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Main Authors: Wickramatunga, Chandima, Nagahawatta, Ruwan, Gamachchi, Anagi, Kaluarachchi, Chintha
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.02392
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author Wickramatunga, Chandima
Nagahawatta, Ruwan
Gamachchi, Anagi
Kaluarachchi, Chintha
author_facet Wickramatunga, Chandima
Nagahawatta, Ruwan
Gamachchi, Anagi
Kaluarachchi, Chintha
contents Smartphone manufacturers continue to release new models annually, yet the pace of meaningful innovation has slowed, with most changes limited to incremental updates in design, performance, or software. This study examines whether such updates deliver tangible user benefits, as perceived by expert reviewers. Using a grounded theory approach, guided by Rogers Diffusion of Innovation (DOI) framework, the research analyses reviewer discourse from 2021 2025 across three technology commentators. The analysis identifies three interrelated processes sustaining perceptions of innovation: innovation displacement, capability utility divergence, and market complacency cycles. While some improvements are acknowledged, such as refined aesthetics or extended software support; they are seldom judged sufficient to justify annual releases. These findings highlight a growing disconnect between industry narratives of innovation and expert evaluations of value, raising questions about the strategic and environmental legitimacy of frequent upgrades. The study contributes to debates on responsible innovation, perceived value, and sustainable technology consumption.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_02392
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Marginal Gains or Meaningful Progress? Exploring Tech Tuber Narratives on Annual Smartphone Innovation
Wickramatunga, Chandima
Nagahawatta, Ruwan
Gamachchi, Anagi
Kaluarachchi, Chintha
Emerging Technologies
Computers and Society
Smartphone manufacturers continue to release new models annually, yet the pace of meaningful innovation has slowed, with most changes limited to incremental updates in design, performance, or software. This study examines whether such updates deliver tangible user benefits, as perceived by expert reviewers. Using a grounded theory approach, guided by Rogers Diffusion of Innovation (DOI) framework, the research analyses reviewer discourse from 2021 2025 across three technology commentators. The analysis identifies three interrelated processes sustaining perceptions of innovation: innovation displacement, capability utility divergence, and market complacency cycles. While some improvements are acknowledged, such as refined aesthetics or extended software support; they are seldom judged sufficient to justify annual releases. These findings highlight a growing disconnect between industry narratives of innovation and expert evaluations of value, raising questions about the strategic and environmental legitimacy of frequent upgrades. The study contributes to debates on responsible innovation, perceived value, and sustainable technology consumption.
title Marginal Gains or Meaningful Progress? Exploring Tech Tuber Narratives on Annual Smartphone Innovation
topic Emerging Technologies
Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.02392