Paradroid01
Well-known member
- Jul 5, 2015
- 121
- 0
- 0
But I believe planned obsolescence is a real thing.
It really is not, at least in the idea that companies plan on having their products break down on a specific date or have some built in universal kill switch.
So, you want people to shut up. So how many dead Notes does it take to make you think there's something wrong?
They have a technical excuse for everything. It's NOT a major problem but there are a percentage of people that experienced it. Just because you've never experienced it doesn't mean the problem doesn't exist and then try to debunk the "myth" with your research. Maybe stop explaining and defending and understand it's an issue some people faced, though your phone right now works fine, cool, but there are people's phone that is about to be trashed due to a silly OS update. I have a close friend that is the biggest Note 4 fan ever, yet alone Samsung.
They have a technical excuse for everything. It's NOT a major problem but there are a percentage of people that experienced it. Just because you've never experienced it doesn't mean the problem doesn't exist and then try to debunk the "myth" with your research. Maybe stop explaining and defending and understand it's an issue some people faced, though your phone right now works fine, cool, but there are people's phone that is about to be trashed due to a silly OS update. I have a close friend that is the biggest Note 4 fan ever, yet alone Samsung.
No the worse thing, by far, is people inventing wild stories to explain away events that are perfectly reasonably explained without the need for tall tales and hyperbole.Even if you don't believe in these so called conspiracy theories, the planned obsolescence is already here: carrier contracts, choice of fragile materials, non removable batteries, limited and limiting software updates, yearly phone releases etc. The worst thing is: people accept this without even starting to think.
Who is this guy who was sentenced to five years in jail btw?No the worse thing, by far, is people inventing wild stories to explain away events that are perfectly reasonably explained without the need for tall tales and hyperbole.
Are we about to be introduced to your red herring?Who is this guy who was sentenced to five years in jail btw?
Because the emmc is a flash memory, not a mechanical memory like normal HDD. So it doesn't completely fail in one go.Some guy found a temp fix for this!!
https://forums.androidcentral.com/s...c-problem-how-long-will-live.html#post5954651
Doesn't make sense, if it was hardware related, why does it work now after he did some modding on his own? Still stand with my original statement...
Because the emmc is a flash memory, not a mechanical memory like normal HDD. So it doesn't completely fail in one go.
This is most apparent in failing memory cards. I've had 2 fail on me, and over 10 years of mobile phone forum participation has shown me the usual symptoms. Generally the phones goes a bit slower than it used to, then there are times with software glitching when trying to access the card, especially from a sleep state. One of my secondary phones, a Galaxy V for work, had the symptom of the icons of apps transferred to memory card suddenly becoming greed droids and telling me the app was inaccessible after waking the device up from sleep. And it would be fixed by a reboot.
In the situation given above, it was described that when he does manage to turn it on, it works until it is placed into sleep where the emmc fail starts. This is because the initial power burst from turning in jolts the emmc to wake up. However once it holds a steady low power state, it becomes unable to wake up due to inherent issues. In that case the most likely reason for the failure to read/write is the connection between the emmc module and the mother board. Could be some wear on the gold connectors. Kind of similar to having the need for some old cables to be folded in a specific way for it to work. An ideal example would be an old cable that when you initially use it to connect to a PC, it works, but after a while it suddenly doesn't allow the phone to be detected, and you'd need to unplug/plug, or play with how it's folded.
In an ideal world where the emmc would not be soldered to the board, you could replace this like replacing RAM on a PC. The solution of keeping a wakelock on it is working as a temporary patch up wherein the worn connectors are kept hot and connected by continuous energy flow taking advantage of the module being jolt awake by initial power surge.
However I could give his solution about a possible additional of one year of use before it finally breaks down, as long as the device isn't regularly turned on and off a lot. That's just off the top of my head. You generally see failure symptoms on flash memory go on for months before they becomes actually unreadable no matter what you do. Sometimes, even if a card becomes unreadable on a cellphone, due to the higher power state in a computer, it will still be read on a PC.
It's all about the power state of the phone.
The only possible explanation I can have for possibly laying it on the Samsung update is that thr update featured improvements on sleep power management like Doze or something similar. If you have a failing memory module, the only way to keep it open is to have always a high power flow into it. However Doze and other similar power saving tricks decrease the flow to certain components, including the emmc module to save power. This is similar to the standby state on laptops where the HDD spinning is turned off after half an hour. This introduction of better power management works fine on phones with new or still viable memory. But if your emmc module is already failing before you got this update, then it contributes to it. So in essence an update may have triggered the final demise, but it's already dying before it happened.
Not specifically Samsung phones, but rather specifically the Note 4. Could simply the a quality of emmc modules used in that particular model unit. I don't have a Note 4, but as I said, I have Samsung devices older than the Note 4 which are running well. In a scenario where there is planned obsolecense, my Tab P6200 which is 5 years older than a Note 4 should be obsolete, but it's still being used as my mom's primary tablet for music, surfing, and games.Great explanation, though why specifically Samsung phones? I have an old iPhone 4 and LG Optimus Fuel from 2014 as well, I use the LG as my daily music streamer and alarm clock. I haven't had 1 issue with it, hasn't shown signs of dying yet. My Samsung laptop is from 2013, runs brand spanking new (windows update turned off bc it kept slowing down my PC, had to factory reset). I would assume computers would take more abuse than phones in terms of usage and heat generation.
Rooted phones have the means to block updates. I have a rooted, old GN3 that's running an older OS. Rooting will void the warranty, but I'm fine with that.
Also, if you purchase your phone with an Amex card, Amex extends the warranty by a year. I think other credit cards offer this was well. So if your phone breaks outside of the warranty period, Amex covers repair costs for an additional year.