SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
SaatPro
Where Technology Meets Clarity
Every human being, regardless of age, job, or bank balance, will one day face the most stressful question of modern times:
“Which phone should I buy?”
This question has ruined weekends, destroyed peace of mind, and triggered more existential crises than college admissions.
Because here’s the truth…
In the smartphone world, there are only two religions:
And choosing between them?
Oh, that’s a journey.
I’ve been on that journey.
You’ve been on that journey.
Even fictional characters like Rahul and Priya from your imaginary cartoon universe have been on that journey.
Let’s start from the beginning.
When someone decides they want an iPhone, the process looks like this:
Step 1: I want an iPhone.
Step 2: Which one?
Step 3: Fifteen, Sixteen, Pro, Max, whatever—I just need money.
Step 4: Buy it.
Step 5: Done.
It’s clean. It’s simple.
Like ordering a coffee at a shop with just three options.
There’s no confusion, no headache, no “which processor does it have?”
It’s Apple.
It works.
And it comes with a price tag that screams:
“Sir, are you financially ready for this relationship?”
Apple has mastered the art of selling clarity.
If Apple sold biryani, they would have just three versions:
That’s it.
Android, on the other hand…
Oh boy.
Android would sell:
Chicken Biryani Y12 Turbo Max 5G
Chicken Biryani Note Pro GT Neo 9
Chicken Biryani Ultra HD AI 200MP Camera Edition
Chicken Biryani SE 2024 (8GB/256GB)
And every day: NEW MODEL LAUNCHED!
Buying an Android phone is like entering a supermarket where every product screams:
“Pick me! I have a better camera!”
“No, pick me! I have more battery!”
“Pick me! I have Gorilla Glass 1000!”
“Bro, I’m only ₹9999 and I come with 12 filters to hide your real face!”
You walk in with confidence.
You walk out exhausted, mentally drained, dehydrated, and questioning your existence.
Let’s bring Rahul into the story.
Rahul wants to buy an Android phone.
He enters a store and finds:
Basically: the whole world.
Rahul’s life becomes a reality show.
Episode 1:
“Which brand?”
Episode 2:
“Which model in that brand?”
Episode 3:
“Is 108MP camera better than 200MP or is it all a scam?”
Episode 4:
“What is this MediaTek? Should I be scared?”
Episode 5:
“Why is this one curved but that one has AI night vision?”
Rahul eventually picks a Motorola.
But wait…
Motorola has:
Each one ₹1,000 more than the other.
Each one claiming to change his life.
Buying an Android is not shopping.
It is a math problem + technology class + emotional breakdown.
Every Android phone company has only one marketing strategy:
“Give them more megapixels until they faint.”
20MP.
50MP.
108MP.
200MP.
At this point, the phone is not a phone.
It is a digital microscope.
If Rahul takes a photo of the moon, he’ll accidentally see NASA interns sitting inside the lab.
Meanwhile, Apple quietly says:
“We have… 48 megapixels.”
“But our photo looks better than your 200MP.”
Because Apple focuses on optimization, not numbers.
Android focuses on statistics.
Apple focuses on results.
Another chaos:
4500mAh
5000mAh
5500mAh
6000mAh
One of them even says “whole day battery.”
Whole day doing WHAT?
Scrolling Instagram?
Watching Netflix?
Calling your ex?
Running PUBG on full brightness?
Battery numbers look like petrol prices.
And the customer is stuck thinking:
“How many mAh equals happiness?”
Now let’s come back to the Apple world.
Buying an iPhone is peaceful.
Owning an iPhone is stressful.
Because every year, in September, Apple announces a new model.
And suddenly:
Your iPhone 14
that you bought with EMI
with pride
with emotion
with love
…now looks outdated.
Everyone around you becomes a judge.
“Still using iPhone 14?”
“It doesn’t even have Dynamic Island 2.0.”
“Oh my god, it’s a two-year-old model?”
Apple users get tension, even if they don’t admit it.
Android users?
They will proudly use a 5-year-old phone.
Nobody cares.
Nobody notices.
Apple 6 user?
People look at them like:
“Bro… what happened in life?”
Here comes the best part.
Apple phones depreciate slowly, but steadily.
Year 1: ₹1000
Year 2: ₹750
Sale Season: ₹500
Year 3: ₹350
Second-hand perfect condition: ₹250
From rich to middle class to college student to delivery boy —
everyone eventually has an iPhone.
This creates a strange emotional problem:
“I paid full price. He paid one-fourth. We both use the same phone.”
“I finally got an iPhone! But why is everyone judging that it’s old?”
But it accidentally killed exclusivity.
Which is good socially…
but bad for bragging rights.
Here’s the fun truth:
Go for Apple.
Go for Android.
Apple.
Android.
Apple (new model).
Android (pick a stable brand).
Apple.
Android.
It’s not about which is “better.”
It’s about which matches your psychology.
Phones are not just gadgets anymore.
They are:
Apple is a premium restaurant with fixed menu.
Android is a massive buffet with 300 items.
Both fill your stomach.
Both have fans.
The key is:
Buy what makes you happy.
Not what makes others impressed.
Your phone is for YOU, not society.