BUT. The battery planned obsolescence thing was bogus.
My sister had a series of Google Nexus phones, which ALL bricked themselves because, as their batteries degraded, they’d lose the ability to boot the phone at low charge. Meanwhile, all over the world, other batteries that were pushed too hard in other Android devices gained infamy for exploding or at least malfunctioning.
Apple recognized this. Instead of leaving their customers out to dry, they capped battery range so it wouldn’t explode or bootloop, yet somehow the public hated them for it.
For all of Apple’s numerous, numerous planned obsolescence sins, I don’t know why people keep ragging on that one. It was actually a good thing. It’s actively harmful to hate on it because it discourages Apple and others from doing it again.
imo the issue was that they weren’t transparent about it. They still do it now, but they tell you when they’re throttling the phone due to low battery health and give you the option to disable it if you choose. When they didn’t tell you, people would go out and buy a new phone, when a much cheaper battery replacement would have done the job too.
Yes.
BUT. The battery planned obsolescence thing was bogus.
My sister had a series of Google Nexus phones, which ALL bricked themselves because, as their batteries degraded, they’d lose the ability to boot the phone at low charge. Meanwhile, all over the world, other batteries that were pushed too hard in other Android devices gained infamy for exploding or at least malfunctioning.
Apple recognized this. Instead of leaving their customers out to dry, they capped battery range so it wouldn’t explode or bootloop, yet somehow the public hated them for it.
For all of Apple’s numerous, numerous planned obsolescence sins, I don’t know why people keep ragging on that one. It was actually a good thing. It’s actively harmful to hate on it because it discourages Apple and others from doing it again.
imo the issue was that they weren’t transparent about it. They still do it now, but they tell you when they’re throttling the phone due to low battery health and give you the option to disable it if you choose. When they didn’t tell you, people would go out and buy a new phone, when a much cheaper battery replacement would have done the job too.
Conveniently within 24 hours of releasing a new phone every time they got caught doesn’t really seem like they were doing any favours.