The worst sound in the world.
I am like a dog, ears pricked and attention diverted, desperately trying to spot the offending sound. It's a violent combination of bombastic crash and subtle crack, a unique flavor of dread.
It's the sound of a phone dropping from hand or pocket or table or anything — gravity doesn't discern — to the cold hard ground. Occasionally, you get lucky and the phone lands on its back, and you see your last interaction — Instagram, let's be honest — staring back at you, the dog photo not nearly as cute dimmed by the judgemental harshness of the late afternoon sun. But often the screen is hidden from view, phone face down, a tense few moments where you brace yourself for the potential heartache and accompanying dread in knowing all the subsequent steps you'll have to take to replace the shattered glass, and hoping that's all it is.
Around 5% said they drop their devices six times per month.
There are no definitive numbers to work with, but a number of studies have attempted to figure out how often people drop their phones, and how often those accidents lead to permanent damage. A 2011 Plaxo study estimates that 33% of people regularly drop their phones on a regular basis — some 20% in to the toilet (which, with a bit of luck, may be less damaging) — while a 2013 study from Tech21 estimates that 90% of people drop their phones at least once a month. Around 5% said they drop their devices six times per month.
For most people, it's not a matter of if but when, and though the materials used on the outside of our beloved devices have somewhat improved over the past few years, nothing is infallible. Corning, one of the most important companies few people know about, introduced the fifth generation of its Gorilla Glass substrate in 2016, and believes that it is the strongest smartphone cover out there, "surviving 1.6-meter, shoulder-height drops onto hard, rough surfaces up to 80% of the time," according to the company's marketing materials. Corning, headquartered in the New York town of the same name, has become synonymous with the front glass of most Android phones, and while there are competitors — Dragontrail is the MediaTek to Corning's Qualcomm — Gorilla Glass has practically become the Kleenex of mobile screen covers.
Everything you need to know about Corning Gorilla Glass
But even the strongest glass is still breakable (for now), and unless we outfit the world with carpet (which could get gross pretty quickly) there isn't an alternative to trying to make our devices more durable. A worrying trend, and one that has been criticized since the debut of the all-glass Nexus 4, is outfitting both the front and back of a phone in glass. From the Galaxy S7 to the Honor 8 and many in between, the Gorilla Glass sandwich doesn't seem to be going away anytime soon — the Galaxy S8 looks to have more glass, front and back, then ever — so we're just going to have to deal with it.
The sight of a person, or groups of people, walking with phones in hand, reading the news or catching up on a Twitter feed, is all too common on busy city sidewalks.
If we assume that people are not generally getting clumsier, the rising prevalence of cracked and broken phones due to drops is likely due to the increasing number of hours people spend each day using their phones. The sight of a person, or groups of people, walking with phones in hand, reading the news or catching up on a Twitter feed, is all too common on busy city sidewalks, and the more we take the technology for granted, the less careful we are with the thing itself. Smartphones may be dropping in cost overall, but they're rising in importance in our lives, and a cracked screen is more than an inconvenience — it's a tragedy.
And yet the same Tech21 survey said that many people are willing to continue using a phone with a cracked screen because the idea of having to get it repaired or replaced — often out of pocket, since accidental damage is not covered under most manufacturer warranties — is stressful and, often, traumatic.
I hate seeing cracked screens. It's a visceral reaction, a combination of anger at the owner and sadness for the phone. But that's dumb; I should feel angry at the phone for breaking, and sad for the owner who has to go through the hassle of replacing it. I've been there; you've been there. We've all dealt with a cracked screen or at the very least damage a phone's casing.
For a few years, high-quality polycarbonate — devices like the HTC One X, Nokia Lumia 1020 and iPhone 5C — were all the rage, and while they may not have looked as nice (debatable, since the Lumia phones were perfection), they tended to be very durable. But no material — metal, glass, polycarbonate — is unbreakable and the most important factor to preventing drops is being aware of your surroundings.

Credit: Getty
In Toronto, where I live, there has been a huge increase in the number of pedestrian deaths in recent years, many of which are caused by people engrossed in their phones as they cross streets or step into intersections. Such accidents are increasingly common in big cities throughout the world, and lest this turns into a PSA against using one's phone out in public, it's clear that people are becoming more cavalier about using phones in places that a few years ago would have been considered verboten.
