Posted August 10, 2018 3 minutes ago, D13H4RD2L1V3 said: Not entirely. There's tons of sub-categories in the midrange section. $200-$300 is what I'd call the lower midrange. This is where you find devices with SD62x processors with 3GB of memory and some might have 4GB. They don't have much features and usually have okay camera but they do the job fine. $400-$500 is the upper-midrange territory. Phones with SD66x SoCs come here and usually pack guts that bridge the gap between a midranger and flagship. They have far better hand-feel, significantly more performance and generally feel more like budget flagships than actual midrangers. Nokia's 7 Plus comes to mind and it is one of the best $400 phones you can get. At times, you'll also find phones with SD8xx chips here. Well, the SD62x and SD66x pricepoint segregation are going to come to an end hopefully since the Snapdragon 660 is intended to replace the 62x and 63x series. The successor for upper midrange is the upcoming Snapdragon 7xx series which will be launched with Snapdragon 710 Judge a product on its own merits AND the company that made it. How to setup MSI Afterburner OSD | How to make your AMD Radeon GPU more efficient with Radeon Chill | (Probably) Why LMG Merch shipping to the EU is expensive Oneplus 6 (Early 2023 to present) | HP Envy 15" x360 R7 5700U (Mid 2021 to present) | Steam Deck (Late 2022 to present) Mid 2023 AlTech Desktop Refresh - AMD R7 5800X (Mid 2023), XFX Radeon RX 6700XT MBA (Mid 2021), MSI X370 Gaming Pro Carbon (Early 2018), 32GB DDR4-3200 (16GB x2) (Mid 2022 Noctua NH-D15 (Early 2021), Corsair MP510 1.92TB NVMe SSD (Mid 2020), beQuiet Pure Wings 2 140mm x2 & 120mm x1 (Mid 2023), Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 3 hours ago, dizmo said: Haha some people need it. I have a friend with a massive music and movie library. He also takes tons of pictures and video. He's totally getting one. Yes, that's fine and understandable. But can you really not realize that, just maybe, there are people that do want that extra little bit of performance and will (obviously, given they haven't had to lower prices) pay to get it? Another thing you're forgetting is that these larger OEM's invest massive amounts into R&D. Then the smaller companies feed off of their hard work. That money has to come from somewhere. $200 is far from a midrange phone, that's entry level territory. Midrange is around $400 - $500 depending on the company. You can easily use a flagship phone for 3 or 4 years, and it'll still perform significantly better than an entry level phone. And this is where I really think your whole argument is flawed. They are affordable. They're just not affordable for you, so you make it seem like no one else can either. Sorry, but a Note 4 is not faster than a 200$ Honor 9 lite. And I will spend the same amount of money you will but I will be able to upgrade every year or 2 years if you are willing to spend 400. I will also have a decent software support. A flagship from Samsung is going to get 3 years of support tops. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 Author 13 minutes ago, Konrad_K said: Sorry, but a Note 4 is not faster than a 200$ Honor 9 lite. And I will spend the same amount of money you will but I will be able to upgrade every year or 2 years if you are willing to spend 500. I will also have a decent software support. A flagship from Samsung is going to get 3 years of support tops. Duh. The Nokia 7 Plus is nearly as powerful as my old Moto Z, and that phone was a top-end flagship from 2016. One question though. Why upgrade every year? Sure, you spend the same money by upgrading every year, but that's not practical. The one big reason people buy cheaper phones is to not spend much on it in the first place. Buying it with the intent to upgrade yearly isn't practical. Also, 2-3 years is normal for most Android flagships. I'm sorry, but an Honor 9 Lite isn't going to receive the same level of software support as a Huawei Mate10 no matter what's promised. Cheaper phones receive updates usually at a later date. The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 4 minutes ago, D13H4RD2L1V3 said: Duh. The Nokia 7 Plus is nearly as powerful as my old Moto Z, and that phone was a top-end flagship from 2016. One question though. Why upgrade every year? Sure, you spend the same money by upgrading every year, but that's not practical. The one big reason people buy cheaper phones is to not spend much on it in the first place. Buying it with the intent to upgrade yearly isn't practical. Also, 2-3 years is normal for most Android flagships. I'm sorry, but an Honor 9 Lite isn't going to receive the same level of software support as a Huawei Mate10 no matter what's promised. Cheaper phones receive updates usually at a later date. Honor was just an example. Funny, I also have a Moto Z and am planning to upgrade to a Nokia 6.1/7+. