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Why Do Gadgets Break?

TurboTurnip writes "A post on the Crave blog at CNET asks: Why are modern consumer electronics so easily broken? It argues that the 21st Century is 'The Age of the Flimsy' where 'your gadgets will simply break within the year.' Post author Chris Stevens talks about how computers are fast enough for the average user, and the only way to make consumers upgrade is 'increasingly poor build quality ... Engineers have built obsolescence into mass-produced technology since the 1920s. There are two kinds of planned deterioration in a product: one is technical, the other is stylistic.' The writer compares the build quality of a 20 year-old IBM XT to the modern Motorola Razr phone and concludes that modern gadgets are 'delicate, beautiful supermodels that can't go the distance.'"

9 of 554 comments (clear)

  1. Supermodel Gadget. by teiresias · · Score: 4, Funny

    Where can I pick up one of those delicate, beautiful supermodels gadgets everyone's talking about these days? At an Apple store?

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    -Teiresias
  2. Keyboards by bmo · · Score: 4, Funny

    Keyboards these days are neither supermodels nor even remotely stylish. Yet they are exceedingly flimsy. If you bludgeon someone over the head with a keyboard these days, it simply shatters into dozens of pieces. The old XT keyboard, however, could have been used to dispatch Jimmy Hoffa.

    --
    BMO

    1. Re:Keyboards by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hoffa dissapeared YEARS before the introduction of the 88-Key!

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
  3. I still have an XT - 3 of them! by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 4, Funny

    I will testify to their sturdiness! They are being used as blocks, to hold up my 1962 Jaguar XJ12 - itself another of those time-honored robust technologies, in contrast to today's delicate and tempermental flim-flams!

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  4. Oh yeah? by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 4, Funny

    I found my Razr after it was missing for three weeks. Somebody had buried it in the backyard.

    There was not a scratch on it, and it worked just fine after a recharge.

    This guy must be using one of the pink ones- those are sissy phones.

  5. The funny part by ArchieBunker · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is seeing how much older electronics are still around compared to new. I have tube amplifiers that are over 50 years old and still operate because the parts are easily servicable. IMHO most of the electronics that fail early are due to bad solder joints. Your average tv is probably assembled by children in an open air factory somewhere in the pacific. Parts are bought from different suppliers constantly to save a penny here or there. Remember the recent rash of motherboard failures due to leaking capacitors?

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
  6. Re:Use a bit of care... by cerberusss · · Score: 5, Funny
    If I buy a mobile phone, it's because I want to bring it with me to become mobile, not to keep it inside original packaging with temperatures between 15-25 celcius and low air humidity.
    Welcome to the real world. I wished for a chick with long legs and a tight pussy but instead I got an ostrich and a cat who lets me pay everything.
    --
    8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
  7. Re:Use a bit of care... by scheming+daemons · · Score: 3, Funny
    I would be willing to pay a lot more to get a phone where I don't have to worry about random breakage any time I fall on it.

    Every time you fall on it?

    Man... that just sounds weird. Do you fall that much?

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

  8. Re:Use a bit of care... by timeOday · · Score: 3, Funny
    With you until "being dropped in salt water." WTF???
    Obviously he uses his laptop for piracy.