EU Just Changed Smartphones Forever
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- Опубликовано: 12 авг 2023
- A new EU law will require all mobile devices to have user-replaceable batteries by 2027. In this episode we take a look at the law, it's consequences and right to repair.
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Hi everyone, so you may notice a couple of seconds in this video where the audio is a bit funny. I'm actually in South Korea right no, so the recording situation wasn't ideal for re-recording those lines. Apologies in advance!
Yeaa
Enjoy the trip!
No worries, have a nice trip!
@@superjam5433 Thank you!
We forgive Dagogo, we also forgive you for your spelling mistake in your comment 😛
Apple must be super happy that their phones will now be more eco friendly as they care about it so much and go far as removing their charger to promote eco friendliness.
😂😂😂 nice one
Cool 😂
LMAO. This comment needs more likes. Don't worry Apple always finds other ways to be scummy, we can always count on them for that. The best part is the sheeps will eat that shit up like every apple product ever released.
The irony
I have a removable battery is my LG G4 from 2017
I strongly believe that the right to repair is more valuable than any warranty you will ever have
it also gives 3rd party sparepart makers a chance, hopefullt.
Yes, my glue + glass phone broke after a week, & my Samsung Galaxy s5 still works if i want to call, text, take forward or backwards photo, & record audio.
I also greatly think we should get rid of the SIM card tray since I got comfortable/confident enough to stick a random sewing needle I could find into the mic hole \ wrong hole 😫
as everyone aware is
both? both. both is good
(in eu you have a 2 year warranty on most purchases)
@@k680B Both is best, but if I had to choose, I pick repairs
The reason phones changed from having user replicable batteries to being glued was because the manufacturers noted that if people could replace the battery when it was old, they would keep their phones much longer. They want the batteries to fail so people will be forced to buy new phones more often
It's the same with tablets...I have a Samsung T520 with a Retina-like screen but with an old battery I can't change (without tearing it apart)...so I would like to see devices with easily replacable batteries, darn it, I won't throw away my well working phone and tablet...especially when I don't see such high reso. screens on new tablets, for that money. (250 USD)
It's not going to matter. Manufacturers will just make sure their updates cause the phone to pull more current, so your battery life will decrease until it's unacceptable, even with a new battery. They're already doing this today. The only way this new EU law would help is if they could also stop manufacturers from forcing us to accept their updates, which will never happen.
@@davidryder3374 Which is why I won't buy an Apple or Google-Android phone but something like Graphene or Linux based Operating Systems. In addition to extended OS supported life one avoids a lot of spying/data mining the big companies do to earn more money.
I think that phone makers knows that the functionality horizon has been reached and from now on any improvement is incremental and iterative. Nothing new. So it's in their interest to lengthen their time of ROI.
No, the reason is people kept buying phones with non replaceable batteries as of it didn't matter
I am a retired Electronics engineer, I started when Thermionic valves where still in use so I have seen all the changes in the Electronics/Electrical industries over the years. Non repairable products have slowly entered the system on a drip drip method until what we have today. In my last years before retirement I did work for one of the largest Electronic manufactures and like the rest of them their goal was no user replicable parts that started to drift in to the professional repair sector to the point that it became practically impossible to obtain product repair information such as circuit diagrams and repair parts such as specific to the product batteries from Manufacturers. Glad I have permanently left all that behind.
Can't believe manufacturers are allowed to do that. Why there is no law in the first place to counter this kind of practice?
In the larger view of things if the Manufacturers where forced into providing spare parts for all their products they would need warehouses the size of multiple sports fields. And would you really want to purchase a replacement spring for a wind up gramophone or parts for those first mobile phones that were the size of a shoe box weighing rather more than the phones of today. Just look back ten years and count the number of electronic devices that have now slipped out of use many not because they did not work but more they became un fashionable, I do not like it but that is the way the world is going with consumer electronics. @@Pedonickatank
@@Pedonickatank believe it. The "Law" is there to enable these companies, not restrain them. without Law all along the way it would have been much harder to get to where we are today.
that said, it would be nice to have the Law come in and fix this crap, there's just always a catch.
eventually all of this will come crashing down. unfortunate but true
Common EU W. Seriously though, the amount of devices that go to e-waste just because of a dead battery is ridiculous.
Now imagine how many batteries will become e-waste when user replacement becomes possible. Much more e-waste than you can imagine since people will be able to do it on their own.
@@DJ-yh8hmWhy would the rate of battery failure increase ? When the phone/EV dies people will just change their battery instead of the whole thing, fuck planned obsolescence we should be able to keep electronics for decades
Agree
@@DJ-yh8hmthat makes absolutely no sense.
It is way better to just change the battery instead of the whole device, which also has a new battery.
@@DJ-yh8hm more batteries but less e-waste in total as device life will be prolonged with replaceable batteries
The EU singlehandedly changing the tech field in so many ways
Yeah that effect has a name: It’s called the Brussels Effect.
Multihandly*
Goodbye to water resistant phones😂😂😂😂😂
For all its faults and corruptions (like any country or organisation in this world) I do love lots of the things the EU is doing. They do seem to be the 'good' guys in a shitty world.
@@PSy84Someone didn't watch the video Sony had an IP68 phone with removable battery, Galaxy S5 was IP67 water resistant also
Replaceable batteries have *always* been possible. They stopped doing it because people (such as myself) would hang on to an old phone *forever* and just keep replacing the battery. With the battery soldered permanently into the case, when the battery dies (and it always dies before the electronics) you are forced to replace the entire device, whether or not you otherwise needed to.
When I was 16 I used to buy iPhone like that l, and open em up, replace battery and either sell it or keep it as an upgrade. I was just trying to get a nice phone but the journey taught me alot about upcycling
batteries are not soldered to anything, it's just that now they require someone experienced with the right tools to be replaced. No one is forcing you to replace the entire device because of the battery, stop making shit up
@@justdude8115 not everyone has the time or expertise to tear down a phone properly. I fucked up a good few before I could find my way through a phone repair relatively easily.
@@Deyas786 "it's just that now they require someone experienced with the right tools to be replaced". Which means if you lack those thing then pay to a professional to do it.
Dont take me wrong, I 100% support the idea of making phone with easily replaceable batteries, but this guy is just making things up.
@@justdude8115 I see your perspective but what if you can't afford to pay someone to do it? Where it was at one time a 10 second open and shut replacement it's become much more complicated. The same way that a simple padlock is easily opened with force or knowledge, by making it just hard enough that the layman cannot open it would effectively rule out 80 percent of people from even trying. It's the same here. Either way I just wish phones could be more modular 😭
Even if they make separate versions for EU and the rest of the world, I'd still be inclined to buy the EU variants purely on the 'maintenance' cost be considerably lower since battery replacement is generally the main thing I personally worry about on my phone. On a related note, I recently had my screen crack and I absolutely love my phone, so I sought to get the screen repaired, all places quoted the cost would be half the original MSRP of the phone, I was so confused and looked into how to do it myself and realized the problem, they use adhesive to glue the battery to the screen which makes replacing screens or batteries very difficult, it's just bad design that they are passing onto the consumer to eat the cost of.
If separate models exist they will support different radio band unfortunately
Whenever a company tells you it’s impossible to make a waterproof and dust proof device with replaceable batteries just remember those two words…. Action cameras
Edit: Damn Im dumb read your comment wrong 😂
Bro you named the most horrible example like name one popular action camera that doesn't have replaceable batteries? Like Go pro replaceable, Dji Osmo action 1,2,3 replaceable, Insta360 3 and RS series. Like what are you talking about!? Like action cams have dust and waterproofing despite having super easy to remove batteries in seconds if you have no case....like rubber gaskets and spring locks can heavily increase waterproofing the only minus is added bulk for the typical ways of locking the rubber gasket batteries...
