• Kelsenellenelvial@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    This is the real answer to me. Often, the premium version is still out there but people go for the budget version anyway. That’s not necessarily a bad thing though. When we can furnish a whole room for what a couple pieces used to cost, that’s a win for a lot of people even if some of those items wear out prematurely. It also depends if we’re talking about a mostly mechanical and utilitarian item, vs something that relies on modern software ecosystems. Toasters haven’t changed much in 40 years, but a 10 year old cell phone is pretty much useless, possibly not working at all with current network technology. Durability is less important when an item becomes technologically obsolete anyway.

    • dreugeworst@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      There may be premium versions that are high quality, but too often the premium version is made with planned obsolescence as well these days. There’s generally no way of knowing if you’re paying extra for quality of for the privilege of showing off the money you spent

      • Kelsenellenelvial@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        Looking for commercial type products and checking the website for parts/manuals can go a long way. Doesn’t always guarantee that those parts will still be available in a decade or two, but it shows the company at least making an effort to support those products. You’re paying up front though, that commercial product can be 5-10x the cost of the equivalent consumer model. Heck, sometimes people still buy those consumer models because it’s a lot easier to justify a $100-$200 price tag every, even if you expect to replace it every few years than $1000+ up front.

        • Tankton
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          9 months ago

          Exactly. As an aquarium hobbyist there is a massive price difference between pumps. Something with the same specs on paper can cost €50 for a cheap brand vs €250 voor a top brand. But the top brand sells parts online and has manuals listing all the parts and serial numbers . They are also available after 20 years and run more quiet and reliable overall. The cheap or nameless pumps are made to throw away when they malfunction, which they do in a few years.

          The nasty part is that there are brands which charge top dollar and pretend to be top but sell you crap anyway