since I'm a real photographer who uses real cameras! I've finally given in and admitted that I use the phone as a camera way more than I a purpose-built one!