Or just Galaxy s5
Removable back and battery and waterproof
or Life's Good,
or well, their more commonly known as LG.
the LG V20 an G5 were physical proof that it was possible to create the same sleek and thin premium devices with removable batteries and retain water-proof ratings.
the Samsung S5 was an even better example of how even a phone made entirely out of cheap plastic can have a removable pack panel and still retain an IP67 rating.
the Fairphone 4 has an IP54 water resistant rating - and a fully removable battery - in a relatively MODERN phone.
the sole purpose of companies getting rid of replaceable batteries in their phones is because they were trying to copy Apple.
every time these companies are making their newer devices more and more anti-consumer they are just copying what Apple is doing.
it is pretty widely known that the average Apple user upgrades their phone every 2.5 years (essentially whenever their battery no longer holds a charge, or if they broke their display or back panel).
a replacement back glass panel for almost ANY iPhone is a nearly impossible task to do and requires specialized laser to do - so this replacement costs nearly 300$.
a replacement display for almost ANY modern iPhone is also a nearly impossible task to do without the proper Apple certifications and serial number approvals by Apple - that alone make the whole replacement expensive because of additional hoops the repair technician's have to go through - so a screen replacement costs around 430$.
you can see how these numbers add up and make it basically not worth it to repair iPhones with broken displays or broken rear glass panels, which otherwise are still fully functioning very capable phones...
Samsung has began copying Apple's anti-repair tactics and soon the rest of the phone/tablet companies will too...
@@HoLDoN4Sec Tbh IP 54 is not water resistant. It's splash resistant.
@@Xirenec_ you are confusing IP44 and IP54...
IP 44 = resistant to water splashes from all directions + protection against solid objects over 1mm in size (some dust particles).
IP54 = resistant to low pressure jets of water from all directions + against solid objects over 1mm in size (some dust particles)
Well I’ve always said the change to non replaceable batteries was just a way to force people to buy new phones once the battery and performance degrades in tandem
Planned obsolescence because of money, just sad 😅
Almost all of my batteries in my devices last well past the device's usefulness.
True , but lets not ignore the fact that some manufacturers intentionaly slowing down their older phones to force ppl get new ones. This is still a big W for common people but wont change much.
The batteries are not non-replaceable. They are not considered to be user replaceable, thus a user changing one will invalidate the warranty within the warranty period. Thus it must be done by a suitably qualified technician so as to not to void the warranty.. I agree most companies will make this an opportunity to rip customers off by over charging for the process but it can be done. It will still, most likely, cost a lot less than a new device.
@@pumpkinchucker4953 How is it possible for your devices to be useless before the batteries die?
Nokia N95 - I used to have several batteries fully charged, cost very little money - out and about when a battery died, just chuck the next one in. Go away camping for days no problem.
Touch screen, Maps, everything.
Germany already has a well working refund system for bottles. We also have a return system for empty non-rechargaeble or brocken rechargeble batteries as well es printer cartrages. Its not that doing wast separation and reuse is a new system. There are plenty working example like aluminium cycling (many aluminium articles are made from a huge percentage so recircled aluminium.
A battery that can't hold a charge is a huge reason most people get a new phone. It's obviously the driver for them sealing the battery.
This, and manufactures not updating the software on their devices for as long as they could, leading to some newer apps not working, or running very sluggish.
It’s like lightbulbs tires, and everything else they can’t make money if some things will last 100 years
Every single time I've got a new phone is because I destroyed the screen
no, batteries are holding up fine nowadays. Software obsolescence is a bigger problem.
That's part of it but phones also have gained in processing power over the last 10 years, significantly more hardware acceleration, extra LPDDR chips etc...
Once again proving that big manufactures have to have pro-consumer features shoved down their throats before they are able to finally make positive changes. Thanks EU!
@@absolutemadchad8637 yeh and then your iphone lock you out of some features, just because yes, In which way those the EU changes are affecting you and why?
In UK we will insist that phones are glued shut.
@@MrTait_en_Chile Brexit be like
Sad shame
@@MrTait_en_ChileHe said worldwide didn’t he?
Well done. Not sure if I was ever interested in the topic but genuinely enjoyed the video and background music so much that I almost took a nap while listening.
Changes away from user ability to repair was absolutely an intentional process of cost-cutting and forcing users into repair contracts.
This is why I've owned a Fairphone for over a year, and love it.
It is make things slimer as you dont need extra layer of plastic isolating rest of circutry. There is possibility to do sliible battery same as simcard have. either way its gonna be interesting what companies will come up with
Apple: "Our engineers have found a way to fit an entire desktop into your pocket"
Also Apple: "A removable battery is impossible"
😂😂😂😂
I wish people would pay really close attention to this EU law and how manufacturers are going to deal with it. Of course, they're going to tell us that it was their idea all along, that it's the next disruptive innovation they invented, and what not. There are way too many apologetics out there who believe every single word these companies utter. Everything is always completely impossible---until it is enforced. And then it's a non-issue all of a sudden. And still people keep on repeating the PR nonsense.
It's always the same old song: A capitalist doesn't need a reason to whine. All they need is someone who listens to them.
Not even a desktop. iOS is awful
yes, apple is evil and greedy. however, easily swapped batteries: waste space internally, add extra weight, add extra volume and make waterproofing harder to engineer for
More like "being consumer friendly is impossible"
This was a problem that was CREATED by the cell phone companies. Those old flip-phones had removable batteries, that you didn't need to literally melt your phone to access
You really don't have to go that far back, all of the LGs had that feature up till the late models
Flip phones? Pfft!
I got a 2017 Samsung Galaxy Xcover 4, and it has really easy to remove plastic back cover and detachable battery.
It's also drop, water and dust resistant out of the box, has physical side and face buttons, and has a headphone jack.
and were sturdier. the almighty nokia brick.
This comment courtesy of a 2018 Samsung Galaxy J3 Orbit with replaceable battery.
And those devices back in the day of user-replaceable batteries had a habit of "WHOOPS... into the drink and it stops working FOREVAH!"
Today? Many phones can take a quick dunking, be turned off quickly, and still work if they are quickly put into a bag of rice or dessicant for the water to be sucked out of the device.
Great topic, and great directives/regulations from the EU.
The "difficult to see consumers giving back batteries" part is trivial to solve: Money. You pay people for their batteries. That cost will obviously reflect in the purchase price, so it basically becomes a refundable (partial) deposit. This is how a number of European countries have long operated for recycling requirements in markets for other goods - glass bottles particularly. That's how it will be for these batteries, almost surely.
My Apple laptop had a replaceable battery. When Apple stopped selling those, I bought a brandless one. It was half the price and lasted twice as long. Last year the screen went black, and I had to retire the thing. I could not find a new, or even a refurbished laptop with a replaceable battery. I'm looking forward to the day I can replace it myself again.
Panasonic still makes them for outdoor/militairy usr, but they cost a fortune.
With a career in electronic engineering stating in the early 1970s it was unthinkable for me to be designing a product that could not be easily repaired. As a teenager I was repairing Televisions, no one who owned one of these expensive items would have believed in just replacing it when it failed. This is a reversion in product design that is absolutely the right way to go.
Apple products are easily repairable. Or it´s remainig price still makes it reasonable to repair it even if you need to buy expensive component. Chinese low quality electronics is what makes those milion tons of waste. Even if chinese brand phone will have easy access to battery, everyone will throw it away after two years.
