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Iphone Apple Technology

Apple Is Locking Batteries To Specific iPhones, a Nightmare for DIY Repair (vice.com) 281

A longtime nightmare scenario for independent iPhone repair companies has come true: Apple has tied batteries to specific iPhones, meaning that only it has the ability to perform an authorized battery replacement on the newest versions of iPhones, two independent experiments have found. From a report: Battery replacements are among the most common repairs done by Apple and by independent repair companies. This is because lithium ion batteries eventually lose their ability to hold a charge, which will eventually make the phone unusable. Replacing the battery greatly extends the life of the phone: Apple CEO Tim Cook acknowledged earlier this year that battery replacements are resulting in fewer people buying new iPhones, which has affected Apple's bottom line. It's concerning on many levels, then, that on the iPhone XS, XS Plus, and XR, that any battery swap not performed by Apple will result in the phone's settings saying that the new battery needs "Service." An iPhone will still turn on and function with an aftermarket battery, but several important features are unavailable, and the iPhone warns users that they should seek service, presumably from an Apple Store.
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Apple Is Locking Batteries To Specific iPhones, a Nightmare for DIY Repair

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  • New? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by slashkitty ( 21637 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @01:26PM (#59063512) Homepage
    It's been doing that for years. I've replaced dozens of batteries.
    • Correct. This is not news at all.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by lgw ( 121541 )

      Here's a foolproof method to replace a locked iPhone battery :

      1. Remove the used battery from the iPhone, set them side-by-side on the table.
      2. Toss the old battery in the trash.
      3. Place an Android phone battery in the spot it occupied.
      4. Throw the iPhone in the trash.
      5. Place an Android phone in the spot it occupied.
      6. You can now safely insert battery into phone.

      "That's a stupid plan" I hear you say, "I couldn't possibly do that!".

      Good point, you shouldn't throw electronics in the trash, especially not ba

  • Cute (Score:5, Interesting)

    by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @01:26PM (#59063514)

    What next, a big countdown to zero starting with first phone boot?
    Time remaining: 364:23:59:59

  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @01:30PM (#59063534)
    But it appears they meant green as in money rather than green as in minimizing their impact on the environment.
  • well bye. Android etc will do for me, ***if*** I ever climb higher on functionality
  • by Tom Rombouts ( 4765725 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @01:38PM (#59063592)
    For most people, there are many other mobile phones out there. (I suppose maybe a small percentage of people are required to buy iPhones due to their work.) TWR
  • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @01:44PM (#59063624) Homepage Journal

    No reasonable person would purchase a phone knowing that a wear item like a battery can only be obtained by having the manufacturer replace it. Therefore, Apple suddenly adding technological checks to prevent replacing such a wear item without informing the buying public prior to purchase seems like clear and evident intent to defraud the public.

    I encourage every person who owns one of the affected products to contact his/her state's Attorney General and demand that legal action be taken on behalf of the public against Apple before other companies decide that they can get away with it and follow suit.

    • Ok this is napkin math, but the average iPhone age to replacement is about four years now, and there are approx. 190 million iPhones in current use. Apple's battery replacement peaked last year at about 10 million batteries. If we double that to account for non-Apple repair shops to 20 million (which is probably way, way higher than normal), we still have only about 40% of iPhone users changing their batteries during the life of the device. So yes, in fact, most people that buy an iPhone don't ever expect
    • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @02:45PM (#59064058)

      Almost everyone who buys a phone would "purchase a phone knowing that a wear item like a battery can only be obtained by having the manufacturer replace it". Very few people care.

      • by garcia ( 6573 )

        I have a 4-year-old iPhone SE I got for "free" with a contract extension. The battery only requires a charge once per day.

        I most definitely don't care about this.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      "No reasonable person would purchase a phone knowing that a wear item like a battery can only be obtained by having the manufacturer replace it."

      The dumbest thing you're read today. More like the vast majority of phone buyers would have no problem with this and most would never even think of it. Most have never even had to replace a battery in a phone.

  • by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @01:46PM (#59063642)

    I do not like that move either, but let me play the devils advocate in this particular case:

    Imagine your friendly neighborhood independent repair shop turns out to be a shoody place, and replaces your old and tired Apple Genuine battery with a Galaxy note 7 Class battery...

    If something, anything happens, who will get the bad publicity, bad reps and possible lawsuits?

    Will the press hold off sensationalist headlines until mnore info is known?
    Will you admit not doing and original repair?
    Will the shoody place pay for the lawsuits?

    So, in something as a fire hazard as a Battery, and something with risk of electric shock as cables and chargers, and things with security implications as fingerprint readers, I thend to side with apple.

