The true cost of a new iPhone
Lets talk about buying an iPhone for $1,000. Tim Cook, Apples chief executive, once compared this eye-popping price tag to buying a cup of coffee a day over a year. No big deal, right?
But financial advisers see this differently. By some estimates, an investment of $1,000 in a retirement account today would balloon to about $17,000 in 30 years.
In other words, $700 to $1,000 the price range of modern smartphones is a big purchase. Fewer than half of American adults have enough savings set aside to cover three months of emergency expenses, according to the Pew Research Center. Yet one in five people surveyed by the financial website WalletHub thought a new phone was worth going into debt for.
Tech companies fairly argue that our smartphones are our most powerful tools for work and play and thus worth every penny. But they also play numbers games to downplay the costs of a new phone. Samsung, for example, has said the price of its new Galaxy phone is $200 but thats only if you trade in a year-old phone for credit toward the new one. The true price is $800.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/20/technology/personaltech/iphone-upgrades-cost.amp.html
One of the reasons people don't become rich: They go into debt buying a phone they don't need.
Scrivener7
(52,736 posts)Android does everything everyone else is doing with their phones.
And I think its about 7 years old now. Got run over in the rain once. I had to replace the screen for $75 but it works fine.
Hugh_Lebowski
(33,643 posts)And def. not as quickly.
I kept my last phone (Samsung S5) for 5 years so I understand what you're saying, but I'm telling ya ... there's a big difference with my newer S20+.
Camera quality has improved a lot, bluetooth streaming sound quality is way better due to Apt-X technology, battery life is muuuuuch better, my screen is much higher resolution, speaker phone works much better, and everything I do on the phone is WAAAAAAAAAY snappier.
Also ... I get new android OS updates that old phones don't get anymore. Old phones become much less secure over time.
The 'updating everytime there's a new one' tip some people are on is almost always ridiculous, cost-wise. But every 3rd new one or so ... it can be worth it. Esp. if you're annoyed by slow performance.
Just saying
TreasonousBastard
(43,049 posts)Phone is something you get use of. Of course the phone isn't going to las 30 years, so we're deep in apples/oranges territory.
drexelkathy
(118 posts)They are incredibly expensive.
Auggie
(31,798 posts)Posted weeks ago on the awesome pages of DU.
Response to Tomconroy (Original post)
Cartoonist This message was self-deleted by its author.
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)can handle important documents from remote areas allowing us to stay away from office, replaces maps, alerts us to important things, keeps us in communication with people, great in emergencies, and a bunch more.
In my opinion it's a cost savings and cheap, especially if you are careful in the one you buy.
msongs
(70,170 posts)Tomconroy
(7,611 posts)today. But not a $1000 one, and don't replace it every year or two. Invest the money you save. You may think it isn't doing anything for 30 years. It's actually performing miracles.