
Subscription fatigue is a thing and regulators are circling, but Korean giant reckons you're ready to cough up after buying hardware

Whether it be electronics, automobiles or medical equipment, the manufacturers should not be able to horde "oem" parts, render your stuff useless if you repair it with aftermarket parts, or hide schematics of their products.
Rules:
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LG to offer subscriptions for already purchased appliances and televisions, evolving into a provider for “Home as a Service”
Subscription fatigue is a thing and regulators are circling, but Korean giant reckons you're ready to cough up after buying hardware
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1539142
LG to offer subscriptions for already purchased appliances and televisions, evolving into a provider for “Home as a Service”::Subscription fatigue is a thing and regulators are circling, but Korean giant reckons you're ready to cough up after buying hardware
A positive repair experience from Bosch
Nicked a hose on my new dishwasher and had to repair it. In the app Bosch gives you the option to buy parts straight from them, with breakout illustrations showing each part to make sure you get the right one. Parts were extremely reasonable and came within 2 days. Could almost build the thing from spare parts! Best repair experience I’ve ever had.
Newly released: Fairphone 4 has an incredible 5-year warranty, aims for 6 years of updates
If you want a smartphone with a long life, Fairphone is leading the industry.
We just hit 520 subscribers and 55 posts 🔥✊. If you are a lurker please help us grow the community by commenting and posting. ✌️
If you are lurker please help us grow the community by commenting and posting interesting on topic quality info/discussions so we can attract more people and make this community more interesting to spend time on. ✌️
Previous milestone: https://lemmy.fmhy.ml/post/489828
Today I'm going to start my journey where I go through EVERY damn video from Louis Rossmann that's related to right to repair/ownership so I can add it to our megathread/library. Wish me luck!
This is going to be a long term effort from my side to build a library of resources on the topic of right to repair/ownership to make it easier for people to learn about the topic. Of course this sub is not Louis Rosmann circlejerk, it's just that he shared a lot of great videos/views on the topic of right to repair/ownership. I also don't want him to be the face of this movement (and he doesn't want that too) I just decided to start building the library starting from him and that's all. You can help me make this community grow by sharing the resources on the topic yourself to speed up the process of building the library. Please avoid sharing stuff from Louis Rosmann because no matter what you share it's guaranteed that I will find it myself later and it will result in a duplicate post because as of now I don't have a way of tracking what's in the library and what's not. Hopefully I find a scalable way to organise my workflow soon enough.
Louis Rossman: Android's slow creep towards being closed source continues on - open source elements deprecated
Click to view this content.
I've been using Graphene OS for a while now and it feels like a miracle to have access to the play store yet not be so locked in with Google. Changes like the ones in the video make me worry that this is a flash in the pan and that Google will lock the play store into their Android for that sweet tracking data
We just hit 300 subscribers and 50 posts 🔥✊. If you are a lurker please help us grow the community by commenting and posting. ✌️
If you are lurker please help us grow the community by commenting and posting interesting on topic quality info/discussions so we can attract more people and make this community more interesting to spend time on. ✌️
Previous milestone: https://lemmy.fmhy.ml/post/376126
Next goals: 400, 550, 700, 850, 1000
The Right to Repair Is Law in Minnesota. California Should Be Next (23 day old article)
Last week, Minnesota governor Tim Walz signed an omnibus bill that includes a comprehensive right to repair law requiring manufacturers to make spare parts, repair information, and tools available to consumers and repair shops. This law builds on smaller, but still significant, wins in Colorado,...
Québec legislature introduces Bill 29, An Act to protect consumers from planned obsolescence and to promote the durability, repairability and maintenance of goods (22 day reddit repost)
The bill introduces a legal warranty of good working order for certain new goods that are commonly used. As regards the warranty of good working order for used automobiles, the bill updates the classes of such automobiles.
The bill enhances the legal warranty of availability of replacement parts and repair services for goods of a nature that requires maintenance work by specifying that the availability of the information necessary to maintain or repair the goods must also be guaranteed. Merchants or manufacturers who are bound by the warranty of availability must make the parts, repair services and information necessary to maintain or repair the goods available at a reasonable price. The bill also provides that it must be possible to install the replacement parts using commonly available tools, without causing irreversible damage to the goods. In addition, consumers have the right, under certain circumstances, to request the repair of goods requiring it.
Under the bill, merchants mus
Manufacturers should also make their devices easier to recovery (unbrick) from firmware corruption. (1 year old reddit repost)
As a hobby, I like buying broken phones off the internet, fixing them up, play with it for a bit, then resell. Recently, I bought a Redmi 8A from Facebook Marketplace. The phone in question has a corrupted firmware/operating system. I've resurrected phones (mostly Samsung and older Xiaomis) with such issues before, so I thought it was an easy fix.
With my past experience with resurrecting a bricked Xiaomi phone, I would normally just disassemble the phone, short out some pads on the motherboard, flash the firmware, and off I go.... This time though, you have an extra step. Before the computer even starts flashing the firmware into the phone, it will ask for an authorized Xiaomi acccount (that has special permission to flash devices using EDL).
Older Xiaomi phones: Disassemble phone > Short out pads > Connect phone to PC > Flash firmware > Done
Newer Xiaomi phones: Disassemble phone > Short out pads > Connect phone to PC > Log-in to authorized Xiaomi account > Flash firmware > Done
With Governor’s Signature, Minnesota Gives Residents A Right to Repair (1 month old article)
Signed into law by Governor Tim Walz on Wednesday, the Digital Fair Repair Act is the second broad, consumer right to repair law in the U.S., after New York enacted a narrower bill in December.
Logitech partners with iFixit for self-repairs (1 month old article)
iFixit’s Logitech Repair Hub will provide spares and repair guides.
Official spare parts, batteries, and repair guides for select Logitech hardware will be available through iFixit starting ‘this summer.’
A new jailbreak for John Deere tractors rides the right-to-repair wave (10 month old article)
Exploit now provides root access to two popular models of the company’s farm equipment.
Some Epson Printers Are Programmed to Stop Working After a Certain Amount of Use | Users are receiving error messages that their fully functional printers are suddenly in need of repairs. (1 year old)
Users are receiving error messages that their fully functional printers are suddenly in need of repairs.
Compilation of resources on right to repair/ownership that I will be building over time. If you have any good resources on the topic please share them in the comments so I can add them to the list. <3
I got frustrated by electronics that failed fast, so I built a crowdsourced database of broken things to identify common failure modes and how to fix them. (7 month old reddit repost)
We never hear about broken and worn-out products. Pretty much all gear nowadays is baseline ok, it’s the negatives that really set things apart.
That's why I'm building ExitReviews to change the way people review products. Let's reflect upon how a product performed over its duration of service instead of when it first arrived and people haven’t spent much time with it to learn the quirks.
We can then build a collection of how long products last, where they break, and how to fix them. Even if certain products are not available anymore, it still gives a good picture of brand deterioration.
Let me know what you think! I'm sure this sub could contribute many submissions :)
Any thoughts on how to promote this community? It's currently still facing the chicken-egg problem, so we would need some PR or partnerships to make this popular.