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by dpkonofa
1005 days ago
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I’m glad that the nerd porn exists because I do care about sustainability but operating on Apple’s scale means those devices are a fantasy for the majority of people. Apple’s approach seems more sustainable considering how many claims they can continue to make. Maybe it’s all marketing but I can’t find anyone that invalidates their claims without mischaracterizing them (as this article does a ton). |
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One way, is to make it non-user serviceable, the other, to make it user serviceable.
Now, which do you spend immense sums researching? Which people do you hire for your company? And after you spend years down this path, tooling, hiring, designing, someone says "the environment counts, it should be user serviceable".
Well of course, with billions spent designing, and predicated upon current methods, AND with all the people you hire experts in closed, non-servicable design?
What sort of answer will you get?
Apple, and others, the entire industry, has created this industry to be like this.
If the same R&D was spent on user serviceable, it would happen. Cheaply. Easily.
So of course it's "very hard" to do user serviceable, because no one knows how, and no one has the experience, and no one is researching it.
And no, these little firms working at it, don't equate to Apple working at it.
It may not be on purpose, but to claim it isn't possible is unfair.
You know if the auto industry was left to its own devices, it would still be claiming electric cars weren't feasible too, right? And from their perspective, they were not! Because without billions in research, and iteration, it wasn't.
Just like with Apple and user serviceable parts.
Just as with cars, and bags, and everything else, we should legislate such requirements. So all players in the market must comply.