Apple’s charts set the M1 Ultra up for an RTX 3090 fight it could never win

Apple’s charts set the M1 Ultra up for an RTX 3090 fight it could never win

Apple’s charts set the M1 Ultra up for an RTX 3090 fight it could never win

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The M1 Ultra is not more powerful than an RTX 3090, and that’s OK

Image: Apple

When Apple introduced the M1 Ultra — the company’s most powerful in-house processor yet and the crown jewel of its brand new Mac Studio — it did so with charts boasting that the Ultra capable of beating out Intel’s best processor or Nvidia’s RTX 3090 GPU all on its own. The charts, in Apple’s recent fashion, were maddeningly labeled with “relative performance” on the Y-axis, and Apple doesn’t tell us what specific tests it runs to arrive at whatever numbers it uses to then calculate “relative performance.”

But now that we have a Mac Studio, we can say that in most tests, the M1 Ultra isn’t actually faster than an RTX 3090, as much as Apple would like to say it is.

To hear Apple tell it, the M1 Ultra is a miracle of silicon, one that combines the hardware of two M1 Max processors for a single chipset that is nothing less than the “world’s most powerful chip for a personal computer.” And if you just looked at Apple’s charts, you might be tempted to buy into those claims.

On the chart here, the M1 Ultra does beat out the RTX 3090 system for “relative” GPU performance while drawing hugely less power. It’s a great achievement!

But that’s because Apple’s chart is, for lack of a better term, cropped. The company only shows the head to head for the areas where the M1 Ultra and the RTX 3090 are competitive against each other, and it’s true: in those circumstances, you’ll get more bang for your buck with the M1 Ultra than you would on an RTX 3090.

But what the chart doesn’t show is that while the M1 Ultra’s line more or less stops there, the RTX 3090 has a lot more power that it can draw on — just take a quick look at some of the benchmarks from The Verge’s review:

As you can see, the M1 Ultra is an impressive piece of silicon: it handily outpaces a nearly $14,000 Mac Pro or Apple’s most powerful laptop with ease. But it seems that Apple just simply isn’t showing the full performance of the competitor it’s chasing here — its chart for the 3090 ends at about 320W, while Nvidia’s card has a TDP of 350W (which can be pushed even higher by spikes in demand or additional user modifications).

It’s sort of like arguing that because your electric car can use dramatically less fuel when driving at 80 miles per hour than a Lamborghini, it has a better engine — without mentioning the fact that a Lambo can still go twice as fast.

And yes, it is very impressive that Apple is accomplishing so much with (comparatively) so little power. I’m sure Apple’s chart is accurate in showing that at the relative power and performance levels, the M1 Ultra does do slightly better than the RTX 3090 in that specific comparison. But it’s effectively missing the rest of the chart where the 3090’s line shoots way past the M1 Ultra (albeit while using far more power, too).

It feels like the chart should probably look more like this:

A very approximate and unscientific rendering of what an actual 3090 vs. M1 Studio comparison might look like

The thing is, Apple didn’t need to do all this chart chicanery: the M1 Ultra is legitimately something to brag about, and the fact that Apple has seamlessly managed to merge two disparate chips into a single unit at this scale is an impressive feat whose fruits are apparently in almost every test that my colleague Monica Chin ran for her review.

Apple’s UltraFusion interconnect technology here actually does what it says on the tin and offered nearly double the M1 Max in benchmarks and performance tests. Apple duct-taped two M1 Max chips together and actually got the performance of twice the M1 Max. No other chipmaker has ever really pulled this off.

That’s fantastic and a far more impressive and interesting thing for Apple to have spent time showcasing than its best, most-bleeding edge chip beating out aged Intel processors from computers that have sat out the last several generations of chip design or fudged charts that set the M1 Ultra up for failure under real-world scrutiny.