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 22 minutes ago, D13H4RD2L1V3 said: Duh. The Nokia 7 Plus is nearly as powerful as my old Moto Z, and that phone was a top-end flagship from 2016. One question though. Why upgrade every year? Sure, you spend the same money by upgrading every year, but that's not practical. The one big reason people buy cheaper phones is to not spend much on it in the first place. Buying it with the intent to upgrade yearly isn't practical. Also, 2-3 years is normal for most Android flagships. I'm sorry, but an Honor 9 Lite isn't going to receive the same level of software support as a Huawei Mate10 no matter what's promised. Cheaper phones receive updates usually at a later date. Just to make it clear, I am not partial to any brand. I don't really understand how upgrading yearly/biyearly is impractical. As with your example, a Moto Z is two years old, and it's beat by a 300-400$ mid range phone. That's the point. Buying a expensive flagship does not really make much sense anymore. The money that is invested will be partially wasted because a phone thrice the price won't last 3 times longer . But that's just what is reasonable, if you are an enthusiast and like having the absolute best in phone technology and can justify the huge price premium it's fine, I am just presenting more of a balanced approach. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 Author 13 minutes ago, Konrad_K said: Just to make it clear, I am not partial to any brand. I don't really understand how upgrading yearly/biyearly is impractical. As with your example, a Moto Z is two years old, and it's beat by a 300-400$ mid range phone. That's the point. Buying a expensive flagship does not really make much sense anymore. The money that is invested will be partially wasted because a phone thrice the price won't last 3 times longer . I find it impractical because I am increasingly finding it difficult to justify a yearly upgrade. What are you getting for flipping your phone every year on this day and age? We're now at a time where a Nokia 7+ can last for quite a while without feeling grossly obsolete The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 Just now, D13H4RD2L1V3 said: I find it impractical because I am increasingly finding it difficult to justify a yearly upgrade. What are you getting for flipping your phone every year on this day and age? We're now at a time where a Nokia 7+ can last for quite a while Its fine. it's just my approach. I find buying a 1000$ flagship impractical because I can't justify paying that price for a phone that I will change in 2 years anyways- it's the same thing you pointed out just the other way around. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 4 hours ago, AluminiumTech said: No....... $100 is budget. $200-300 is midrange. $400-500 is heavily overpriced midrange If a phone costs as much as a good laptop then it's not affordable. The only reason phones are so expensive is cos the profit margins are insanely high. Someone else already pointed out the err in the pricing structure. It's affordable for me and many of my friends *shrug* Make more money? Again, you're ignoring the cost of R&D and focusing only on BOM costs which is illogical. 1 hour ago, Konrad_K said: Sorry, but a Note 4 is not faster than a 200$ Honor 9 lite. And I will spend the same amount of money you will but I will be able to upgrade every year or 2 years if you are willing to spend 400. I will also have a decent software support. A flagship from Samsung is going to get 3 years of support tops. The Honor 9 Lite also isn't $200. I also buy a new phone every year. I spend as much as you do. Contracts. 1 hour ago, D13H4RD2L1V3 said: One question though. Why upgrade every year? Sure, you spend the same money by upgrading every year, but that's not practical. The one big reason people buy cheaper phones is to not spend much on it in the first place. Buying it with the intent to upgrade yearly isn't practical. Also, 2-3 years is normal for most Android flagships. I'm sorry, but an Honor 9 Lite isn't going to receive the same level of software support as a Huawei Mate10 no matter what's promised. Cheaper phones receive updates usually at a later date. I upgrade every what because I get the most for my year old phone. If I wait two years, I find I get significantly less. CPU: Ryzen 9 5900 Cooler: EVGA CLC280 Motherboard: Gigabyte B550i Pro AX RAM: Kingston Hyper X 32GB 3200mhz Storage: WD 750 SE 500GB, WD 730 SE 1TB GPU: EVGA RTX 3070 Ti PSU: Corsair SF750 Case: Streacom DA2 Monitor: LG 27GL83B Mouse: Razer Basilisk V2 Keyboard: G.Skill KM780 Cherry MX Red Speakers: Mackie CR5BT MiniPC - Sold for $100 Profit Spoiler CPU: Intel i3 4160 Cooler: Integrated