There are many ways and tools to choose your next device, but some are better than others. How do you do it?
I'll begin - I tend to use Kimovil, however it lacks pricing for many devices and thus makes the process harder. Has many filters though, from headphone jack to different 5G and 4G bands.
GSMARENA Phone Finder is pretty amazing. You can filter by basically any phone characteristic you want. Back material? Yep. Refresh rate? Also yes. Proximity sensor? You got it. Minimum wired charging wattage? Sure, why not.
I've yet to find a more comprehensive one.
Edit: taking a look at Kimovil. It seems like it has much of the same filters as Phone Finder, but with the bonus of also showing price, which is nice.
My only gripe is I can't filter by SoC type, like Snapdragon only for example, otherwise it's a cool thing to have, but yeah, kimovil shows regional pricing
I check for LineageOS support, repairability (kind of pointless nowdays), a headphone jack and a SD card slot and end up buying something that just supports LineageOS because apparently I am asking too much of a modern phone... :(
I'm kinda doing the same thing, expect I'm still waiting for a phone that does all of it. The problem is that my old device is usually more powerful than the current offerings, so I guess I'll wait. No hurry anyways.
I already have one without a SD card slot and lacking repairability and the reward is a dying battery and no easy way to repair or back up anything, can't recommend!
I look up what I like in a phone (headphone jack, expandable storage, led, Snapdragon..., plastic back, etc.) and use gsmsarena's advanced search feature.
I don't use a tool, I just check the sizes to narrow down if the phone can be used comfortably in one hand. This narrows the results down to 0 and I just decide to keep my current device for longer.
I look at the supported devices list for LineageOS or Graphene, compare the specs to find the smallest one that's current, then hit the classifieds to buy a used phone. Because I'm just going to break it anyway and I'll be fucked if I use stock Android.
GSMArena has nice phone search functionality, I was using it often when thinking about upgrading, but to be frank I bought 2 of my last phones basically on release date based off specs, unboxings and first impressions I saw online, even not full reviews were online, those phones were:
Motorola One Vision - May 2019 - 128GB of UFS storage, modern punch hole display and OIS equipped camera sounded cool, unfortunately the camera was kind of sub par, slight zoom resulted in garbage photo, also apparently Motorola couldn't optimize for exynos because despite somewhat satisfying performance, stuttering was frequent
OnePlus Nord 3 - July 2023 - powerful SoC, 16GB of RAM, OnePlus declares 3 years of software support, fast 80W charging, looks nice on paper, my only gripe is battery drain but they keep optimizing the software
www.epey.com - Turkish website that can serve that purpose for a very wide variety of things. It allows filtering based on specs, comparing items side by side and shows price history. The prices and availability isn't always complete so I usually pick what I want from there and search the web to see if they're any lower prices. And it only lists items that are on sale in Turkey so might not be as useful to people living in other countries, but might be worth trying.
I mostly use GSMarena to compare features and check out reviews of shortlisted phones on amazon and youtube. Kimovil looks interesting. Will try it out next time.
I dont. I will generally narrow down on a couple devices and then type (phone brand phone model specs gsmarena) into duckduckgo and compare the two or 3 on my short list this way. What has become really important to me is width. I hat a 76mm motorola and with the case it was not nice to hold. With that said my most recent phone is 74mm, but i still will try for just a bit narrower next time. I am suspecting 71mm should be about right.
A smartphone is the ultimate, single-user personal computer. Choosing a device is too intimate for me to use any sort of tabular comparison tool. The device needs to be right for me qualitatively also.
I strongly recommend picking a handful of devices and getting a variety of opinions from reviewers. Then, weigh those opinions against what features are most important to you.
If this is your main computer which most likely it is for most people, it's worthwhile to spend some time on selection.
I'm a farmer and need a rugged phone that can fall off a tractor into an irrigation ditch on a regular basis. So I buy Sonim, end of story. Usually replace them every 5 years as they never get updates and the Android version starts getting obsolete.
Unfortunately the Sonim XP10 looks to be not as sturdy as previous versions and they have walked back their previous bulletproof warranty. So I guess I'm in the market for a new ultra-rugged phone, luckily the XP8 I'm using should last for years yet
I've heard good things about them online but sadly they aren't supported by my Canadian carrier at this time, and as my carrier gatekeeps services like VoLTE and VoWifi with their firmware for some reason it's not really worth the risk of importing one especially at full price...
But I'm hoping they make it out here soon to provide us with another rugged option for sure. I've been so happy with Sonim for years that I'm quite disappointed in their latest offering.
I check sites that list hardware specs, and once I find a phone that seems interesting for an average price I'm willing to pay, I check places like XDA to know how much of a hassle it'll be to unlock the bootloader and add a custom ROM. And if modding the phone has too many/too big drawbacks, I return to the first step until I find a phone that seems good.
The quality has skyrocketed lately, a working bacon(my current main phone), then a working addison(which now supports treble thanks to lineageOS and Xperience teams!), then my next main phone, the oxygen