Submitted by shanoshamanizum t3_11bgvlw in Futurology
Surur t1_j9xtco5 wrote
Can you give us some concrete examples so we can have a better discussion about value, pros and cons?
GenoPax t1_j9xv1s7 wrote
Good question that completely went over his head.
Emotional-Wrangler75 t1_j9ym30x wrote
My grandmother's floor model television lasting 45 years, versus flat screen television built at the height of human technological development, lasts 5.
Surur t1_j9ymcyt wrote
> versus flat screen television built at the height of human technological development, lasts 5.
I wish it lasted 5 years, since then I would have a reason to replace it, but we know that is not really the case, is it. Flat screen TVs last ages.
robotatomica t1_ja2ejf9 wrote
yeah, I was considering a second tv for a workout space and measured my model, it was an odd size for Samsung - turns out my tv’s almost 10 years old. Still looks great!
[deleted] t1_ja0sxog wrote
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PublicFurryAccount t1_j9zy4io wrote
Televisions were way more expensive back then, though, and advances in CRTs was really slow. So you needed it to last a long time to justify the purchase, even for a middle class family, and you could expect that it wouldn't really be behind newer televisions for many years because it took a long time for any significant changes to arrive.
mhornberger t1_ja3pzyu wrote
> Televisions were way more expensive back then, though, and advances in CRTs was really slow
Reddit generally has trouble accepting that a) prices have gone down, and 2) products have improved. We want stuff for dirt cheap but also think that if it wasn't for "greed" then things would last basically forever, like the survivorship-bias outlier examples of our relative's washing machine, refrigerator, or television.
PublicFurryAccount t1_ja4flu3 wrote
Oh for sure.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9xtrh1 wrote
Gladly just let me know what kind of examples do you need?
Surur t1_j9xu57t wrote
Products with built-in obsolescence.
How those products can be changed.
Bierculles t1_j9yptap wrote
Coffee machines have a built in counter that turns them off after a set numbers of coffees. Officially it is for quality reasons but you can easily get twice as many coffees out of a machine withoput a drop in quality. You can reset the counters if you know how, it's not that hard.
Surur t1_j9yrtkb wrote
I think you need to name and shame.
Bierculles t1_j9yt4tx wrote
Oh broh, it's been a decade since then, i don't know if this is even a thing anymore. Sorry i do not remember, it was just a teacher of mine who showed us the trick on his coffee machine, no idea what brand it was, but certainly a cheap one.
PublicFurryAccount t1_j9zyw73 wrote
Searching around, it looks like it wasn't planned obsolescence but malfunctions in various sensors. This was pretty common a decade ago as "smart" was just starting; it was a slapped-on feature that wasn't engineered well.
Pecheuer t1_ja1vy6l wrote
No fucking way, I knew something happened to my machine.
Legit one day it just stopped working on me, I pulled it apart, put it back together, there was nothing wrong with it, it just stopped working. Fucking cunts
RideRunClimb t1_ja0h5ez wrote
My microwave is in the process of dying the exact same way as my previous one. The latches on the door slowly wear grooves into the plastic they run over to latch. At first the door starts sticking and won't close and open properly. Then it stops latching altogether and becomes unusable. Both microwaves were purchased from Costco, I don't remember if they're the same brand.
The fact that this has happened on two microwaves in less than 6 years makes me consider that it's planned obsolescence. Of course I will try to repair the latches myself, but this could easily have been avoided had they used metal or even a harder plastic. I'm sure that people in charge of these decisions are informed about how long the products are expected to last.
Surur t1_ja0mjev wrote
I understand microwaves have a finite life in any case due to slow deterioration of the mechanism which produces the microwaves.
The magetron has from 2000 to 8000 hrs of use.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9xua32 wrote
It's all about the business model really and the bi-directional incentives for users and producers. The post is not really about how to make them but rather how to make companies make them.
Consider that companies make cheaper products because of decreasing income of population. They can still make everlasting products but they will cost a lot. So making it half price now and recurring payments based on usage incentives both sides.
Initialised t1_j9xv3zy wrote
Those aren’t examples.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9xvfap wrote
I don't understand. I am not suggesting a product but rather a business model.
Initialised t1_j9xy455 wrote
I can see that in your answers.