A dropped smartphone is not always a broken one, and avoiding the occurrence completely is likely impossible, but being aware of when and how these drops happen is the first step towards realizing that our devices, as essential (and addictive) as anything we use on a daily basis, can be made safer by being more careful.
And, if you can't, or just refuse to be, more careful, there are always rugged phones and thick-as-a-brick cases that will probably save you from yourself.
Reader comments
Dropped phones, cracked screens and the death of awareness
I just dropped my LG G5 today on the very rough asphalt here are work in the parking lot. My heart dropped when I hear the sound of it falling and skidding, but after some dust on the screen and corners, my Spigen case held up with no visible damage at all. Not even a scuff on a corner.
I've not dropped a phone from that height in the last bunch of yrs. So glad it held up.
My wife has dropped her Nexus 5X several times with no problem. However, the other day, she dropped it (with a screen protector and a case on, mind you), hit just right or something and it cracked the screen. Super PO'ed. I go caseless, so I'm asking for it but she was always super careful...
I dropped my beloved Note 4 from chest high this weekend (I'm 6 feet) and thankfully my trusty Otterbox Commuter saved it again.
Well ya.....There was a freakin OtterBox on it!!
Tempered glass screen protector helps.
I had three of those and each one broke when I dropped the phone once. Phone itself though didn't and ultimately three protectors cost WAY less than screen replacement!
I dropped my Pixel a few days ago. I'm talking the famous juggling act before taking an end over end tumbling and finally landline face first on the sidewalk. Thankfully my Otterbox Defender case saved the day. I've always said Defender protection is the best way to go. Plus it gives you something to grip as these paper thin phones are getting harder and harder to hold.
Dude, OtterBox is definitely not the best way to go in most cases. (No pun) hehehe. Those things are so damn fat. All you need is your standard thin case with a lip that protrudes beyond the glass so it lands on the lip instead of shattering and you're good to go 99% of the time.
I agree I have never gotten anything bigger than ones like my Spigen Armor case it's light thin and drop after drop it never fails. Plus the $10-15 for a case so out beats the $40-50 on a Defender case. Those things are so bulky it's literally a brick.
Agree with this. I drop maybe twice a month but have never broken a phone -- always have one of the 3.99$ gel cases from the mall kiosk. Seems to work great. Knock-on-wood.
Ugh, the juggle, it is the worst. I did that with my Note 4, except it was on a day that I had taken the case off. The phone is currently at my parents' place and I always pick it up and internally scream at myself if I visit.
agreed, otterbox are nice for REAL protection from drops. Have a look at the lifeproof as well. I have a fre coming for my iPhone 6s. We do a lot of outdoor activities, plus I use my iPhone as navigation. entertainment on my ADV motorcycle. In the fre, on a special dash mount on my bike. Through mud, dirt, rain, sleet, whatever. my phone is protected and working correctly!
I just hate those giant cases tho. I wish Otterbox could make a thin case that works as well as their Ginormous ones.
Warning signs in Sweden with pedestrians walking with their devices in hand is not true though. Two artists made one sign they put up as an art object. It's street art, not a traffic regulation.
No one said it was traffic regulation.
I have never had a cracked screen, and I drop my phones a lot. But I ALWAYS use a case, and not some thin minimalist case. Some don't like the tradeoff in bulk. For me, I would rather it be bulky and have a non-cracked screen.
I don't feel bad for people with cracked screens. Every time I see it or ask about it, it is because they didn't have a case on, or just a thin case or a skin.
When I get a new phone, it is just like clockwork that I either have a case already purchased, or if in store, I buy a case when I buy the phone. I NEVER leave the store without a case.
Some swear by going naked to experience the smartphone as the manufacturer intended. But that is a risk that they are willing to take. I eliminate that risk, while still enjoying the phone... but dressed in TPU or plastic. I'll take that tradeoff any day to ensure my phone stays pristine. Also helps with resale value.
While I do agree with you, I love the feel of a naked phone.
I dropped my last Nexus 6 four times. Screen burnout after all those drops.
That was a replacement for another N6 I had dropped.
