Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Apple Your Rights Online

Apple Shipped Me a 79-Pound iPhone Repair Kit To Fix a 1.1-Ounce Battery (theverge.com) 219

An anonymous reader shares a report: Last month, Apple launched its Self-Service Repair program, letting US customers fix broken screens, batteries, and cameras on the latest iPhones using Apple's own parts and tools for the first time ever. I couldn't wait. I'd never successfully repaired a phone. This time, armed with an official repair manual and genuine parts, I'd make it right. That Apple would even let me buy those parts, much less read its manuals and rent its tools, is a major change of pace for the company. For years, Apple has been lobbying to suppress right-to-repair policies around the country, with the company accused of doing everything it can to keep customers from repairing their own phones. It's easy to see this as a huge moment for DIY advocates. But having tried the repair process, I actually can't recommend it at all -- and I have a sneaking suspicion that Apple likes it that way.

The thing you should understand about Apple's home repair process is that it's a far cry from traditional DIY if you opt for the kit -- which I did, once I saw the repair manual only contains instructions for Apple's own tools. (You can just buy a battery if you want.) I expected Apple would send me a small box of screwdrivers, spudgers, and pliers; I own a mini iPhone, after all. Instead, I found two giant Pelican cases -- 79 pounds of tools -- on my front porch. I couldn't believe just how big and heavy they were considering Apple's paying to ship them both ways. I lugged those cases onto a BART train to San Francisco and dragged them down the streets to our office. Then, I set everything out on a table and got started.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Shipped Me a 79-Pound iPhone Repair Kit To Fix a 1.1-Ounce Battery

Comments Filter:
  • See? (Score:5, Funny)

    by pnoa ( 9426637 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @03:33PM (#62562302)
    We TOLD you iPhones were difficult to repair, didn't we? Are ya happy now? Regards, Apple
    • by Vrallis ( 33290 )

      It does have the air of "malicious compliance."

      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        Indeed it absolutely is malicious compliance. The total cost of renting the tools from apple, buying the replacement battery, going through the process including getting apple to remote control your computer in order to authorize the new battery is almost exactly the same cost as they charge you to get it done at an apple store. They want to guarantee that either way you do it, they get to cash your check, and of course keep things proprietary. This flies in the face of the intention and spirit of all rig

  • by luvirini ( 753157 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @03:43PM (#62562326)

    If you know what you are doing you do not need the kit, much simpler tools work.

    The kit is the one that Apple uses themselves and as they like any other large company wants to see employees as interchangeable and easy to train, that tool is made "idiot proof" for their own employees.

    And given how ingenious some idiots are at bypassing procedure, the tools have to be truly complete.

    So the complaints is: "I wanted the idiot proof tools and they are idiot proof!"

    • Sure you don't *need* it, but it's a trade-off.

      You can have the proper tools for the job, that'll pretty much guarantee you things won't go wrong.

      Or you can use DIY spudgers and homebrew heating methods that'll work *most* of the time.

      • by smap77 ( 1022907 )

        Did you read the article? Apple's tools throw error codes with no troubleshooting?

        Something did go wrong, and by your logic these were not, therefore, the proper tools for the job.

      • As someone who has wrecked things even more by using the wrong or just crappy tools I'm getting a kick out of your post.

    • The real question is what did he assume and what was spelled out when he ordered the kit. If he ordered this thing and it was clearly described with all the tools, then the issue was his assumption.
    • I doubt this. I think the "we lose money on self repairs but the Gov. says we have to do this" scenario is much more likely.
    • by slaker ( 53818 )

      It sounds to me like the official Apple toolkit might have a chance of retaining the water resistant characteristics of a phone that's been opened. I've never fixed an Apple phone myself because I don't want to catch cooties but people I know who've let mall tech swap a screen (Apple stores aren't everywhere) have all been told that water resistance is out of the question thereafter.

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        It sounds to me like the official Apple toolkit might have a chance of retaining the water resistant characteristics of a phone that's been opened. I've never fixed an Apple phone myself because I don't want to catch cooties but people I know who've let mall tech swap a screen (Apple stores aren't everywhere) have all been told that water resistance is out of the question thereafter.

        Not sure what the tools have to do with anything. The double-stick tape seal that holds the unit together is destroyed and replaced whenever you change out the battery whether you're using these tools or some other random tools, and replacement seals should be provided along with the battery.

    • If you know what you are doing you do not need the kit, much simpler tools work.

      If you can follow simple instructions you do not need the kit. The kit from iFixit is simpler, cheaper and faster to use and only weighs 1/50th of the weight.

      It's not hard to do. You just need to not have Parkinson's disease.

      This Apple program was setup to fail.

      • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

        If you know what you are doing you do not need the kit, much simpler tools work.

        If you can follow simple instructions you do not need the kit. The kit from iFixit is simpler, cheaper and faster to use and only weighs 1/50th of the weight.

        It's not hard to do. You just need to not have Parkinson's disease.

        This Apple program was setup to fail.

        No, it was set up to make it look like the repair process is too hard for consumers to do themselves, as part of a disinformation campaign in Apple's war against self-repair.

