• Nah, the 12 dead laptops undef my bed I use for hardware salvage and experiments are device hoarding. The multiple disassembled game consoles in my closet is device hoarding. None of it is sorted, the retro stuff isn’t sorted, the new stuff isn’t sorted.

    I’m device hoarding. The average consumer is absolutely not.

    • Cruxifux@feddit.nl
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      That movie always wilds me out because it was so much better back then for this shit, and it was still recognized that it’s insane we live like this.

      • Scubus@sh.itjust.works
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        “some of those that work forces are the same that burn crosses.”

        “Those who died are justified; by wearing the badge, they’re your chosen whites”

        These problems have been seen forever. Everyone is comfortable working through controlled opposition so we just chill on the ratchet. Its only going to get worse until people grow a spine and stop being tolerant, which is never going to happen.

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          Man, I know. Too many people didnt understand the point of these events or the cultural icons that spoke about them, and instead chose sides of an imagined political spectrum in North America. Abbie Hoffman and Fred Hampton are rolling in their graves.

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      I never know what kind of car my dad drives because he seemingly always has a new one.

      If my new car don’t last me 10 years I’m going be petty pissed off.

    • zurohki@aussie.zone
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      To be fair, those cars don’t just get set on fire when they’re done with them. They’re supplying the used car market.

      It’s a terrible idea financially, but it isn’t actually wasteful.

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        The demand from it does make car manufacturers to produce more cars. It also floods the market with newer cars, causing older ones being phased out from use earlier

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            It’s more about what happens after it stops running. If used cars are scarce and prices are high it makes a lot more sense to do that expensive engine repair. If used cars are cheap, you get more repairable cars going to the wrecker.

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        Not doing that either, but from what I understand after two years cars get you the most bang for buck. So economically it makes most sense to trade it in after two years for a new one. But of course you’ll need to keep doing so to keep that *advantage "…

        • ccunning@lemmy.world
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          from what I understand after two years cars get you the most bang for buck

          If you mean buying a two year old car, maybe. If you mean buying a new car every two years as implied by the previous commenter, absolutely not. Cars lose a ton of value in the first couple years.

          • The Octonaut@mander.xyz
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            Pretty sure he means after 2 years it gets a lot harder to sell. So they’re selling at the moment when they’ve had a “new car” longest.

            Not saying it’s a good idea, just that there’s a logic to it.

        • The_v@lemmy.world
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          It only works if you paid for the very first new vehicle in cash. Save up for 2 years and cash out the subsequent vehicles as well. Then the numbers pencil out.

          If you to take a loan out it’s fucking stupid.

          After 2 years at 10k miles per year, historically you have lost 20% or so of the value of the car. With a 5 year loan you have paid the principle down to around 63-64% of the original value.

          This means you can trade in the car for more than what you owe on the loan. The difference is a partial or total down payment on a new vehicle.

          Lenders strongly encourage this behavior. Due to the amortization schedule 2/3rds of the interest is paid during the first 2 years. So people who do this with loans are always paying the highest intereston their vehicle.

          The best thing to do finacially is to buy a car with 20-30k then run it for as long as possible. Once the cost of a common major repair is more than the value of the car, get another low mileage used one.

  • DandomRude@lemmy.world
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    Yes, these people are truly insane. I recently read the following headline:

    Rheinmetall shares: Fear of peace shocks investors

    (Translated from German, source | Rheinmetall is an arms manufacturer)

  • vrighter@discuss.tchncs.de
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    i refuse to upgrade, because newer phones are objectively a worse experience than older ones. They keep removing features in the name of “innovation” while putting more stuff in there that the market is actively telling them they don’t want.

    • 🍉 Albert 🍉@lemmy.world
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      I miss the 90s early 2000s, where every 2 years the new products were much better, not only specs wise but categorically so. and a new phone did not cost a month of rent.

      I have a 2020’s phone, and besides battery life being weaker now. I see absolutely no reason to upgrade for a marginal spec bump.

      When was the last time a new feature was added? like something that would make want to have it? they are afraid of any risk and so there is absolutely no innovation. the closest thing to any risk they took is when they removed the headphone jack to sell 300$ headphones.

      The whole industry is being enshitified.

