this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2023
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[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I guess what I’m getting at is that there are two valid opinions on this matter. On one side, people want to replace batteries, on the other, people don’t care about the battery.

The government is stepping in on the issue for some reason. This irks me. If there was a market for it, it would exist.

This isn’t about a monopoly or even a significant environmental impact like aerosol spray in the 80s, or leaded gas of the 70’s. Right to repair? Yeah I agree. Specific charge port? Hmm, I understand the argument but politicians shouldn’t decide it. Required replaceable batteries? Hold up, aren’t their bigger issues that need to be addressed?

And yeah your dad remembers when his phone would last two weeks on the dash of his truck that he parked it the sun every day. Those were different times, and he should know those phones still exist if he really wants it, but no one does.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

You keep talking about the market as if consumers get a vote in what Apple or Samsung build next year and not the other way around. If replaceable batteries weren't desirable, they wouldn't have been standard for the first 33 years of existence of cellphones. It wasn't until the last few years when the market got stagnant that manufacturers turned to cutting features left and right in order to cut costs and increase profit.

The only phones manufacturers offer with replaceable batteries are still using the same hardware that was around when replaceable batteries were still the norm. There was never a time were you could get a Note 8 with a replaceable battery or a Note 8 with a sealed case -- a true choice that one could then use to make informed statements like "the market decided". Saying the "market decided" when every major manufacturer removed them within a single generation leaving people with little to no alternative isn't the market deciding, it's manufacturers deciding.