Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by douche 3875 days ago
You are buying much higher quality washing machines than I am, apparently. If you get 8-10 years out of most brands now, you're doing quite well. Planned obsolescence is just the best...
1 comments

Mostly quality Miele machines. They have 10 years warranty from the manufacturer, so most actually survive for 20 years. Not what they used to make – they used to survive a lifetime – but it’s okay.

Same with stoves or fridges.

We already see how hard it is to keep mobile devices updated. Android is the nightmare example, but even Apple drops devices after 4 years. In 20 years, your smart fridge will have tons of malware on it if it’s connected to the internet. If it isn’t connected, you won’t be able to get updates, so the software has to be perfect.

And the point we made in Uni was that agile is suited for situations where your requirements change after deploying. In all other cases you can do waterfall – provided you actually find out what you’re supposed to do – better.

I'll have to look into that brand the next time I'm in the market - I've been hearing a lot about them on here lately.

Personally, I want my appliances 100% electromechanical. I don't really get the whole IoT buzz. Besides simple reliability and repairability, I have no desire to control my stove or washing machine with my phone. I can get up and punch a button.

Then you’re the perfect customer for the German market! Next to no modern hip bullshit. Next to no IoT, next to no "Agile", or "moving target", or "constant updates", instead technology like it used to be – buy once, use a lifetime.

Warning: Expensive. Really expensive. Their washing machines start at 1300 USD.