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        You might even change the phone because of the battery and find out that your new device has an absolute power hog of a screen with no battery upgrade to match and your battery life is even worse now

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          Hey now, they saved half a millimeter of thickness with that smaller battery. You should be thanking them.

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        Spec bumps are pretty irrelevant now anyways. Phones are currently in the land of diminishing returns for performance. They’ve been ‘fast enough’ for some time now, and the only thing that breaks them is software, not hardware. Newer hardware is marginally more efficient, so that’s the only real world benefit.

        I miss the old days of android where they were trying all manner of wild ideas. I want variety where one company has an eink screen protector. Put a laser pointer on a phone because… Because. Where are the projector phones? Maybe some crazy transformer phone with modules that all clip together to turn into a robot. Sure, they never sold well, but they were cool to see.

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          Or if you go for the “full-size”, a tablet that folds into a standard phone size.

          Foldable are nice either direction you want to go.

    • kadaverin0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      They keep removing features in the name of “innovation” while putting more stuff in there that the market is actively telling them they don’t want.

      I always put off buying a new phone for this exact reason. It feels like every iteration further strips users of the ability to remove telemetry, AI bullshit, or bloatware. I’m not paying out hundreds of dollars for a dedicated advertisement displayer that spies on me.

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    What if, bear with me here, what if people just don’t have as much disposable income after the dramatic transfer of wealth to the rich class we’ve been seeing?

    The economy is collapsing and the lower classes are feeling it already. The rich investor class isn’t seeing it because the tech industry has been propping up the market with their investments going all-in with unrealistic expectations for AI technology. We are currently experiencing a K-shaped recovery where the richest are on a spending spree while the poorest are cutting back their expenses. How much more obvious must it be that this is what’s going on?

    You want the general population to start wasting their money on useless crap again, you’ll have to give them more money to work with.

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      I agree, but I gotta point out the area you’re wrong. It’s the internet after all. So don’t take my hyper-focus to heart.

      The investors are absolutely aware. They don’t care if AI has any material value. They will happily invest in a bubble and inflate far beyond what anyone believes is possible. The capitalist system has only evolved to be BETTER for capitalist when the bubble pops. They know this. They literally have lobbies dedicated to ensuring their wealth is protected.

      I think we confuse the “irrationality of the market” with the investors being irrational themselves. They are doing exactly what any rational investor would do in an economic system that has been built to favor them.

      I’m sure you’re aware of this given your perspective. But I think it’s important to use the right vocabulary to describe this. The problem is not a “broken system” with irrational actors. The system is working EXACTLY as intended and the investors are acting completely rationally within the economic system that has been created for their benefit. This isn’t “bad capitalism” that needs regulation. This is just capitalism.

      Bubbles and crashes are not something that investors are working hard to avoid. They are a feature of the contradictions of capitalism. Capitalist are very much aware of them and have ensured they can benefit from them while the working class takes the losses.

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        I have never thought in terms of this before but now that you explain it, why wouldn’t they do exactly that when no one was held accountable after the 2008 financial crash, the big firms that fucked the market got bailed out, and the ones who had enough money when the dust settled could buy everything for cheap and increase their ownership?

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        I agree with Frank Herberts take on the “power corrupts”: its not power that corrupts people, corrupt systems attract corrupt people.

    • Lemminary@lemmy.world
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      They’ve also been propping up the market with some sketchy circular deals, swearing up and down they’re not like Enron.

      • Macchi_the_Slime@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        I straight up laughed when people started talking about “skipping Black Friday/Cyber Monday deals” to “stick it to the Oligarchs,” just like… must be nice to actually have enough disposable income to have been thinking about making leisure purchases during this. Some of us are broke enough that we’ve been putting off replacing things we need that are barely functional because we can’t really afford it and sales like these are the only time we can.

    • whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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      Some journalist should start calling them all Smaug. The problem is a bunch of us asshats would then be like “Smaug did nothing wrong!”

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        Why should dragons pay tax. He earned that gold fair and square!

        #temporarilyembarrasseddragons

    • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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      Better yet, let’s get the heads of those bazillionaires and put them on pikes, and then run headlines about the excellent new trend of beheading the rich and putting their heads on pikes.