It’s OK that Apple’s latest chip can’t beat out the most powerful dedicated GPU on the planet! The 3090 is nearly the size of an entire Mac Studio all on its own and costs almost a third as much as Apple’s most powerful machine. But I can’t help but wish that Apple would focus on accurately showing to customers the M1 Ultra’s actual strengths, benefits, and triumphs instead of making charts that have us chasing after benchmarks that — deep inside — Apple has to know that it can’t match. At least, not yet.

Update March 17th, 2:25pm: Added RTX 3090 power specifications for better comparison.

Correction March 17th, 1:55pm: The Shadow of the Tomb Raider chart in this post originally featured a transposed legend for the 1080p and 4K benchmarks. We regret the error.


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Reddit launches official apps for Android and iPhone

Reddit launches official apps for Android and iPhone

Reddit today released new, tailored apps for iOS and Android, with the iPhone version replacing the popular Alien Blue service as the site's official mobile client. Both of Reddit's apps have been in beta for some time — Android since January and iOS since March — but the software is now available to download in the US, Canada, the UK, and Australia. Reddit plans on making its apps available in more countries over the following months.

Alien Blue, which has been the official Reddit app for about 18 months, is being removed from the iOS App Store. Its paid iPad version will remain available until Reddit develops its own dedicated tablet app. Those who have Alien Blue downloaded can continue to use the app.

"We learned a lot from our passionate Alien Blue community about what makes a great iOS app and we applied those learnings when building Reddit for iOS," Alex Le, Reddit's vice president of consumer product, tells The Verge. "Due to limited resources, we decided to focus our efforts on making Reddit for iOS our primary and official Reddit client. The new code base has allowed us to add features and build a stable client in a record amount of time. We hope to keep up the pace and deliver new updates at least once a month (hopefully even more often than that)."

The new apps represent Reddit's first concerted effort to create top-class mobile experiences since it acquired Alien Blue in October 2014. The social news and community site's mobile approach has always been somewhat inconsistent; a dedicated AMA app was launched two years ago and later abandoned. To fill the void, third-party Reddit clients with unique takes on how the site should operate on smartphones have sprung up and stuck around for years. Of that ever-growing list, Alien Blue stood out as the most polished and most used of the bunch, giving Reddit a good reason to scoop it up.

The approach changed last July, with the return of co-founder Steve Huffman as CEO. The company underwent a rather tumultuous mod revolt, leading to the eventual resignation of interim CEO Ellen Pao, and the episode acted as kind of reset for the site and its employees. Once things quieted down in the fall, Reddit decided to put resources toward creating new mobile apps of its own. After hiring Le to help lead product, Reddit brought on Chen Chen from Instagram to become its lead iOS engineer. The two, alongside a small internal team at Reddit, focused on creating the company's first fully in-house apps.

"We felt an obligation to deliver a Reddit experience to our core users — the people who love Reddit and can't live without it," Le says. "The third-party ecosystem has been really awesome and there’s always going to be third-party apps for Reddit." But Le says the company sees itself as a "custodian" of sorts for how hundreds of millions of Redditors out there use the site. So it wanted to create something that could try and meet everyone's needs.

Reddit's new apps look like souped-up versions of Alien Blue, with design tweaks and iconography that make the experience feel less like a stripped-down version of the desktop site and more like a unique destination. The software preservers its predecessor's popular Night Mode feature for viewing Reddit in low-light situations. But it also rethinks how one might navigate the flood of Reddit content on a phone screen. There's a new "speed read" button that lets you quickly navigate lengthy, meandering threads like Ask Me Anything sessions. The apps also cater better to active users with quicker and easier ways to drop in links, text, or photos and check your account activity.

A Reddit experience for the core users

Some of the most important changes happen to be under the hood. Chen takes pride in how efficient the app is — at only 4.8MB, Reddit for iOS downloads in less than five seconds, he says, and opens and loads even faster. Throughout the app, Chen says he and his team employed an extreme attention to detail. "Keep in mind this is v1 [version one], the depth is there," he says. "I don’t think think is this finished. We’re going to enable a lot of product to be deployed." Chen says the app's extremely low crash rate and nimbleness will help it scale to the tens of millions, and onward to hundreds of millions, of users who may want to access Reddit on mobile.

