I remember, and I’m gen z. And some higher end laptops had two battery slots so you can hot swap the batteries without turning it off.

Those were the days. Everyone talks about how smartphones nowadays get people addicted to instant gratification and convenience, but IMO the ability to swap out the battery when it died was a level of instant convenience we had decades ago that modern devices are severely lacking. Having to tether your phone to a battery bank while on the go is nowhere near as good as just popping the back cover and replacing the battery.

    • Jay
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      156 days ago

      Same with the S4. I still use mine, it’s on it’s third battery now and is running LineageOS.

      • @[email protected]
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        66 days ago

        Same with my old Samsung Note. In addition, you could buy a bulky aftermarket battery that had way more capacity.

        • Jay
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          56 days ago

          Yup, that’s what I did with mine… forget the capacity but it would go 3 or 4 days on a charge. Even came with a thicker back panel on the phone because the original wouldn’t fit.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 hours ago

      Quote from the article:

      Regrettably, a huge opportunity was missed to make all smartphone and tablet batteries removable and replaceable by end-users.

  • @[email protected]
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    55 days ago

    what’s way more angering is the deliberate constant raising of prices. tech is supposed to get better and cheaper at the same time. what was thousands in '06 should be like $100 now. no, a desktop is still supposed to cost north of $1000 without a monitor.

    mentioned it a coupla times, RX 570, a midrange GPU, was introed in 2017 at $170. nowadays, midrange starts at like $700?

    that same year I bought a Redmi Note, a feature rich budget phone from a budget line for $140. nowadays, a comparable Snapdragon model with an insignificant performance and feature jump is $300+.

  • @[email protected]
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    176 days ago

    More than that I remember when you could MOD your phone

    You had some money burning a hole in your pocket and/or were good at tinkering? You could change the casing of your phone, add gaudy flashing LEDs, etc

    Real nerds like me would wire LEDs into circuits on the phone so that when it rang they triggered. Combine that with some of the circuits from the “baby’s first circuits” book and then you have a ring of LEDs around the screen that chase each other like the knight rider car when it rings. You can see them because OF COURSE you swapped the case with translucent plastic like a 1998 N64 or gameboy color. The resale value is now $8

    Some designer asshole was like “b-b-b-b-but that’s not good design!!! My training says so! Myspace.com, livejournal, and geocities are a travesty! Soft edges and muted colors everywhere! All logos have to be a stupid flat piece of shit! Webpages should take much longer to load even though computers are literally hundreds of thousands of times faster! Now everything is BLAND and it SUCKS. I hate the future

    • @[email protected]OP
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      6 days ago

      I wish I could still use a fairphone as a daily driver in Canada. I have a Fairphone 4, had it shipped all the way from Europe and used it for two years before my network suddenly stopped connecting to it so I ended up getting a new phone. still use it at home though.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        Did you try with a new Sim card ? I had the same problem on my fairphone where it kept losing the network.

        I got a new sim card, it fixed the issue and it seem to be a common issue with Fairphones

      • @[email protected]
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        36 days ago

        Not a fairphone but I’m on my 4th one on my phone and went through 2 on the phone prior to that.

      • @[email protected]
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        26 days ago

        Fully replace it or just switch to another one due to low battery? I haven’t replaced any battery yet as I’ve had them for just a bit longer than 6 months, but I’ve had a couple cases of switching batteries to make sure I don’t run out of battery unexpectedly, for example during a quizz night

  • ☂️-
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    5 days ago

    my last phone with a replaceable battery was a motorola smartphone with android. i had two batteries i swapped out when the other discharged, it was great.

    but no, we have to have disposable planned obsolescence phones that can’t do what they used to anymore after a couple years of use.

  • @[email protected]
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    35 days ago

    I had a Nokia flip phone in the 90s (no internet), and it was freaking amazing! I’m looking for a basic cell phone with no internet, and would welcome recommendations. I made this decision 2 weeks ago when I went for a walk with a friend around a lake. Beautiful walk, the lake, the spring flowers, water birds… and almost everyone we passed on the trail was on their phone. They didn’t even look up when we passed. I found it really disturbing, and I’m opting out.

  • @[email protected]
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    66 days ago

    Remember when cell phones did next nothing other than make calls, and their batteries would still die before the day was out?

  • setsubyou
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    56 days ago

    I had one of those laptops (a PowerBook). Yes, it had two slots that could be used for batteries. But that meant taking out the CD drive. Modern laptops don’t have that anymore so I’m not sure where the room for another battery would come from. The other thing is, it lasted at best 4-5 hours on one battery when doing light work. Its modern counterparts last 10-15 hours on one battery.

    The same thing actually happened with phones. But now we literally can’t spend half a minute not looking at them and we also play energy hungry games on them etc. You can still get a phone with replaceable battery though, e.g. Fairphone or Volla.

  • @[email protected]
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    46 days ago

    I’ve got an old Motorola AMPS phone around somewhere that has a charging cradle that will fit either the whole phone or the battery on its own. Most commercial two way radios still work like that, I wish they would still make phones like that too.

    The dual laptop batteries are handy too. I’ve got a Thinkpad T480 and it can hot swap the external battery. The high capacity battery lasts so long that you rarely need to swap it, but if you use the slim batteries, you will need a couple to get through a whole day. Unfortunately, that’s the last Thinkpad model that can hot swap batteries.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 days ago

    I have a galaxy Xcover 6 pro. It still has all of the good features people want. My first smartphone the Galaxy S5 also had those.

  • @[email protected]
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    16 days ago

    My LG V20 has a replaceable battery. I’ve been through 3 of them. It’s why I’m still using it instead of one of the garbage options available now.