New Phone Help

Seric20

Registered User
Messages
28
Hi,
Looking to buy a new phone. Posting as I literally have not a second to research.
I have had and quite like Samsung but have not upgraded in 4years (blame small kids busy life) Current phone bought outright is a Samsung S8 (still gd but battered)
Can anyone advise on a decent model maybe budget of €400 max please and where best to purchase. Am with 3 on €20 p/m non contract.
V.gd camera
Plenty storage
Good battery life
General use.
Thanks v.much
 
I can strongly recommend OnePlus - and for your budget the Nord 2T

Have used the 6T before, and now on the Nord 2, and can't really fault them.
Buy directly from their web site. Data/app migration is a doddle with software and instructions provided.
 
Everyone will say there's is the best in the range you're after. I'd go with answer No 3 above. They're all 6 of 1 and half a dozen of the other.
 

Seric20,​

This is from todays Irish Indo. Think you'll get good advice from it.​

Top of the class: What are the five best Android phones available right now?​


While Apple's new iPhone 14 is due to be unveiled in the next month, most of the big Android launches are now complete for this year. Which ones stand out? Here are five you'll want to consider, spanning good value mid-rangers to ultra-premium flagships.
1. Ultra-premium
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold4
Price: from €1,929
If you're seeking the out-and-out top Android phone, Samsung's new Galaxy Z Fold4 is one you'll have to consider.
It's certainly not for everyone. And it's not actually the best on any individual metric, such as camera, battery or power.
But its large-screen fold-out display — going from [6.2 inches] to a 7.6-inch near-square shape — makes it stand out as the flagship of flagships.
I have a more in-depth review on the Fold4 on Independent.ie, where I test how useful (or not) that larger screen is for things you might want to do with a smartphone.
In my experience so far, it's likely to be of most appeal if you're the type who likes using a stylus with a tablet, or genuinely find utility in having a few different apps open in front of you, especially for work.
In other words, it's really a supercharged productivity device. Samsung reckons it's the 2020s version of its Note, which completely upended smartphone design with its large screen a decade ago. Whether or not it sells as such, there's no question that what was something of an experiment is now starting to act and feel like a more solid, complete, thought-through device.
2. Flagship
Oppo Find X5
Price: €899
Those looking for an alternative to Samsung's S22 in the 'standard' flagship phone range will, at some point, end up at Oppo's door.
The Find X5 is easily one of the best sub-€1,000 Android phones.
The same company that makes OnePlus adds a little more quality and refinement to its main flagship which, for my money, is probably better value than the high end Find X5 Pro.
For what you're paying here, you're getting almost everything Samsung's S22 has in a slightly sleeker package. That includes a truly superb 6.5-inch screen, a top-end engine and very good battery life.
The cameras, while excellent, are perhaps a shade off Samsung's in some edge-case situations, in my testing. There is however, an optical telephoto zoom (2x) on board.
Its design includes slightly curved glass at the edges, which is now not common on flagship phones.
As ever with Oppo, the accompanying charging apparatus is a real bonus. It comes with an 80-watt charger and can support 30-watt wireless charging - a rarity.
3. Mid-range
Pixel 6a
Price: €459
Google's Pixel phones were always decent value on a specification shootout, but used to be a bit dull-looking.
The recently-launched Pixel 6a is much more visually distinctive, standing out from most of the black slabs out there. One big advantage to the 6.1-inch Pixel 6A is that you get the same powerful 'Tensor' chip system as the bigger, more expensive models.
This allows for fairly advanced computation photography, as well as helping to save battery life.The Pixel 6a's two rear cameras (12-megapixel wide and ultrawide) are also very, very good for a phone at this price. They're barely a half step back from flagship cameras. The only real drawback is the absence of a zoom lens.
In short, this is an affordable Android with very considerable power, good cameras, a good display, decent storage and the all-round feel of something that will last a while.
4. Mid-range
Samsung Galaxy A53
Price: €469
The sub-€500 phone category is, right now, the most competitive in the smartphone market.
There are several really compelling devices with specifications that will absolutely tick almost all boxes for the majority of regular smartphone users.
And I don't mean your parents' requirement for a bit of WhatsApp, Facebook and web browsing - I mean you.
Samsung's Galaxy A53 is a great example of why. It comes with features and specifications that people were paying almost €1,000 for two years ago, and over €700 last year in the shape of the S21 FE.
These include a really nice, super-smooth, 120hz, 6.5-inch display, excellent battery life and a guaranteed five years of Samsung security updates - which means it's likely to be top of your enterprise organisation's subsidised phones list.
The cameras (64-megapixel wide, 12-megapixel ultrawide, macro and depth) are very decent, but there's no optical telephoto zoom.
This is a really good sweet-spot device for those who need a lot of functionality and superb battery life on a budget.
5. Mid-range
Nothing Phone 1
Price: €469
In some ways, the recently-launched Nothing Phone 1 is the best, most interesting mid-range handset you can buy. Nothing is the new company launched by OnePlus founder Carl Pei.
It has a superb 6.5-inch screen, great power, high storage and good cameras. But it's also very definitely the most distinctively designed new smartphone of 2022, thanks to a system of 900 micro-LED 'glyph' lights built in to the rear of the phone.
These serve mainly as a visual aide to alerts and ringtones. The whole point of Nothing's Phone 1 is personality and identifiability in a world of bland black slabs.
Face down on a table, an incoming call or text should reveal its difference. It's also designed rather like an iPhone in shape, which some will like.
The 6.5-inch Oled screen is really nice, with a 60hz to 120h adaptive refresh rate, 402ppi and 1,200 nits peak brightness.
Its engine is among the most powerful you can get in this price range, with a Snapdragon 778+ chip backed up by 8GB of Ram. This is easily good enough for most games and video processing.
It also has some high-end features, such as reverse charging and wireless charging — neither of these zap battery life too badly.
This is a maverick choice, but a very good one.
 
Hi all,
Thanks v.much for all that info, some very comprehensive. I used to have time once but not at the minute so thank you. I will check those out and the Samsung A today also. I was looking at some Samsung S20's online.....not the 21 or 22..too expensive. Stretching budget a bit but wondering are they btr than A. Hmm.
Plus am horrified at the larger phone sizes now. My Samsung S8 ‍♀️ is only about 5inches...a nice pocket friendly size.
 
I must have seen price for refurb s20's....either that or serious hike in the last wk ‍♀️ no I wont be getting s20
 
Get a brand new Xiami for 250E direct from xiaomi.ie. Great phones, dont pay for the branding.
Apple phones use chips manufactured in Taiwan and assembled in China, so no bugger all difference in quality.
 
There is a signicantly different in quality . But if you don't notice it, you don't need it.
 
The last four phones I've bought for myself and others have been Moto G series from G7 to G10. Never had a complaint and they've been getting cheaper as time goes on. Could never understand anyone spending 1000+ on a phone. That's way more than I spend on my laptops (and I'm a software developer). Latest midrange (but perfectly adequate) one is G22, currently EUR 150 on Lenova site:

 
Always liked the Motos mostly stock Android. Last couple I had a few bugs and camera's and specs were lackluster. But it's been a few years since I had one.

I switched to using pixels which where slightly better specs but still a little buggy now and then.

I don't see the point of a high end phone unless money is no object and it's something you are into.
 
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