Its also been in an invite beta for a few months so they would have had time to sort out major bugs and security flaws
I deleted my Reddit app(to stop habit browsing) and am now using Mlem(via TestFlight) and the only way I’m finding communities is by going through the all tab and refinding communities I joined in Reddit so if they keep posting then I might find one of the communities I was previously subbed to.
The question is will this new system work like it used to be, as in can you just buy a battery from some seller in china or is it going to be similar to what we have now where the batteries are paired to the device.
The article never said a company like Apple couldn’t pair the battery to the device and charge €100 for it.
The article goes into it a bit but the downside to user replaceable batteries is that they are bigger while not giving more charge, you have to include the plastic casings to ensure that they aren’t damaged when being pulled out or dropped or thrown in bags so you do end up with a thicker device and while some devices may allow a hotswap if the phone is plugged into a charger that’s not guaranteed.
I also question the viability of it leaving the EU market, take Apple for example, they already make a different model for the US market and a different model for the china market and a different model for the international market for the 12,13, and 14 lines, they could just make it a Europe only model as it will likely effect the design of the phone in some ways. USB-C I can see coming to all models as it’s something that doesn’t affect the design as much and it’s already on their other devices. But we’ll have to see.
At this point I’d say for any skilled repair person replacing a phone battery shouldn’t be too hard but I guess this can make it easier. For the iPhone 14 lineup you heat up then remove the display, pull the battery pull tabs, life the battery and put in the new one then reseal the display and your good.
While having easy to swap user replaceable batteries seems nice on paper I worry it will lead to chunkier devices. I’m more in favor of right to repair, or basically requiring the parts such as batteries and displays have to be available to everyone including third parties at a reasonable price and ensuring that third parties can actually do the repairs without having to say call up a customer support line to recalibrate the battery(ie pair it to the device); cough couch, apple self service repair.
*disclosure; I’m a certified Apple partner repair technician and as such my view point may be skewed.
The rainy day(that will never come) project
I’ll be honest, kind of thought it might take a bit longer before I’d see screenshots of other Lemmy posts. Don’t know why I’m surprised.
The iPad app has been broken in “more space mode” for over 9 months now and makes it essentially impossible to use, the original comment would be left then a response on the right then another response on the left then a new comment on the right and there’s no way to tell it’s a new comment thread. The official Reddit app is the only app I’ve come across that’s been broken in “more space mode”.