Currently reading:
Dead phone.

Discuss Dead phone. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

westward10

Staff member
Admin
Esteemed
Supporter
Reaction score
25,637
Now I only replace my phone when they need replacing but my old Samsung S7 kept freezing the other day then died. Took to a phone repair shop they said new battery so I left with them 24hrs later all working, the old battery all bulged out. Worked for a day then kept freezing, restarting and now nothing so now have a new Samsung S22.
Question, the phone no longer works but the chap in the shop says he can transfer the data for Ā£15 and that is fine by me because at the moment it is irretrievable but has anyone ever had this done I don't see how it is possible. Tried several links on my laptop but nothing recognises the dead phone.
Is it possible?
 
iPhone' security is very good also iPhone doesn't need antivirus software.

I've repaired both Apple and Samsung phones and think the PCB quality of the Samsung is better, but the iPhone is better thought out and much easier and cheaper to repair, or so it was before the iPhone 10.

Bulging batteries causing screens to break in unused Samsung's is an issue.

Apple products are incredibly well thought out and I admire their efficiency. What I don't admire are the eyewatering prices šŸ˜
 
Voxi sim here, and iphone11 across the family. (Except the fiercely independent student daughter who will buy anything if itā€™s advertised by a K-pop groupšŸ˜‰)
Yes, iPhones automatically uploads to iCloud, if you pay for enough storage.
 
Before phones came along everything seemed to flow better.
True to say that if you broke down you might find yourself using up energy and causing yourself to become fitter by walking 5 miles with a petrol can, but messages still got around it's just they didn't feel so important like they do today.

Concentration is a thing of the past. You can be doing the most delicate of things, and phones go off losing the attention.
Kids walk around glued to them even crossing roads, they go into complete meltdown if they should lose one.

Btw, it you ever want to find out how many people are in your house, turn off the internet!


I hate phones with a passion. But I know you can still get all the texts and all the calls each week for a quid. That's still a quid more than I would pay though.

Unlimited Calls & Texts SIM - Only Ā£4 a month! | Asda mobile - https://mobile.asda.com/bundles/talk-and-text
 
I tend to set the phone down and get on with life, whether that be in the kitchen, car or toolbox. It's on silent when I sleep. The idea of being at the beck and call of others never sat well with me and mobile phones are a huge intrusion on a peaceful life.

In the past if someone called you, it was likely to be important as they had to go to whatever cold room their phone was in or even walk to a phonebox. When you called someone it generally meant making an effort, not least having to look up their number, so phones (for most people) were used when necessary. If arrangements were made, people either stuck with the arrangement or missed out on whatever was happening - there was no way to get in touch once people left home.

I'm not a dog and I don't respond to whistles. Similarly I might answer a phone or then again I might not - much depends on what I'm doing when it rings, rather than who's calling. Most people know this and accept it as a precondition to calling me and if that's a frustration, they're probably calling the wrong person.
 
Everything is backed up to the cloud, but is this something to be trusted?
It kind of depends on what you mean by trust, and what sort of level of comparison you are making.
  • Should GCHQ/MI5/NSA/etc relay on Apple, etc, to host sensitive data? No.
  • Are Apple & Google less likely to lose your data if you don't regularly save it yourself? Yes.
  • Can Apple/Google for whatever bureaucratic or contractual reason simply delete it and tough? Yes. So if your data very important to you make your own copy in addition.
Battery issues happen with all battery powered devices and apple products are no exception. The one major difference being that batteries in android devices can deteriorate very quickly, whereas apple provide a long period of notice by throttling performance of devices as and when they see fit.
All phones deteriorate with age in one way or another, Apple are generally better than most in keeping stuff going but at a price.

I treat my phones and laptops as useful accessories to my main desktop/NAS/cloud contracts so go cheap on the assumption they will be lost/stolen/broken at some point. Typically i try and get by with a Ā£200-ish Motorola G-whatever. Not as good as latest iPhone but I could burn my way though 5 of them and still have spare cash!
 

Reply to Dead phone. in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc
This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock