• foxymochakitten@slrpnk.net
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    2 hours ago

    I feel very lucky that my phone has lasted as long as it has (just about six years now). It’s slow and a little annoying but I’m thinking that I’ll probably dump some apps and photos and switch out the OS soon and that’ll probably help. My last laptop, on the other hand, made it three years before a Windows update rendered it completely useless. A friend of mine thinks he can get Linux on it and get it running again but I’m pretty pissed that it shit the bed like that after three years of moderate use.

    My laptop before that one suddenly had a keyboard issue after five years… it would have been fine if I could have repaired the keyboard, but I had the one model that welded the keyboard to the goddamn chassis. A replacement keyboard was only 10 bucks. I’ll never let that one go ;-;

  • A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip
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    10 hours ago

    Planned obsolescence is not one thing. It operates through several overlapping mechanisms, each individually defensible as a design choice and collectively functioning as a system that ensures a device’s useful life is shorter than it needs to be.

    The lifespan the manufacturer assigned it, engineered through battery chemistry, software policy, availability of spare parts, and a set of design choices that ensure the device becomes unrepairable or artificially obsolete before its hardware wears out. The EU just made significant elements of that practice illegal in its markets.

    Significant elements? Sounds like weasel words. The main bits of the law are quoted further on: it contains lots of flexible adjectives like “reasonable”. Better than nothing I guess.

    Apparently in some countries planned obsolescence per se is illegal, but I didn’t see that any EU law includes that.

    BTW often the software alone makes all the difference: I know one operating system that still runs & receives updates on 8yo phones and the hardware is still tip-top.

  • makeshift0546@lemmy.today
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    10 hours ago

    Sorry, I’m tired of this shit.

    It’s already, today in the states, absurdly easy to repair your phone and battery. There is none of this bullshit preventing you from installing a new battery.

    I’m not against phones being repairable, but they already mostly are and nobody gives or will give a fuck. People replace phones and cars because they have small scratches and are just old. They just want the latest and greatest every year and phone are a trival cost compared to rent 🤷‍♂️.

    We’re burning shit down, stop passing the blame.

      • A_norny_mousse@piefed.zip
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        4 hours ago

        I did. It’s a soft mess that isn’t easy to remove because it’s glued to the case. I was twisting and prying and suddenly it got extremely hot so I ripped it out before it destroyed the whole phone. The change was succesful, but I accidentally ripped out the flat cable connecting the volume rockers to the board.

        Absurdly easy my ass.

      • foxymochakitten@slrpnk.net
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        2 hours ago

        It’s both. I tried to repair my last phone but it would have cost me more in special parts than to just buy a new one. Meanwhile my family members are buying new phones because theirs are a little slow or have a crack in the screen. I’ve known so many people to ditch their iPhone for the latest model regardless of how well theirs was functioning. And I know a ton of people who are clinging onto an almost-new phone that randomly shuts off every 30 minutes because “it still works” or just keep buying new batteries until the software stops updating.

        I guess what I’m saying is that planned obsolescence is bullshit AND we have a consumerist culture that encourages people to always want the latest and greatest. We need tech that lasts and is easily repaired and we need people to prioritize using what they have

    • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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      8 hours ago

      My ten year old phone has a battery that still lasts the day on a charge. I’m only looking to upgrade because it doesn’t get security updates any more. My bank app doesn’t work any more because of this.

      That’s planned obsolescence.