I’m happy I didn’t replace my phone!

Since I’ve been to the US, I’ve been thinking of replacing my cellphone, which right now still is my HTC Desire HD (which I was supposed not to pay, as I got it with an operator contract, but which I ended up paying dearly to avoid having to pay a contract that wouldn’t do me any good outside of Italy). The reasons were many, including the fact that it doesn’t get to HSDPA speed here in the US, but the most worrisome was definitely the fact that I had to charge it at least twice a day, and it was completely unreasonable for me to expect it to work for a full day out of the office.

After Google’s failure to provide a half-decent experience with the Nexus 4 orders (I did try to get one, the price was just too sweet, but for me it went straight from “Coming Soon” to “Out of stock”), I was considering going for a Sony (Xperia S), or even (if it wasn’t for the pricetag), a Galaxy Note II with a bluetooth headset. Neither option was a favourite of mine, but beggars can’t be choosers, can they?

The other day, as most of my Twitter/Facebook/Google+ followers would have noticed, my phone also decided to give up: it crashed completely while at lunch, and after removing the battery it lost all settings, due to a corruption of the ext4 filesystem on the SD card (the phone’s memory is just too limited for installing a decent amount of apps). After a complete re-set and reinstall, during which I also updated from the latest CyanogenMod version that would work on it to the latest nightly (still CM7, no CM10 for me yet, although the same chipset is present on modern, ICS-era phones from HTC), I had a very nice surprise. The battery has been now running for 29 hours, I spoke for two and something hours on the phone, used it for email, Facebook messages, and Foursquare check-ins, and it’s still running (although it is telling me to connect my charger).

So what could have triggered this wide difference in battery life? Well there are a number of things that changed, and a number that were kept the same:

In all of this, I fell pretty much in love again with my phone. Having put in a 16GB microSD card a few months ago means I have quite a bit of space for all kind of stuff (applications as well as data), and thanks to the new battery life I can’t really complain about it that much. Okay so the lack of 3G while in the US is a bit of a pain, but I’m moving to London soon anyway so that won’t be a problem (I know it works in HSDPA there just fine). And I certainly can’t lament myself about the physical strength of the device… the chassis is made of metal, I’d venture to say it’s aluminum, but I wouldn’t be sure, which makes it strong enough to resist falling into a stone pavement (twice) and on concrete (only once) — yes I mistreat my gadgets, either they cope with me or they can get the heck out of my life.

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