Quote from: mixedfish on August 14, 2023, 03:17:08I think by now there is a sizeable market that just simply doesn't care about something is repairable or right to repair.
On a completely different note I picked up a used 13" i7 Dell for $250 last week. Bought a new battery and now I have something that I paid peanuts for with 13hour battery life. That's really how society needs to treat eWaste but instead we choose to pay $1000+ to make more waste.
The thing is - a lot of used equipment floating around is refurbished by third parties. Someone buys equipment in bulk. Repairs if needed by replacing components. That repair includes swapping components from donor machines. It is quite possible to buy a water-damaged laptop and take it's screen and place it onto another laptop that had it's screen damaged.
Manufacturers can outright kill this industry. And Apple has done it on many occasions by simply limiting parts availability. This artificial limit simply makes devices in-repairable by third parties. And it is cost prohibitive to repair by apple (sometimes apple would quote repair costs that are higher than a new product).
I've personally fixed two laptops by replacing their motherboards extending life for those machines.
We should absolutely care about right to repair.