Je_suis_Jean wrote: » Works perfectly and can really give the phone a power boost if you are just doing a short(ish) journey. For reasons I won't bore you with I tend to use a retractable micro USB cable with a USB C adaptor to charge the phone on long journeys and I couldn't believe it when I saw the phone actually increase battery % whilst on charge despite using GPS and podcasts through the car audio system via Bluetooth. My old OPO used to burn battery on GPS even whilst charging.
Areas wrote: » I bought the fast charger for my car yesterday. I'll be on the road a lot over the next few weeks and I listen to a lot of podcasts when I'm driving so hopefully it was a good purchase. Any feedback from anyone?
sentient_6 wrote: » The winge bagging over headphone jacks has to be the single most exhausting aspect of all things Android at the moment.
corwill wrote: » It's exhausting, in that there's not a single good reason we should have to be talking about it in the first place.
god's toy wrote: » In fairness if you just complaining about the audio jack been missing just because you'll have to carry around a dongle then I agree it is a somewhat pointless argument, however if you're an audiophile or at least appreciate good audio and that's buying factor to you as much as the good screen is buying factor to some then it's a completely different kettle of fish. The USB dongle they give you instead would have a really poor DAC in comparison to the built-in ones, plus bluetooth audio solutions, again to audiophile, are somewhat lacking and are no substitute for good built in one.. Oneplus always had a really powerful DACs in there phones, stronger than most other phone even by today's standards, better than most Samsungs and googles pixels probably rivaled only by LG v series. By them including the dongle in the box you can say goodbye to all that heritage they built up about having top notch audio for those that love it. I can mostly take it or leave it but given the choice I would prefer a built-in Jack if only because I don't lose the damn dongle...
micks_address wrote: » The DAC in the one plus 5 is the onboard Snapdragon offering. It's pretty poor in my opinion. That's why I use a dragonfly red usb DAC with my 5.. amazing difference
sentient_6 wrote: » no bundled usb c headphones, now that's BS.
billybonkers wrote: » Heard a rumor that 3 Ireland may be stocking the next OnePlus device
marcbrophy wrote: » Like the upcoming 5T or next years 6?
brevity wrote: » Quick question, would people recommend these phones and one plus overall? Thinking about changing things up in the new year, might get out of a contract and go on a sim only plan. Something like this:https://www.eir.ie/mobile/prepay/ Anyone else doing something similar?
deadanonymau5 wrote: » Id recommend them over other Android phones unless youve the money for a Pixel (Which has its own issues too). Good value for what you pay and they get updated regularly. The cameras are poor in my experience with their phones, Ive had the OPO, OP2 and OP3. Also, youre in a OnePlus thread full of OnePlus owners so...
Doge wrote: » Anyone else getting random reboots with the one plus 5? I'm not rooted so I don't what's causing the issue. Is there any android log I can look at to see what's causing the issue?
pandabat wrote: » You can go into Developer Options (click 7 times on "build number" in "about phone" if not visible) and enable USB debugging. Once that's enabled you then connect phone over usb to and you can use adb (part of Android SDK platform tools - Google how to install) to connect to phone. 'adb logcat -v time' will give you log output with timestamps.
Doge wrote: » Thanks a lot for the help man. Will give it a go tomorrow!
Basil3 wrote: » Bear in mind that logcat gets wiped upon phone reboot, so you would have to be connected to your PC and catch a reboot as it happens. Another method is to pull a file called last_kmsg from your device after a crash/reboot, but I think you need to be rooted to access that file. Most random reboots aren't actually random, they're set off by something that you're doing at the time. See if you can figure out how to make the phone go into the reboot, or think about when the problem started, and settings you might have changed on the phone at that time.
Doge wrote: » It usually happens when the phone is in my pocket, I tend to install a lot of apps so it can be hard to pin point the offender. I have the fingerprint lock activated and also the pin so I don't think I'm accidently hitting reboot in my pocket.