Motherboard: Integrated RAM: G.Skill RipJaws 16GB DDR3 Storage: Transcend MSA370 128GB GPU: Intel 4400 Graphics PSU: Integrated Case: Shuttle XPC Slim Monitor: LG 29WK500 Mouse: G.Skill MX780 Keyboard: G.Skill KM780 Cherry MX Red Budget Rig 1 - Sold For $750 Profit Spoiler CPU: Intel i5 7600k Cooler: CryOrig H7 Motherboard: MSI Z270 M5 RAM: Crucial LPX 16GB DDR4 Storage: Intel S3510 800GB GPU: Nvidia GTX 980 PSU: Corsair CX650M Case: EVGA DG73 Monitor: LG 29WK500 Mouse: G.Skill MX780 Keyboard: G.Skill KM780 Cherry MX Red OG Gaming Rig - Gone Spoiler CPU: Intel i5 4690k Cooler: Corsair H100i V2 Motherboard: MSI Z97i AC ITX RAM: Crucial Ballistix 16GB DDR3 Storage: Kingston Fury 240GB GPU: Asus Strix GTX 970 PSU: Thermaltake TR2 Case: Phanteks Enthoo Evolv ITX Monitor: Dell P2214H x2 Mouse: Logitech MX Master Keyboard: G.Skill KM780 Cherry MX Red Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 The prices are getting a bit steep but basically the flagship is there to push things forward while earning sweet profits to finance R&D. It's like complaining about the price of a 1080 Ti and saying the 1060 is a better value which can get the job done for the next few years. Of course it's true but there's reasons to go top shelf. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 On 8/9/2018 at 1:32 PM, RorzNZ said: Idk why people are complaining about price when they know as well as I do these will sell like hot cakes. You get a much better feel with flagship phones than cheaper phones. Specs are not everything a phone has to offer at all. Yeah, usually regretful is what that feeling is called. Overpriced phones are overrated. People who day it's about the intangible things that make the difference are usually full of it because they can't actually come up with a real reason to buy overpriced things. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 $999? LOL. Not even my 1080Ti cost that much and let's me do a lot more than the phone could. I much rather go with some Chinese smartphone from a company like Xiaomi. $300 get's you a hell of a lot with them. i7-6700k Cooling: Deepcool Captain 240EX White GPU: GTX 1080Ti EVGA FTW3 Mobo: AsRock Z170 Extreme4 Case: Phanteks P400s TG Special Black/White PSU: EVGA 850w GQ Ram: 64GB (3200Mhz 16x4 Corsair Vengeance RGB) Storage 1x 1TB Seagate Barracuda 240GBSandisk SSDPlus, 480GB OCZ Trion 150, 1TB Crucial NVMe (Rest of Specs on Profile) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 It looks cool, but isn't worth it's $1,000 starting price. I'll just stick to my Note 4, it was much cheaper. The current one I'm using (I have 2) only cost me around $125. Buying used electronics is definitely the way to go. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 30 minutes ago, Brooksie359 said: Yeah, usually regretful is what that feeling is called. Overpriced phones are overrated. People who day it's about the intangible things that make the difference are usually full of it because they can't actually come up with a real reason to buy overpriced things. My personal experience, flagship phones tend to maintain high performance far longer, and tend to fair Android version updates the best. I'll gladly drop $1000 on a phone if it'll last me at least twice as long as a $500 counterpart, and they always have. Come Bloody Angel Break off your chains And look what I've found in the dirt. Pale battered body Seems she was struggling Something is wrong with this world. Fierce Bloody Angel The blood is on your hands Why did you come to this world? Everybody turns to dust. Everybody turns to dust. The blood is on your hands. The blood is on your hands! Pyo. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 10, 2018 1 hour ago, dizmo said: I upgrade every what because I get the most for my year old phone. If I wait two years, I find I get significantly less. iPhone my man....4 years old and still worth more than a year old android flagship. Used S9's are selling for $250 and that's a current generation phone. iPhone 6 64GB is selling for $200 and it's 4 years and 2 generations out of date. Workstation: 14700nonK || Asus Z790 ProArt Creator || MSI Gaming Trio 4090 Shunt || Crucial Pro Overclocking 32GB @ 5600 || Corsair AX1600i@240V || whole-house loop. LANRig/GuestGamingBox: 13700K @ Stock || MSI Z690 DDR4 || ASUS TUF 3090 650W shunt || Corsair SF600 || CPU+GPU watercooled 280 rad pull only || whole-house loop. Server Router (Untangle): 13600k @ Stock || ASRock Z690 ITX || All 10Gbe || 2x8GB 3200 || PicoPSU 150W 24pin + AX1200i on CPU|| whole-house loop Server Compute/Storage: 10850K @ 5.1Ghz || Gigabyte Z490 Ultra || EVGA FTW3 3090 1000W || LSI 9280i-24 port || 4TB Samsung 860 Evo, 5x10TB Seagate Enterprise Raid 6, 4x8TB Seagate Archive Backup || whole-house loop. Laptop: HP Elitebook 840 G8 (Intel 1185G7) + 3060 