All smartphones, including iPhones, must have replaceable batteries by 2027 in the EU::undefined

4 points

Thank fucking god for the EU, for fighting for global digital rights where nobody else does.

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1 point

Apple in 2027: This is not a battery, it’s a…umm … Ultra High Density Low Current Super Capacitor.

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1 point

EU: Ok, then in addition to that UHDLCSC you also need a removable battery.

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1 point

Yay! Another dongle!

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1 point

The fact that some of the gen Z crowd think it will be horrible have forgotten that it was much easier to carry 2 batteries and swap them out vs carrying a charger and cable with you everywhere. Pop in the new battery, power it on and carry on with you now full battery phone. Being tethered to a wall so you can have 10% from 20 minutes of charging is crazy.

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1 point
*

I used to do this. I thought it was awesome but I was literally the only person I ever knew who did this. It was not a popular thing to do.

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0 points

Not a bad idea but there are flaws and this also doesn’t seem to address the issue of pricing or availability.

  • So you can remove the battery, will you be able to buy one.
  • They could prevent 3rd parties from making batteries that work.
  • They could just not sell battery replacements.
  • They could add more parts needed, like seals, screws that strip too easily, that annoying sticky tape etc.
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0 points

They could start selling tiers of battery quality which TBH sounds awful if they make the best battery life duration paywalled.

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0 points

Making them easily replaceable will create a market, a better one than we have today, almost any battery you can buy today as end-user are trash-tier.

Quality 3rd party batteries will rise up if the phone manufacturers fuck around.

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0 points

We already have regulations about spare parts availability and pricing for some devices (mainly household appliances) - and it is planned to slowly enforce regulation for other device types over time. They’ll watch the market, and if apple decides to be stupid that’ll come pretty quickly.

Just like with the appliances where some vendors had their shops ready way before regulation we already have some phone vendors prepare for that - like Nokia selling some spares via ifixit. So if apple decides to play stupid games it’ll be up against vendors that’ll be completely fine pushing regulation through quickly as hurting apple will only benefit them.

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0 points

Just like with the appliances where some vendors had their shops ready way before regulation we already have some phone vendors prepare for that - like Nokia selling some spares via ifixit. So if apple decides to play stupid games it’ll be up against vendors that’ll be completely fine pushing regulation through quickly as hurting apple will only benefit them.

You mean like Apple’s Self Service Repair, which has been available for a few years now?…

https://support.apple.com/self-service-repair

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0 points

You mean like Apple’s Self Service Repair, which has been available for a few years now?…

Sure, if you call 1.3 years a few years…

Here’s the press release dated 2022-04-27

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0 points

Why just batteries?

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0 points

With more context it makes sense. It isn’t just smartphone batteries, but lots of consumer electronics. Phones, tablets, cameras, ebikes/scooters/cars. And other parts of the legislation are focused on battery recycling targets for long-term sustainability.

From another article on the resolution:

All electric vehicle and rechargeable industrial batteries above 2kWh will need to have a compulsory carbon footprint declaration, label, and digital passport.

The parliament also passed new targets for collecting waste and recovering materials from old batteries.

They’re targeting batteries (first) because they use so much lithium and other relatively rare metals, and having so many batteries up in landfills is not only terrible pollution when they leech into water and stuff, but it’s just not compatible with our current and foreseeable dependence on lithium battery tech.

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