There are manufacturing trade offs between competing qualities: affordability, reliability, longevity, modularity, reparability, environmental resistance, recyclability. No one product can score highly in all areas so each has a balance of attributes and the legislation of the market it is sold in.
It’s not as binary as you suggest, most product segments are split into three regions on a sigmoid curve of quality as a function of price.
Budget, Mainstream and Premium.
To suggest that budget products have built in obsolescence by design vs premium is incorrect, they are built to a lower quality so will wear out quicker. Similarly a premium product may seem overpriced, especially in a rapidly evolving product like semiconductors. True value exists in the linear mainstream section where performance and quality goes up linearly with price. This spectrum exist for buyers too,
We already have leasing and subscription based services, Desktop as a Service, mobile phone contracts, vehicle subscriptions, rental properties. These make sense while a technology is evolving but less so for mature products like furniture where we don’t perceive planned obsolescence as problematic.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9xydj9 wrote
Yep, precisely that's mostly about electronics.
Think of it this way - with a warranty you have to prove a product is broken with this model the company needs to prove it's working each year before you make a recurring payment.
Initialised t1_j9y1n1v wrote
That’s just a product as a service model and already exists.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9y1ubg wrote
Not really because when the product fails the responsibility changes from the user proving it's not user damaged to the company proving it's still working to get next payment.
Initialised t1_j9y64h9 wrote
No, if you lease computers when on fails you get a same or next day swap out.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9y747x wrote
Not in Europe.
Initialised t1_j9y77pv wrote
Which company are you leasing with and did you also buy management with hardware monitoring?
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9ycfvp wrote
Leasing here doesn't work that way. You get a leasing on the money not on the laptop. If the laptop is dead you still owe the money to a financial institution.
Initialised t1_j9ydrs3 wrote
I worked for and bought from companies that have lease options in Europe. If a customer has a faulty unit it gets repaired or replaced according to the terms of their SLA unless it’s physical damage. We offer additional tools for device management that can tell when a drive, battery or cooling system might be going bad to proactively target failing machines before end users notice.
The model you propose exists and your last statement is not reflected in how leasing works in Europe.
Again, what are you leasing and who from?
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9yknua wrote
>unless it’s physical damage
[deleted] t1_j9yoamk wrote
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Dry-Influence9 t1_j9xzf6y wrote
You seem to have invented the subscription model and we already have that for many different products. For example in cars you can lease one for a few years and replace it with another new one after the lease is done.
A lot of companies have tried and keep trying to innovate with this type of business model but the public do not seem to like it.
Initialised t1_j9y1sn0 wrote
It has a place, many people’s phones are part of a subscription service, it’s quite common for cars and leased fleets of laptops in large organisations.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9xzxzl wrote
If I lease it it's in warranty. In warranty you have to prove the product failed not the company. This model is reversing that.
Dry-Influence9 t1_j9y0so3 wrote
> In warranty you have to prove the product failed not the company.
what does this mean? I don't get it.
Warranty protects us from factory defects and these cars are designed to survive the warranty period under normal circumstances.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9y0yj1 wrote
I will give you a recent example with a laptop. It ended up with a busted battery. The warranty service claimed it was user damaged. I had to prove it's not. With this model it's the other way around. The company has to prove it's fully functioning in my presence in order to get the next recurring payment. If they can't the plan ends and the device is considered non-functional.
Dry-Influence9 t1_j9y1sl0 wrote
In warranties the burden of proof is on them by law, at least in the US. That doesn't stop companies from doing shady shit like this mate.
The model you propose seems to be the same as leases. Where you can lease a new phone with a mandatory insurance, the insurance replacement.
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9y23oj wrote
Not in Europe, here you have to prove it's not user damaged but you can't open it first. With the lease and insurance model it might still end up as "user-damaged".
PublicFurryAccount t1_j9zzc65 wrote
That's a problem with your warranty laws, not the products.
These kinds of failures are common because most failures are from a bad draw, i.e., a part that has a defect because some percentage of parts does.
Equivalent-Shake-824 t1_j9xv3mf wrote
Could you give an example?
shanoshamanizum OP t1_j9xvgla wrote
This is about an example business model not about a product in mind.
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