People have a tendency to go backwards when they know of nothing else to do
@@Voldees No, they are not easy to repair. They are clearly engineering ways to make repairing their devices an uneconomical as possible.
@@An_Attempt They're even trying to pass laws so that you can't buy the parts to fix it yourself! Yet everyone keeps supporting apple. The company pushing to remove your right to repair. DUMP THEM.
TVs are far cheaper today than they used to be, overall it's probably cheaper to just buy a new one compared to the old days where you pay the equivalent of multiple months minimum wage for a quality TV. My $600 Hisense has a stunning image with zoned backlighting, real HDR. For $600 today dollars you probably couldn't have even bought a brand new colour TV of any size in 1970, let alone something with the image quality that true HDR offers today. They will repair TVs under warranty today, replace boards and stuff, but after five years out of warranty it kind of isn't worth it. The equivalent TV new would be $300 new five years from now.
Right to repair is vital. Having modular batteries is a huge step toward that. I'd buy euro variants just to get that feature.
This is more like the right to replace, and I'm not sure how I feel about it. Being someone who repairs my own devices, right to repair means that the parts are available to purchase, and they are not physically impossible to replace (like Apple's soldered in parts). Batteries remain one of the easiest parts in a phone to replace typically, but a main reason I wouldn't want to replace one, or have replaceable batteries, is because it compromises the water resistance integrity, and that's something I've valued and assumed was a main reason behind the design of today's phones.
@@stuiedaman
that is bull shit.
I had waterproof mobile phone 20 years ago. And it has replacable batery
They probably won't have "EU variants" more likely they'll just standardize
@stuiedaman i dunno man, I think it's cheaper and more time efficient to just have easily replaceable batteries than to have a technician open, replace and solder (dunno if it needs soldering) it for you. On the water resistant part, 3:42 seems like a good design for that.
Edit: just noticed that you fixes your own devices and I don't think everyone have the time to learn how to properly open a smartphone, buy tools and glue and doing the repair itself, finicky stuff.
@@ephraim4259 my iPhone 4 (I know, I'm a dinosaur) had two screws on the bottom of the phone, take those out and the back cover slides off, and you're able to pop out the battery just like you could any other phone. No tech needed, just a special screwdriver which could bought online for $5. This design also prevented your battery/cover flying across the floor when you dropped your phone, being that it was secured with smalls crews instead of cheap plastic.
I had an LG G5 with a replaceble battery. I would charge a spare battery in a charging cradle and just change them out when I was running low. The LG G5 was amazing for its time.
Had my XCover 6 Pro a year now. I bought it BECAUSE it has a removable battery and I do NOT need an 8k camera. Camera is just fine. I'm old school. I like it.
Apple now has a chance to sell their batteries separately 😂
And, for an outrageous price, and patent some ridiculous attribute, like rounded corners, or something, and forbid any 3rd party from manufacturing it without facing huge lawsuits for patent infringement. Yup, they're devastatingly clever, and will skirt around that law any chance they get. Or, they'll simply double the price of their already overpriced phones, and the sheep will gladly buy it, then Samsung will just follow suit.
The EU will go after them.@@theclearsounds3911
At the cost of selling more phones... The whole market is super saturated now anyway, past its pinnacle.
Don't give them ideas 😂
with an extra special Apple Battery Charger 🤩
I love it. Stopping people from being able to make basic repairs in their own devices is insane.
Debt slaves only get abuse and death in this world.
I hope laws fix printers and ridiculous ink cartridges next :)
As insane as having designed obsolescence?
The ONLY reason we have to change lightbulbs is because the companies need us to keep buying more lightbulbs.
@@mikect05 This. It is nuts how much waste and lost savings the average person is forced into simply because big businesses PAY the government(s) to keep their purposefully cut rate products the legal standard. Food, printers, phones, computers, cars, furniture, bulbs, clothes, HOUSES, literally everything. If something you own breaks, unless you dropped it from a high place onto a hard surface, IT WAS DESIGNED TO BREAK.
@@MyRealName I'd might recommend an Epson Ecotank printer. They seem to have some mixed reviews so I guess it's hit or miss, but I've had mine for at least 2 years periodically printing and the ink is still almost full. After I haven't printed in awhile I just make sure to go through the maintenance settings for cleaning and test the print, and it's been surprisingly good in my experience.
This is fantastic! I've been wondering how long the present insanity of disposable devices could continue. Why has it taken so long for any major governmental body to act on this?
Totally agree with that move, return of audio jack should be included too🤗🤗
Removing replaceable batteries seems like one of the biggest trends in “planned obsolescence”. Where companies make products that don’t last as long on purpose so you inevitably have to purchase another. Apple not allowing security updates after a phone model is so many years old is another example of this. Happy to hear governments are starting to hold companies accountable for this in some way.
Wasn't there one where one of the IOS's the less "health" your battery has the more the phone becomes bottlenecked? Which would easily be fixed with just replacing a battery
I never thought I would give props to Apple for anything but if theres anything to give them props for it's updates. Last time I checked they were the only company giving out updates for more than 5 years. which compared to other manufacturers where you barely have 2 years is a win.
It is crazy considering while devices have gotten more integrated and less user servicable because Apple wants you to get the next iPhone instead, while at the same time theres less and less reason to get a new device since improvements today are tiny jumps and not leaps anymore.
@@SWUnrealI'm on a samsung that is more than 3 years old. Still getting updates. Definitely not just apple doing updates longer than 2 years.
@@mattsadventureswithart5764 I never said theres no company that doesn't give out updates for more than 2 years. I said last time i checked the only one doing more than 5 is apple although that's what I remember. There can be others like google that do more than 2
As a kid I remember having a removable battery android and the disappointment I felt when upgraded to having a non removable battery sucked. I used to swap and charge my batteries and my phone would never die. We took a step back as a whole.
Having an integrated battery is not desirable. I would regularly change batteries and was perfectly content.
I can agree with you on that as I used to take a batter charger and spear batter in to school with me and if I was running out of charge or need to work with it I cunled just change it out on the fly. this is why I don't like change any of my tech that is not working as it just make more e waste for the environment and sometime is just a 1% increase in performance with the new tech that it just a moony sink, so my question to law makers is why are there so many company that don't allow to have a system for 3 party repairs that fallow a set guide lines.
Another thing is on the few occasions a phone crashes/seizes one can get it restarted by removal and re-insertion of the battery, I still have an old LG phone and it has crashed 4 times over the years, but fixed in less than a minute each time. My new Samsung crashed, I could not remove the battery and ended up having it to be sent off for 'repair.' I do not appreciate the arguments in favour of not having removable batteries. I think it is to make more money.
Be careful what you wish for. Batteries which are more integrated into the mobile phone does bring a few significant advantages. Sure it was initially an apparent advantage to have removable battery in the HTC Desire and the LG phone I replaced it with but I had to carry a replacement battery with me to get through the day. Until I bought a phone with sealed integrated battery which enabled a larger capacity faster charging batter enabled by removing the excess bulk of the more robust case required to safely enclosed a Li-ion battery and the chamber into which the battery is to be inverted. Both of which, add weight and bulk which doesn't contribute to the function of the phone.
Secondly, many high performance phones which charge high capacity batteries requiring speed charging benefit from sophisticated cooling as with this performance comes a need to manage that heat with close contact thermal control not easily achieved through the case of a removable battery, thus shortening the battery life. This isn't in the consumer interest surely
@@BarryHaegerSalesCoach fair point but speed charging your batteries will kill it's life faster tho. Improving thermal dissipation of the battery casing beats its purpose when the battery itself is on fire with that high charging current flowing in 🤔
My Macbook had a dead pixel dead center of the screen which was the only possible place that dead pixel could have been for apple to replace it at no charge. They literally messured it with a ruler to see if it was in the middle of the screen as that is their policy.
