nahoku
Well-known member
- Jan 26, 2013
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Built in obsolescence is not that the battery will suffer that much in a year. It means that after a while the battery will for sure be no where what it used to be, and the user can't readily swap it out because it's built in. On this forum, there are tons of posts about batteries not lasting and yet you try to make light of this fact with your comments. Batteries wear and lose capacity, that's a fact. I'm not saying the manufactures are building/designing these phones with failure in mind. Are you joking? Its just fact that the batteries will suffer from use, and since it's built in... once that happens the phone becomes useless. How many early Prisms (Toyota) are still on the road today? How many suffer from short cycle times? Not everything new is the "best" just because that's all that's offered.
Some of you just don't understand where any of us are coming from. You pretend to, (not very well!), but in the end, your view of the issue is clouded. It's understandable since a removable battery is not something you care about.
Yes, it's a benefit for Samsung, and other manufactures, because Cash is King. There is no benefit to users.The removable battery is 100% a cost/benefits issue - and the costs far outweigh the benefits according to Samsung's data of how people use phones.
The S6 and Note 5 was a test... I doubt very much Lollipop had anything to do with it. You actually believe Samsung worked/designed these phones in the one year prior to release? In fact, the Note 5 was released only 10 months after the Note 4, so you want everyone to believe they designed all the parts, manufactured them, tested them, built the phones... all within 10 months and left out the SD because of LP? My 30+ years of electrical engineering tends to disagree. Right now, I'm guessing the Note 9 and 10 are already on the drawing board... if not in some stage of production! The S6 and Note 5 were the first models to not have a removable battery and SD card. They didn't know how it would go over so didn't even bother to release the Note 5 in the UK.The S6 and Note 5 lost SD cards for two reasons. 1. SD card support was broken in Lollipop and they hadn't solved fixing it yet
Conspiracy theory? You're joking right? This is how you view what's going on? Oh... we'll just call it a conspiracy theory and it'll go away! Nice try! Samsung and all the other manufactures are in it for the money. That's what business is all about and if you think they're thinking of you, well, that's a conspiracy theory too... or more accurately, a delusion. The only thing the manufactures are thinking of is what can they offer to capture your business. You might think that your perception is correct and that it "can help"... but, do you think we need help?Here's the thing that needs to be pushed into the foundation of analyzing phones: No OEM's are sabotaging user experiences. Every single one of them is making a list of priorities of what the best things they can do within their budget and hardware constraints (size, shape, what products are available, etc) can be and trying to get the maximum number of things from that list into the device. If what you want isn't on that list ... they're not doing anything to you or anything against you; it's just that the best device they could create within their constraints includes priorities other than your personal priorities. The constraints vary based on the pricing and market of the device. That's important too. And in some cases, there just isn't enough time or money or space in a device to have all the critical items and choices have to be made... and there are trade-offs that have to be weighed to make those decisions. But at the end of the day... Every OEM is trying to make the best device possible within their constraints. If you start looking at every phone from that perspective, a lot of the conspiracy theories and comments about ulterior motives fall away and you're left with a better understanding of what their vision of the market consists of. I think that perspective can help.
Some of you just don't understand where any of us are coming from. You pretend to, (not very well!), but in the end, your view of the issue is clouded. It's understandable since a removable battery is not something you care about.