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by ClumsyPilot
1484 days ago
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I disagree with both claims you are making - that right to repair folks are agitating for redesign, and that 98% of the market is happy with the status quo. If I go out and ask everyone I know, if they are happy with the current unrepairable appliances, the amount of people who answer yes is < 10%. The only people I know who are happy, live in extreme privilidge where they can afford replacing devices annually. But let us say that both claims you are making are true -> so what? What are the economic and environmental implication of unrepairable equipment? |
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I find this incredible.
Most people have been throwing away / replacing perfectly repairable appliances since long before mobile phones.
What makes mobile phones different?
(Obligatory Framing: I'm all for RtR. I don't think it's practical to require Apple to dumb down their design or construction to fit what a consumer could accomplish at their basement bench. But if I, or my neighborhood repair shop, is sophisticated enough to perform the work, I do think parts should be available.)