Framework are well placed here. Rock on!
We'll see very very quickly that it's been possible for them to make user replaceable batteries all along. They have not been limited by design they've been limited by desire. It is in the phone manufacturer's best interest to make their products last as short a time as possible. Making them difficult to repair is simply part of that plan.
Take a look at the Galaxy XCover 6 Pro. It has a removable battery, while at the same time having IP68 certification.
Ohh it's possible and quite easy to achieve without bulking up the phone. If Samsung can make a foldable phone waterproof and fit a giant s pen inside their note/S series without losing functionality, adding a removable battery door is quite trivial. They just don't want to do it.
Stop buying from companies that screw you and everyone else over. Vote with your feet.
Sony has SIM slot that does not require any tools while being waterproof and I had Motorola with removable back cover for accessing microsd card that was also waterproof.
It's called Planned obsolescence.
Not only batteries, laptops are coming with soldered RAMs, Storage, Processors etc. Also keyboards are glued thermally with plastic screws making it extremely difficult to remove and replace. Double RAM slots have become single now in many consumer models. If all these are not the outcome of greed, then I fail to understand what it is.
There are some advantages to soldering the RAM, like increased speed, but i'd rather have the slower RAM and be able to upgrade/swap it. Enterprise models i kinda understand, as they are generally replaced at a faster rate than consumer ones, and come with swap warranties.
eu already has drafts in place regarding the anti-consumer tactics in laptops. soldered ssd makes laptops fail completely at less than half their usual lifespan.
Yeah this keyboards in laptops are extremaly annoying to change. I literally had to use knife to remove plastic garbage and then hotglue new keyboard back. It works for 2+ years now so I guess glue is the way!
go pro and others have waterproof to 15m they all removeable batteries .
The issue with making laptops like that is you will most definitely have to implement slower exchange rates between shared components. You also have a choice as to what product you buy, if you want a device more accessible to upgrade or change parts, then you will probably go with a bulkier and sometimes more expensive model. The general population does not feel comfortable operating on their laptop’s internals
When i had a phone with a replaceable battery, when i got new batteries, they went dead faster than the original, even when i factory reset it it is like the phone had a hidden app running the battery dead faster
Miss my LG V20 removable battery glad this will come back
This is a huge win. Phasing out user replaceable batteries was nothing more than anti consumer. There's no other way to spin it
Well there is also the system upgrade support. Extremely few decices go beyond 3 years, and it is bloody rare to get 4 years of upgrades.
Well there goes water proof
We can thank Apple for that. They started the trend when they were in the race for "thinnest phone ever".
@@mr.tomfoolery9159Nope. We had waterproof phones back then as well. The video explains how Samsung and Sony both had waterproof phones with removable batteries.
@@mr.tomfoolery9159 The irony of this comment. Drop your iPhone in to water and it's dead for good. Drop some Nokia phone in to water, open it up to get some air, good to go in a matter of 12-24 hours.
Planned obsolescence and paying extra to get your phone fixed is what it was all about and not waterproofing.
How many times did you have to repair e.g. your phone's battery? Older models vs. newer ones.
My own personal experience:
older = zero
newer = 4 times.
the EU is singlehandedly saving technology from going into a downward spiral of non-reusable or non-repairable and proprietary hell.
even a broken clock is right 2 times a day.
A co z samochodami elektrycznymi ? Wyobraź sobie, że ue ma zamiar zabronić napraw karoserii w samochodach ! Są takie projekty !
@@morepowerr If it wasn't for the EU, European countries would be the same shit show as the US. Pipe down.
@@morepowerrA broken clock is right 2/86,400 times a day, so only 0.0023% of the day. By saying "even a broken clock is right 2 times a day" without context you make it seem more significant then it really is.
@@Marshark50 In the contest even someone or thing that makes mistakes a majority of the time can do something useful from time to time.( examples - Clumsy smurf, Launchpad Mcquack, Wile E Coyote, Urkal, "Screech" from save by the bell )
The phone in the thumbnail is the LG G5 which i used to use like a days back but it was a pretty good phone back in the day
Hope they do this for all electronics, for example smart tv replacements screens and parts readily available for home repair.
Go Pro cameras feature very high water resistance and are actively recommended for underwater use - yet have easily removable batteries.
Everything comes with a trade-off and smartphones skew way towards the compactness and portability end of that bargain. Every gasket, every door, every latch takes space.
Speaking of compactness, how about digital watches? After leaving the factore there is no chance of replacing the battery and maintaining waterproof characteristics.
@@weldonyoung1013those will also be covered by the law...
@@gabrielarrhenius6252 , maybe watches could be covered. But I've been using battery powered digital watches for over 4 decades, quality ones that last over 8 years. And every time I replace the battery or have a shop do it, the watch only work for a few weeks. The "glued" factory seal alway gets broken.
This might also happen to larger devices once the EU regularion comes into effect.
@@weldonyoung1013Do you mean smartwatch? Normal digital watches especially ones designed for diving are fully waterproof have replaceable battery. Only that you'll need a special tool to open the case and replace the gasket along with the battery to retain the water resistant.
I love how cell phones came standard with removable batteries, then it went away, now it must be regulated to come back. 🙂
I came here looking for this comment. Thanks 🙂
why do you love it?
@@UnlikelyToRemember
Use some common sense when using a cellphone!
Don't use it near water and you don't need to take with you to the WC or to the sea/swimming pool. You have no idea how many people use the cellphone and are inside the water when they are on the beach...
Don't eat/drink near it!
And listen to a video until the end before you comment. LG already solved that issue.
Because it was easier to manufacture that way.
Glad I wasn't the only one who remembers.
Making the batteries replaceable is a good step forward. But notice something, I replaced my smatphone 2 years ago, had it for 6 years maybe? The battery and all physical components were all fine, but updates for the system stopped. Meaning, at some point, I couldnt run some apps anymore. I remember the banking app was no longer working. Making all hardware easly replaceable is a good step forward, but software is another issue.
Unless you standardise the batteries themselves, limiting them down to no more than 5 set shapes/voltage/connections, the companies will just continually change the batteries between models and claim "no stock" after two years or so, putting us all back to the same outcomes as now.
AA through to D cells worked well due to standardisation and many products benefited through not having to supply their own individual battery types. A standard for battery power tools should also be looked at.
Nah. There will always be 3rd party parts if there's a demand.
I always love this Argument of "Apple wants safe repairs"
Like... i don't Care, what apple wants. I bought the device from them, it's my property, and if i want to go to the sketchy repair store next door, it's my right to do so lol
Everyone knows Apple's argument is bs for "I want to sell more devices". EU Should slam them with even more fines and force them to fix this mentality.
Why does this even have to be an argument? The concept of shilling for a company that will screw you just as much as the people who complain is so alien to me. This is beyond just repairing a phone. How can you not be bothered that some shitty company in America or China knows everything about you AND is turning a huge profit off of it? How can you support and even be affectionate towards a huge company? They make products. If you have use of that product, you buy it or use it in some way. Since there is a number of options, pick the one that best suits you. For some people that's Apple products. Perfectly reasonable, but _why_ would you get emotional about any of it?
But what if someone is injured by an unsafely repaired Iphone!?! You could get sued!
I mean you always can, the issue is Appe will void a warranty because who knows what that sketchy shop did to your phone
safe repairs, and thats why they wanted to charge a woman $475 to plug her laptop battery in properly,... pretty sure their only reason is money as everything they do is with the intention of having people spend more money... anyone who believes apple has their best interest in mind or any interest other than extracting as much money as possible from people has some serious issues.
