• borari
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    1 year ago

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    • MentalEdge
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      1 year ago

      An yet, it can still be better.

      Apple has a tendency to undercut this type of legislation by preempting it with options that are just barely good enough that 90% of users are satisfied. This way they can continue screwing over third party repair partners, the customers, and the planet, only ever doing just enough to not be forced to go all the way to doing it all right. They tightly control component availability, device schematics access, and more.

      As long as they only wrong a minority, they can get away with it, because a majority has to be upset with them to force them right.

      As for your need for a more damage resistant phone… An iPhone is never going to be it. It has always prioritized form over function in that regard. Modern phones only ever introduced water proofing and impact resistance, once it could be done without making them ugly or too large. Yet most people slap on a case anyway. If phones were made in a way that integrated the space taken up by a case into the actual device, making it larger and heavier, the case unnecessary in the first place, we could have it all. Case and point, caterpillar phones, and the old XCOVER Samsungs, which had swappable batteries, AND waterproofing.

      If durability is a priority due to your need of always having a functioning mobile device, a user replaceable, even hot-swappable battery, is a boon, not a detriment. Your argument is self-contradictory.

      • borari
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        11 year ago

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        • MentalEdge
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          1 year ago

          No. It doesn’t. It has a absolutely horrible design for repairability, which apple has desperately worked around to be able to claim they’ve done their due diligence, so they wont have to change how they design, make, and market products.

          You main point is that in this case, we cannot have our cake and eat it too, but the only reason that’s true, is because the practices of modern device manufacturers choose not to develop products in that direction.

          • borari
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            11 year ago

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            • @[email protected]
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              01 year ago

              I have done it, and its a huge pain of adhesives and seals and stress. A sealed panel with screws wouldn’t really have to impact water resistance or thickness or prettiness. Other manufacturers have done it before, and they can do it again.

            • MentalEdge
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              1 year ago

              It’s the literal definition, yes. But speaking literally, you can do your own electronics in your house, or defuse a bomb, or build a nuclear reactor. You just need access to the parts and instructions… But should you? And if you could, why would you not do it in the simplest way possible?

              Literally speaking, anything is user-doable.

              Literally speaking, everything is being done by someone.

              Claiming apples hardware is efficiently repairable and serviceable, is a fucking joke.