But I love the feel of my N6 when it's naked. Sleek, fits the hand nicely, everything. I'm just sad that I've finally scolded myself into getting a Unicorn Beetle Pro, which, admittedly, has saved my phone quite a few times
The N6 was the only phone I used without a case simply because it was too damn big. But I glued a pop socket handle to the back of it and it's been there ever since (which are must haves for giant phones like that). Dropped the N6 once and spent $220 to replace the display. I knew I'd want it around to use as a tablet at the house and I still do almost daily
Gotta agree with you on not feeling bad. I ask the cracked-screen-people all the time why they didn't have a case. The answer is usually that they just don't like the feel of it or that they just like the way the phone looks. I think more of it is that they want to show off their expensive toy. Either way, a broken phone doesn't look very good at all and can get rather costly. I use a decently made case on any phone I get. No one knows what my phone is, but it still looks pristine 2 and a half years later.
I've never had a cracked screen, and I've only used a case on 2 phones in the last 10 years -- and they were minimalist cases. I hate cases.
Recently I gave my old, no-longer-used G2 to a friend. She promptly put it in a flip-style wallet case. One day it fell out of her hand while she was getting out of her car, landed on the corner of the outside of the case...and shattered the screen. Insanity. I mean it was a wallet case, so the actual phone corner was like 1/4" away from the case corner, and it was a very short drop because her old car is so low. Even so, I mocked her -- like, "Do you know how many years I used that phone without damaging it at all?!?"
Reading the comments on various sites I'm actually seeing more comments from people WITH cases where their phone broke from a fall, than people without.
Now maybe its just most people without being too embarrassed to post, but there is also another possibility - the cases CAUSE the phone to break.
The thing is, the phones are designed and tested based on being used and abused as-is, uncased. So when you slap a case on it then drop it, the impact will interact with the phone in a way it was neither designed nor tested for.
So overall, I think unless its a VERY over-engineered case (it would have to absorb the entire impact), then slapping a case on your phone actually makes it MORE likely to break, not less.
I've had my Xperia Z for four(ish) years and have never had a case on it. It's had one drop in that time. Fell from a pants pocket onto concrete as I sat down (stupid new trousers with shallow pockets). Before that I had a HTC Desire HD that lasted 2 years with a single drop (again from a pants pocket while sitting down). I don't remember dropping any of the phones before that.
I'm honestly amazed when people talk about dropping their phones regularly "Yeah at least once a month." WTF? How do you manage to do that? Do you literally have the phone out *all* the time and you drop it because you've bumped into something? Do you drop it because you're clumsy? Is your model of phone super slippery? Or is it something else? Maybe it's time to start looking seriously into the cause of the drops rather than trying to toughen the phones.
Only phone I've ever bought a case for was the Note 7 - because I was worried about the "edge" style screen. I think if it hadn't been recalled I'd have ended up ditching the case for it as well.
I will say, the assurance you can get it fixed helps too. That is the one thing Apple has going for it. You can take it to an Apple store and usually get your phone fixed without issue, insurance or not. You really can't say that about other brands. It's a crapshoot getting most Android phones fixed. I have a Moto Z Play and a Nexus 5x. If one of those screens crack I will most likely have to send them somewhere and be without a phone for an extended time (especially dealing with Motorola Droid what I read). My wife has a 5S. She cracked her screen and after a drive to the Apple store it was repaired in an hour by the company that made her phone. It's such a hassle to get Android phones repaired (especially anything other than Samsung)people may tolerate using cracked phones, it may not just be because of cost.
Motorola has an "advance repair" option. They put a $500 hold on your account, send you a replacement phone, you send your phone back, and they lift the hold and charge you $200 (for Nexus 6 - probably a bit cheaper with Moto Z Play's smaller screen).
I have friends with 5X, and they say that LG/Google do really well with replacing broken screens
I don't understand the whole "glass sandwich" trend.
Yes, it looks good, but honestly, I think glass is a poor material choice for a phone's back as it is slippery, a serious fingerprint magnet and is also rather fragile due to it being prone to cracking when dropped.
I long for the days where we can enjoy phones with well-made soft-touch plastic backs like the Nexus 5. That phone was one of those phones that really hit a home-run when it comes to plastics. It feels great and doesn't feel cheapskate at all while also being extremely grippy and while it might not be the most scratch-resistant thing in the world, due to its soft nature, it can better withstand drops.
i figured it had something to do with electromagnetic signals or whatever passing through glass more easily than through other materials?
Probably that and the fact that most people use cases anyway so it doesn't really matter what the back is made of. You can also add wireless charging since it doesn't work through metal yet.