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      They all have a severe case of OCD, manifesting itself in hoarding behavior. If they hoarded cats as intensely as they hoard money, we would take ALL their cats away, redistribute them to more responsible owners, and hospitalize the OCD victim until their medication kicked in, and they can contribute to society in a positive manner.

      They don’t hoard cats, they hoard money, but the solution is the same - confiscate their stolen treasure, redistribute it to the people they stole it from, and incarcerate them until they learn to behave positively among society.

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    If you want people to buy a new phone every year “for the economy”, the $1800 phone must be reduced to $50, and the quality stays at flagship levels. The citizens are not here to make the oligarchs wealthy. Fuck your economy.

    • anugeshtu@lemmy.world
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      For real… “device hoarding”. Lol. What about “saving”, “environmentally friendly”, NOT wasting resources for nothing"? No, we need a negative term for that!

  • Jay@lemmy.ca
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    They can pry my Galaxy S4 with removable battery and IR blaster out of my cold dead hands. (Thank you LineageOS, because Samsung dropped updates for it a decade ago.)

    • Hoimo@ani.social
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      You’re still getting Lineage updates for the S4?! That one maintainer keeping your phone alive:

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        To be honest I’m surprised too… official builds are done, but there’s still unofficial ones floating around. I expected everyone to give up on this thing by now, but the last update was Nov 16th (https://updater.oddsolutions.us/devices/jflteatt/builds)

        I’m happy they are though. The phone may not be very powerful by today’s standards but it does what I need it to.

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        Sitting on the same phone, i don’t know what to do when it dies, really low spec ones got sd slots and a 1500 euro xperia…and thats it. But i like my local files so much

    • Echolynx@lemmy.zip
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      I miss my Galaxy S4… I had a blast running CyanogenMod on it. Ended up replacing it after ~3 years because I dropped it in the ocean (it mostly worked after I opened the back and cleaned it, all except the network card). Such a great device!

      I’m really pissed that my current phone (S23) now has a locked bootloader because of the newest OneUI update. Damn it, Samsung.

      • Jay@lemmy.ca
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        I’m not in the market for a new phone at the moment, but that one does look awesome. I like phones that are a little bulkier rather than those super thin things you usually see nowadays that feel like they’re gonna snap in half if you forget it in your back pocket.

        Too bad the battery isn’t removable though, that’s the only bad thing I see with it. ( I know that’s a rare thing to find a phone that does, but one can dream lol)

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          It is built for repairability and has accessible screws. I havent tried taking the back off yet tho. The right to repair attitude of the company is what drew me in too!

          • Jay@lemmy.ca
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            Ok that’s pretty cool! I just saw in the specs that the battery wasn’t removable, but that’s sort of misleading I guess if you can pop it open with a simple screwdriver.

            My daughter might be getting a new phone this spring, I’m gonna have to talk to her about something like this one. Thanks!

  • kadaverin0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    It’s funny how thrift and frugality will ruin the economy for everyone but gambling with other people’s homes and retirement funds is good business sense.

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    “Costing the economy”

    Thankfully wealth horders aka. billionaires pouring money into offshore bank accounts, unaffordable real estate, government bonds, and inflated stocks are all in our benefit. Only us peasants are being selfish.

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        But they are so generous because they are protecting the rainforest in subsuharen Africa or something. Case closed, no need for tax reform, they know better and are better.

        Seriously, the belittling nature of some these billionaires borders on perverse, Bezos mentioned something about how he likes to be looked at like a daddy to his employees.

  • That Weird Vegan she/her@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    blaming the consumer again?

    Instead of the billion/trillionaires that are hoarding wealth that they’ll NEVER be able to spend?

    how fucking sad is it that there are people sleeping on the street, worried about their next meal will come from, meanwhile gaben has a billion$ worth of megayachts

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      We need to keep spending money, so that billionaires continue spending on mega yachts, so that mega yacht companies do not start firing their work force due to lack of sales

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        You’re right, he definitely needed to buy another new yacht last month. Oh, and the company that makes the yachts, because why not.

        That’s real, btw.

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        What, is Gaben a “good one”? Please. He deserves the criticism as much as any other. Steam is the most unethical platform of its kind.

