It’s been like this for a very long time, but you gotta hate somewhere I guess
Not bad at all, let’s hope they don’t do anything to deliberately make you have to buy new equipment.
TK420@lemmy.world 8 months ago
PoliticallyIncorrect@lemmy.world 8 months ago
I’m not saying you are a liar mate, but in my personal use of a smartphone, I can’t use an iphone, there are some many things I do on it what I can’t do in an iphone. So I prefer to buy a new cheap android smartphone every 1-2 years instead of a 5 years device with I can’t do 50% of the things I do on Android,
The main reasons I don’t use apple it’s cos, you can’t use ADB(or similar) and you can’t install anything outside the app store out of the box.
In my personal POV and for the things I do with my phone(run my business they way I like le to run it) I prefer to buy cheap Chinese smartphones for around 100 bucks each 1-2 years instead of spending 700 bucks in an iphone with a can’t do 50% of the things I do on Android.
blurg@lemmy.world 8 months ago
Like, say, slow down an older phone so one has to buy a new faster phone? Source
BorgDrone@lemmy.one 8 months ago
That was not to get you to buy another phone, in fact the opposite. It was to keep your phone functional even though it had a worn out battery.
In phones there is this concept called a ‘race to idle’. Basically, you want your phone to do nothing, because doing nothing uses very little energy. So when you do something on your phone, the goal is to do it as quickly as possible so it can go back to doing nothing and save battery. Your phone will be in this low-power idle state 99.999% of the time. You still want your phone to be responsive though, when you click on something you want it to respond without delay.
Now, iOS is really aggressive in this, it ramps up the CPU speed really fast. As a result, the power draw of the CPU goes from almost nothing to a high power draw very quickly. This causes problems with old batteries. As a battery ages it not only loses capacity, but it also becomes slower to respond to changes in power draw. If the CPU needs a lot of power quickly and the battery can’t keep up you get a brownout (drop in voltage) and the phone basically crashes and reboots.
So what Apple has done is that when iOS detects this happening (i.e. a crash due to the battery being unable to keep up), it will ramp up the CPU a little slower. Or to use a car analogy: they don’t change the top speed, but are less aggressive on the gas so it takes a little longer to get to that top speed. If you replace the battery it goes back to the original behavior.
This is basically a good thing, the alternative is that your phone keeps crashing. Where they screwed up is that they failed to inform users of this.
AProfessional@lemmy.world 8 months ago
BorgDrone@lemmy.one 8 months ago
Walk into Apple store, hand over phone, pick it up an hour later. Couldn’t be easier. Looking at prices, 3rd party repair services using non-original parts charge the same or more as Apple does.
anarchy79@lemmy.world 8 months ago
BorgDrone@lemmy.one 8 months ago
You’d rather have a phone that randomly crashes?