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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: September 21st, 2023

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  • Right? It’s a frigging battery.

    Surely we can get a group of battery techs and mechanical engineers together to come up with a solution.

    Hell, I’ve been bastardizing the “wrong” batteries into devices since the mid-70’s, while today I’m usually replacing crappy built-in batteries with 18650’s. And I’m no EE, just have a little skill and vision.

    Surely the battery spec on this is pretty clear, and it’s an off-the-shelf tech (not some odd chemistry devised by the company). Not that it really matters - a replacement merely needs to fit in the space, and match voltage and current requirements.


  • BearOfaTime@lemm.eetoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldThoughts on HumHub?
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    4 days ago

    Your family isn’t dumber than average.

    Uu tech folks tend to forget/overlook that most people are clueless as to how mobile devices work. I have IT friends who know practically nothing about the Android file system, or how apps store (but don’t sync) data, for example. And these are people designing/implementing/supporting complex systems.

    Most people can’t be bothered if there’s more than one or two steps. I can’t walk my “70 year old uncle” through configuring an app on his phone, over the phone. The stuff he says he sees make no sense at all. I’m like “no, that’s not what you should see, what did you click on”?.









  • That’s the key.

    That said, I’ve always bought ~2 year old phones. They usually have batteries at 85% life (or more).

    I haven’t had fast charging hurt one significantly yet, and I’ve used it a lot on some phones.

    Of course, I avoid using it as much as possible. I use a slow charger (1A,max) overnight and it’s on a timer. On rooted phones I use a charge limiting app.



  • The difference is even this pittance of a fine wouldn’t happen in a planned economy - it would be like the planners fining themselves.

    What we’re seeing here is a result of the amoral “beastly” types concentrating power. What you’re suggesting is to intentionally concentrate that power from the start.

    Facebook is a great example of democracy - the billions of people using it have effectively (in their voluntary ignorance) voted for it to be like this. These are the same people who would vote for policies in a pure democracy.

    And you’re ignoring what happens in the SMB space, where people aren’t part of the corrupt circle.

    You’re welcome to start a small community anywhere in the US with a planned economy, as proof of concept.

    You could call it… A commune, to indicate its goals.