• After 15+ years, we've made a big change: Android Forums is now Early Bird Club. Learn more here.

I'm so done. Galaxy S7 not phone for me..

techsavvy01

Well-Known Member
Sep 27, 2014
147
21
New Jersey USA
I hope the samsung president reads this. This phone is just not for me. #1 This phone's build material glass is so fragile. I rarely took s7 out of case and now I have pretty deep scratch on back of s7 unbelievable! I only put s7 on hard surface for a short amount time to take sd card out. Samsung next time use more durable material like metal on HTC. #2 Touchwiz is once again sluggish full of bloatware. Sure touchwiz has improved but its still not quite great because its still sluggish, bloatware, and a memory resource hog. Also my charger cable has tear! Come on are you kidding samsung?! Please use better durable material in your products including charger cables accessories etc. So now I'm tired of s7 plus it is a pain in ass to root. I did not have much difficulty rooting my previous phone HTC One M8. Don't get me wrong. The Galaxy S7 is a great phone but not perfect and not for me. I'm switching to HTC 10. Quick question, How do you transfer or backup sms samsung app texts to another phone like HTC?


oLaj3swP.png


NdvTx6Zu.png


6WEfmqye.png
 
Last edited:
Sad thing is that the executive staff of these companies are basically sheltered in their own little bubble, with little, if any, view on the world outside their own shareholders' meetings.

I remember when Samsung was the go-to choice for a power user's phone for the Android platform. Now they and Google are going out of their way to copy the iPhone so hard in the name of fashion, that it's basically resulting in exploding phones within not even a month of release.

It's honestly distressing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: jivenene01
Upvote 0
Speaking personally, and coming from a Windows Phone! I quite like the OnePlus 3. It recharges at a fantstic rate.

So far my experience with their Customer Service has been positive. My daughter bought a OnePlus 1 which (after 1½ years) developed a dead-spot on the screen. It is possible that a fall had something to do with it. OnePlus was prepared to take it back under warranty and look at it. Of course if it was caused by factors outside the warranty she would have to pay for the repairs and transportation. She opted for a replacement rather than repair.

I was sufficiently impressed enough to buy a OnePlus 3 when my 3 year old Nokia 920 started to show signs of time to die.

If it works for for you, give it a try.

Best regards
Sleuth
 
Upvote 0
I hope the samsung president reads this. This phone is just not for me. #1 This phone's build material glass is so fragile. I rarely took s7 out of case and now I have pretty deep scratch on back of s7 unbelievable! I only put s7 on hard surface for a short amount time to take sd card out. Samsung next time use more durable material like metal on HTC. #2 Touchwiz is once again sluggish full of bloatware. Sure touchwiz has improved but its still not quite great because its still sluggish, bloatware, and a memory resource hog. Also my charger cable has tear! Come on are you kidding samsung?! Please use better durable material in your products including charger cables accessories etc. So now I'm tired of s7 plus it is a pain in ass to root. I did not have much difficulty rooting my previous phone HTC One M8. Don't get me wrong. The Galaxy S7 is a great phone but not perfect and not for me. I'm switching to HTC 10. Quick question, How do you transfer or backup sms samsung app texts to another phone like HTC?


oLaj3swP.png


NdvTx6Zu.png


6WEfmqye.png


I came from Apple at the first of the year. It was my first time ever with Android. As one would guess my first Android was a galaxy s7. Nice phone but to me by far the worst software interface I've ever experienced. Choppy and sticky are the best words to describe it. Why does Samsung insist on making an awesome Device but not use pure Android software? Then I tried the s7 edge. Lasted a week. I love everything that is superior of Samsung but what we all use the most is the software. I have since tried several other androids and found Motorola to be an awesome device and smooth interface. Had the Z Force until I dropped verizon and I decided to go with the Nexus 6p which I've found to really be identical to the Z Force with the exception of the mods of course and the beauty part half the cost! By far the 6p I've found through a bunch of trial and error to be one of the best devices out on the market and at its pricing.
 
Upvote 0
You'll find that, like Samsung, HTC have their own transfer tool, so as long as you don't sell the S7 before setting up the 10 you should just be able to use that to transfer messages between the two phones. I did this a few months back with someone who was upgrading to a HTC 10.

Otherwise yes, a third-party SMS backup app will do the job (install app to both phones, save the backup to SD, swap card between phones, restore backup).
 