The real reason is stupid reviewers like on this site and most every other site that ***** and moan if it's made from plastic, despite the fact that they all immediately cover up their nice looking glass backed phone with a big old hunk of plastic in the form of a case, so really making it "premium" with the glass back is pointless.
Shiltz +1000 Unbelievable.... Three people in a row that are okay with plastic backed phones! I thought I might be the only one left that prefers plastic, rubber or polycarbonate over this fragile crap that the manufacturers have been forced to use from all all of these knuckleheads talking about how beautiful these glass and aluminum phones are and how they feel so much more expensive. WTF... Who cares how expensive a mobile phone looks. Give me a 5X build with top of the line internals and it will be the phone I buy. I hate cases and never put one on my 5X, but I had to put one on my S7 & Note 5 because if you set it on your lap it will end up on the floor or between your console and seat because the damn things are so slippery. Its a shame they have been forced to build these fragile devices for the people that prefer form over function, but thats how brainless our population has become.
I agree. I wish this trend with glass phones would go away. Glass looks nice but you don't see the beautiful phone if you have to cover it in a case. I'd rather have a plastic phone that won't go to hell if it's dropped.
Plus, plastic phones are easier to fix if any of the hardware needs to be replaced.
Super agree, one of the reasons I rid myself of my Note 5 was because of all the glass. Everytime I used the thing I felt it I might break it. I hope the trend dies, but I won't hold my breathe.
+1 on the Nexus 5, probably one of the best phones I've ever owned. Tooks the spills and drops and kept on truckin'. Too bad about that battery life though.
I have dropped my Nexus 5 way too many times to count. Shout out to the Cruzerlite Bugdroid Circuit Case I bought from AC that has faithfully protected it for 3 years.
When I had my S7 Edge, I almost never dropped it. I got the Moto Z Force and maybe it because I know it is "shatterproof" or whatever, but I tend to drop it a lot. Which I'm certainly not doing on purpose, I realized there are other things that can get damaged besides the screen.
however it is nice not worrying about the screen
This. I rarely dropped my Moto x 14. I drop my Z Force regularly. I don't know if he a size thing or like you said some subconscious thing since i don't have to worry about the screen.
Same here, Phones like the Moto x '14 or phones with a bit of thickness will not and should not be dropped nearly as often... Why??? Grip!
It's amazing how thin phones have gotten (see: Moto Z - not force, not play) and tell me how your fingers can grip that handset sitting on tabletop or nightstand... It's like trying to pickup a penny now. Of course we drop 'em... Even more when we're trying to "one-hand" a width of almost 3" with little grip.
I have an OP3t now and I'm scared as ahit I'll drop it like nothing, whereas my X'14 I had not issue, it even stood over the table because of its curved back.
Anyway, Dear Manufacturers, NO ONE ASKED FOR THINNER-THAN-AIR PHONES vs BIGGER BATTERY.
Sincerely,
The People Buying :)
I have a Droid Turbo 2. I've never dropped it, but I'm not concerned if I ever do.
I too miss the days of plastic backs, but I also remember the majority of people complaining about plastic builds which is why we now get metal or glass. Everything is a trade-off. Glass cracks but allows for wireless charging, metal is more durable (except to scratches and denting) but no wireless charging. Then there is the whole case or no case debate.
On a side note, if you are so distracted using your phone, that you can walk into the street oblivious to your surroundings, and get hit by a car, you deserve to be hit. At the very least, you should not be allowed to even have a phone. Catering to idiots breeds more idiots and allows "idiot" behavior to be acceptable. Sorry for the rant, but common sense is no longer common.
Cases always protected my note 4 and g4 play. My gear s2 on the other hand, thank god I had a glass screen protector since I bump it around everywhere.
My phone gets dropped about a half dozen times each year and I've never had a cracked screen going all the way back to my OG Droid. Over this past weekend, I dropped my Pixel, in a Google My Active Case, face flat on to concrete with no cracks. The case cracked and had some small dings but the phone remained unscathed. Maybe I'm lucky and just ramping up my odds for a spectacular hit but I've been impressed with the improvements in Gorilla Glass over the years and would have to see screens more to polycarbonate. They dull quickly from UV damage and dust. They yellow. My 1st Gen Asus Zenwatch had a poly face and was scratched to hell in the first month.