To help get the app off the ground, Reddit is offering users who download it within the first week a free trial of Reddit's ad-free gold membership. The company plans on maintaining advertising on its mobile apps for free users, but in a way consistent with its philosophy on keeping it out of the way when possible.

Revenue aside, Reddit hopes the apps will give people a fresh way to use the site. "For people who are really used to the desktop experience it’s brand new," Chen says. In that regard, he adds, the apps "send a signal, that Reddit has become even better."


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How to turn your phone screen to grayscale

How to turn your phone screen to grayscale

How to turn your phone screen to grayscale

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If you prefer black-and-white to color, here’s how to set it on your iPhone or Android phone

iPhone with grayscale screen against a colorful illustrated background.

Illustration by Samar Haddad / The Verge

With the exception of old movies, most of us are used to seeing our screens in full color. However, grayscale — in which you see nothing but black, white, or shades of gray — can be useful, even when it comes to your smartphone.

To begin with, people who are intensely colorblind will find a screen that has been switched to grayscale much easier to work with (since otherwise, certain colors can be difficult to distinguish). It may be good for the rest of us as well because grayscale is said to be much easier on the eyes — so using it at night could give your optics a rest. (In addition, forcing all your videos to go grayscale might finally convince you to put down the phone and get some sleep). If used during the day, you might be less tempted to pick up your phone rather than pay attention to your work or other parts of your life.

Here’s how to switch the displays on your iPhone, Samsung Galaxy phone, and Google Pixel to grayscale. (If you have an Android phone from a different manufacturer, the directions should be similar to that for the Pixel.)

Grayscale on an iPhone

Switching your screen to Grayscale on the iPhone is a very simple process. Currently, you can find it as a feature in the Accessibility section.

  • Select Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size > Color Filters
  • Toggle Color Filters on and select Grayscale

You won’t see the options for Color Filters until you toggle it on.

When you toggle Grayscale on, the result is a fully grayscale screen.

There are also various ways you can trigger grayscale on and off using your iPhone’s Shortcuts. To begin with, if you want to trigger it via a triple-click on your side (power) button:

  • Set grayscale as your color filter, as described above. (You don’t have to keep it toggled on; just make sure it is set as the color filter.)
  • Go back to the Settings > Accessibility page and select Accessibility Shortcut.
  • Tap on Color Filters so that it has a green checkmark.

Once you’ve set grayscale as your color filter, you can create an Accessibility Shortcut for that filter.

You can add an Accessibility Shortcut to your Control Center.

To add a button to your Control Center, first set up the Accessibility Shortcut as described above. Then:

  • Go to Settings > Control Center > Included Controls > Accessibility Shortcuts
  • The button (the figure of a person within a circle) will then appear when you swipe down to access the Control Center; tap on it, and any options checked in the list of Accessibility Shortcuts will be available.

You can also create a grayscale Shortcut, which you can then turn on at certain times, such as during Sleep mode or when you’re in Focus mode. To create the Shortcut:

  • Open the Shortcuts app and tap on the plus sign in the upper right corner.
  • Tap Add Action
  • Type Set Color Filters in the search box until it is listed and select it. You will be brought back to the actions page, and you will see the action Turn color filters On.
  • If you want, you can change Turn to Toggle or Ask Each Time, and you can change On to Off.
  • Tap Done.

You can create a Shortcut that will turn your color filters (i.e., the grayscale filter) on.

When you enable this automation, your screen will go to grayscale when Bedtime starts.

If you want to automatically turn on grayscale at night or associate it with a Focus Mode during working hours, then you can also do that via the Shortcuts app. For example, let’s say you want to create a Shortcut that will turn on grayscale at night when you’re supposed to be sleeping:

  • Open the Shortcuts app and tap the Automation icon at the bottom of the screen
  • Tap Create Personal Automation
  • Tap Sleep > Bedtime Begins (or, if you prefer, Wind Down Begins) and select Next
  • Select Add Action
  • Type Set Color Filters in the search box until it is listed and select it, then select Next
  • The next screen will show that your new automation will begin when Bedtime starts and that it will set the color filters. You can toggle Ask Before Running on or off. When you’re satisfied, select Done.

