I think the opposite side of this coin is that the company should clearly define the minimum lifetime of the product and it support, including what services they will provide upon its sunset (such as a partial refund and disposal if the product folds before that date). I want to make an informed decision, and like you I would shop for another product beyond this crap we subscribe to.
kwhitefoot|1 year ago
https://www.elkjop.no/product/hjem-rengjoring-og-kjokkenutst...
Unfortunately for electronic items the lifetime and spares information is usually blank because the manufacturer doesn't supply it.
SAI_Peregrinus|1 year ago
shiroiushi|1 year ago
This might be OK for a huge company like Google, but for many others, what good is it? If the product folds, it's probably because the whole company folded, and when that happens, you're not getting a refund, regardless of what any contract says.
baq|1 year ago
Did they promise that anywhere? No. Did they kept on their unwritten and unspoken promise? Yes, for years now. Do you have to be Apple to do this? I don't know, would love it if the answer was no, but looks like everyone else treats this as cost and Apple treats it as value added?
whycome|1 year ago
awaythrow999|1 year ago
jaggederest|1 year ago
Imagine if there were a product support guarantee corporation which took, say, 4% of the cost of retail electronics sales, in order to guarantee their long term support.