For the first time, Apple discussed repairability during its iPhone launch event. An engineer mentioned the new iPhone 15 Pro models were designed with a structural frame that makes the back glass easier to replace. This comes after the iPhone 14 introduced a design that allows removal of the front or back. Repair advocates welcomed the acknowledgment but will still examine the devices for barriers like parts pairing. While praising initiatives to reduce emissions, critics argue the most sustainable option is not buying a new phone annually. The conversation on repairability is complex as commitments face scrutiny versus past actions restricting repair. Only time will tell if Apple’s claims translate to meaningful improvements or are more superficial than substantive.

  • Thorny_Thicket@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Ease of swapping parts is quite pointless as long as they keep bricking your device/disabling features when unoriginal part is detected even if it’s from another genuine iPhone.

      • loki@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        They say it’s to stop people from stealing iPhones to sell for parts.

        There’s an easy fix to this. Allow users to mark their devices as broken/dead in their (icloud?) system, so its parts can be extracted and used for genuine repair. Put it behind 2FA, email confirmation, and require purchase invoice, or whatever to make it happen. To counter edge cases, give a month for appeal, only then mark it safe for usage of its parts on other phones. A trillion dollar company should be able to implement this, but they’re trillion dollar company for a reason, so yea…

        Thiefs don’t have access to the accounts inside a locked phone, let alone the invoice of purchase.

      • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Huh? A phone battery, for example, is about 50 bucks (the exact price is slightly different for every model). And they sell the parts directly, to anyone, via self service repair.

        They recommend renting or service tools that often cost quite a lot… but you don’t have to use them, such as their “heated display removal” tool which gently and consistently heats up a display then pulls it off with a suction cup and a “display press” which holds a phone and a display perfectly aligned and allows you to pull a lever to glue them back together with sub-millimetre precision. Those do cost a bit of money (especially if you buy them, instead of renting them) but again - you don’t have to use them. There are cheaper ways to do it (such as microwaving a standard heatpack from a first aid kit then resting it on the display to heat it up).

        • erwan@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Or you can buy a phone that doesn’t require this bullshit to change the battery

          • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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            1 year ago

            There was hardly any backlash.

            They’re doing it as part of reducing their carbon footprint. There’s so much carbon produced during manufacturing that they need devices to continue being used for about ten years after the original sale, otherwise the company will never be carbon neutral.

            That means the devices have to be cheap to repair - both in terms of parts and labor/time. I have an older phone (too old to be eligible for Apple’s self repair process) that I tried to repair recently - took it to a tech, they gave me an outrageous price - more than the phone is worth. And when I checked ifixit’s step by step guide for the repair… yeah over a hundred steps and it will take at least 3 hours with a high probability of messing it up and having to buy other parts that you’ve damaged during the process.

            Apple’s newer models, that are supported for self repair, are designed to be easy to repair. That’s why they’re the only ones that are supported.

  • Kyoyeou (Ki jəʊ juː)@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    It’s cool if anyone can change it. It’s not if it checks if it’s an apple backplate and blocks you from using your phone if it’s not from Apple