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People Are Keeping Their Phones Longer Because There's Not Much Reason To Upgrade, Study Finds (vice.com)

According to a recent study by Hyla Mobile as reported by the Wall Street Journal, a mobile-device trade-in company, the average age of an iPhone at trade-in is now 2.92 years. That's up from 2.38 years in 2016, and 2.59 in 2017, according to the company. From a report: Part of this, according to Biju Nair, chief executive of Hyla Mobile, is because phone plan carriers moved from a subsidized payment model for new phones, to payment plans, as smartphones got more expensive over the years. Now, if you purchase it from a big carrier like Verizon or T-Mobile as part of a plan package, your phone is basically on loan to you from the carrier, while you make smaller monthly payments until it's paid off and you own it outright.

It can take years to pay off a new smartphone (the iPhone XS Max costs almost $1,100), and once you've done it, there's not much incentive to give up that investment -- especially when the newest models aren't much different in terms of specs and performance than the one you already have. Add to this the efforts by right-to-repair groups to raise awareness about the fact that your phone actually doesn't need to go in the garbage every time you crack the screen, and you've got people keeping their phones longer. The way we view new technology has also changed in recent years.

8 of 234 comments (clear)

  1. Re:+1 by Naznac · · Score: 4, Interesting

    one thing that is gone from modern smartphones and should never have been removed is easily replaceable batteries. It`s a pain to open a phone to replace it nowadays...

  2. Re:Newer = worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Doesn't matter. When Trump gets done rolling out his tariffs you won't be able to afford a new phone. Who knew trade wars could be so disastrous?

  3. Yah by no-body · · Score: 3, Interesting

    But you may run out of support on Apps for your old gear and find no ear for your complaints...

    System is geared for consumption and profit from there. Using old gear is counterproductive to this philosophy - try to win against that, fat chance.
    Long term effect of this, I leave it to your fantasy.
    Underlying reason, same thing, maybe the fiddler crabs effect, he who has the biggest claws gets the female.....

  4. Most things have been 'good enough' for a while by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My laptop (M6700) was released in 2012, my phone (Note 4) is from 2014 and my desktop (4770k) is from 2013. They're all sufficient, even in late 2018.

    In the case of the Laptop I can't find never Laptops that perform as well or have as much room to expand for anywhere near the price I paid.

  5. 2.92 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How ridiculous! If I am going to sink $600 - $1000 into a phone, I wan't the damn thing to last a DECADE at least.

    This is one of the (many) reasons why I use a dumbphone (for which I paid 30 bucks).

    Here is a concise documentary on the subject.

  6. Re:Newer = worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    LG V20 here. Removable battery & sd card support. $150 off ebay. I see no reason to "upgrade".

  7. Now that I know what smartphones really are for... by DaveM753 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Now that I know what today's smartphones really are for, which is the selling of my personal information, I feel there is no compelling reason to purchase a new one. My next cellular phone will be either a simple flip-phone with no "apps", or a smartphone which is a true PC in a small, "phone"-factor format that runs my choice of Linux OS which *I* can control. Anything other than that, and I'm not going to purchase one. I lived the first 30 years of my life without a cell phone, I'm sure I can live the remaining 30 years without one.

    ...and yes, it must have a 3.5mm headphone jack sans DRM.

    ...and get the fuck off my lawn.

  8. Newer = worse for Android too by Excelcia · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I want my darn headphone jack. And I'm keeping it until my phone is unrepairable.

    The same feature loss is happening on Android phones too. My Samsung Galaxy S5 has both MHL (HDMI) and an IR transmitter. I can both connect it to a TV and control the TV with it. Fantastic for traveling, especially being in the Navy. I can connect my phone with my movies to a TV in the mess, or in barracks rooms when attach posted to a different city, or just when at a friend's house.

    In the S6 they dropped support for both, In the S6 they even dropped a MicroSD slot. Of course with that abortion that Android KitKat was where they took away normal user write privileges onto the sd card, the writing was on the wall that they were going to try that. That was an obvious ploy to go the Apple route and make you pay hundreds and hundreds extra.

    So it's not just Apple that drops really nice features. Android phones are falling over themselves to drop features. In fact, I've noticed there is this life cycle for all goods. You have three stages. Phase 1 is the prototype, phase 2 is the feature phase, and then the phase 3 mass market stage. The prototype phase is where it's new technology, and still working out the bugs. The feature phase is where they throw every feature they can think of at it to encourage wide adoption and because they aren't really sure all the things people will want. Then you have the mass market phase, where they zoom in on the center of the bell curve and getting anything outside that basically requires getting an older model.

    I love my phase 2 Galaxy S5. I'll keep it until the oLed degrades beyond recognition.