There are over 24,000 unique Android smartphone and tablet devices for sale currently, your sample size is a single phone purchased from one company.
Fine, show us a phone from 2017 that can't run modern apps.
Thanks to the new regulation, they can be.
Hmmm yes I love the assumption that I have zero experience and technical know how with electronic products and multiple operating systems. Do go on!
I base that assumption on your comments. I'm happy to accept that you know your things about Android phones, but so far, you've shown the contrary by demonstrating your belief that they're unusable without software updates, and that they don't last 5 years for that reason, which is completely wrong.
Plenty of people take their cars to mechanics for those basic things though, you're assuming a much broader technical know how for the population that does not exist. Your example does not make any sense either because the hood already does the sealing. As such the company would have to provide enough data showing the consumer why they should spend money on their solution as opposed to others available on the market.
If you take your car to a mechanic to top up your washer fluid, that's on you because
you don't have to. It's your choice - and that's the point! I like having that choice and deciding for myself. And no, the hood doesn't seal anything as long as you pop it open by pulling a latch, which is pretty much the same thing you do on any device with changeable batteries. It's even included in the user's manual as a normal operation.
I dont compare electronics blindly across the board. Transistor count, pcb population, and form factor matter.
That's got nothing to do with the topic at hand.
Most people today are like yourself, talks the talk but does not walk the walk.
What walk? See my comment above. I'd much rather have a sealed phone than no phone at all, but if I have a choice, I'll have one with a changeable battery. Smartphones are good, but having that choice is even better. There's no walk to be walked here.
No one said profit equals progress though, free markets merely dictate winners and losers with people making the decision using their wallets. Why do you think Intel magically started producing 4+ core parts after Ryzen dropped? Competition breeds innovation and who wins is decided by who buys their product.
Well, phone manufacturers don't seem to be competing on the serviceability front, that's for sure. And when there's no competition on a free market, the only question is how much does the consumer lose. A lot, or even more? Because the consumer is always the loser unless we have regulations in place to protect them.
You continue to miss the point. No one is forcing you to buy the $70 game.
That's right, and I'm not buying any game for such price. But please, do try to live a normal life without a smartphone, just for a month. I dare you!
Staying with the game analogy, you seem to be thinking that sealed smartphones are like a shit game to me that I bought and now I'm complaining. In fact, they're more like a fine game with a not so pleasing ending, that I enjoyed playing, but now that they're making a new ending, I'm even happier.
Right because a 1030gt will age the same as a 1080ti (sarcasm)
I have a 1030 that I use for playing videos in a HTPC, and it's doing just fine, thanks.
![Wink ;) ;)](https://tpucdn.com/forums/data/assets/smilies/wink-v1.gif)
See my point above: how well a part ages is hugely determined by what you use it for.
It's a win if you want it because a company has a phone with that feature for sale for you to buy. It's a loss to actively make every smartphone product conform to said standards.
Whose loss is it? Yours?
You do have a choice you just choose to not exercise it. Blaming others for your own shortcomings isnt everyone else's fault.
I also have a choice of jumping out of the window, that I'd rather not exercise if possible. You're very funny, indeed. (sarcasm - see my point above for a normal answer)
Edit: I'm not blaming anyone for anything. I'm just welcoming a new regulation that will make phone maintenance as easy as it used to be merely a decade ago. That's all.