You can use the Shortcuts app to set all sorts of automations or other ways to enable or disable grayscale (or other conditions). Go ahead and experiment.

Grayscale on a Google Pixel phone

If you use a Pixel or other Android phone, you can have two different ways that you can adjust the screen to go to grayscale, depending on what you want to use it for.

If you want to go grayscale at night to relax your eyes (or discourage yourself from using your phone), you can use Android’s Bedtime mode to have your phone automatically go to grayscale at a specific time. (If you haven’t set up Bedtime mode yet, here are some instructions.)

  • Go to Settings > Digital Wellbeing & parental controls > Bedtime mode
  • Scroll down to and select Customize > Screen options at bedtime
  • Toggle Grayscale on

To set up Bedtime mode for grayscale, tap on Customize.

There are several screen options for bedtime, including grayscale and dim the wallpaper.

What if you want the screen to be grayscale all the time — or if you want to be able to toggle it on and off any time you wish? This is possible as well by using the color correction feature in Android’s Accessibility toolkit.

  • Go to Settings > Accessibility > Color and motion
  • Select Color correction, scroll down, and select Grayscale.
  • Go back up to the Use color correction button and toggle it on.

If you want to switch to grayscale anytime you like but don’t want to go through all those menu choices each time, you can make it easier by using your Quick Settings menu or by adding a small “accessibility button” that will continuously float on your screen. In either case, keep in mind that grayscale isn’t the only type of color correction available, and so before you set either of these options, you need to go to the Color correction menu as described above and select Grayscale.

The color correction menu lets you turn all your screens to grayscale.

The accessibility button on the right side of the screen will toggle color on and off.

To add color correction to the Quick Settings menu:

  • Swipe down from the top of your display twice to show the Quick Settings menu
  • Tap the small edit icon at the bottom right of the menu (it looks like a pencil)
  • Find the Color correction tile and hold and drag it up to add it to your active tiles

To create an accessibility button:

  • Follow the directions above to the Color correction page
  • Scroll down to the bottom of the screen, and toggle on the Color correction shortcut

(Interestingly, I found that when I created the accessibility button, my Pixel 6 automatically added Color correction to my Quick settings menu.)

Grayscale on a Samsung Galaxy phone

Similar to the Pixel, Samsung has a Sleep mode. However, Samsung’s mode automatically goes into grayscale mode (rather than giving you any other choices).

  • Go to Settings > Modes & Routines > Sleep
  • On the Sleep page, toggle on Turn on automatically (and set your schedule if you haven’t already).

When Sleep mode goes on, your screen will automatically go to grayscale.

Samsung’s accessibility tools let you turn your screen grayscale at any time.

Samsung also has a way to turn on grayscale using its accessibility tools.

  • Go to Settings > Accessibility > Visibility enhancements
  • Select Color correction and tap Grayscale.
  • Toggle color adjustment on at the top of the page.
  • You can also create a shortcut similar to that on a Pixel.

You can also turn grayscale on and off using the Color correction tile in your Samsung’s Quick Settings menu. As with other Android phones, you should first set your color adjustment to grayscale in the Accessibility area.

  • Swipe down from the top of your display twice to show the Quick Settings menu
  • Tap the add button at the bottom of the menu
  • Find the Color correctiontile and hold and drag it to your active tiles

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The best Android phone to buy in 2023

Whether you want everything but the kitchen sink or top-tier performance for a midtier price, you’ve got options.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission.See our ethics statement.

Image: The Verge

The Android ecosystem is all about choice. While iPhone owners have a smaller pool of new devices to pick from when it’s time to upgrade, there’s a huge range of new Android phones every year. Some of them even fold in half! You want a built-in stylus? A flagship processor for less money? Maybe even — dare I say it — an unapologetically pink phone with matching earbuds? You’ve got options on Android.

