The iPhone SE is the best minimalist phone right now

collected by :Clara William

Earlier this week, Apple began a clearance sale on the iPhone SE, its nearly three-year-old, 4-inch smartphone modeled after the iPhone 5S, at a $100 discount. The immense interest in the device was yet another sign that the minimalist phone movement is here to stay. Granted, many of these companies are just trying to sell you a second phone to keep you away from your main phone. According to Apple's Screen Time dashboard, I open my phone on average 94 times a day. The iPhone SE can be the mini Palm phone for iOS usersI don't have high hopes that it will work all that well.


iPhone SE fans UNITE! Bring back the small phone lifestyle!

Apple pulled the iPhone SE from store shelves officially in October 2018 after having been the budget model since March of 2016. iPhone SE fans are everywhereWithin just a few days, the iPhone SE sold out at Apple's clearance section. After just three months, I went back to my iPhone SE. It's not because the iPhone SE was old and running slower. When iOS 12 came out, I saw significant performance improvement in the iPhone SE, more than any other model iPhone I ran version 12 on.

iPhone SE fans UNITE! Bring back the small phone lifestyle!

Chinese phone maker Huawei punishes employees for iPhone tweet blunder

as declared in HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's Huawei Technologies [HWT.UL] has punished two employees for New Year greetings sent on the smartphone maker's official Twitter account using an iPhone, an internal memo showed. Huawei, whose P-series handsets compete with Apple's iPhone, on New Year's Day wished followers a "Happy #2019" in a tweet marked sent "via Twitter for iPhone". (Click here for an interactive graphic of Apple vs Huawei tmsnrt.rs/2GPPIRI)In an internal Huawei memo dated Jan. 3 seen by Reuters, corporate senior vice-president and director of the board Chen Lifang said, "the incident caused damage to the Huawei brand". Sapient did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent via the contact form on its website. Hu Xijin, editor-in-chief of nationalistic tabloid Global Times, was mocked online last year after he used his iPhone when expressing support for Huawei and domestic peer ZTE Corp.





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