I have a feeling they’re gonna charge like $200 to $400 more then blame the regulators.

  • @halcyoncmdr
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    522 hours ago

    They’ll make them replaceable and ignore waterproofing them for 99% of models citing the added difficulty in making a good seal without being able to glue it shut. Which is arguably true. It’s possible, but more difficult to design and much more likely to fail.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashedOP
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      321 hours ago

      They’ll make them replaceable and ignore waterproofing them for 99% of models citing the added difficulty in making a good seal without being able to glue it shut. Which is arguably true.

      Take a look at Samsung Galaxy XCover 6 Pro

      it’s still in production and being sold lol

      • @halcyoncmdr
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        421 hours ago

        I never said it was impossible. I said it was harder to both make them replaceable and water resistant. And they won’t bother to do both for 99% of models, they’ll just drop the water resistance to comply with replaceable battery requirements. There might be a few that they bother and then sell at inflated prices.

      • @[email protected]
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        221 hours ago

        That’s a ruggedized phone, most people don’t want a phone that’s twice as thick and doesn’t provide anywhere near twice the battery.

    • @[email protected]
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      118 hours ago

      I don’t know why waterproofing phones became de facto standard. How often will that waterproofing actually come to use?

      • @halcyoncmdr
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        517 hours ago

        Having worked in retail phone repair for 15 years, both for a major US carrier and privately… A lot.

        I saw water damaged phones every single day, and I’m hundreds of miles from an ocean, sea, lake, or any major body of water. That’s just from mistakes near things like backyard pools.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 hours ago

        This is because waterproof devices will be might be exempt from having to have replaceable batteries.

        Some manufacturers are already eyeing an exemption for batteries used in “wet conditions” to opt out electric toothbrushes and possibly wearables like earbuds and smartwatches. The exemption is “based on unfounded safety claims,” states Thomas Opsomer, policy engineer for iFixit, in RepairEU’s post.

        Source

      • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashedOP
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        14 hours ago

        Rain is quite common. Most clothing isn’t waterproof.

        Or you could be making a call after a rainy day then drop it in a puddle.

        Or your drinks spilled over

        etc… etc…

        • luluu
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          116 hours ago

          There’s a difference between waterproof and rainproof. The Fairphone (just has a clip on back panel for easy access to the battery) is rain proof