> I would not call the Redmi Note 5... "terribly slow", instead I call it "perfectly useable".
The software you use plays a rather large role in how the hardware performs. Some people here like to live on the OEM-designed happy path, where things tend to just work. That means using Google Apps for everything, an expectation that the latest video streaming social platforms will open quickly and not stutter, and scrolling the Google Play Store or Google Maps will be a fluid experience.
Others may use simpler apps, or expect less of their phones. I'm in the latter category, and I suspect you are as well. While the BlackBerry KeyOne I use daily was panned by some six months after release in 2017 for being too slow, I instead killed off nearly everything else that would run in the background - including and specifically any Google frameworks and apps.
Some software companies have made a point of taking any hardware gains for granted. Most people have new phones, with fast processors, so some companies will push devs to take shortcuts. I'm quietly indignant about that, though that rant is rather tangental to your original question about how some have such different experiences from yours.
The software you use plays a rather large role in how the hardware performs. Some people here like to live on the OEM-designed happy path, where things tend to just work. That means using Google Apps for everything, an expectation that the latest video streaming social platforms will open quickly and not stutter, and scrolling the Google Play Store or Google Maps will be a fluid experience.
Others may use simpler apps, or expect less of their phones. I'm in the latter category, and I suspect you are as well. While the BlackBerry KeyOne I use daily was panned by some six months after release in 2017 for being too slow, I instead killed off nearly everything else that would run in the background - including and specifically any Google frameworks and apps.
Some software companies have made a point of taking any hardware gains for granted. Most people have new phones, with fast processors, so some companies will push devs to take shortcuts. I'm quietly indignant about that, though that rant is rather tangental to your original question about how some have such different experiences from yours.