Fairphone’s New Modular Flagship Is Still a Repairable Dream With a Sleek New Design

A photo of the Fairphone 4 on a desk surrounded by tools

Would you swap out your new flagship smartphone for a more affordable, sustainable one?
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

I’ve been dreaming of a modular smartphone since I first laid eyes on Google’s Project Ara. The concept made so much sense to me, a person who has built PCs before and isn’t afraid to attack a wire (as long as it isn’t live, of course). But despite the relative user-friendliness behind the idea of swappable modules, Project Ara failed to make it to the real world.

Other modular smartphones have come and gone, but the one with the most staying power thus far is Fairphone, an almost modular and repairable smartphone from the Netherlands. Unfortunately, it remains limited to overseas availability, but the fact that we’re now on Fairphone 4 is something that should be lauded considering that so many others have failed.

A photo of the Fairphone 4

The Fairphone 4 can be easily taken apart.
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

What’s Inside

The Fairphone 4 packs in some pretty impressive specs, making it a definite upgrade from the Fairphone 3 . The Android phone has a larger 6.3-inch Full HD display. It runs on a Snapdragon 750G with 6GB of RAM inside and 128GB of storage. The extra bit of memory helps the device feel more responsive than its mid-range processor suggests. Fairphone also boasts that this is the first 5G-capable modular smartphone, though it only works on sub-6Ghz bands and doesn’t support ultra-fast millimeter-wave spectrum. I am using the Fairphone 4 with a SIM from Mint Mobile, but I don’t get 5G service at my house (not surprising).

G/O Media may get a commission

eufy Smart Scale C1

15% off

eufy Smart Scale C1

Holistic Health via App
12 insightful measures such as weight, body fat, BMI, muscle mass, and more

For the Whole Family
Track the health trends of up to 16 users, perfect for families of all sizes

The Fairphone 4 has a 3,905 mAh battery, which is removable like the phones you used to own back in the day. At first, I was worried about the phone’s battery life, but then I remembered that you could theoretically take a spare with you in a bag and swap it out if there’s no way to charge. Fairphone says the battery lasts up to 200 hours of use while idle. It can also charge up to 50% in half an hour with at least a 20W charger. There’s no charging cable or power brick in the box, so you’ll have to supply your own with the appropriate wattage to enable fast charging.

A photo of the exposed backside of the Fairphone 4

Finally, a removable battery in an Android device!
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

The Fairphone 4 sports dual 48-megapixel rear lenses with a supporting sensor and a 25-MP selfie camera. The primary camera is a Sony IMX582 sensor with an f/1.6 aperture and both color and time-of-flight sensors. There is 8x digital zoom capability, along with up to 4K video capture at 30 fps and up to 240 fps slow-motion capabilities. You can definitely make some content with this camera.

The Fairphone 4 has no headphone jack. While it may seem like an antithesis to the company’s sustainability claims, I think this makes the most sense considering where we’re at presently. Bluetooth headphones are a dime a dozen, as prevalent as the wired earbuds that came packaged with our phones in yesteryear. The lack of an audio jack might also make it easier for the Fairphone 4 to retain its modularity. Fairphone doesn’t include a USB-C adapter to add a headphone jack, so if you want to go wired, you’d have to buy it separately.

At £499, or a little under $700, the Fairphone 4 offers some solid features for the price. But don’t expect the bells and whistles you’d get with a Samsung flagship, for instance, because that kind of feature exclusivity comes at a price: a phone you can’t repair yourself.

Still, Fairphone included a fingerprint scanner embedded in the power button, NFC for contactless payments, and a microSD card for extra storage. The company makes another Fairphone 4 with 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage for £569, or about $760. Fair offers an extended five-year warranty, including the guarantee of spare parts until at least 2027, as well as long-term software support.

A photo of the backside of the Fairphone 4 open with a person hovering a screwdriver over a screw

It’s almost way too easy to remove screws from inside the Fairphone 4, but I suppose that’s the point!
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

The Fairphone 4 runs on Android 11, and the company says it will receive software updates up to Android 13. And though the company aims to support Android 14 and 15 down the line, you might have to upgrade your chipset to make that possible. That shouldn’t be a problem, of course, because the whole point of the Fairphone 4 is that it’s a long-lasting device.