My phone gets dropped about a half dozen times each year and I've never had a cracked screen going all the way back to my OG Droid. Over this past weekend, I dropped my Pixel, in a Google My Active Case, face flat on to concrete with no cracks. The case cracked and had some small dings but the phone remained unscathed. Maybe I'm lucky and just ramping up my odds for a spectacular hit but I've been impressed with the improvements in Gorilla Glass over the years and would have to see screens more to polycarbonate. They dull quickly from UV damage and dust. They yellow. My 1st Gen Asus Zenwatch had a poly face and was scratched to hell in the first month.
I notice a lot of people using cracked phones when I'm at public events.
My favorite is when I know someone that has dropped there phone, got a cracked screen and now they invest the $10 into a simple case... It's kinda late is how I feel but to each his own right
I have a 15 yr old and he and his buddies are bat about 80% on cracked phones. He went through three ( cheapo BLU phones) until I made him buy his own. Still cracked it. So he's on his own now. ha. life lessons.
Recently got a Moto G4 to play with. Simple gel case and glass screen protector is all I have. Went for a dip into the toilet over the weekend. Thank God it was a toilet I had just cleaned. Took it apart down to removing the midframe. In front of dehumidifier overnight and brand new.
Thank God that's never happened before. Usually keep everything in Otterbox. But this was cheap so couldn't see a $40 case. I got lucky I know.
Geez, people with butterfingers. I drop my phone once every two to three months, and it's usually only on carpeting. I don't understand how people can drop them six times per month!
My Otterbox commuter on my GS6+ works very well. Four saves since I've had my phone. I was using a Spigen case on the first one that I had, and it failed. Good thing I had insurance.
Puhleeze, there's plenty of products that could be used that are "unbreakable" from any normal drop but phone manufacturers make money off you dropping and breaking your phone coupled with them not wanting to pay any patented material fees that would cut into profits. And let's not forget about all the money lost by companies that sell you a "protection plan" that might not like more durable screens/phones as well. Demand better
I really believe a minimalist case can make all the difference I mean common these cases are getting really thin and really durable at the same time. My Spigen even contours to the same curve of the glass on the back as does my phone. Even my wife who always uses a UAG case feels like mine is super thin but drop after drop my Note 5 still looks brand new.
Working in cell phone retail, probably there thing I see most of cracked screens. It just amazes me at how bad phones can get and people will still use them. Like missing dime sized chunks out of the screen, or finger slicing bad. Yet they still use them.
A decent case and screen protector usually helps a ton. Not perfect. Not pretty. But helps.
I just cringe when I see a parent hand a toddler or young child their expensive new Android or iPhone. I've even seen a kid in a stroller toss it on the ground only to have the parent hand it right back to them. It's almost like the phone owner has no idea that the screen will break.
A young child or toddler also has no business "playing" with a cell phone. What model parenting they are doing!
How true is that Lisa Ann! We have a two year old grandkid and when she comes here, the rules are, no phones. Never. They are not toys. Period. They toss it around, they dribble on it and they lock you out if you're not careful... And it's really bad for their development.
I think luck plays an important role too. I was riding my road bike last year at around 40km/h and my LG G4 fell out of my saddle bag. It skimmed across 2 lanes of traffic and stopped dead center in the middle of a lane with the screen facing down. Three vehicles passed over it before I could run out and retrieve it. I picked it up and the case received a scratch at the top left corner, probably where it landed. Phone itself was unharmed. I only had a no name soft gel bumper case on it.
I hate cracked screens too. To the point that watching Miller use his cracked device on The Expanse drives me crazy! Get that thing fixed!
I dropped my galaxy s6 a year ago face down on concrete.
I had a cheapo hard case with a kickstand, it slid into a holster.
I was walking a dog, slid the case into the holster, but it missed and went down.
With bated breath I picked up the phone to find no damage.
The case is so thin, it's almost like having no case at all.
Ugh cracked screens make me cringe! I rarely drop my phone but I do a lot to avoid having my screen cracked, just in case. Case all day every day.
I always use a case and screen protector - the investment is too great to go without them, IMHO. As a result, I've never cracked a screen or damaged a phone. Probably will drop it and destroy it now that I've said that...