Upvote 0
Personally I'm using a Huawei P9 at the moment (free work phone) and I must admit I'm pretty impressed. It's got some great design and is pretty fully featured at much less cost than Samsung or Apple. Not that I paid for it, but just for comparison sake. I think these guys are going to do really well in the future. They'll move on from the 'cheap rip-off' thing and start making some great original phones, I think. Especially if the competition keeps stumbling.
 
  • Like
Reactions: andMego
Upvote 0
I think these guys are going to do really well in the future.

They're doing pretty darn well right now. One of the world's Top 5 mobile manufacturers, #3 (iirc) Android OEM, and readily investing millions in both their own and joint R&D. Heck, they bought an entire chip fab business just so they could design and manufacture their own 'Kiron' SOC range in-house.

Huawei are serious players, make no mistake. The P9 shows just what is possible when you decide to go your own way rather than follow the herd. :D
 
  • Like
Reactions: andMego
Upvote 0
  1. Hi all! I just got a galaxy s7 edge like a month ago. And I bought the phone outright from a friend for get this! $300! I know that was a great deal for that phone! But he is a good friend! So I'm not on a device plan. Now my phone carrier plan is prepaid verizon plan. So I'm with verizon. So since I fully own the phone. It's my phone. So I should be able to do what I want with my phone? So I want to root it. I'm fully aware of the risks of rooting a phone? And that it voids the warranty. But first of all? There are some factory apps on my phone that I want to uninstall? I don't care if samsung wants them to stay on the phone? I own the phone! Samsung don't own my phone. I do! So I tried and tried and tried to root my phone over the last few days? With no avail? Then I find out that I have to unlock the bootloader? And well I have to say that this is bs! Why is samsung like this? When I own this phone? So I would appreciate it if anyone here could give me advice on how to accomplishing rooting my phone? Now also I don't have a pc? But I may be able to use a friend's pc to root my phone? But I would prefer not to have to use a pc to root my phone? Thanks! God bless you all!
 
Upvote 0
  1. ....Why is samsung like this? When I own this phone?

Think you'll find it's the carrier that dictates the locked bootloader. Got an S7 in the UK and rooted it a few weeks after getting it. The only negative about the phone is that without a cover it is very slippery and easy to drop. I use a transparent thin case plus screen protector and have no problems.
 
  • Like
Reactions: andMego
Upvote 0
Think you'll find it's the carrier that dictates the locked bootloader. Got an S7 in the UK and rooted it a few weeks after getting it. The only negative about the phone is that without a cover it is very slippery and easy to drop. I use a transparent thin case plus screen protector and have no problems.




Yea I got a case immediately because of the same reason. And well im getting different answers on here about who locks the bootloader? Some are saying that it's samsung that locks the bootloader for specific carriers? And some like you are saying that the carriers lock the bootloader? And well s7 is a pretty new phone? And I'm sure that someone will find a way to exploit the locked bootloader? It's just probably going to take some time for someone to develope a program to exploit the bootloader? So I guess that we all will just have to wait until that time comes?
 
Upvote 0
Think you'll find it's the carrier that dictates the locked bootloader. Got an S7 in the UK and rooted it a few weeks after getting it. The only negative about the phone is that without a cover it is very slippery and easy to drop. I use a transparent thin case plus screen protector and have no problems.

For information, the UK and European versions are Exynos rather than Snapdragon, that don't have CDMA/EVDO modes in them and are incompatible with Verizon, Sprint, etc. And it's only the US, China(where I am) and Japan that use the S7 Edge Snapdragon variants.
 
  • Like
Reactions: andMego
Upvote 0
Tell Oppo to do something about TMOUS bands and I'll buy another.

I believe Oppo have gone to locking some of their bootloaders now, and not providing fastboot. Also Oppo's international forum seems to be showing serious signs of neglect, like months old spam, and old mastheads. And only Chinese version devices getting newer Android versions. Presume they're concentrating on their domestic market only. Have no problem with that myself, because I'm in China, and I have no desires to root my daily use phone, R9 Plusm.
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

BEST TECH IN 2023

We've been tracking upcoming products and ranking the best tech since 2007. Thanks for trusting our opinion: we get rewarded through affiliate links that earn us a commission and we invite you to learn more about us.

Smartphones