What It’s Like to Use

A photo of the Fairphone 4

The Fairphone 4 is a nice phone, but it’s got some work to do before it is flagship-level “ooh.”
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

The design of the Fairphone 4 reminds me of Motorola’s line of budget smartphones, the Moto G series. There is a bit of blockiness to the phone, which is something I haven’t had to deal with since thin smartphones became the standard. Frankly, this is the design issue that I can see making the Fairphone 4 difficult to sell. Then again, if you’re the type of person who appreciates tinkering with a device’s insides, you might not notice the Fairphone 4 is two millimeters thicker than devices like the OnePlus 9.

I haven’t had enough time with the Fairphone 4 to really put it through its paces, though I plan to use it for awhile and see how it fares with daily use. But after a few days with the first modular smartphone I’ve used since that Project Ara developer conference I attended long ago, I can attest that it’s good!

The Fairphone 4 is capable using apps like Pokémon Go, Office 365, and Google Chrome. In a Geekbench 5 test of overall system performance, the phone scored 638 in single-core and 1859 in multi-core tests. These aren’t Samsung or Apple flagship scores, but you’re not getting a cutting-edge flagship here. Geekbench ranked the Fairphone 4’s performance higher than the Samsung’s solidly mid-range Galaxy A71, which runs on a Snapdragon 730 (and cost about $450 at launch last year).

I played with the camera settings a bit, too. They’re laid out much differently than what you’d see on the Google Pixel’s camera app, for instance, and there were a few times I had to wait for the app to finish taking the photo before moving on to the next scene. And while the images taken with Auto HDR are vibrant enough to share online, you can easily see where the camera struggles when it’s indoors. The camera can also zoom in quite a bit, but the result is overly pixelated.

Clearly, we have some work to do before a modular phone’s camera is as good as a flagship iPhone, for instance. But maybe we can get there.

Removable, Repairable Parts

A photo of the author's fingers holding up the USB-C module over the bare body of the Fairphone 4

I was admittedly reluctant to do this, but here I’m holding the USB-C module from the Fairphone 4.
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

The Fairphone 4 is as modular as its predecessors. You can swap out seven modules, from the USB-C port that charges and delivers audio, to the loudspeaker and earpiece. The cameras are swappable, too. You can also replace the display for less than $100, and all it requires is removing and keeping track of eight tiny screws. The Fairphone 4, in particular, is one of the few devices you’ll see with the 10/10 iFixit repairability score, and that’s because you can quickly take it apart yourself. (The others that have earned a 10/10 are, of course, earlier Fairphones.)

I haven’t yet fully taken apart the Fairphone 4, though I did take out its loudspeaker and USB-C module, which are both offered as spare parts. It was absurdly easy to do with a Phillips 00 screwdriver, though I’ve built PCs and mechanical keyboards so I’m comfortable with poking and prodding at circuits. I was worried at one point that I’d messed up the connecter between the USB-C and the rest of the device, but the Fairphone 4 turned back on after I reseated it. It’s charging as I type.

A photo of a hand holding the Fairphone 4

It looks like a regular phone from afar, though it’s totally fixable by me.
Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

Fairphone says its mission is to set an example for the tech industry, to show that it’s possible to manufacture electronics ethically while also being commercially successful. It’s easy for tech companies to hype their sustainability efforts, but they could also do more to eliminate the mounds of e-waste contributing to climate change by making it easier for people to extend the lives of their devices.

Although the Fairphone 4 isn’t directly offered in the U.S.—it’s only available in select European countries—it does come at a time that the Right to Repair movement in the U.S. is picking up steam. Though there haven’t been any new laws set just yet, the FTC has begun implementing new policies that will hopefully push companies toward making their devices actually repairable. And with Fairphone as a partner in the Right to Repair campaign, I imagine Fairphone 4 will be used as an example of how to a repairable phone could be manufactured.

