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

usatoday.com/story/tech/2020/1

@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

@obi @Matter

Oh yea, I understand replacing something that is broken. - I had a phone for a year, or so and dropped it.

Replacing a $600 phone just because there's a new model?

Naw. Forget it.

I'm annoyed that there's hardware good phone, that can't be updated or upgraded.

@randynose
What's needed is forcing manufacturers to stop providing devices that can't be repaired, starting with the battery. Another annoying thing is the impossibility to upgrade the OS on most Android phones.

I know in the States the idea that "the free market will regulate itself" is popular, but it simply doesn't work, the evidence is there for everyone to see. 🙄
@obi @Matter

@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 If your phones aren't outdated or break, their profits won't be high.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

@obi
The EU has proven time and again that government regulation is effective in reining in big companies. It's just that the US political system has been bought off by the lobbies, and the population brainwashed to think this is normal.
@Matter @randynose

@normand @Matter @randynose OK, so how is the cell phone industry better in the EU? Seems the same

@obi @normand @randynose thank the EU for having one charging port instead of a gajillion. We wouldn't have seen the end of that for a long time otherwise.

More recently, in the EU, you can choose your search engine on setup.

@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

@obi
You think people will choose their search engine on their own? They don't even know anything else exists. Google has even become a verb synonymous to search.

The same thing happened on the PC in the early days of the Internet. The EU forced Microsoft and computer makers to give EU users the choice of their default browser (this was only effective in Europe). Without such a measure, we may still all be using Internet Explorer. I obviously exaggerate, but still.

@Matter @randynose
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@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.

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