text
stringlengths
14
502
[1678.46 --> 1679.10] Of course you do.
[1679.14 --> 1679.86] And of course you are.
[1679.94 --> 1680.56] And that's fine.
[1680.68 --> 1680.82] Yeah.
[1681.28 --> 1681.96] Not the point.
[1682.22 --> 1684.06] The point is that the typical user.
[1684.36 --> 1685.00] Typical user.
[1685.08 --> 1685.20] Yeah.
[1685.20 --> 1686.66] That's why I specifically called out OnePlus.
[1687.28 --> 1687.38] Yeah.
[1687.38 --> 1688.38] Not Android in general.
[1688.38 --> 1690.40] Although they're going more mainstream.
[1690.72 --> 1691.50] They're in T-Mobile now.
[1692.24 --> 1692.70] Oh, weird.
[1692.84 --> 1696.96] So there's like literally thousands of stores worldwide, worldwide, excuse me, nationwide
[1696.96 --> 1700.04] in the US that are going to be pushing the OnePlus 6T.
[1700.40 --> 1701.68] I was like, oh, good for you guys.
[1701.96 --> 1702.30] That's cool.
[1703.04 --> 1703.44] Anyway.
[1704.04 --> 1706.30] So back to the typical user.
[1706.80 --> 1711.32] I suspect they neither notice nor care in a lot of cases.
[1711.32 --> 1718.66] Because you got to remember, even the more normie users online are still probably more
[1718.66 --> 1719.08] connected.
[1719.28 --> 1723.54] Because like even people who don't care about smart functionality at all, like who might
[1723.54 --> 1727.62] not even have a data plan, they're still buying smartphones these days because where
[1727.62 --> 1728.54] are you going to get a flip?
[1730.60 --> 1731.56] You can get them.
[1731.60 --> 1732.52] You can get them.
[1732.58 --> 1735.02] But they're like kind of garbage.
[1735.60 --> 1736.00] Yeah.
[1736.36 --> 1738.64] They're like actually disposable phones.
[1739.02 --> 1739.34] Yeah.
[1739.76 --> 1740.40] In most cases.
[1740.40 --> 1746.64] I was thinking the other day, if I didn't have the work that I currently have.
[1746.70 --> 1746.90] Yeah.
[1747.14 --> 1749.66] Because the vast majority of the time that I'm on my phone, it's for work.
[1749.68 --> 1750.34] You'd be a drug dealer?
[1750.86 --> 1751.06] No.
[1751.20 --> 1751.94] Is that where you're going with this?
[1752.00 --> 1752.18] No.
[1752.26 --> 1753.78] How does this tie into flip phones?
[1754.74 --> 1756.90] I honestly wouldn't use very much on the phone.
[1757.60 --> 1757.82] Yeah.
[1758.08 --> 1760.98] And like I could actually pretty easily get by with a flip phone.
[1761.44 --> 1762.10] And maps.
[1762.20 --> 1763.08] I really like maps.
[1763.30 --> 1767.86] I'm having a really hard time with my Pixel 3 XL review because I don't typically use canned
[1767.86 --> 1772.92] benchmarks to measure battery life because my usage is pretty consistent.
[1772.92 --> 1773.00] Consistent.
[1773.00 --> 1774.48] Like the way that I use my phone.
[1774.48 --> 1780.46] Except that a few days into my Pixel 3 XL review, I kind of made an early New Year's resolution
[1780.46 --> 1782.80] to stop consuming political news.
[1783.80 --> 1791.12] And probably a good 50 to 60% of my screen time was like political news before that.
[1791.12 --> 1791.52] Yeah.
[1791.52 --> 1798.94] So I ended the day yesterday with 82% on my Pixel 3 XL battery because Google does a great
[1798.94 --> 1802.68] job of idle battery management on the Pixel lineup for sure.
[1802.94 --> 1803.16] Yep.
[1803.46 --> 1805.10] And I barely touched my phone.
[1805.46 --> 1806.22] Like it's crazy.
[1806.30 --> 1809.92] Over the last few years, it used to be I couldn't go five minutes without getting a phone call
[1809.92 --> 1810.40] or a text.
[1810.62 --> 1813.80] Are you sure that's entirely because of the political thing or is that because you don't
[1813.80 --> 1815.86] like the experience so much that you're just using it less?
[1815.86 --> 1816.22] Okay.
[1816.66 --> 1821.68] There's a little bit of me not liking the experience that much, but I also definitely have.
[1821.68 --> 1822.88] Yeah, because I know you did that.
[1822.96 --> 1824.18] I've cut down my consumption.
[1824.36 --> 1824.54] Yeah.
[1825.42 --> 1827.00] Shoot, I forget where I was going before.
[1827.36 --> 1828.16] That's fine.
[1830.72 --> 1834.02] Yeah, someone in the chat just said, don't forget flips are used for tough environments.
[1835.54 --> 1837.80] Yeah, they've got some pretty rugged smartphones these days too though.
[1838.16 --> 1839.12] Just throwing that out there.
[1839.66 --> 1839.98] Yes.
[1840.48 --> 1841.00] All right.
[1841.04 --> 1842.22] So let's finish up here.
[1842.22 --> 1846.82] Apple's position is iPhone 8 and later use a more advanced, don't you love that?
[1847.12 --> 1848.40] They don't call it the iPhone.
[1848.98 --> 1849.76] An iPhone.
[1850.10 --> 1851.10] It's iPhone.
[1851.26 --> 1852.50] Like it's a person or something.
[1852.96 --> 1853.96] I'm not going to do it.
[1854.44 --> 1858.82] The iPhone 8 and later use a more advanced hardware and software design that provides
[1858.82 --> 1862.76] a more accurate estimation of both power needs and the battery's power capability to
[1862.76 --> 1864.16] maximize overall system performance.
[1864.48 --> 1868.86] This allows a different performance management system that more precisely allows iOS to anticipate
[1868.86 --> 1870.30] and avoid an unexpected shutdown.
[1870.30 --> 1876.74] As a result, the impacts of performance management may be less noticeable on the iPhone 8 and later.
[1879.04 --> 1883.20] Someone in the chat said, Casey Mac in the YouTube chat.
[1883.32 --> 1885.02] I'm trying to pay a little bit of attention to both.
[1885.70 --> 1887.60] He said, I can't believe Linus covered an iPhone.
[1887.92 --> 1889.36] That's a very confusing statement.
[1889.72 --> 1889.90] Yeah.
[1890.76 --> 1892.96] I've been doing iPhone reviews for literally years.
[1893.16 --> 1893.32] Yeah.
[1893.40 --> 1894.14] Four years or something.
[1894.22 --> 1895.48] Even iMac and MacBook.
[1895.68 --> 1895.86] Yep.
[1895.94 --> 1896.36] And iPad.
[1896.54 --> 1896.72] Yep.