TL;DR touch screen working correctly when wet (ie in the rain, or in my case, the shower 👀)
This headline sounds clickbaity as fuck, but yeah that would be nice.
This is the reason why I recommend a submission statement and de-clickbaiting the title before submission.
Submission statements were amazing on many subreddits! I would love to see them on Lemmy.
It’s optional, but recommended when needed here, I don’t really want to force the issue, but from what I’ve seen, the posts with some of your own thoughts usually get more upvotes.
Unlike on reddit, Lemmy post submission can have any combination of both link and text, so writing a little bit about your submission is a good general habit to get into here.
But it isnt so whats the problem ?
I dont want to read the article, what…uhh…what’s the solution? And is it coming (will they sell it to) to other phones too?
Edit: read the article and there’s no mention of it. Just talks about the ram of it, as if phones were short RAM these days.
Second paragraph:
“The company has revealed that the upcoming OnePlus Ace 2 Pro includes ‘Rainwater Touch Control’ technology, which combines a custom screen chip and some algorithms to account for water on the display, and prevent it from interfering with taps and swipes.”
I wonder if it’s as simple as just slowing down the input reading to a human reaction time level. At least my screen seems to take 15 000 inputs at the same time when wet.
the tl;dr is the OnePlus video I shared here a while ago: https://lemmy.world/post/2988195
Partially off topic, but I won’t buy OnePlus anymore, because they lock down the bootloader.
I’ll similarly stay away from OnePlus as they are basically nothing more than overpriced af “stock-like” clones of Oppo/Vivo at this point.
My 8Pro is the last 1+ I’ll own. Looking longingly at Nothing Phone next year I think, but this phone has been wonky last few days. Keyboards not working, apps not working correctly (and are updated). Could technwbe because I’m still on Android 11, but the 1+ track record for stable Android releases isn’t great either.
I also got the 8 pro a while ago, it was such a shame watching their UI get uglier and uglier over time. I loved the warp charge feature
I just last week updated from A11 to A13, I do not enjoy it. I did it because some functionality was getting weird; Bluetooth dropping from Android Auto repeatedly, SwiftKey keyboard not working with some apps, weird app responses and delays.
Some of the issues resolved, new ones cropped up. I’m getting more and more frustrated with it.
oneplus isn’t stock like anymore
but they are competitive again with the 11
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In newer versions it’s entirely blocked. I’ve unlocked OnePlus 6 and it was quite easy, because there were no updates for Android 12. On OnePlus 7 it was a different situation I needed to downgrade first to be able to unlock the bootloader. And it only works with vendor tools in a special service mode. These tools are not provided for new phones anymore as far as I know. And I mean, what do you want to downgrade to when Android 12 bootloader stock image is locked.
Just curious, is 24GB of RAM in a smartphone useful for anything?
Doubt it, I don’t use so much even on my gaming PC.
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It will let you run more advanced local AI. I’m looking forward to running private LLMs.
The only reason I can think of is for more on device ai. LLMs like ChatGPT are extremely greedy when it comes down to RAM. There are some optimizations that squeeze them into a smaller memory footprint at the expense of accuracy/capability. Even some of the best phones out there today are barely capable of running a stripped down generative ai. When they do, the output is nowhere near as good as when it is run in an uncompressed mode on a server.
For the user? Not at all. For the companies that want their spying/tracking apps to run and take your precious data 24/7? Yes, this way dozens of apps can track you even if you open a hundred more afterwards and forget about them, they can live forever deep down those 24gb
Mostly caching I guess, so less cold starting of apps
It will allow future developers to create even less optimized apps and not worry about how resources are used.
Hopefully this becomes standard. Looks like Apple were looking into it too
https://www.phonearena.com/news/patent-improves-typing-on-iphone-in-rain_id141115