• @ocassionallyaduck
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    22 hours ago

    Nope. I quit their Google bullshit ages ago. Moto 360 was a brutal betrayal.

    Get a withings scanwatch or something that is “dumb” enough to be an excellent and nice looking watch, hugely long battery life, and has all the health features that matter.

    It looks sharply professional, I charge it once a month, and the updates for it don’t constantly make it run worse to push features in a different part of their product line…

  • @militaryintelligence
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    74 hours ago

    Make parts available. Right to repair isn’t wholly about designing products a certain way, but not allowing apple to monopolize certain parts.

      • @Static_Rocket
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        6 hours ago

        We’ll have a timeline for the plan to make the plan by next quarter

  • umami_wasabi
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    5 hours ago

    Actually, how hard can it be? My old cheap ass Casio can have its battery replaced and waterproof already.

    Sure, smartwatches have more bells and whistles but not as complicated as a mechanical watch, right?

    • Dark Arc
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      65 hours ago

      Not as complicated, but the parts are bigger. Few would want an even bigger smart watch just to get repairability.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        just make it easily repairable by third stores with minimally qualified people and cheap tools, like digital watches already were and are. Or, make a full collecting and recycling tax to be paid by those uncaring clients.

        • @grue
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          14 hours ago

          Or, make a full collecting and recycling tax to be paid by those uncaring clients.

          No, that’s not good enough. “Right to repair” is kind of an unfortunate name, because it really shouldn’t be just about repair. My property rights include a right to modify, too, and letting manufacturers off the hook by doing first-party replacements instead of facilitating work by third-parties is not sufficient to protect that right!