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daemontus | 2 years ago
Out of the 10+ phones in our family over the last 5-10 years, one was water damage and one was failure of the internal flash memory. Every other phone was replaced because the battery died. Every single one.
Official replacement was no longer available and DIY was either impossible (lack of parts) or eventually ended up damaging the device beyond economical repairability.
Regular people that don't have thousands of dollars in disposable income (and nothing useful to spend it on) haven't cared about phone specs for years. Hell, I love tech and could buy a new phone every year and even I haven't cared about phone specs since the original Google Pixel.
If you brick your phone every year because that's just who you are, no judging.
If you want a new phone every year and can afford one, its your money. Just remember that you are fortunate enough to be able to do so. And someone will surely buy your used phone and likely (try to) replace the battery in it.
Overall, it's like claiming that nobody drives cars that are 10+ years old because they needed a new clutch. Or that a 50 year old house needs to be torn down because fixing the roof economically is clearly beyond our engineering prowess. Are there people that swap cars every 5 years? Absolutely. But that does not mean those cars go to a scrapyard.
I will not comment on the technical aspects of this proposal, since the actual outcome might very well need to be settled in the court still. But dismissing the general point of legislature which demands better longevity for devices that basically everybody needs to partake in modern society is rather shortsighted.
FooBarBizBazz|2 years ago
Open bootloaders and drivers (after a certain number of years at least?) would help with that. Make available enough to let open source developers help themselves. Even if Google stops supporting Android on my hardware, or Apple stops supporting iOS, there should at least be a stripped down Linux?
I'm not sure how useful even that would be though, because that surely won't be able to run the latest apps used by society.
Sigh. Maybe everything is just an arms race. Phones won't stop going obsolete until it is physically impossible to make faster phones.
Since space bloat has been a bigger problem than time bloat, I could maybe have gotten more life out of my phones if the OS had supported the installation of apps to the SD card. Maybe that could be a cheap partial fix.
deepspace|2 years ago
I am currently using a five-year-old iPhone Xs, and it seems to be just as fast as ever. The only issue I have with the device is decreasing battery life. If the battery was replaceable, I could easily use it for another 2–3 years at least.
tmaly|2 years ago
That only gives you maybe 1.5 to 2 years of time before the battery is gone.
While we are on the topic on replacing things, it would be nice if we could change out the internal flash memory. I would keep my iphone for 5 to 7 years if I could change out both the battery and flash memory.
MontyCarloHall|2 years ago
A cycle is equivalent to a full discharge/charge. Using the phone to x% battery is roughly equivalent to x% of a cycle (it’s not a perfectly 1:1 relationship, but close enough).
Most people do not use a phone to 0% battery every single day. That’s equivalent to ~8 hours of screentime on a modern phone.
The average person uses their phone for about 3 hours a day [0]. Assuming that the vast majority of people's usage is within an hour of the average, 2-4 hours of daily phone usage would translate to 25-50% of a cycle, or 1000-2000 days of a usable battery, assuming a 500 cycle battery lifespan. (In reality it would be somewhat less, since as the battery degrades over time those 2-4 hours of usage would constitute more than 25-50% of a cycle.)
[0] https://explodingtopics.com/blog/smartphone-usage-stats
sitkack|2 years ago
Most people would buy a new phone anyway, but these devices get obsoleted and turned into garbage, forcing people to both generate ewaste and buy things they don't really need.
Between eMMC and SD Express, there are at least two existing great options. I am not asking for doors, all this stuff can be internal by removing the back.
The issue when people discuss this, they get into weeds talking about how this or that mechanism isn't feasible, which is entirely orthogonal. You dictate the outcome, let engineers solve the problem.
daemontus|2 years ago
- A phone that is used a lot in the car as GPS is often charged/discharged continuously, often for hours.
- Furthermore, this often happens in very hot or cold conditions which are bad for battery charging.
- A lot of people seem to live with the perpetual 5% of battery, or generally don't care about properly charging the device. This is also terrible for longevity.
- There are other reasons why you may want to constantly charge/discharge your phone (e.g. you are making Android apps, or it's the phone where people call your place of business, etc.).
So, just to make myself clear: I completely agree that on average, batteries should last for a long time. But in practice, people often have irregular activities which appear negligible on average ("it's just a few charge cycles"), but end up damaging the battery more than regular prolonged use. But again: I'd very much like more hard data on this :)
sidewndr46|2 years ago
scarface_74|2 years ago
To a first approximation, anyone can buy a new phone every year. You can get an unsubsidized Android phone for less than $60.
pnt12|2 years ago
Technically correct sometimes is not the best kind of correct.
danShumway|2 years ago
Churn on budget smartphones is even worse than on premium phones and battery life is even more likely to be an issue on those budget phones. It's good for the budget market as well if batteries are replaceable.
It would be great if people could buy an old secondhand iPhone and replace the batteries themselves for $30-40 bucks instead of buying a $60-70 garbage phone with who-knows-what spyware and out-of-date software every 1-2 years. That companies are able to put out this kind of garbage and people are buying them is (if anything) evidence that the secondhand/repair market on smartphones isn't nearly as strong as it should be.