On the flip side, all that choice can make for some hard decisions. Here’s where I’d like to help; I’ve tested a whole boatload of recent Android phones, and I think there are some real winners in the current crop. It’s all a matter of what you’re looking for, what you’re comfortable spending, and what your definition of a “reasonably sized phone” is. (I have my own, personally.)

And haven’t you heard? It’s hot foldable summer, and there are a bunch of new folding phones debuting over the next few months. Motorola’s Razr Plus looks really promising with a huge cover screen, the Google Pixel Fold is arriving soon with a likable new form factor, and OnePlus says it’ll have a (likely less expensive) foldable this year. If you’re curious about foldables, you might want to hold off for a few months until all the options are on the table.

If you live in the US, I have some bad news about the Android market, though. For complicated reasons having to do with “capitalism” and “geopolitics,” we don’t get nearly as many of the options as you’ll find in Asia and Europe — brands like Huawei, Xiaomi, Honor, and Oppo just aren’t available here. I’ve limited this guide to the devices I’ve personally tested in depth; thus, it is a fairly US-centric set of recommendations. 

With that in mind, it’s also worth acknowledging that most people in the US get their phones “for free” from their wireless carrier. If you can manage it, buying a phone unlocked will give you the most flexibility and freedom if you end up wanting to change carriers in the near future. Phone manufacturers also offer financing and trade-in deals to make payment more manageable. But if you’re happy with your carrier and the free phone on offer is the one you really want, by all means, take the free phone. Just make sure you understand the terms, especially if you need to change plans to cash in on the deal. 

However you go about it, you have some fantastic options for your next Android phone.


Best Android phone overall

Samsung Galaxy S23 Plus standing upright on a table top showing home screen and colorful wallpaper. Samsung Galaxy S23 Plus standing upright on a table top showing home screen and colorful wallpaper.

With a sizable 6.6-inch screen, good battery life, a whip-fast Snapdragon processor, and a capable camera system, the S23 Plus is an Android crowd-pleaser.

Screen: 6.6-inch 1080p 120Hz OLED / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy / Cameras: 50-megapixel F1.8 main with OIS, 10-megapixel 3x telephoto with OIS, 12-megapixel ultrawide, 12-megapixel selfie / Battery: 4,700mAh / Charging: 45W wired, 15W wireless / Weather resistance: IP68

Samsung’s Galaxy S series phones have been the go-to high-end Android phone for the past few years — particularly in the US — and there’s a good reason for that: they’re excellent devices. The Galaxy S23 Plus is a minor update to that winning formula, but that still makes it a winner. It neatly checks every item on the list of 2023 must-have flagship features: a lovely, large 6.6-inch screen, a capable camera system with a telephoto lens, robust weather resistance, and great battery life. At $999, it’s not cheap, but it’s also not the most expensive flagship phone you can buy.

It’s not surprising that the S23 Plus includes Qualcomm’s latest chipset: the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2. But what is surprising is that all versions of this phone sold across the globe use that Snapdragon processor — previously, some regions would get a Samsung-made Exynos chip. That’s great news because the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 is excellent, and it makes the S23 Plus sing. Day-to-day performance is top-notch, and battery stamina is much improved. There’s a larger 4,700mAh battery cell in the Plus this year, but the 8 Gen 2 is also well-tuned to conserve battery.

The S23 is an all-around winner with a great camera and high-quality build.
Image: Allison Johnson / The Verge

The 50-megapixel main camera, ultrawide, and 3x telephoto cameras that make up the S23 Plus’ imaging system aren’t showstoppers like the S23 Ultra, but they’re more than adequate for most situations. Occasionally, the S23 Plus takes stunning photos, particularly in its telephoto portrait mode. But it’s also prone to some heavy-handed processing that goes a little too hard on the HDR sometimes.

Samsung’s software isn’t our favorite, either. With a little work upfront, you can uninstall or at least hide most of the proprietary apps and services Samsung insists on downloading, but it would be nice not to have to tango with Bixby in the first place. But on the bright side, Samsung offers one of the strongest software support policies from any Android device-maker, with four years of OS updates and five years of security updates promised. Even if the initial setup takes a little work to get right, at least you won’t have to do it all over again in a couple of years.