But I can’t help but feel like humanity needs a philosophical shift before modular, repairable devices become the norm. Smartphones are sold to us based on their new capabilities, and the whole point of the marketing machine is to make us want the newest, shiniest thing. I could see the Fairphone 4 appealing to buyers of mid-range phones who might not be interested in the latest and greatest but want to upgrade or fix parts as they see fit. (It would be nice if you could upgrade the system-on-chip like you can on a PC, but that’s not possible—yet.) The Fairphone 4 shows that it’s possible to make an affordable, modular phone. It remains to be seen if any other tech company will even try.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Onlineshopping: Ist auf Bewertungsportale Verlass? thumbnail

Onlineshopping: Ist auf Bewertungsportale Verlass?

Wir verwenden Cookies oder ähnliche Informationen (z.B. deine IP-Adresse, Zählpixel) sowie Funktionen von Drittanbietern, die Cookies setzen. Das dient der Funktionalität auf t3n.de (z.B. sichere Datenübermittlung, Bereitstellung von Inhalten, Verknüpfung von Geräten, Betrugsvermeidung), der Verknüpfung mit sozialen Netzwerken, der Produktentwicklung (z.B. Fehlerbehebung, neue Funktionen), der Monetarisierung zu Gunsten von t3n, der Abrechnung mit Autoren, Content-Lieferanten…
Read More
Ryan Reynolds’ Maximum Effort is part of an upcoming 1.2 million-square-foot studio in Markham thumbnail

Ryan Reynolds’ Maximum Effort is part of an upcoming 1.2 million-square-foot studio in Markham

The space is being described as a fully integrated production studio for film, scripted and unscripted reality television, drama series, live-action, and animated feature films Canada’s own Ryan Reynolds, alongside his production and advertising company Maximum Effort, is set to establish a new 1.2 million-square-foot studio in Canada. Maximum Effort, which Reynolds co-founded with George
Read More

A revamped wired Nest Doorbell is coming in 2022 with 24/7 video recording

Google is feeling the smart home heat. Shortly after Amazon announced its dirt-cheap $50 Blink video doorbell, Nest VP Rishi Chandra announced that Google also has a competing second-generation Nest Doorbell coming next year. And unlike the recently launched battery-powered Nest Doorbell, the new device will be hardwired like the original Nest Hello. That opens…
Read More
ASUS falls in love with Owl launches RTX 3070 Noctua Edition graphics card thumbnail

ASUS falls in love with Owl launches RTX 3070 Noctua Edition graphics card

早前網上盛傳 ASUS 會推基於 Noctua (貓頭鷹)風扇的顯示卡,在今天終於成真! ASUS 正式宣佈推出 RTX 3070 Noctua Edition,成為繼 ROG Strix 及 TUG Gaming 外的一個全新系列。編輯部更向 ASUS HK 求證,表示該產品會於香港發售的好消息。 談及與 Noctua 的合作, ASUS ROG Ryujin 及 Ryujin II 系列水冷已在採用 Noctua 的風扇並受到各方好評。然而 Noctua 風扇以 120mm 大尺寸為主,如何應用在以 90mm 或 100mm 風扇為主的顯示卡是一個問題。為此顯示卡仍然只得採用 2 把 Noctua NF-A12x25 120mm 風扇, ASUS 更為此別造一款高身散熱模組以作配合。由於採用 2 把 120mm 風扇關係,所以 RTX 3070 Noctua…
Read More
Cheeky chappy rides horse around London filling station, singing: 'I don't need petrol 'cos he runs on carrots' thumbnail

Cheeky chappy rides horse around London filling station, singing: ‘I don’t need petrol ‘cos he runs on carrots’

First it was bog roll and pasta shortages. Now people are panic-buying petrol to round out the post-pandemic/Brexit apocalypse. It's a suboptimal situation but an effective ad campaign for electric cars or, indeed, any other mode of transport that doesn't run on fossil fuels. And as with any suboptimal situation, you'll find Brits making mirth…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share