    Now, screens, cameras, flash et al that lock up if not get a specific switch flipped, or elements glued like mad, yes, I agree, dick move apple.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by DigitAl56K ( 805623 )

      What if people write shoddy apps?

      What if advertisers get ahold of your phone number and call you with shoddy ads?

      What if you get shoddy spam email on your Apple device?

      What if you use a shoddy charger?

      What if you buy a shoddy accessory?

      What if you buy a shoddy case and it doesn't hold up?

      Making batteries easier to replace is how we keep device service life higher and keep electronics out of landfills.

      Apple needs to stop their bullshit.

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        Which ones of those cause deadly fires?

      • Making batteries easier to replace is how we keep device service life higher and keep electronics out of landfills.

        I call bullshit on this.

        A quick search of Apple Authorized repair spots in my tiny little Midwestern town shows a half dozen of places willing and able to do an iPhone battery replacement, all within a short drive. Some of them will even do it while you wait, meaning they aren't just shipping it overnight somewhere and leaving you without a phone for a day or three.

        If there is a Best Buy near you then you can quite likely get your iPhone battery replaced in hours. Take your iPhone to the little shop or ki

    • If Apple didn't have a history of screwing over their customers with similar practices then maybe I could give them the benefit of the doubt. But Apple has pretty much always been this way. The original Mac had essentially no expansion built in and required warranty breaking modifications, it also had the cathode of the display exposed right above the motherboard. Be sure not to kill yourself if you open it up!

      Yeah no, Apple wants you to buy a new device every year and if you have to get it serviced they ar

    • The entire industry already went through this. Early phones with Li-ion batteries had the charge circuitry built into the battery (this enabled a phone to operate with either Li-ion or NiMH batteries). This circuitry was especially important to Li-ion batteries - they can catch fire or explode if you overcharge or over-discharge them. People bought the phones, balked at the price of a spare battery, and purchased a "compatible" battery from China off eBay. The eBay batteries didn't have any charge prote
    • It is pretty hard to make an expkoding battery. They are safer than air travel.
  • ... is continuing its transformation into a guarded dungeon.
  • There's a lot of phone competition, so anit-trust law will be a tough sell in the courts, but how is this NOT false advertising?

  • .... from Louis Rossman on this little nugget of info. Should be very entertaining

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @02:23PM (#59063900)

    They probably don’t want to get blamed for not notifying users of the danger when one of these batteries starts on fire.

    I admit I am bad at groupthink. Go ahead and post a bunch of profane groupthink replies telling me I don't understand the groupthink though. I know you have to — I understand at least that much about groupthink.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • LOL serves the dumb noobs right! Good thing they're made of money...right? ;-)

  • Didn't they get in trouble several years ago by requiring customers to buy their ink cartridges? And then when someone make a clone they tried to sue them out of oblivion. But it backfired. And the courts said the printer manufacturers could not stop off-market cartridges from being made.

    How would batteries be any different?

    Okay, decided not to be lazy, here's an article about it....

    https://www.techdirt.com/artic... [techdirt.com]

  • by BenJeremy ( 181303 ) on Thursday August 08, 2019 @03:12PM (#59064232)

    So you lose the battery life indicator... can you use an App to replace the functionality? On Android, there was a handy Battery Life indicator that turned its screen icon into a live battery life gauge. I wonder if that would be possible on the iPhone.

    • Apple can lock out such apps, like they do any app which would show you WiFi band you are on, detailed signal strength, channel number, and other tech info relating to WiFi. No wonder by the way, in my house we have Galaxy 9 and iPhones X, iPhones have very poor WiFi reception compared to Galaxy phones (my access points do report the details on the connections, even if the iPhone hide it). Actually, iPhone X's have the worst WiFi reception of all devices in the house (about 20 of them), even older iPhones (

  • That your iPhone is locked to a specific battery.
  • >and the iPhone warns users that they should seek service, presumably from an Apple Store.

    The Apple store will then tell you that because you replaced the battery by something other than Apple, they will no longer service the phone at all, explaining you need a new phone. They argue that they cannot deal with somebody else's battery due to fire risk. I know, this happened to me - a former Apple fanboi since the 1980's.

    Batteries should be end user replaceable. Memory should be expandable with SD cards
  • As the summary points out, it just lets you know you don't have an original battery but for most intent and purpose the battery works. It's a management chip that's missing which can probably be obtained from certain Chinese sources.

  • https://store.nintendo.com/ng3... [nintendo.com] $14.99 for a new 3DS battery with instruction on removing one screw with a phillips not some magic Apple proprietary screw.
  • Mac pro will have locked ram and pci-e cards as well?

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