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1. random+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-07-17 09:53:54
I'm still using a 13 mini, it's fractionally too large, I think the original SE is perfection.

Regardless, battery life is horrendous now, and it's starting to lag and fail so when the new ultra watch is released I'm going to replace my phone with it.

replies(3): >>easton+X6 >>Jaxan+k91 >>tim333+fv1
2. easton+X6[view] [source] 2025-07-17 11:13:12
>>random+(OP)
Getting the battery replaced fixed mine (and seemed to mildly improve system performance, although maybe that’s placebo), might be worth a shot if you like the form factor.
replies(2): >>rekoil+p9 >>random+4M
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3. rekoil+p9[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-17 11:29:57
>>easton+X6
Depending on how degraded the original battery was it isn't necessarily placebo. If iOS detects a severely degraded battery it will clock down the CPU slightly to cope with it, sacrificing a little performance to keep the device stable.

With 3rd party batteries it can't do this, so it doesn't (I think, will admit I'm not entirely sure exactly how iOS deals with 3rd party batteries it can't determine the status of), and if you replaced it with an official part then it would have been in good condition, so regardless which road you took, it's possible that you went from a state where the OS was clocking down, to one where it wasn't anymore.

Source: https://support.apple.com/en-us/101575

replies(2): >>pyman+0y >>acheon+ui1
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4. pyman+0y[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-17 14:09:20
>>rekoil+p9
The problem is not the battery, it's the battery, processor and price.

The iPhone 13 Mini made up around 3% of total iPhone sales, so there's clearly a market for compact, mid-range phones ($600-$700). You can manufacture them in China or India for somewhere between $250 and $400, depending on the battery, camera, and overall performance.

The real challenge is that the retail price of a mid-range Android phone can't go over the $500 mark. People in developing countries are always stuck trying to balance quality with price. And for $500 bucks they expect a prime phone nowadays.

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5. random+4M[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-17 15:36:47
>>easton+X6
it has a few dings on the frame and I'm not especially attached to the form factor more significantly I am addicted to it and need a viable alternative.
6. Jaxan+k91[view] [source] 2025-07-17 17:40:59
>>random+(OP)
I still use my first gen SE and have had the battery replaced once.
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7. acheon+ui1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-17 18:31:18
>>rekoil+p9
> If iOS detects a severely degraded battery it will clock down the CPU slightly

I currently have this problem (iPhone 11). It's not slight at all. Keyboard inputs sometimes has up to a full 1000ms latency and that's with autocorrect, suggestions, and spellcheck turned off. Scrolling in most apps are jumpy rather than smooth. When this phone dies, I don't know what I'll get. Hopefully a good linux phone exists by then.

replies(1): >>rekoil+7mn
8. tim333+fv1[view] [source] 2025-07-17 19:40:58
>>random+(OP)
Same here. Stuck with SE2 till it stopped catching pokemon properly. Currently pleased with the iPhone 13 mini. I think part of why I like small phones is I carry a laptop and hate web browsing / typing on the phone. It's mostly a modem and camera for me.

Also having a laptop means the battery doesn't matter that much as you can just charge it off that.

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9. rekoil+7mn[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-25 09:34:36
>>acheon+ui1
That’s also a 6 year old device man, it is amazing that a device with such an old battery is still running at all, I presume its been a daily driver all this time?
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