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by tediousdemise 1717 days ago
You’re strawmanning my argument by picking components least likely to be repaired or replaced by the average user, completely dodging the usual suspects.

Non-removable batteries are almost always the first parts that go bad in handheld devices, and there are absolutely no excuses for using them other than greed and incompetence.

3 comments

What do you mean by non-removable battery? The video shows how to unplug it. I'm sure it can be replaced by any normal repairman or hobbyist. Aftermarket batteries will also surely be available like they are for other popular devices.
If it is not intended to be removed (because the SteamDeck should remain closed) it is non (user-)removable in my opinion.
So your concern is that Valve recommends you don't do it yourself and is nothing to do with the product itself?
> non-removable battery

Considering how important it is to keep Lithium Ion batteries within a safe temp range for longevity and the risk of thermal runaway I'm not so sure we will ever see easily replaceable batteries again without a new chemistry.

Everyone seems to have fond memories of their AA's and NiCad's but ignores that replaceable Lithium tend to suck... all my old phones that had replaceable batteries like the Google Nexus had batteries that got way too hot and subsequently lost their ability to hold a full charge

Not dodging, we are talking about the steam deck here, so it's 100% on point.

Your original argument is the one that's doging the fact that we are on a steam deck thread.