Best affordable flagship

Screen: 6.3-inch 1080p 90Hz OLED / Processor: Google Tensor G2 / Cameras: 50-megapixel F1.85 with OIS, 12-megapixel ultrawide, 10.8-megapixel selfie / Battery: 4,355mAh / Charging: 30W wired, 20W wireless / Weather resistance: IP68

Depending on how you look at it, the Google Pixel 7 can pass as either a budget-friendly flagship or a premium midrange phone. At $599, it’s a bit cheaper than Samsung’s S-series phones and also a bit more expensive than the $499 Pixel 7A, a bona fide midrange device. Its specs follow suit: you get the high-quality build and conveniences of a high-end device, like an IP68 rating and wireless charging, but you miss out on nice extras like a telephoto camera and a 120Hz screen. If those things aren’t super important to you, then the Pixel 7 is one heck of a good deal.

The Pixel 7 and its step-up 7 Pro sibling use Google’s latest custom chipset, Tensor G2. It delivers flagship-level performance, but it’s also part of the Pixel series’ special sauce of Google-exclusive features. They’re generally clever but sort of a mixed bag in terms of how helpful they actually are. 

Clear Calling, which is exclusive to the Pixel 7 series, is like noise cancellation for phone calls that makes it easier to hear someone you’re talking to when they’re in a loud environment. Other features designed to make navigating phone trees and customer service calls less painful don’t work as well consistently. But they aren’t actively bad, and Google has proven committed to supporting its devices with updates and new features throughout their life spans.

There’s no telephoto lens, but it’s still a top-notch camera system overall.
Image: Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

Software really is the Pixel 7’s strength. It runs a clean version of Android, free of duplicate assistants and app stores (looking at you, Samsung) and will be supported well into the near future with three OS upgrades and five years of security patches. On the hardware front, you’ll have to live with a couple of concessions Google made to keep the price down. The 6.3-inch screen is just fine, but its 90Hz refresh rate is a bit slower than the super-smooth scrolling 120Hz screens on most phones at this price. 

The Pixel 7 is also missing a telephoto rear camera, though the 2x crop mode from the 50-megapixel main sensor does an admirable impression of a true optical telephoto lens. The ultrawide camera is also a generation behind the Pixel 7 Pro’s. But outside of those few drawbacks, you don’t miss out on a whole lot by opting for the Pixel 7 rather than the 7 Pro — and you definitely get to keep a few extra dollars in your pocket.


Best phone with everything but the kitchen sink

Samsung S23 Ultra in cream color standing upright on a table with rear facing outward. Samsung S23 Ultra in cream color standing upright on a table with rear facing outward.

The Galaxy S23 Ultra offers a huge 6.8-inch screen, built-in S Pen stylus, two telephoto cameras, and a top-notch Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset. It’s pricey, but there’s nothing else quite like it on the market.

Screen: 6.8-inch 1440p 120Hz OLED / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy / Cameras: 200-megapixel main with OIS, 10-megapixel 10x telephoto with OIS, 10-megapixel 3x telephoto with OIS, 12-megapixel ultrawide, 12-megapixel selfie / Battery: 5,000mAh / Charging: 45W wired, 15W wireless / Weather resistance: IP68

The Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra isn’t for the faint of heart. It’s pricey, starting at $1,199, and thanks to a 6.8-inch screen, it’s huge. It’s also the most powerful Android phone you can buy in the US right now, with a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset, S Pen stylus support with a built-in silo for storage, and two — count ’em, two — telephoto cameras on the rear panel. It’s kind of hard to imagine what else Samsung could possibly stuff into this phone.

The screen at the center of this spec monster is a 6.8-inch OLED with a variable refresh rate up to 120Hz and 1440p resolution. It’s lovely, and the even better news is that it’s more battery-efficient than last year’s model. Between that and the new chipset, the S23 Ultra gets through a full day of heavy use with a little more wiggle room than its predecessor could. 