I had (and still have) a Note 4 that I loved - you could change the battery and plug in some wired headphones...ah the good old days
Still using my LG G4 as a media player. They should also make a law that permit turning off the display of any phone and tablet while youtube, crunchyroll, disney plus, prime, etc play a video to you can listen without watching and not draining your battery.
So happy to hear about this. It's unfortunate, but true, that you have to force companies to be consumer friendly. I wish more countries would get out of bed with the companies, and start actually passing laws that favor consumers.
Creating devices that dazzle you with tech you’d never be able to create yourself isn’t consumer friendly?
@CharlesQuiros fair point but your forgetting that a device regardless should be repaired by all (if not consumer then atleast my local repair shop) artificially soft locking, manufacturing hard replacement parts (windows surface laptop for example), and telling consumers they have to buy a new device over repairing an older model that's less then a year old is absurd. I am glad the EU is doing this atleast it has made tech companies atleast make modifications that benefit everyone
Consider this: an IP65 rating would suit the needs of 99% of users out there. Glue is not needed to achieve that - a thin o-ring will get there just fine. Section off the battery compartment, pot the leads going out to serve the board/screen, and bobs your uncle. That allows screen to be installed with adhesives to preserve sleek appearance most have come to enjoy, and restores user access to the battery.
Facts: capitalism only works when accompanied by meaningful regulation with teeth.
The problem with that kind of laws is that they come way too late and never go far enough.
I could think of lots and lots of urgently needed regulations of all kinds.
In another post on this video I mentionned electroportative tools like drillers and saws that should be included in this replaceable batteries requirement law.
On another subjects there's agricultural tools and machines :
In the past farmers would do a lot of the maintenance on them. But also : modifications.
Today we have tools/machines in the fields that can't (physically but also by contract with the manufacturer) be modified or improved or adapted. It's very detrimental as each producer faces its own contraints, and from ancient times always had to do a lot of adaptations. It's very problematic now if you speak with some farmers that can't anymore find or adapt tools to their specific needs. It's also progres and innovation from the ground up that is in question. Those people know best how to produce than ingeniers in offices and computer designers.
Huge W for the EU actually caring for consumers not corporations
They said its for the environment....not the consumer.....either way its good though
Tying the life of the product to the component with the shortest lifespan was definitely deliberate.
we have so many devices like GoPros that are well waterproof that it should be easy to make it slide out or open the back. you can just make a seperate department for the battery channel like a Galaxy S Pen that's sealed from the other components.
Politicians are doing something for real... that's a change we all want.
The EU is currently passing many welcome regulations.
Some would say working in the interests of the population rather than the corporations is "Unamerican"
I'm glad that Apple is now finally being forced to stop their anti consumer practice of not allowing to sideload apps
Imagine politicians actually helping their people. American politicians need to take notes
na there’s always some evil lurking in the background, even if it appears good for us.
Probably more battery production by billionaires
I think its pretty clear that the main motivation for getting rid of replaceable batteries was planned obsolescence
Its is a form of way to force people to buy new devices. Companies know that batteries will decay over time and no longer hold charge.
and when that happens, companies jump for joy when they see customers are forced to spend $1,200 for a new phone. even though their current phone is fine,
and the only problem was the battery. I am glad this is now changing. Because people are tired of being forced to buy new devices when they don't have to.
@@TwstedTV In most cases, though, batteries don't just "decay". It's the software that is programmed to kill your device slowly and painfully by malfunctioning.
It's both @@kojisan1
@@kojisan1 very true. and one of the main culprits is Apple and Samsung. Because they want to force people to purchase new devices each and every year.
90% of the population can not afford to keep spending $1,200 for a new device every time a new apple phone gets released.
So yes you are correct regarding most cases.
nokia beeing one of the last to do that.. and the first with standartized chargers.
Well, until nokia was run into the ground by an american ex-microsoft manager and the hostile american market.
(you cant sell phones, if the carriers in a country dont help you sell them - and apple made sure to keep the market hostile for nokia - while still benefitting from licensing all the nokia patents... there would be no iphone w/o nokia r&d )
With machines what people want is plug and play replacements for most parts in an open ended easy to replace design with no obstructions or lots of dismantling because parts get in the way of other parts. I had to disassemle my entire beko dryer just to replace a smaller starter belt pully which took me over 5 hours and alot of jigsaw skills to do.
apple already designs a version for the US specifically. Worldwide 14/15's have SIM slots while in the US they don't.
Wouldn't be surprised if they do everything they can so the US version stays sealed while the int or possibly a EU version comes out specifically meeting that criteria.
Hopefully they do the same as with USB C and release it in the next version so we can see how they do it :)
I always thought that having batteries non removable from the phone was a dumb idea.
Whoop whoop 🙌
The batteries have always been removable, people just lack basic skills
@@BMWROYALand breaks your warranty for most.
i always thought so it meant your phone could still be technically on when off or remotely turned on whenever
I've used LG G5 because I had the same thoughts as you, worst phone purchase of my life
I'm saying it here and now. Once this law passes, a possibility of a brand new phone that is sold "batteries not included" shall rise.
if the batteries are standardized across platforms... why not. you want to upgrade to the latest model and don't have to pay for a new bettery, just use the old one. I'm not saying that companies wouldn't charge you the same as they intended to do if the battery was included but it's a possibility. Then again, say if samsung, nokie and apple all use their own battery, then they would include the battery because trying to get a customer to change brand if they have to buy the battery seperately is going to be haaaard.
Nobody will buy it....
@@marcvangastel2157 I wouldn't be too sure about that
Just buy your own rechargable double a batteries ...
@@tore650 I dont think they will become cheaper just because the battery isn't in the phone.
As for waterproofing, just keep a sandwich bag handy. takes up no space at all, and if by some bad luck you encounter heavy rain, just put it in the bag.....
Best way would probably be a cover in the back which would be cool, too! I want replaceable backcovers back to get rid of cases. My phone feels so cool without a thick case, but you usually dont do it, because a scratch means being not repairable easily. Imagine having artistic freedom again to design the back of your phone again? Even steel printings, illuninations, etc.
Cant wait to hear how Apple is gonna market a replaceable battery as brave game changing decision they lead the way in for the industry.
...and then we'll have herds of fan bois online adamant that apple invented the replaceable battery
The ibattery
Don't forget it gonna presented to their consumers/sheep in obnoxious rotating phone CGI describing each battery component that dosent even new tech from 10 year ago while claiming they care and pioneer in green earth zero waste or something
They will just make a shit battery that only they can replace at high cost
replaceable iphone batteries are going to cost as much as the phone itself. the phone comes with one but if you want more it will be prohibitively expensive.
Well, okay, not as much as an iPhone, that's hyperbolic, but their current business model relies on people prematurely buying a brand new phone to replace the old one just because the battery wore out. Batteries are going to be expensive enough to maintain that same level it income for them or close to it And they are going to have to be egregiously expensive to offset people not flippantly buying new iPhones anymore just because the battery sucks after a year or two.
Finally, I’m tired of losing all my rechargeable tech stuff after 3-5 years over this exact reason.
Good now they would be forced to invent a more evil way to suffocate last gen devicea
And now higher prices for the battery option 10/10 Apple they totally gonna screw u over.
You get what you paid for better hope it’s worth a extra 500 considering Apple has to make design changes
This is why I love Apple passive aggressive is how you deal with this. Why force companies to change their own tech don’t like it don’t buy it
@@user-gs6er5mz8o people would never understand this, but let them pay more for it now.