A couple of years back, my Nexus 5 at the time was in pristine condition. No scratches, cracks and the like while I rocked a thin hardshell case and screen protector. Until one day, I was putting the phone in my pocket, but missed it and it fell corner first onto the hard concrete. The case had protection mainly on the sides, but was exposed on the bottom with some protection on the bottom rear. It hit just right and my heart sank seeing a crack going up from the corner. Though I replaced the display on my own, I still buy thin cases for my more recent phones (Nexus 5X, 6, and 6P...still have the 5 too), but want it covered all the way around with a lip. For good measure, I added a tempered glass screen protector too.
Damn I preach this all the time at work to co-workers: PLEASE PLEASE get a damned phone case. It's better to get a cheap case when you get it and then get a better case, then it is to not have a case. It will save you time, grief, and money to shell out to your phone's insurance company.
NO COMMENT!
It will only upset the screen gods and lead to my phones demise.
Never dropped a phone/cracked a screen in the 7+ years of owning a smartphone. And I refuse to use a case as it diminishes the beauty of a well designed phone. I guess I pay attention to the $1000 thing in my hand and am suitably cautious with it. I hate seeing (almost always young women) using phones with shattered glass held together by sellotape. Most people just aren't careful I guess.
There's always someone like you on these threads. Acting like they want a medal for taking care of their phone. Some people use their phones to get things done instead of staring at it and god knows what else. Granted if someone repeatedly drops their phone, they should get a case. I personally use a case so I don't need to worry about it and I don't need to handle it with kid gloves. I can gingerly toss on the desk or in my bag, not caring what else it may come in contact with. Not to mention adding grip to a slippery phone.
Yeah, damn those careful people that actually look after the things that they buy. It's much better to use a case that hides the phones great design and makes it more bulky. Silly people that take care of things shouldn't be allowed to comment here. We only allow the clumsy asses that think it's 100% necessary to buy a case because they're neanderthals that like to throw their $hit all over the place...
Do you want a medal because you use a case so that you can "gingerly toss" your phone? Well you sound like a tosser, so I guess it figures...
Well you successfully missed my entire point, but good job. There's no reason to be condescending because someone else uses something differently than you do.
Magus 12000, you said to someone on here "There's always someone like you on these threads. Acting like they want a medal for taking care of their phone. Some people use their phones to get things done instead of staring at it and God knows what else"
Then you say to me "There's no reason to be condescending because someone else uses something differently than you do"
You do know what hipocrisy is, right?
I do. The key difference is I was being condescending in response to condescension.
Well if you think that Nick Vis made condescending remarks you'll need to point out to me exactly what he said that was condescending. I see nothing that he said as even remotely condescending...
One thing I hate about cases is how dust collects in the margins where the lip of the case meets the phone, and makes its way under the case as well. You can clean it by removing the case, but the better-fitting the case, the harder it is to remove. And yet the case is somehow NOT tight enough to keep the dust out.
So, there you have it: Cases make phones ugly AND dirty. But other than that, they're great... :/
I hate smartphones made of glass. I think it's the stupidest design choice every since, has the article stated and everybody knows, everyone drops his phone eventually. That's why will never buy one, since I also hate cases. What's the point if buying great looking phone made of glass if you're covering it up and hiding the design?!
That's why I love my HTC One M8. I also believe everyone should use a glass screen protector, the cheapest one from ebay will suffice (1 or 2 bucks each) and will do wonders.
Sorry, a cracked phone screen is not a tragedy. A tragedy is something like 100,000 people dying in a tsunami.
yea, but that is not what we are discussing. You could put that in any of millions of forums on the internet. "Sorry, ingrown toenails are not a tragedy...
"
To some people their phone is their best friend and the most important thing in their lives. Just look at the people that held onto their Note 7's like their life depended on it. So no doubt a cracked screen would be a complete and utter life changing tragedy to many of those sad people that have no life outside their phone
It all depends on whats more important to you. In the US it's Phone then Family. Pretty much in that order..
I love the Otterbox Defender Series and they just keep getting better and better. My first one was with the iPhone 3gs. Now I have a Google Pixel XL and it's awesome. I never worry and my screen and phone remain in excellent condition and clean. It's great protection. I have never ever damaged a smartphone and over the years I've had 4 due to upgrading. I once had a phone in an Otterbox going flying across Port Authority bus terminal in NYC because someone's coat caught my earbuds' wire. The phone as fine as was the case. Not a scratch or dent.
