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Reasons NOT to Buy a $1000 Samsung Galaxy S10
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<blockquote data-quote="Ink" data-source="post: 811366" data-attributes="member: 3"><p><span style="font-size: 12px">Thanks to [USER=74969]@plat1098[/USER] for sharing this link, as posted <a href="https://malwaretips.com/threads/galaxy-s10-screen-replacement-costs-are-so-high-you%E2%80%99re-better-off-buying-a-new-phone.91296/post-811270" target="_blank">here</a>.</span></p><p></p><p>Quoted from <a href="https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2019/04/galaxy-s10-review-for-1000-samsung-needs-to-offer-a-more-complete-package/2" target="_blank">Galaxy S10+ review: Too many compromises for the sky-high price</a></p><p></p><p style="margin-left: 20px">"Since this is a Samsung phone, let's talk crapware! This is <strong>an unlocked phone direct from Samsung</strong>, so with no carrier involvement, this is as good as it gets. Despite being a premium, $1,000 smartphone, the Galaxy S10 comes <strong>loaded with ads</strong>, even my unlocked version. There are <strong>apps from Flipboard and Spotify as well as a unremovable version of Facebook</strong>. McAfee Anti-virus is baked into the operating system as "security," and the <strong>Samsung Gallery app wants to share my location with Foursquare</strong>. The storage management settings, which is just <strong>a simple file-cleanup app, is "Powered by Qihoo 360,"</strong> a Chinese security company. A caller-ID feature built into <strong>the phone app is provided by a company called "<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiya_(company)" target="_blank">Hiya</a>."</strong></p> <p style="margin-left: 20px"></p> <p style="margin-left: 20px">Once you run through setup and connect to Wi-Fi, <strong>the phone spawns an undismissable "Secure Wi-Fi" notification</strong>, which, it turns out, is <strong>an ad for McAfee VPN subscription service</strong>. I tried blocking the notification—it's not blockable—but it turns out you can open the advertisement, carefully consider subscribing to McAfee VPN, say "No," and then it will go away. Cool.</p> <p style="margin-left: 20px"></p> <p style="margin-left: 20px">The clash between Google and Samsung is visible all over the phone, and mostly it will manifest in having <strong>two competing version of every basic phone feature</strong>. During setup, you'll be asked to sign in with <strong>two different accounts</strong>, one from Google and one from Samsung. There are <strong>two app stores</strong>, Google Play and Galaxy Apps; two voice Assistants, the Google Assistant and Bixby; two browsers, Samsung Internet and Chrome; two security systems, Google Play Protect and McAfee; <strong>two "find my phone" systems, two password systems, two galleries, and two music solutions</strong>. The duality of everything makes some common tasks profoundly weird. After the usual ritual of setting up the phone and installing all the updates in the Play Store, I wandered into Galaxy Apps and <strong>found 14 more updates waiting for Samsung apps</strong>. You really do have to straddle two different ecosystems."</p><p></p><p>Related: <a href="https://fatsecurity.com/article/apps-like-truecaller" target="_blank">How Caller ID Apps like Truecaller Violate Your Privacy</a></p><p></p><p><u>Change my mind.</u></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ink, post: 811366, member: 3"] [SIZE=3]Thanks to [USER=74969]@plat1098[/USER] for sharing this link, as posted [URL='https://malwaretips.com/threads/galaxy-s10-screen-replacement-costs-are-so-high-you%E2%80%99re-better-off-buying-a-new-phone.91296/post-811270']here[/URL].[/SIZE] Quoted from [URL='https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2019/04/galaxy-s10-review-for-1000-samsung-needs-to-offer-a-more-complete-package/2']Galaxy S10+ review: Too many compromises for the sky-high price[/URL] [INDENT]"Since this is a Samsung phone, let's talk crapware! This is [B]an unlocked phone direct from Samsung[/B], so with no carrier involvement, this is as good as it gets. Despite being a premium, $1,000 smartphone, the Galaxy S10 comes [B]loaded with ads[/B], even my unlocked version. There are [B]apps from Flipboard and Spotify as well as a unremovable version of Facebook[/B]. McAfee Anti-virus is baked into the operating system as "security," and the [B]Samsung Gallery app wants to share my location with Foursquare[/B]. The storage management settings, which is just [B]a simple file-cleanup app, is "Powered by Qihoo 360,"[/B] a Chinese security company. A caller-ID feature built into [B]the phone app is provided by a company called "[URL='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiya_(company)']Hiya[/URL]."[/B][/INDENT] [INDENT][/INDENT] [INDENT]Once you run through setup and connect to Wi-Fi, [B]the phone spawns an undismissable "Secure Wi-Fi" notification[/B], which, it turns out, is [B]an ad for McAfee VPN subscription service[/B]. I tried blocking the notification—it's not blockable—but it turns out you can open the advertisement, carefully consider subscribing to McAfee VPN, say "No," and then it will go away. Cool.[/INDENT] [INDENT][/INDENT] [INDENT]The clash between Google and Samsung is visible all over the phone, and mostly it will manifest in having [B]two competing version of every basic phone feature[/B]. During setup, you'll be asked to sign in with [B]two different accounts[/B], one from Google and one from Samsung. There are [B]two app stores[/B], Google Play and Galaxy Apps; two voice Assistants, the Google Assistant and Bixby; two browsers, Samsung Internet and Chrome; two security systems, Google Play Protect and McAfee; [B]two "find my phone" systems, two password systems, two galleries, and two music solutions[/B]. The duality of everything makes some common tasks profoundly weird. After the usual ritual of setting up the phone and installing all the updates in the Play Store, I wandered into Galaxy Apps and [B]found 14 more updates waiting for Samsung apps[/B]. You really do have to straddle two different ecosystems."[/INDENT] Related: [URL='https://fatsecurity.com/article/apps-like-truecaller']How Caller ID Apps like Truecaller Violate Your Privacy[/URL] [U]Change my mind.[/U] [/QUOTE]
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