@@user-gs6er5mz8o whilst its very sweet that you 'love' apple - it's just a shame they don't love you back - they are notoriously anti consumer, they have a track record of deliberately, and arguably fraudently, blocking repairs on their products. Plus apple have been increasing the prices of the phones for years anyway - the original iPhone was $400.
They will only increase the price if YOU keep paying too much for their phones - people like you actually allow them to charge $500 dollars MORE - because you'll still buy it anyway.
Stop giving Apple money, it really is that simple. I have, I got screwed over by them, shame that Steve Job is not around anymore to be held accountable for the first iPhone
I miss my Treo 650. Thing got charged twice a month whether it needed it or not. Oh, and that was a replaceable battery.
The Palm V pioneered the use of adhesives. They result in a thinner and stronger device that looks more premium.
Having the company give a coupon for a new battery with the retrieval of an old one would be an easy way to motivate people to do it
In Germany they have something called Pfand. When you buy a bottle you give a small amount extra, and when you recycle the bottle you get that back. This concept might work great for batteries. Also this can be a way to get repeat customers.
a "core charge" like car batteries, or engines, alternators, etc.. there is discount to your new battery purchase if you bring in your old one for recycling/refurbishing. Similar concept
This! What a great idea.... You, I like you.
Just my personal opinion. 10-20 years ago, the producers didn't had to include non-removable battery to make customers order a new phone, because phones used to get exponentially better year after year. After around 2012-2015, the processing power of the units started getting only marginally better, so the only reason to change it was if it got broken, and making unremoveble batteries was the easiest way to make it useless after 2 years.
Yeah, and later on they start degrading the software updates. Changeable batteries will not affect too much in the behalf of a user. It may just shorten the software updates in order to maintain the number of sales, if that scenario occurs - just my personal opinion.
💯
@@alexsterijev Also Apple being the main culprit here. I remember having an old Ipad 2 that could be used without a problem as a 2nd screen for my pc, run basic games and other things without a problem. Now except the fact that they dropped support and most apps won't run just because they force the developers to ask for newer IOS versions, hence locking you from having a functional device anymore, all the apps that still run, just run horribly. Anti consumer practice at it's best.
100%. I remember the 2000s/2010s when every generation of smartphone was so much better than the one that came before it. Nowadays it's slightly thinner bezels or a better fingerprint sensor. But I couldn't tell the difference between a phone that was released yesterday and a phone that was released 3 years ago.
This is not an opinion dude XD
I remember when I got HTC EVO. That’s still one of the best phones I can hold. All plastic , more than half the price of a iPhone, better screen, sound and I could work 48 hour shifts as a medic and never have to worry about phone dying or breaking it.
I wish my current phone had a user replaceable battery. Our only phone repair shop went bust so now there's no-one around who can professionally replace it.
A lot of people get a new phone after around two years because they are no longer happy with the battery life.
It's definitely in the interest of the manufacturer to keep this up and prevent swappable batteries.
Glad to be an EU citizen!
It’s already so easy to get it replaced by a professional for 1/10th the cost of the phone.
That's not a reason a great majority of people buy phones.
Batteries don't degrade _that_ quickly.
My 3 year old battery-that I absolutely do not take care of whatsoever-is still at 81%.
That takes it from well over one day to still over one day of quite heavy use.
This is not true. Replaceable batteries are smaller, hold less charge and are much more expensive to produce. Eeplaceable ones which have a negative effect on everyone
@@closeben 160€ are still too much
If the government passes a law that lowers the revenue of a business, the customer always pays to make up for it. Phones will probably become more expensive due to the additional manufacturing complexities of removable batteries, as well as lost revenue from people not needing to replace their phones as often.
There are no free lunches. Corporations do not pay for the proverbial meals.
One side effect of non-replaceable batteries that I don't see mentioned much, is that we have no way to completely turn off our devices. It used to be that the only way you could be sure that nobody was listening, watching, and otherwise collecting your data was to remove your battery. Once they sealed the batteries in, it became impossible to ever be truly off-grid. While most of the data collection is commerce driven, for some people, in some parts of the world, this data could seriously impact one's freedom (especially in the country that produces most of these devices).
here we go again with paranoia.
@@hydrohasspoken6227 I've been in many war room sessions, and believe me when I say we leave our phones in a locker before the meetings.
It’s not paranoia but then again your probably not important enough for them to care
In case you didn't know - if someone want to listen to you he will be able to hear you
even if the battery of your phone is unplugged.
Look it up.
@@yoshy2628wasn't there something like this with PC motherboards ?? Even when switched off data collection was done with CMOS battery 🤔 my memory is bit hazy on this.
Phones were sleek and thin with batteries too lol. My early Asus Zenfone was very thin for example.
Hey, you got Louis Rossmann! Way to go!
About time this filthy greed is addressed. Especially at Apple.
I do NOT want replaceable batteries. How can they decide "for" me? I want slim, water prove phones, am NOT interested in replaceable batteries, can't see NO advantage for me in it.
@@RonKI DO want replaceable batteries. How can they decide ”for” me? I want bulky, repairable phones, AM interested in replaceable batteries, can’t see NO disadvantage for me in it.
You're in a tiny minority. If you're up for replacing your phone every 2 years, be my guest. We have the tech know-how by now on how to make phones with replaceable batteries and at the same time keeping them thin. It's not 2010 anymore. @@RonK
I 100% believe that it was a way for manufacturers to shorten the lifespan of the products for the users. I am also old enough to remember the slim, waterproof phones WITH removable batteries! Phones have not gotten that much slimmer since they started sealing batteries into phones and I can actually remember a bunch of clever designs which kept the phone slim while still allowing the battery to be removed.
This is a great step forward and I’d happily take my battery to a drop off point.
Hardware is only part of it. We need better update policies and longer support. Planned obsolescence in action.
@@RandomPlaceHolderName Part of the same law package that makes replacable batteries mandotory also makes it manditory for software and security to be ensured for the lifetime of the device. Yes this "lifetime" will be messed with a lot but the EU is generaly pretty good at enforcing the spirit of the law and not the companies "creative" interpretation of it. It might even state that for mobile phones it would be atleas 5 years.
@@someonespotatohmm9513 Would be lovely to see. A phone with a replaceable screen and battery could last a decade, especially with performance stagnating over the past 5 years or so.
@@RandomPlaceHolderName I think the phone that comes the closest is the fairphone.
@@someonespotatohmm9513 Aye, their website says updates until 2031 which is fantastic but €700 is waayyy out of my price range. I also really don't need those specs.
I think it's a mix of reasons. The biggest reason is to encourage customers to buy new phones instead of repairing them. But a small reason is so that the phones have less mechanical/moving parts. Requiring more tolerances. I had an LG G5 and it was wonderful.
The issue that companies will face is that the amount of research needed to design phones with replaceable batteries WHILE also making them look the same as previous models.
But I know Apple will comply and call it a battery replacement feature
Noticed the display wasn't as good. Like I can see screen burn it and other display issues. Other than that loved the phone concept and still have the 3D camera gift lol. Had to trade in for new phone
I hope they include the charging / data port with the replacement battery
I always used android and I remember 2018 being the year I could no longer find a good phone with a removable battery. I had a removable battery all throughout middle school and early highschool and always had extras. I've had so many people say to me "haha arent you happy your battery doesnt pop out anymore?" and I reply "no im not happy that I now have to constantly recharge my phone and need to spend hundreds of dollars to fix an issue that I used to be able to fix myself"
I remember a time when people complained about having to carry small, spare batteries for a few dollars when they went on a trip. Now the same people buy large and heavy power banks that cost several times as much and are still happy if they work longer than the end of the warranty.