  • Sunflier@lemmy.world
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    The poverty caused by funneling money to the top in the kleptocracy we have will cause most people to “hoard” their devices.

  • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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    In the meantime EU is forcing manufactures to use replaceable batteries, provide updates for 5 years and spare parts for 7 years.

    • tetris11@feddit.uk
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      I had to buy a new phone for work. My current jailbroken one was rejecting the auth app I needed to logon suddenly after an update.

      I tried using an older phone using a newer (lineage) OS, no root, but the App kept saying no. I was beginning to lose quite a few working hours on this, and my work said “no” when I asked them for a phone.

      So I bought a Fairphone6. Unnecessarily. I’m certain it’s a good phone, with great repairability, and I will probably switch to it at some point in the future if my current phone ever stops working.

      But it exists to log me in to work. That’s its sole purpose. I dread to think what I’ll have to buy next if the logon app gets too old on this phone.

      • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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        Same thing happened to me ounce. I downloaded older version of the app and was able to keep using it.

        Also, I’ve checked recently and in my country the employer can’t legally force you to buy devices you need for work. If job requires a device they have to provide it. So it’s worth checking the regulation.

        Currently I’m forced to use MS Authenticator app but it works fine with Graphene OS.

        All that being said, I also have two phones because my car has Android Auto and I only recently was made available on Graphene. EU has a big issue with dependency on US tech but I think we’re seeing some progress here. They should really focus on Android and force AOSP compatibility on everyone.

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        My company recently took away text-message as a way to 2FA and wanted us to download their app. I told them (politely) that I had an authorization app already that I trusted because it was Open Source (Bitwarden) and could I use that instead of installing a corporate app on my device.

        They said no.

        Never install your work’s corporate spyware on your own personal device. Rule #1. If they want me to install their shit, they can provide the phone for me to do it.

      • Pat_Riot@lemmy.today
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        Why in the hell are you buying a phone for your job? My company was trying to get us to download some app to make us all more “connected” and I told my boss that there was absolutely no reason for the company to “connect” with me unless I am on the production floor and then he can walk out of the air conditioned office and talk to me directly. Your work should not be on your personal devices.

        • tetris11@feddit.uk
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          Yep. I asked, they said “no”, and something along the lines of “if we make an exception for you then blah blah blah”. I need the job, I swallowed it.

            • tetris11@feddit.uk
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              Tbh they’re a pretty good company, and treat their employees pretty well on the whole. It’s just this one pain point, which I think I can live with

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        Buying an old galaxy s7/s8/s9, oneplus 3/5 or something like that would have cost 90% less and saved a phone from the landfill. Or one with a cracked (but working) screen for 95% less. If all you need is the login process, an old phone with stock firmware would have been good enough.

        • tetris11@feddit.uk
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          I have two of those old phones, I flashed the stock but the Android was too low, I flashed the lineage with Android 13, re-locked the bootloader, and the App still fucking said no. Once you’ve opened the bootloader even once, a flag is set in the gsettings.

          At that point I wasn’t even sure if my boss was going to let me keep this job, so I just went out and bought a new phone that I knew would be delivered the very next day

          • paperazzi@lemmy.world
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            If it was a work requirement, it should have been provided by work. Employers passing their own costs down to employees needs to stop.

            • AtariDump@lemmy.world
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              Agreed, but welcome to the US where people are fearful of losing their health insurance because they got fired after pushing back at their job.

          • Tja@programming.dev
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            Well, then a S20 or something, still around 100 bucks/pounds/euro and new enough. Not 90% but 75%,still a good deal.

            • tetris11@feddit.uk
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              Fairphone seemed like a good longterm purchase. Im tired of collecting phones from family members and ex’s and repurposing them ala lineage or postmarket.

              Nokia N900 was the last phone I truly felt anything for. Fairphone seems to have a modular design that might accomodate a similar experience in the future

              • Tja@programming.dev
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                The Nokia N900 is the only phone I actually have been excited about. Still have the muscle memory.

                • tetris11@feddit.uk
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                  Same, I remember one long wonderful car trip with my parents through scenic europe where I was staring affixedly at my screen as I learned to write a game in python ncurses for the first time