• MrTHXcertified@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    I don’t mind that my phone battery is sealed up. I do mind that I have to bring it to a specialist that might screw it up and make me pay for the privilege.

    Actually, this bothers me way more with laptops than with phones. With laptops, there’s no water resistance or any other reason besides thinness to seal the battery up. Particularly with business machines, the computing power will be more-than-sufficient for many years to come, yet many will end up in the trash because the battery’s no longer doing its job. It’s ridiculously wasteful.

    • heluecht@pirati.ca
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      2 years ago

      @MrTHXcertified I think that no device should be built in a way that it cannot be disassembled anymore. Concerning the argument “but what about water resistance?”: remember that for a long time there are quartz watches that are water resistant to incredible depths - and their batteries can be replaced.

    • Haatveit@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Many laptops/ultrabooks have easily accessible batteries nowadays, any specific example when you mean sealed up?

      • MrTHXcertified@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        All of them. You could argue that the time and expertise needed to replace a laptop battery is negligible, but I say it’s an unnecessary increase of time and risk required to do so.

        What do you feel are the benefits of embedding a laptop battery in the case?

        • boonhet@lemm.ee
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          2 years ago

          What do you feel are the benefits of embedding a laptop battery in the case?

          Portability for one. You can move your laptop without worrying about the battery latches getting damaged.

          I used to refurb laptops and I’ve seen plenty of externally mounted batteries that just wouldn’t reliably sit on the laptop anymore.

    • probably_a_robot@lemmy.one
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      2 years ago

      This is a big part of why I bought a Framework laptop. Every part is easily accessible and they sell replacement parts. The laptops are even modular and upgradable

    • catcarlson@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      I remember when I was looking for a new laptop, I made a replaceable battery a requirement, since my previous laptop’s battery (which wasn’t replaceable) lost its charge very fast.

      Out of the hundreds of laptops available today, I could only find two or three laptop models total with a replaceable battery. And none of them were in physical stores, so a less tech-minded person would never find them.

      Interestingly, the replaceable battery also seems to be higher quality than the permanent battery was.

      • mike901@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        I got one of the framework laptop over a year ago and it’s been fantastic other than having a defective trackpad (which took all of 10 minutes to replace after receiving a free replacement part from their support team). I will even be able to upgrade to a newer mainboard with an AMD CPU from the current 11th gen intel later this year when the boards start shipping.

        It really grinds my gears when companies claim that repairable devices aren’t possible to make in modern form factors, especially when a rinky dink startup was able to do it.

      • boonhet@lemm.ee
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        2 years ago

        Out of the hundreds of laptops available today, I could only find two or three laptop models total with a replaceable battery.

        Nearly every business class laptop has a replaceable battery, you just need a philips-head screwdriver for most.

        Anything that is meant for consumers shouldn’t be bought anyway, Dell Inspirons and HP Pavilions and shit are not made to last unfortunately. Nor are they made to be easily repairable. I’d go as far as recommend an 8 year old thinkpad over some brand new consumer models. It’ll last longer.