Sneezy McGlassface

Aro/Ace

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  • 28 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • Well, there are some significant negatives to a powerbank solution.

    • Charging from a powerbank takes a long time. Swapping a battery for fully charged one can be done in half a minute.
    • You need to make sure the cables stay connected. How many times did you have phone on charge in a backpack for an hour, only to find out it wasn’t charging because the connection got a little loose?
    • Each charge cycle reduces lifetime of the battery. If you have two batteries to swap between, you effectively double the overall lifetime.

    And of course, when (not if) the battery dies, you can replace it at your leisure, instead of searching for a repair shop in the case of phone being glued shut. Battery is pretty much the only perishable component in your phone. If you keep your phone safe from falling or drowning, it can work just fine for decades. But the battery will need to be replaced one day, regardless of how careful you are. You also wouldn’t need to pay the extra service fee if you can open the phone and put the new battery in yourself.










  • Remember that consumers expect certain things from smartphones nowadays, which will mean that OEMs can’t just go back to the old way of doing things. An IP68 rating would be very difficult to obtain while still offering a premium-feeling device with an easily replaceable battery, for example. These are hurdles OEMs will need to get over to be in compliance.

    this is straight-up BS. there were many phones with ip68 and user-replacable batteries back when sealing the battery in a phone was frowned upon. not all but many.








  • You don’t need to make account on other instances. The whole point of fediverse is that the instances are all interconnected. You can talk to people from anywhere and post anywhere too, and it will propagate to all the other instances. Like your account is on programming.dev, this post is hosted on lemmy.world, and I’m on lemm.ee, see? It’s all interwoven together, that’s the main strength of it. So you can have communities (sub alternatives) all over. Some will be doubled (like most instances have Main) but you can always see where it’s hosted to know which is which. (sorry if I’m over-explaining it)

    That means if you want to make a community about, for example, 6502 assembly, you make it where you are, and people who are interested in the topic will come and discuss, no matter where their accounts are hosted. It would make sense to have a 6502 assembly community on programming-focused instance but it’s not mandatory. If I were to make a 6502 assembly community, I’d make an account on programming.dev and create the community there for consistency. And give my main account mod status.
    I don’t know if this is the “right” way to go about it but it makes sense to me. I’m happy to be corrected.