• Gabadabs
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    361 year ago

    More focus on the ability to maintain, repair, and perhaps even upgrade existing tech. So often people are pushed to upgrade constantly, and devices aren’t really built to last anymore. For example, those yearly trade in upgrade plans that cell phone providers do. It sucks knowing that, once the battery in my cell phone finally dies, the whole phone is essentially garbage and has to be replaced. I miss my older smartphones that still had replaceable batteries, because at least then it’s just the battery that’s garbage.
    We’re throwing so much of our very limited amount of resources right into landfills because of planned obsolescence.

    • @onlinepersona@programming.devOP
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      31 year ago

      I think the solution to this will come by itself: the supply chain will break down and people will have to learn to make do with what they have. It was like that in the Soviet Union, is like that in some parts of the world right now, and can easily return if we don’t get climate change in check.

    • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      once the battery in my cell phone finally dies, the whole phone is essentially garbage

      I don’t get this. I understand they aren’t user replaceable but surely you can get it replaced? Given how good batteries are, they easily last 2-3 years. iPhones are supported for 5-6 years so you only ever need one replacement

      Getting my iPhone battery replaced has typically cost about $75, not all that different from a decade ago spending $35 for a user replaceable battery for a flip phone

      One major difference now is that at least iOS gives me a good measurement of battery health so I can make data driven decision