The S23 Ultra stands alone.
Image: Allison Johnson / The Verge

The S23 Ultra’s camera system is a major reason to consider putting in the extra cash for this model rather than the S23 Plus. There’s nothing quite like it available on any other flagship phone: there’s both a 3x and 10x telephoto camera plus an ultrawide and, oh yeah, a 200-megapixel main camera.

The 200-megapixel thing is only partially a stunt — most of the time, you’ll be getting a 12-megapixel file from it, but the extra data from all those pixels seems to help the system come up with some fantastic images. It occasionally makes some weird judgments or turns the HDR up to 11, but it’s often very good and, here and there, is even capable of stunning “I can’t believe it’s not a ‘real’ camera” photos.

Our complaints about Samsung software stand, unfortunately, and its faults are even more glaring on a very pricey phone. Why the spammy clickbait links in the weather app? And who on earth wants push notifications from the Samsung Galaxy store? You don’t get that kind of thing on a Pixel phone. Still, there are enough impressive things about the S23 Ultra that it’s worth some minor software annoyances.  


Best alternative to Google and Samsung

OnePlus 11 5G in-hand showing green color option and OnePlus logo with a black and white background. OnePlus 11 5G in-hand showing green color option and OnePlus logo with a black and white background.

$699

The OnePlus 11 lacks a couple of key features, namely robust water resistance and wireless charging. But its big 6.7-inch screen, excellent performance, and fast wired charging are all quite appealing at its relatively low price.

Screen: 6.7-inch 1440p 120Hz OLED / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 / Cameras: 50-megapixel F1.8 main with OIS, 48-megapixel ultrawide, 32-megapixel 2x telephoto, 16-megapixel selfie / Battery: 5,000mAh / Charging: 80W wired (100W outside of US) / Weather resistance: IP64

The US Android market is dominated by Samsung and Google (well, mostly Samsung). But we do have a few alternatives to those brands, and the OnePlus 11 5G is a standout for someone who wants a high-performing device for a bit less money. It uses the excellent Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset, but at $699, it’s $300 cheaper than the S23 Ultra with a similar processor. 

The OnePlus 11 has a couple of other things going for it, too, including a fantastic 6.7-inch 1440p display with a top 120Hz refresh rate. There’s also very fast wired charging with the included fast charger — up to 80W in the US, which will take its big 5,000mAh battery from empty to 100 percent in less than 30 minutes. It’s fast enough to make overnight charging optional. 

The OnePlus 11 5G misses a couple of flagship features but trades them in for excellent performance at a lower price.
Image: Allison Johnson / The Verge

On the downside, there are a couple of things missing here that you’ll find on most other phones at this price. The first is wireless charging, which may be a deal-breaker if you’re already invested in charging your phone that way. And the OnePlus 11 is only rated to IP64, not IP68 like virtually every other flagship. That means it’s resistant to splashes and spray but isn’t built to withstand full immersion in water for any length of time. 

Those two missing features narrow the OnePlus 11’s appeal. If you’re not concerned about dropping your phone in a puddle (or toilet or bathtub or sink or swimming pool) and you’d rather charge your phone quickly than on a wireless charging pad, then the 11 5G is a great way to get excellent performance and keep a little more cash in your wallet.


Best foldable phone

$1799

The Fold 4 is a multitasking powerhouse that can be used tablet-style or as your daily driver smartphone. It’s a gadget person’s gadget with a high price tag to match.

Screen: 7.6-inch 2176p 120Hz OLED inner screen, 6.2-inch 2316p 120Hz OLED cover screen / Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 / Cameras: 50-megapixel F/1.8 main with OIS, 10-megapixel 3x telephoto with OIS, 12-megapixel ultrawide, 10-megapixel selfie (cover screen), four-megapixel under-display selfie (inner screen) / Battery: 4,400mAh / Charging: 25W wired, 15W wireless / Weather resistance: IPX8

There’s nothing quite like the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 on the market, particularly in the US. The Z Fold 4 is Samsung’s tablet-style foldable — you’ve got a 6.2-inch cover screen on the outside for normal phone stuff, but on the inside, it unfolds to a huge 7.6-inch screen. It’s a level of versatility you won’t find on any traditional slab-style phone. It’s priced accordingly, too, at a steep $1,799 MSRP.

