Screw that...👎
I don't see the need to get a new phone 📱 every year.
Get over it: you need to upgrade your phone every year now. I prove it
@randynose Lol, I've had my OnePlus One for 5 years, and it'll probably last at least one more, maybe 2 or 3.
So, that's 0.19 per day, 0.13 if I keep it two more years.
What do people do with their phones to need the new model??
@Matter @randynose I just got a Pixel 4a after having my OnePlus 6t for over 2 years, longest I've had a phone. Changed the charging port and antennas out. After last opening, changing the charging port, I spidered the back screen. Antennas went again and if I would have taken off the back screen again I would not have gotten it back on again. Only reason I got a new one device
@normand @Matter @randynose won't ever happen. If your phones aren't outdated or break, their profits won't be high. What's the alternative to the free market tho? Gov't regulation? They will just regulate them into prices of shit
@normand @Matter @randynose OK, so how is the cell phone industry better in the EU? Seems the same
@Matter @normand @randynose anybody can choose their search engine, and its not hard. I don't get what you mean about the charging port. Sorry, I'm confused
@Matter @normand @randynose I remember. Not like their is just one connector now. Would be great if their was just one, but most phones come with one and nowadays its not like they don't last forever. I'm no fan of Google, but I'm not a fan of telling them they have to give users the setup option. Breaking up Google Search or limiting in broadly I would be fine with. More importantly, I wish they would focus on data collection over search selection. At least you know tour searching with Google. Most people don't realize or believe they are sending their data to Google/Apple hundreds of times an hour, and its much harder to stop that than just select a different search engine
@normand @Matter @randynose no I don't think. People should want choice, if they don't care enough to learn even enough that a child can, then they shouldn't be forces option. We never forces default browsers on USA customers, and no one here uses frickin EDGE or IE.
@normand @Matter @randynose and if people don't know any better what is the point in having choices in products they know nothing about?
@normand @Matter @randynose does a blind man really care which brand water he drinks?
@obi @normand @randynose you're arguing against yourself here, no of course people don't care and that's exactly why the defaults matter, why we should *make* them care, *make* them choose explicitly for Google if they want to use it, but letting them be the default just guarantees that all the data is leaked to a hostile oligarchy such as the US.
@Matter @normand @randynose I agree, attack the data collection, not force an arbitrary choice. How do we decide which choices in search engine that they have? Give them 3? Which 3? Top 3? Best 3? How and who decides which ia best? All search engines? That would be a long selection, and who decides which order they go in? Who decides which are best? Some corrupt suit in an office? All they would do is choose on brand recognition anyway, cuz they don't know anything. You can't help people who don't help themselves. Their are choices, but they have to make a conscious (minimal) effort to decide which one they want. I think our fundamental disagreement is that you think government knows best. Maybe because you believe they are an extension of the people. They should be, but definitely aren't.
@Matter @normand @randynose what I am trying to say is fix the problems. If Google is raping you for your data, saying that we should have more choices on who rapes us is not the answer. Stop the data rape itself.
@normand @Matter @randynose I'm on board with government regulation of data collection. Absolutely. Its secretative, invasive, and most people don't even realize it occurs. I'm not on board with forcing companies to opt into a search engine, by an arbitrary selection of competing search providers, when people can do it manually now. If there wasnt a way to switch your search, my response would be different, but my 7yr old switched hers by herself on her most recent laptop.
Oh yes... The Browser wars... What fun years those were.
But yes. Most people seem to stick with whatever is setup with their computer in the first place. So it matters.
One can also use this for a search engine.
https://whoogle.sdf.org/
@randynose @normand @Matter and that's fine. Options are great. Forcing companies to offer competitive search engines on initial setup is what I'm arguing against
@obi @normand @randynose What is possible isn't very relevant, only the default really matters. The EU forced Google to make users choose instead of defaulting to Google.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_external_power_supply
Do you not remember the time before this, when every single phone had another weird proprietary plug?