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Gadgets Built to Fail


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#1 Nvyseal

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 11:00 PM

...buy-die-buy theory: Manufacturers design technology to fail so you're forced to upgrade regularly.

It may sound paranoid, but buy-die-buy is established gospel among longtime MP3 player owners, many of whom are on their second or third devices. It's a predictable routine: Purchase a player, enjoy several months of stress-free use, then notice minor bugs or shortfalls that slowly, or not so slowly, turn into major problems.

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For proof, look no further than Orem, Utah, where dozens of flatlined iPods rest like miniature tombstones beside Luis Gamero's workstation. Gamero, a technician at Brokenipods.com, has seen enough conked-out 'Pods to know that their main assailant is normal use.

"These iPod hard drives weren't designed to move around. Jostling and bumping will eventually break them," Gamero says. "And devices like these are harder to repair because there are few fixable parts."

Or the repair isn't cost-effective. Generally, it's easier to replace a broken product than to fix it; that's especially true for tech toys, for which prices routinely drop even as performance improves. A member of Best Buy's Geek Squad tells me that the age of a device usually determines its destiny when it breaks: Under two years, likely salvageable. After that, dumpster-bound. Also, there's an inverse relationship between cost and recoverability: Companies that make low-end products rarely bother to manufacture spare parts. Meanwhile, companies that make premium gear invest in the replacement parts needed to salvage broken machines.

These truths echoed in my head when my 26-month-old cell phone died. I took it back to the T-Mobile store and asked the young clerk, who was thumbing a new Sidekick 3, if my phone had been programmed to self-destruct after a couple of years. He shrugged, then proceeded to show me an ultrathin upgrade offered at discount with -- can it be coincidental? -- a two-year contract renewal.

Wired

Do you generally buy a new replacement before your trusty gadget dies or do you get your money's worth and then some

For me, I have been told by a customer service person "Dont you think you've gotten your full usage out of this" ...when i tried to get my 7 year old code-a-phone batteries replaced.

#2 Camaro

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Posted 11 December 2006 - 11:27 PM

very true, I have known of this for along time, I try to keep things as long as possible, or until I want the better thing offered for cheaper, lol, however even cars are disposible these days, how many of you have had a vehicle for more the 3 yrs.
My personal longest has been 8 yrs.

#3 VoodooGuru

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Posted 12 December 2006 - 03:50 PM

Ah, yes... built in obsolescence. Corporations strive for it due to greed and profits.

People, too have fallen victim to this way of thinking. No one is irreplaceable nowadays. If you can't perform, you are obsolete. Disposable cars, disposable appliances, disposable dishes, disposable clothes, disposable people, disposable lives...

It is what our world has come to. Unfortunately these same people think we have a disposable planet also.

Edited by VoodooGuru, 12 December 2006 - 03:51 PM.


#4 bluerip

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Posted 13 December 2006 - 03:44 AM

Yup. For that reason I load up my iPod once a week. I start it and pause only when I have to. I let it turn off on auto to lessen mechanical fuctioning. I can only hope to beat the average with this strategy. The lock slide switch and the face wheel button eventually will wear out on this nano. I like it so much I will buy another. But if it doesnt last long enough I might not be able to buy another one soon enough.

#5 Nvyseal

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Posted 18 December 2006 - 03:21 AM

Im really surprised how cheaply things are made these days

#6 Linoman

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Posted 20 December 2006 - 12:40 PM

I have the belief that if something fails, don't fix it rather replace it. Of cause its not always the affordable option




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