• @arkonis
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    131 year ago

    You don’t ever really ‘need to use’ the waterproof feature on your phone. It’s more insurance for most people.

    I have personally known dozens of people for who’m it’s saved their phone including:

    • Dropped it in the toilet.
    • Dropped in pool.
    • Dropped it in the bath.
    • Bag flooded when water bottle broke.
    • Flooded when coffee cup failed.
    • Rained out.
    • Pouring rain on a bike ride.
    • Pouring rain when needed GPS on motorcycles.

    The above are things that happened both to people I know individually and also all of the above have happened to be at some point.

    I don’t necessarily like the lack of being able to swap out the batteries for a cheap replacement but I do like that waterproofing to a high degree should be a default feature for things like phones. It could be argued to get waterproof cases or keep it in a bag and that’s all good and well (except the waterproof cases as they suck and break) but isn’t it nice for the default to be that the device itself is waterproof if that was an option?

    • @BanggerRang
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      01 year ago

      Manufacturers have options to coat the boards in a rubber-like coating - this makes it much less likely to short out, if it gets wet. Like stated above, that with used in conjunction with gaskets, these devices are pretty darn watertight even with replaceable/removable batteries.