Now I'm angry at the manufacturers for removing the memory card slot. More than once, a copy of data on the card has saved me, from losing them, and I also use the most capacious cards, where you have to pay dearly for that amount of memory in your phone.
hundreds of dollars? bro, it's like $50-$80, depends on a country
@@WuxonnyTV no. replacing a battery alone can be upwards of $100. And that's before its corroded everything inside your phone. When a battery starts having an issue in a phone that's removable you can easily remove it before it messes up the rest of the phone. With an iphone, you just have to hear it sizzle. Im speaking from personal experience wt both iphones and androids on this. And that's assuming iphone support doesnt try and just refuse to fix it and make you think its your fault and that you need to buy a new iphone. I had to complain like five times before they would respect my warranty
Remember in school when the battery would become lose and you just folded a piece of paper and put it in between the battery and the phone lid CTFUUUUUU life used to be so simple man we truly are in hell
@@WuxonnyTV Try and fix a new iphone for 50-80 dollars. The parts would not even sell for that little.
FINALLY, a step in the right direction. We all need to get together and pass laws like this to stop corporate greed and to stop letting corporations get away with screwing the customer. Great job guys, I hope this is the start of a new trend. Hey, shout out to Loius!
Forcing all phones to have user replaceable batteries when most customers don't care is not progress.
@@Michael-Archonaeustell that to my 4 years old pixel phone where the battery is now half of what it used to be... And there's no easy way for me to figure this out. Most consumers don't care because there's no other option "it is what it is, situation".
What other solution would be out there to make the consumer life less dependent on profitable and questionable manufacturer decisions?
Absolutely. Difficulty of sourcing and replacing batteries has been a large reason I've bought most of my new phones. I hope a side effect of this is some level of standardisation that makes it easier to source batteries for devices for a longer period of time
I kinda wish companies could just do whatever as long as it’s not harming anyone, and that consumers would be more ready to switch brands instead of being so complacent. Like, instead of purchasing a phone that has what is desired - though not as popular - laws get made to change phones? Kinda weird, but maybe that’s just me. Not to say I don’t like the changes, I do, I just don’t get why people don’t just switch to, say, the Samsung Galaxy XCover 6 Pro, I guess. Or the Fairphone 4, that has a removable battery as well… I don’t get it.
@@RafaelAcurcio Vote with your wallet by buying something different like the Samsung Xcover 6 Pro.
Don't buy phones with non-replaceable batteries and then complain about manufacturers making more of those phones, when you literally told them to!
HTC M2
One of the first Android phones that had it glued together
Its fine but you have some instances where it suddenly changes from 50 to 20 to 0 percent
Crazy
The goal of having products easily repairable by the user is a good one. It feels like if there was a truly free market this would have happened naturally. Artificially easy credit brought about by an expandable monetary system coupled with highly regulated industries kept these large companies flush with cash and without competition. This led to practices like this. The legislation will have many unintended ripple effects and likely make it harder for smaller companies to compete as it gives them another barrier for entry into the market. At the end of the day the aggregate purchasing decisions of billions of people around the world is the best possible indicator of something valued. If there is a mismatch between this and reality it is due to force or coercion influencing those purchasing decisions abnormally from what they otherwise would have been.
I miss LG phones. They had so many bells and whistles, but the problem was that the company was unfocused and kept dropping many of their innovations except for the Hi-Fi DAC and multiple cameras, and great camera app and recording with so many manual settings which were game changers.
Yea even the cheaper phones they made were great I used a $80 LG I think it was the v40 for 3 weeks it had a fingerprint scanner and a good enough screen I had no problems with it.
They were very innovative. My wife had an LG G3 which was awesome and lasted many years and actually still works.
LG was so good.
also to add, durability and QC issues, i had theri g3 if im not wrong, dropped it by accident, display changes was so annoying the display kept not working
I remember the V20 I got back a few months after it released in '16, The selling point was that as a replacement to my S5, it too, needed a removable battery. I still have the spare battery and charger kicking around and the wall adapter is still in use. I think that phone lasted just under a year. the display was bad about ghosting if an image was left up for, say, an hour. Think navigation apps, etc. It could take hours for the ghost to go away fully. I dealt with that for awhile but what ended it was the modem lost sensitivity and the most signal I could get was 1 bar. as soon as I left the peak reception area I had zero signal. vzw took it back and swapped me into a S8
I was sad when Samsung stopped using replaceable batteries. It will be good to see companies start to use them again in their devices.
Imagine a replaceable battery in a laptop
@@chiquita683 my older dell from 2014 has this
Frankly I switched to the Galaxy Note 3 after having every gen iPhone. It was awful. Worst 2 years of my life.
Batteries were bulging and getting overheated all the time. I remember some phones were even blowing up on people.
Hopefully Apple does it right but not holding my breath.
@@chiquita683 My modern Gigabyte laptop has this.
@@chiquita683 miss having a replaceable battery on my laptop.
They can just use adhesive. Just remove the battery like you remove the sim card. The whole card can coming out. Hopefully they will also add the sd card back. Kinda like lg g5 but only a part.
I still have my old gameboy color from when i was a kid, it's great that i can just pop in a couple batteries and still play it to this day.
I want to see how Apple maliciously comply with this.
$199 battery
I want to see the EU regulate to protect me and put them back in their place.
They will maybe put USB C on Iphone 15, how long will it take them for removable batteries? 2030 maybe?
Phone costs $20, battery costs $1,999. I wonder how much hardware the EU limits them from building into the battery.
No different than to see if Tesla complies with it's EV batteries. Apple is one of the worst offenders, but hardly the only one.
thats great and all, but will replacement parts by readily available from the oem?
My first Android smartphone was THL W200 (2013) with a removable battery, when the first battery died I changed it to a brand new one, the thickness was 9.3 mm vs 8.7 mm on my OnePlus 9Pro whereas the battery is not removable of course, a good idea to return all this
I can not imagine the future where Apple sell you the battery for 499
EDIT: To make myself clear I'm not an Apple user, It's just me surprise that a company can be so greedy selling a battery for 499 (eventually)
In Apple's realm, sure but the Right To Repair for practically every small business will make those charges kill Apple for marketing removable batteries because no one would want to and the risk of after market parts but still usable on Apple devices will make Apple think twice how to compete against Android with their very open end and easy to use OS
Basically yes they can, and there would be people stupid enough to pay, but sometimes quality isn't meant to be super expensive
That's still only half the price of a new iPhone, though ^^ and I doubt they can afford to do so without getting replaced by generic brands.
... forgot INFLATION...lol.. $2499.. and breaks warranty!!!
Imagine Apple selling a $999 battery for an iphone with drm chip that prevents installing generic batteries
@@YoloTub3 It's scary that this is something that they would do
I'm honestly fine with my phone being a little thicker if this means getting more control over what's inside of it.
Right? I don't recall ever saying "omg my phone is way too thick I cannot bear to use it" The very idea that a phone has to get thinner and thinner is a goal of manufacturers, not the consumer
S5 is thinner than S23
This is good news to me. My last three Android based phones were all ditched because they all began to show signs of battery swelling. Although they still functioned, the fact that the batteries started to swell up made me reluctant to have them in my home for fear of them spontaneously combusting.
I found an off-brand cell phone that had the ability of battery swaps without too much of a hassle. I then bought a spare battery just in case the existing battery in my latest Android phone started showing signs of swelling.
Now I don't have to buy a whole new cell phone if or when the existing phone battery starts showing signs of swelling.
Imagine if Apple did release a removable battery version of the iPhone for the EU market only and a sealed battery, slightly slimmer, version of the iPhone for the the rest of the world. It would make for an interesting scenario. Like which one would be more desirable? I think there would probably be a flourishing grey market for both versions. It still could be possible that with some devices there might be different versions for the EU market, or there will be certain devices/versions that might not get released in the EU at all.
