SO. MUCH. THIS.

  • @[email protected]
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    161 year ago

    How many people are actually getting a new phone every year? I don’t think I’m poor but maybe I am? Everyone I know keeps their phones for at least a few years and then replaces them when they are no longer functional.

    Still. Every 3 years feels like too often, but that’s around the time things stop working - likely due to planned obsolescence and updates designed to make older phones work worse.

    Should we really blame the consumer for replacing something the manufacturer designed to break after a short time? What’s something else you pay $1500+ for that is useless 3 years later?

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      I know a few folks who do, but most of them have a hand-me-down cycle they follow. I get a new phone every 2-3 years and hand the old phone down to a friend or family member with something older.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Same here, but I have teens. Parents get new phones every 2-4 years, teens get “new-ish” phones with new batteries. Apple supports their phones about 6 years, so we have them the full supported life and get a little money back on trade-in. Hardware is pretty obsolete by then, so I wouldn’t want to keep them longer

        New batteries have been reasonably priced and easy to get done. We spend a little more for better cases so the phones usually last, however replacing a screen means replacing the phone

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Don’t bother with cases and just get AppleCare+.

          A glass screen protector is £20-30, replacing the display under AC is £25.

          A decent case like a Mous one is £50. Replacing the device under AC is £79.

          Plus the phone looks nicer, temps are better, and it’s less cases being manufactured.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              I don’t think you understand. I am not paying for them.

              I have AC+.

              Either you buy high quality screen protectors for your £1000 device or you don’t bother. The same for cases. Mous for instance are extremely durable, but not as good value as AC.

              I’m 12 months in and not had a claim but best believe before the two year mark my phone WILL have an incident and for £79 I get a replacement with a new battery and all.

              Or I could buy a case that holds no value, my phone can still break and then it’ll cost me more money. Than just having insurance which is guaranteed to make me whole again.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 year ago

                I fully understand what you’re saying, I just don’t agree with you on the value. You are ignoring good value cases and screen protectors, inflating the costs there, then not factoring in the initial $200 (or whatever it is in your local) of buying AC+ and only looking at the deductible.

                I’m glad it works for you, but I don’t think your numbers are sound or agree with you conclusion.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  That’s fair.

                  Just to add the extra info, I pay £9.99 per month for apple care.

                  Say I buy a case for £5 and a screen protector for £5 and I break my screen. I’m now out of£10 and the price of a new display, last time I looked it was £189, likely more these day.

                  So that one break costs more than the whole year of AC plus the excess.

                  Are you saying that if you have a case then you’re never going to break your phone?

                  Sure I could have a year without breaking it, but as I said after two I will break it on purpose to get my monies work and have a brand new (refurbished to new standards) handset.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    11 year ago

                    Your original argument was that you’d reduce the amount of cases being manufactured and now you’re talking about purposefully breaking your phone to get your money’s worth.

                    You’re paying £120 a year plus for something that might happen, plus a deductible if it does. I’ve never broken a smart phone screen and I’ve always had a cheap Spigen case, so your numbers make no sense to me and are a waste of money. But that’s me, if you’re hard on your phones or are constantly breaking screens then maybe it makes sense for you, only you can say.

                    Again, you do you. I’m just writing this for other people that might see your original comment and think it’s the best choice financially.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          When it’s my kids, no. I have some family members that will pay me a little bit for devices I pass off, and while I’m not particularly financially set, I do well enough for myself, that I can sometimes eat the cost if I know, it’s gonna benefit someone who couldn’t buy themselves a new phone as often as I can pass it off.