

The Nokia 2.4 has a large 6.5-inch HD+ display with decent colour saturation. There's a headphone jack on the top and a Micro-USB port on the bottom, next to a single loudspeaker. The Nokia 2.4 has a triple-slot tray for two Nano-SIMs and a microSD card. The volume and power buttons sit on the right side of the phone and have good feedback. The Nokia 2.4 has a dedicated Google Assistant button, which can be disabled if you don't use it, but can't be reprogrammed to launch any other app or task. The Nokia 2.4 is a good-looking phone and is built well

Thanks to the matte finish on the back fingerprints aren't really an issue, and it's easy to grip the phone even with greasy palms. I have the Fjord (blue) colour, and this phone is also available in Dusk (light purple), and Charcoal. What makes it stand out though is the textured pattern and gradient colour scheme used on the back. It's relatively slim at 8.69mm and not too heavy at 189g. HMD Global seldom disappoints when it comes to the design of its phones, and despite the Nokia 2.4 being an entry-level model, it looks quite premium. However, does it have enough merit to make it to our list of recommended phones in this segment? Let's find out. 10,399, the Nokia 2.4 offers users a big battery and display, and the promise of guaranteed Android software upgrades for two years. Launched in India in November 2019 for Rs. 10,000, and the recently announced Nokia 2.4 could be another contender. It means that users have to do most of the work to really make use of the system, but for many people that would be easy enough.We have a good selection of entry-level smartphones in the Indian market right now, all priced at around Rs. Users then have the option to subscribe to post codes in the area they live or work at. A deal gets posted, the poster specifies the postcode as a tag. Involving a little more effort, you could create an entire subgroup devoted to local deals, and use the tagging system to track them. You could have one thread as "Current" and the other as "Historical" if you wanted to keep it for the purely information value

People unfamiliar see the first page of this thread and think 'Oh this is all old news'. Local deals are usually short lived and don't exist after a few weeks, so there's no point keeping a long thread going back years. With the existing system, at a minimum I would trim the thread.

There's good solutions I can think of, but they'd largely involve custom tools, and then a big campaign to get people to actually use them so that they were actually worth a damn Well, that depends on how much effort you wanted to expend.
