Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Sue Cauhape's avatar

Oh Alvaro, this is the most profound essay you've ever written. How often do I throw stuff in the can because I can't fix it, it's gone moldy, or it's beyond my ability to repair. What's really frustrating is that attitude you mentioned: throw it away and buy another one. Built-in obsolescence has been a marketing tool for decades and it's only gotten more ridiculous. Last July, I bought a new kindle because the ancient battery on my old one finally died. Three months later, my $90 kindle died as well. Reviews on Amazon testified that this was a common problem. Only lasting a few months. I took it to a battery store who referred me to a specialist in batter replacement for e-readers. He told me, "It costs most to replace the battery in this one than to buy a new one. And that's what they want you to do." FEH! This is a product structure for our technocracy. So, I not only lost a kindle. I lost over 30 books. Mindblowing! I'm not going to succumb to their scheme. I lost, but I tell myself I won.

Expand full comment
David W. Zoll's avatar

Wonderful. Yes I feel

This as well. What Sue Said!

Expand full comment
2 more comments...

No posts