So sad that LG didn't seem to understand the importance of wooing influencers and software updates. Their phones were truly groundbreaking and had so many firsts that were denounced as gimmicks but later found their way into competitors' devices and suddenly became must have features.
When LG had a removeable battery, I thought they were onto something. It was the beginning of something great and then, they went down hill.
@@fearless6947 I loved my G5, but the way they did it was honestly horrible. the "chin" was not a great design at all.
Lg really did make some cool stuff, the lg wing is still a dream phone for me to own one day
I've loved every LG phone I've had. They're always quirky and different, not afraid to try something new. I didn't like the back-buttons at first, but they really grew on me. I'm sad other phones didn't adopt that feature.
Yup. Loved my V30. Borderline perfect feature set.
These changes were definitely motivated by profit. Removing access to the the battery, headphone jack, getting rid of the charging bring being included in the phone packaging.. I'd love to see how this plays out in the next few years.
It was motivated by profit, and assisted by consumers. People demand thinner and sleeker looking phones and the easy path for manufacturers to achieve it, is to cram everything together with adhesives. With the first phones of this design, consumers didn't complain enough or just bought those phones anyway, so manufacturers continued that practice and now we're here.
Of course manufacturers take the path with largest profits if you let them, that's why every consumer should support the "right to repair", it gives control back to consumers to say "hey, we don't like you doing this, find a better solution".
To be fair removing the headphone Jack ended up being good because it caused Wireless headphones to exponentially improve. Now you can buy wireless buds for $2, less finicky than wires within only 7 years.
Battery technology however hasn’t changed in 40 years (still stuck on llithium battery)…
@@theanonymouschicken169Sorry but i like to have audio without having to charge my headphones every 8 hours, so i still use wired headphones (i also use my wired headset with wireless compatibility and the best of both worlds, recent bluetooth headphones doesn't work with my psvita sadly 😅)
charger not being packed in is not too bad, because you don't need a million cables and chargers of the same type. Which is why the EU have made it so there needs to be a universal charging standard, USB-C at the moment. So it doesn't matter if you don't get one supplied, you can just use what you already have.
@@FunnyParadox most humans don't use headphones for 8 hours straight, so charging them is a non-issue. If you're special, then that's a bummer for you, but then it's clearly so important to you, so you can just prioritize a headphones jack over anything else and buy a phone that has it, because they still exist.
Anti Consumer from some brands, and Design Aesthetics from others... ... (On a certain smart-phone, ) the motherboard was placed in a Faraday Cage, and the cable to the screen was not with any ZIF brackets that could be unhooked...
Removable battery was the NORM 20 years ago. It's absolutely insane to me that we reached a point where we celebrate return to normalcy.
even the norm just 10 years ago
I had the LG G5 which had the slide battery. It actually ruined the phone. The battery swelled and messed up the phone. In two years time I went through 3 batteries. The replaceable batteries are lower end and have problems
Up until about 5 years ago, I always had phones with user replaceable batteries, my last one was a Galaxy Note 4, after that phone broke finding a new phone with a replaceable battery was next to impossible. I am 100% sure it was a case of planned obsolescence, how else can they continue to ask over $1,000 for a new phone? Coincidentally, when they took away replaceable batteries, they also raised the prices to $1,000 and higher.
they could afford it because the demand rose after that yeah.
it's more of a gullible thing than an obsolete thing. It's not so much getting people to pay $1,000 for each new model, but the fact that people shell out $1,000 for each new model when first they can't afford it anyway, and second, each new model is not even an improvement on the previous model, but it almost always has less features and is less repairable. If people would just factory reset their old phone instead of buying a new one, the old one is just as fast in most cases, and sometimes is better having features that are gone from new ones.
@@darrylkinslow5613that's only true for some cases, not for the phones where there was already extensive battery degradation (always kept at 100% or always severely depleted below 40% and/or kept/used in hot ambient temperature places) or when Apple secretly throttled computing power to "protect consumers" by making their older batteries last longer.
Thing is even with the few phones still on the market with a removable battery like my Alcatel Glimpse running Android 10 GO Edition I keep as a backup/hiking phone, the specs are not great, and at least for this Alcatel model finding a new battery has been next to impossible(same for my Alcatel KaiOS flip phone I bought to mess around with), and I'm wondering if manufactures will artificially limit the spare batteries they keep in stock, and also limit the amount of time they will keep them in stock, thus leading consumers to lower quality 3rd party batteries that can sometimes be sus, or they will just giving up, and end buying a new phone when they really don't need too, thus leading to not much of a change in things.
The note 4 is what pushed me to downgrade to a flip phone. The fact a company can deny anything wrong, despite nearly 80% of users having battery issues (THEY LITERALLY BLEW UP!) And outright REFUSED to support their customers was the last straw for me.
Remember the days when brands were proud of their craftsmanship and tried to make their products last as long as possible? LV suitcases anyone? Well those days are over and everything lasts shorter and shorter.
One great example is desk lamps. Something simple that everyone has and probably use the most without realizing it. Back in the day, I can change out the lightbulbs no problem. I had a floor lamp that lasted 15 years and died of old age and rusting. My ikea desk lamp lasted for 10 years with 2 bulb changes. Then I got a Philips lamps (it was the only brand I recognized in the store) At first it lasted quite long, 9 years with a bulb change in between (there was only one on/off button). Then it died and I got another Philips lamp which was LED and was touch sensitive. It lasted only 2 years, then the 3 subsequent Philips lamps (all touch sensitive) lasted for: 2, 1, 2 years in that order. Are you seeing what's happening? The 5 lamps were all Philips but their lifespan have become shorter and shorter. I mean, yeah, the LED lamps are way brighter but they also last a lot shorter simply because I couldn't change the lightbulb AND because they were all touch sensitive. The worst part is, even when I wanted to get a light bulb desk lamp, I COULDN'T because they no longer make it anymore or the shops I go to just no longer sell them. Isn't that exactly the same as smart phones? Theses manufacturers are making conscious decisions to phase out stuff that last longer and making stuff that last shorter.
*I DO TAILORING* I have a 1929 communist-era 7kg tailoring iron. The electrical connector broke - I walked 400m to the hardware shop and bought a new one for $2
In the west we were told the communists were backward and stupid - no, they just had a very VERY different philosophy, they wanted things to last and be repairable.
they cant fleece us for all our income if they gave us quality products
Water in our whiskey
@@piccalillipit9211 So communism good-ish
Once I helped the girl of my best friend transporting a 22+ year old (second- to fith hand) washing machine she purchased. I would never have bought that old, loud, ugly thing, but she just wanted to finish this point on her todo-list quickly. It served the couple and a lot of other people (Travel&work guests) another 12-15 years. Was a "Miele" but thats not important, because they dont produce machines that good anymore since decades. Nobody does.
The battery in my Samsung S6 outlasted the usability of the phone. Some key apps will not run because they don't support the version of Android that I am stuck with because Samsung stopped updating. Replaceable batteries should go hand-in-hand with a requirement to provide updates or for apps to be backward compatible.
I would love to see replaceable batteries for e-bikes down to phones and watches. Cars i think should use a shop or such... I wonder how this will work with structural battery packs.
I think it will be a fight between replaceable and cost to make it replaceable. Yes I remember carrying a spare battery for my phone. normally it was the original battery after it had lost some of its life.
yes I want right to repair. and yes i can see why in many cases manufactures try to limit components of combine them.
Yes i have replaced the battery in my Ipod3color 4 times now. and yep that was tricky to do.