I bought a Google Pixel 6 Pro last year. Supposedly the best camera on a phone ever, or so they said at the time, which suited me fine because the camera quality is one of my main criteria when picking a new device.
I was quite happy. Still am. The phone produces amazingly good images.
So, last week, Google released the follow-up phone, the 7 Pro. I noticed in the news, and I was curious to see what had changed, so one of the early reviews caught my eye. It was comparing the 6 Pro to the 7 Pro, since the former is still available, and the author wondered if last year's model was good enough since it's bound to be cheaper. Well, he wrote, if you just need a phone for your day-to-day stuff and (why not?) an occasional photo, then go for the 6 Pro.
But if you like taking pictures with your phone, he added, the 7 Pro is the one you want. The 6 Pro is good enough for basic photography, but that's basically it.
I don't buy this for a second. The phone is very much an incremental update, and pretty much every other review confirms this. Sure, they've learned a few things, but if you got the older one, don't bother. It'll be fine.
Guessing the reviewer in question didn't actually test anything. He just glanced through the marketing materials.
But this raises a larger issue. When did the market change from buying a new one when your old one fails to a yearly thing where not just the manufacturer but the supposedly neutral reviewers both think replacing your old phone every year or two is recommended and close to the objective truth?
Hardware-wise, there's already a limit to the endurance of "older" smartphones. Two or three years, maybe four, and your old device is dying. Its battery can't take it anymore, and the technology is getting close to outdated so the manufacturer no longer supports it with new software. Five and your bank will tell you that your phone is no longer safe to use.
I get it. Everything changes. Another article caught my eye the other day. A 20-yo desktop computer hailed as "future-proof" at the time was examined. Could it be updated? No, was the short-and-to-the-point answer. Everything has changed since then. Yes, technically, you can replace the motherboard and everything attached to it, but what's left then?
So, a final piece of news: there's this "Framework" laptop that you can supposedly upgrade and rebuild for years. Everything about it is replaceable, so it's not just open-source software and BIOS, you can rebuild it! The thing caught my eye on FB or maybe LinkedIn. It looks good enough, but having owned a number of laptops in my time, I remain sceptical.
It all makes me wonder: what's a reasonable cycle with technology? When does it make sense to replace the mobile or the laptop?
(If you simply want the latest every year and can afford it, then don't bother answering.)