In 2026, we will be paying more for less
It’s no surprise that we’ve started hearing that smartphones will be getting the odd RAM cut here and there. Just a bit off the top, just enough to actually manage to produce the devices. Midrangers will supposedly suffer the most, but flagships aren’t immune to the RAMpocalypse. They can’t be.There are two possible ways this will go. Either the next Galaxy S models will have a bit less RAM, or they will have to cost more for delivering the same 12/16 GB configurations. Right now, rumors are saying Samsung will sell the Galaxy S26 series at an uptick, and keep the Galaxy S25 (at least the Ultra) at current price, as it will look like a “reduced price” in this new 2026 reality.This has happened before with both the Galaxy S Ultra and Tab S Ultra lines, so I am not shocked at these reports.And not just Samsung, of course. Apple, Google, Oppo, Xiaomi, Sony, everyone will be affected.Which is why I now come back to this old adage:
Buy last year’s flagship has never rung as true as it does now

Diminishing AI returns
The next move for AI on smartphones is supposedly the new “Agentic AI features”. Agents meaning that you’d be telling your phone what you want it to do, and it will automatically figure out and execute a complex chain of tasks.For example “See when I need to fly to New York and book me a ticket”.The marketing will make it sound like a futuristic miracle. For anyone who has experience with AI tools — it will sound like an AI hallucination fever dream waiting to happen.But the main thing I’d like to touch upon is that a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 or an Apple A18 should be able to run these processes. After all, they are super-pumped, AI-ready, neural monster phone chips, right?And if an AI feature is so new and fresh that it needs to be locked down and made exclusive for the newest phone models, I think it’d be a better idea to not use it until its bugs have been stomped and edges filed down anyway.The 7-year software upgrade promise is a reality
A Galaxy or Pixel from 2024 is going to be getting updates until 2031. That’s wild — if you buy one today, you are still good for 5 years. Not just security patches, but full Android builds.The FOMO of yesteryear doesn’t hit as strong in today’s world. Hardware has plateaued and is powerful enough to last you years. And if you ask me, camera tech has gotten really good and allows you to capture that perfect memorabilia.Shop safely: the concerns and issues with old phones

- Is it counterfeit? (fake iPhones are still a thing)
- Is it stolen? (locked devices or the original owner tracking you down may be an issue)
- Is its battery in good health?