I usually buy every year a new Samsung Phone. I have not dropped a phone in many years. Well my luck ran out the Galaxy S7 Edge I had a screen protector in place but It was the back camera lens that shattered. I Just slipped it in my pocket and forgot about the change I had went to work and Took the phone out and tried to take a pic and the picture was very blurry. Looked at the phone the lens was shattered out of the phone. Never found a case to hold up to there claim. Without pocketing a brick in my pocket. Had AT&T protection they sent me a new phone at $120 .
I primarily use a TPU case which is minimalistic, grippy, and has the lip that can help keep it from landing on it's screen. Then again, I've rarely dropped any phone I've owned, and never outside my carpeted house....knock on wood. The whole distracted phone user thing is really worrying....and the next clown that is texting while waiting for a green left turn traffic signal, and doesn't move, deserves whatever they get.
"If we assume that people are not generally getting clumsier, the rising prevalence of cracked and broken phones due to drops is likely due to the increasing number of hours people spend each day using their phones. "
Yessss, maybe. But I think another factor is the trend to ever thinner phones, with ever thinner bezels around the glass. There's just less material around the screen to absorb any impact. I had a Palm Treo go flying down the road during a motorcycle accident. It ground a hole through the plastic surrounding the external antenna, the battery cover popped off and the battery disappeared (never did find it), but the screen was intact. Retrieved the phone and battery cover, put a spare battery in, and everything worked.
Why did that survive a major accident, and most modern phones can't survive a 2 foot drop onto concrete? The Palm has a recessed screen, with a good quarter inch of space between it and the ground if it landed face down. There was more than a 1/4 inch of plastic on both sides of the screen, and even more on top. And the physical keyboard below, of course. And the phone was twice as thick as my S7.
It was simply built more ruggedly, with far more protection for the fragile glass. The smaller screen helped, too, but the simple fact is that manufacturers have decided, rightly or wrongly, that consumers value style and thinness more than ruggedness. And they're probably right. The AT&T Active series phone sales are dwarfed by sales of the regular version.
Worst thing when you drop a device and the screen shatters, unfortunately part of it is probably build materials although plastic doesn't look as nice as glass and metal it certainly holds up better to drops. A good case is a worthwhile investment, and a phone that isn't oversized helps to prevent drops.
Still have a nearly brand new ASUS zenpad S8 64 GB/4gb that I fumbled and dropped on ceramic tile a month into owning it. That Corning gorilla Glass 3 shattered like it was nothing lol, and the availability of the screen replacement is unavailable, unless done directly through Asus which was close to original purchase cost.
It drops often because it's the design that we wanted them to make. Thin, light, fingerprint resistant, bezel-less, bigger and bigger screen. The less they draw towards those designs, the less we get interested in their phones. But the more they use those designs, the more feeble it becomes, slippery in our hands, and tricky to use.
So am I the weird one? I've had large screen devices since roughly 2004 and have dropped one once.
While getting out of a john boat. Into one foot of water. The other occupant rocked the boat. Still my fault, he was a child, I should have anticipated.
Why would you find it difficult to keep hold of a $750 item? Or misplace one? I know people constantly in search of their devices.
I guess my tax bracket makes me painfully aware of these things.
I am working on a project in Bosnia-Herzegovina in the Balkans.
A law has been passed here making it an offence to cross the road while looking at one's mobile and/or wearing headphones.
Back in the UK where my home is, I no longer get out of the way of approaching mobile phone users who are lost in their screens. Last week I bumped a pedestrian by stopping dead still in front of her, and then explained myself.
Those who do not have a decent case to protect their mobile deserve their fate.
You're not kidding, some people are asking in the forums how to get Facebook etc going in their car Bluetooth setup!! ðŸ˜
Not only are they walking while looking at a phone, they DRIVE doing the same!! Infuriating!
Re breaking phones, I am super careful with my S7 and still the back got cracked somehow. Glass for devices that will surely be dropped and ill treated is a stupid idea.
You cite the idea that distracted pedestrians is increasing the number of fatalities - but your link does not show that. As the link says, the vast majority of fatalities are older people (65+) crossing major arteries in the suburbs without an intersection or crosswalk. That to me does not indicate cell phone distraction (except perhaps on the part of the drivers).