The Z Fold 4 is as durable as foldables come right now. It’s IPX8 rated, so it’s protected against full immersion in water. But that “X” means there’s no guarantee against dust intrusion, and despite Samsung’s best efforts to strengthen the device’s resistance to environmental factors, long-term durability is still a question mark. That’s probably a leap of faith most people won’t be able to take for a $1,800 phone.

There’s nothing quite as versatile as the Z Fold 4 on the market.
Image: Allison Johnson / The Verge

The Z Fold 4 also runs up against another limitation on the software side: the Android tablet app ecosystem. Apps don’t always make great use of the big inner screen; they’re often just scaled-up phone apps, leaving a lot of unused blank space. Thankfully, Samsung’s UI offers plenty of support to arrange multiple windows for multitasking. It can take a little futzing, but you can make use of that big canvas by displaying multiple apps at once. 

Uncertainty about how it will hold up in the long run and the two-hands-on-ness required to make the most of it mean the Z Fold 4 is kind of a gadget person’s gadget. It’s a showcase of hardware innovation, and you can do things with it that slab-style phones can only dream of. If you’ve got the literal and figurative deep pockets for it, you’ll be well rewarded.


Other Android phones worth considering

There are many more great Android devices that weren’t covered here, and a few are worth calling out that didn’t quite make the cut for a recommendation. The Galaxy S23 Plus’ smaller sibling, the Galaxy S23, is a fantastic option if you want a somewhat smaller Android phone. Its 6.1-inch screen doesn’t put it in “small phone” territory, but it’s much more pocketable than the other two S23 models. Battery life has been improved this year on the S23, too, which was a weak point for the S22. 

There’s also the Galaxy Z Flip 4, Samsung’s clamshell-style foldable. It offers a 6.7-inch inner screen that folds in half with a small 1.9-inch cover screen on the outside for heads-up info and notifications. It’s kind of like a regular phone with a smartwatch glued on the front. It’s not as versatile as the Z Fold 4, but it costs a much more reasonable $999. I have the same concerns about long-term durability as I do with the Z Fold, and the cover screen could be more useful. Still, it’s a lot of fun to use, and it folds down small enough to fit in your front jeans pocket. 

If you’re all in on Google’s ecosystem, then the Pixel 7 Pro is a good (and somewhat obvious) step-up option. It doesn’t offer any essential upgrades compared to the Pixel 7 but does come with a good 5x telephoto camera. The screen is bigger — 6.7 inches compared to 6.3 — and it’s also a little nicer, with a faster 120Hz top refresh rate. But the Pixel 7 is priced so well that it’s kind of impossible not to recommend it, and most people will find everything they need in the base model.

There’s one more Pixel phone to consider: the Google Pixel 7A. It’s $499 and has the same Tensor G2 processor as the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro. The 7A is definitely the best phone camera you can get for the money, and it comes with nice creature comforts not usually seen in budget devices, like wireless charging. It’s on the pricey side of the “budget” category, but it’s designed to go the distance.

Finally, there’s the Motorola Edge Plus (2023). It is a fine device for $799, with a nice screen, great battery life, an excellent Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor, and all the flagship trimmings like wireless charging and an IP68 rating. It’s a good option if the OnePlus 11 appeals but you want wireless charging and better water resistance. But we’re not fans of the curved edge screen, and the OnePlus 11 comes with an additional year of security updates. Besides, it doesn’t offer enough to stand out from the rest of the field to warrant a full recommendation.

Update June 9th, 2023, 5:25PM ET: Removed the Asus Zenfone 9, which will be replaced soon by the Zenfone 10 . Removed the Google Pixel 6A from the “also consider” section and replaced it with the Pixel 7A.


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