Galaxy XCover Pro BRINGS BACK THE REMOVABLE BATTERY, my heart is full By phonejerome

By phonejerome
Aug 21, 2021
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Galaxy XCover Pro BRINGS BACK THE REMOVABLE BATTERY, my heart is full

Last week in Finland, Samsung launched the Galaxy Cover Pro. Now this smartphone is categorized as rugged and when I think about rugged I, think about a phone that you use in a construction site or if you're, hiking and climbing a mountain wrestling, an alligator fighting with your in-laws. But what Samsung did differently here is the phone comes with a removable battery. You even remember or owned a phone that had a removable battery when I had my Galaxy Nexus back in the day, and my battery was running low, I actually never charged the phone and what I did was I just swapped the battery out. You know, I put a fresh one in, and then I'd take the low battery or the dead battery, and I'd put that on a battery charger, and then that was it. What I like about that is I was never taught to a cable at all, and that was back in 2011 2012, but really the biggest advantage of having a removable battery is when that battery is actually starting to die.

You know it's starting to wear out: it's not holding its charge as long as it used to, then you could just go, buy a new battery swap it out and then your phone's kind of like brand new again, but obviously we can't do that anymore.99.9% of our smartphones are glued and sealed together, and instead they just become throwaway phones, which is a shame, because I think a lot of us would hold on to our smartphones longer if we could replace the battery ourselves and a lot of that has to do with manufacturers wanting you to replace your phone buy a new phone from that company again I think there used to be an argument. Don't quote me on that, though, but I think there used to be an argument that using a removable battery would make it a lot more susceptible to water or just you know not surviving well enough in the elements, but this Galaxy Cover pro is ip68 dust and water resistance. So if that was an argument back then it no longer is the Verge's. Article also said that it would survive about a 5-foot drop and then the touchscreen works when it's wet or even if you have gloves on it, also has a barcode scan and two programmable buttons, which is pretty nice. But when I think about those other features, it makes me think that it's more of a work phone right, it's something that you'd use at a construction site or maybe something that you use in a warehouse, and it uses mid-range performance specs.

It has an X and O's 96 11 chipsets, 4 gigs of RAM 64, gigs of internal storage, and it comes in at around 550 us I. Don't think it's available for the US, though it looks like it only comes to certain parts of Europe. It might come out for the US, but there's no official word on that. Yet, but does this mean that removable batteries are going to become a thing again? Probably not you know, I would love to see it become a thing, because the one thing that frustrates me, the most is when I know my battery on my phone is starting to go and there's nothing. I can do about it, I mean technically, if I wanted to open the phone up and replace it I could, but for a lot of us, especially when it's sealed the way.

It is it's just more of a hassle, and it's just better to buy a new phone. You.


Source : phonejerome

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