RTX Thunderbolt Dock, Razer Blade Stealth 13" 2017 (Intel 8550U) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 4 hours ago, Drak3 said: My personal experience, flagship phones tend to maintain high performance far longer, and tend to fair Android version updates the best. I'll gladly drop $1000 on a phone if it'll last me at least twice as long as a $500 counterpart, and they always have. Everyone of my phones has lasted me about 4 years accept one. For me the performance degraded on all of them but not enough to matter on any if them. Honestly if it wasn't for the micro usb port giving up after around 4 years I would still have quite a few of them. Anyways phones have become like computer hardware. The high end doesn't make any sense for normal users. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 I can already hear the sighs of my fellow developers anticipating the samsung bloat bugs they'll have to deal with on TouchWiz...shame, cos the hardware seem nice (albiet overpriced) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Honestly, the divide of Android phones mainly seems to be the nice budget ($200-$400) phones and the underwhelming flagships ($700+). This is what kinda has put me off from delving into Android further. I've always wanted to give it a go, but where the fuck do I go when a flagship would be nice but I'd be mocked for owning one, or vice versa with the budget phones? Check out my guide on how to scan cover art here! Local asshole and 6th generation console enthusiast. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 On 8/9/2018 at 1:45 PM, mynameisjuan said: It hasnt been because the S8 was a hot seller and the iterations are finally leveling off. This isnt a fucking bad thing that everyone thinks it is. nah next year the S10 if that's what they call it will likely be a good seller if they get it right. Basically the S9 was for S7 and earlier owners and the S8 was for S6 and earlier owners. a Moo Floof connoisseur and curator. @handymanshandle x @pinksnowbirdie || Jake x Brendan Youtube Audio Normalization Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Author 45 minutes ago, Dan Castellaneta said: Honestly, the divide of Android phones mainly seems to be the nice budget ($200-$400) phones and the underwhelming flagships ($700+). This is what kinda has put me off from delving into Android further. I've always wanted to give it a go, but where the fuck do I go when a flagship would be nice but I'd be mocked for owning one, or vice versa with the budget phones? OnePlus? The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Just now, D13H4RD2L1V3 said: OnePlus? :thinking: I dunno, I really do want to look into Android phones further; oh well, that's a thread for another month. Check out my guide on how to scan cover art here! Local asshole and 6th generation console enthusiast. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Author 2 minutes ago, Dan Castellaneta said: :thinking: I dunno, I really do want to look into Android phones further; oh well, that's a thread for another month. I'd probably say if you want a starting point, the new Nokia phones are a good way to do so. They run a Googlified-vision of Android, have regular updates, both security and OS and they're affordable. The hardware isn't groundbreaking but it's built extremely well. I'd say that if I were to switch from my Note8 to the Nokia 7+ as a daily, I wouldn't have noticed the performance difference. That's how good it is. But I'd miss the pen. The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Just now, valdyrgramr said: ROG phone? Ridiculous fan for turbo, a 3ds like case, and a dock so you can phone game on your tv. nah trust me if I want a switch I got one Check out my guide on how to scan cover art here! Local asshole and 6th generation console enthusiast. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Author 3 minutes ago, valdyrgramr said: ROG phone? Ridiculous fan for turbo, a 3ds like case, and a dock so you can phone game on your tv. I'd get one if they put it in a significantly less gaudy case The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Author 21 minutes ago, valdyrgramr said: I want one cuz it is ridiculous, and honestly, it would be in an otterbox most of the time. Not a huge fan of otterbox cases tbf The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Posted August 11, 2018 Author 1 minute ago, valdyrgramr said: I like the ones with bumpers. Oh, those The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop) CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021) SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro) SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options... Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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