Quote from: H on May 19, 2020, 10:34:09
You have literally ZERO understanding of the compromises for this device. You haven't seen it. You haven't touched. You haven't used it. You don't know its battery life. Yet you've created an entire article questioning the battery size being 10% smaller than an average phone.
This is what I call complete filler material.
Quote from: H on May 19, 2020, 10:06:28
If you think it's not rocket science and it's just a matter of deciding that the battery should be bigger, than you don't understand design and are not fit to write articles about tech.
Design is about choosing what compromises to make about conflicting requirements. Battery size, case thickness, weight, space for electronics, hinge design/space, thermals, battery life, etc.
Quote from: H on May 19, 2020, 09:29:35
What a weird statement to end the article on:QuoteBattery capacity is where things get funky, as the Surface Duo is said to feature a puny 3460 mAh battery. We're...not sure why Microsoft would do that, as that's a small battery for two 5.6-inch displays.
Really.. you have no idea why they would do that? You think the designers just sit down and pick any battery size they want to? "Let's go with 7000mAh guys, people love bigger batteries"
I'm sure they're trying to fit as much as they can in the device considering the other requirements and that's what they got to with this iteration. This is called engineering.
QuoteBattery capacity is where things get funky, as the Surface Duo is said to feature a puny 3460 mAh battery. We're...not sure why Microsoft would do that, as that's a small battery for two 5.6-inch displays.