While I agree that cell phone distraction may be a cause of pedestrian/car collisions, I am going to go out on a limb here and say that most of those will be low speed, often unreported.
I loved the polycarbonate feeling of my htc one x. For me it's the increasing size of the devices which makes one hand usage very hard and often leads to incidentally dropping them.
"anger at the owner and sadness for the phone."
Shouldn't it be the other way around?!
it´s called the aijphoney desease...
Tempered glass screen protector is the way to go. It cracks instead of the screen.
Any suggestions for the best case and screen protector for the Galaxy S7 Edge? The Case Mate clear hard case and the Wal-Mart screen protector I had were fails. I would prefer a minimal, thin, clear case but rubberized enough to keep a easy grip and a screen protector that looks great on the Edge yet really protects.
I had never broken a screen until recently. I had my Samsung Galaxy 7 Edge about a month, when I dropped it 2 feet onto a hard tile floor. It hit on the corner, and broke the screen all the way across. I had purchased Square trade protection when I bought it, and I am thankful! I am without a phone for a couple of weeks while they repair it, but it beats my brand new phone going down the drain.
Last night cat knocked my pixel xl off my nightstand and reaching for my phone in the morning I knocked it over by accident as well. Same scenario happened a year ago with the Nexus 6. Hard concrete or tile cracked it. Can't explain the feeling when you hear that sound and you just know it's not okay. But there's a part of you hoping, "Of it will be okay". That denial even when you see the crack whether it's bad or minor it still remains. And you still think phone will be okay. Learned my lesson with the Nexus 6 and Moto X. Pixel XL has a cruzerlite case and Glass screen protector. It's nice not having to worry that I won't hear that sound anymore (at least I hope). Instead just plastic hitting the floor.
My phone's in a speck candyshell with ballistic glass. I've used this combination for years without issue. The phone in the case is about 1 cm thick, hardly a brick. I started using cases because the rubber lip protected the screen, and later when I got an iPhone 4s, because of the back. Personally, I have not problem with a plastic phone at all. My LG Revolution was plastic and it was extremely durable and looked fine. All-glass is pretty, but seems to be asking for trouble unless you get a case.
Just for the record, I have no problem with antenna lines either. So aluminum phones are appealing.
I'm not sure that this article came to the right conclusion. So, more people are dropping phones more often- perhaps the manufacturers could make the phone less prone to breaking when dropped? Yes, some phones look terrific with nice curves and quality looking finishes, but what good is that when you have to cover it with a case to protect your investment? (And let's face it, it is an INVESTMENT). A comment above notes just how nice it is that a $4 rubber case protects his/her (assuming $600++) phone.
The writers in the "smart-phone press" are part of the problem. The way reviews talk about the visuals of a new model just discourages the manufacturers from making anything but the thinnest shiniest objects. The Note 7 was just trying to be thin at all costs and... Stop it. Point out that glass backs are part of the problem. If a device is thicker to give some front-face to protect the screen (or room for a bigger battery to cool?) don't call it a failure because it's not as thin as last year's model.
I use Spigen ring on featherlight case. Never a drop. Secure on my finger.
If I wanted a brick I would buy one. I go caseless. I don't drop expensive things and if I walk around with my phone in hand it would take cutting off my hand for me to drop it. I do own a case for my note 4 but it's only for the kickstand and watching movies.
As for double glass phones, pointless. What the phone can do is way more important and if people were honest they would agree. We only look at the screen. The back and sides could use stronger materials. Buying a glass backed phone and saying it's premium feel only to case it in plastic and rubber is like saying your a vegetarian while eating a burger.
People drop phones because they don't think about what they are holding cost more then an average laptop until it breaks. Over the years getting cheaper or free phones from carriers made people careless. If every time everyone paid full retail for let's say an S7 they would treat and respect it better. When my note 4 is in hand I am well aware of any danger to it and it goes into my pocket the second I feel it might not be safe.
Okay...I know I am going to jinx myself and am going to be hated by everyone but I have never dropped my phone. Not any of them...ever! I know, it sounds like a lie but it is true. I have come very close a few times but quick reflexes saved the day and I caught it on the way down. To answer the question that some of you may be thinking...no, I didn't just buy my first cell phone less than a month ago. I think it was in 94 or 95 when I bought my first cell phone. I know that probably within 10 minutes of clicking on the comments button to post this I will probably drop my phone but here's to living dangerously.