        The fact that the process ends with you having to call up Apple and let them take control over your device to re-pair the logic board with a new battery is mind-boggling. The extent to which Apple has become abusive is appalling. And the fact that even with their insanely complicated, ridiculously expensive set of tools, they still fa

        • If you know what you are doing you do not need the kit, much simpler tools work.

          If you can follow simple instructions you do not need the kit. The kit from iFixit is simpler, cheaper and faster to use and only weighs 1/50th of the weight.

          It's not hard to do. You just need to not have Parkinson's disease.

          This Apple program was setup to fail.

          No, it was set up to make it look like the repair process is too hard for consumers to do themselves, as part of a disinformation campaign in Apple's war against self-repair.

          So the entire RTR is about replacing Apple screens? The screen is the one part that most people can cripple-dick their way through. Do you seriously believe that the rest of the phone is just as easy?

    • If you know what you are doing you do not need the kit, much simpler tools work.

      The kit is the one that Apple uses themselves and as they like any other large company wants to see employees as interchangeable and easy to train, that tool is made "idiot proof" for their own employees.

      And given how ingenious some idiots are at bypassing procedure, the tools have to be truly complete.

      So the complaints is: "I wanted the idiot proof tools and they are idiot proof!"

      Yeah - they way idiots can figure out how to wreck the most idiot proof processes makes me wonder how they can be idiots. But they are idiots.

  • "For one horrible moment, I realized Apple gave me no way to test whether the battery and display connectors were actually seated (they probably weren’t) and had me close up the phone anyhow."

    Once you get good repairing these things, you'll just know when to plug it all in to see if everything works before closing up.

    • The connectors typically give a "snap" when they've been seated correctly. If they don't, I unplug them and do it again.

      I generally turn it on and test before closing up, because once you close up - with the more modern units, anyway - the adhesive is shot and must be replaced if you got it wrong and have to open it again. I leave the backing on the adhesive until I'm like 97.5% sure it's all good.
    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )

      you'll just know when to plug it all in to see if everything works before closing up.

      I've never replaced a smartphone battery, at least not since it's required tools to do so. But I'd have to imagine that "right before you glue it back together" would be a reasonable spot in the process to stop and make sure it works. I guess they really SHOULD put that into the instructions, but holy shit, if you can't figure that out yourself...

      Reminds me of a story I read about a guy that wrote instructions for the military. He was talking about the instructions for repairing the guts of some panel,

      • Reminds me of a story I read about a guy that wrote instructions for the military. He was talking about the instructions for repairing the guts of some panel, the first instruction was "remove the screws". That wasn't clear enough, so he had to re-write them. The new first step was "go get a screwdriver".

        What kind of screwdriver?

        • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
          I wish I could find the story. I seem to remember that was the second rewrite. "go get a #2 phillips screwdriver."
      • It's not so much "common sense" as "experience with working with stuff like this". The first time I took an electronic gadget apart I made lots of mistakes which I learned from, and which I now consider "common sense". But they're not, because most people have never done anything like this, and they have no experience with what can go wrong.

        And yes, that includes not thinking about what the press actually does and similar.

        • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
          All fair points. One of the "joys" of DIY, fixing your screw ups. I have two ribbon cables on the slow-boat from China right now because I tore them wile fixing a printer. The difference between me and this guy, I don't think it's Dell's fault for neglecting to tell me to disconnect them before I started reefing on what they were attached to.
      • Reminds me of a story I read about a guy that wrote instructions for the military. He was talking about the instructions for repairing the guts of some panel, the first instruction was "remove the screws". That wasn't clear enough, so he had to re-write them. The new first step was "go get a screwdriver".

        Long ago, I knew movie writer Gene Towne [wikipedia.org] during his last years. Back during WW II he wrote training films for the Army, including that ever-green classic, How to Take a Shower, for recruits from the mo
    • "For one horrible moment, I realized Apple gave me no way to test whether the battery and display connectors were actually seated (they probably weren’t) and had me close up the phone anyhow."

      Once you get good repairing these things, you'll just know when to plug it all in to see if everything works before closing up.

      There's an old adage - "If ya gotta go into to something, replace all of the degradable an replaceble parts.

      It's like if you are doing a valve job on a car - you do the valve guides and valve seats and both sides if a V-Engine. Maybe just one valve has a problem, but since you're tearing the engine half apart, do it.

      If I open a phone - it's getting a new battery.

  • So (Score:2, Insightful)

    His complaint is that Apple sent him really good equipment to perform the repair?

    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
      That seemed to be the theme, yes. I honestly had a difficult time figuring out his angle. He said right in the article that you don't HAVE to rent the tools, you can just buy the battery. I will agree with them on the fact that you have to call Apple to authenticate your new battery is football-bat level stupid.
      • I get the impression he's a hack journalist and just wanted some click bait. The author should be ashamed of writing this garbage.

        • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
          I more get the impression he's the kind of guy that would pay someone else to change his windshield wipers.
      • That seemed to be the theme, yes. I honestly had a difficult time figuring out his angle. He said right in the article that you don't HAVE to rent the tools, you can just buy the battery. I will agree with them on the fact that you have to call Apple to authenticate your new battery is football-bat level stupid.

        Well - I remember a few years back, there were bogus Apple phone chargers made in China being sold dirt cheap. Apple's charger is a nice well designed tiny switcher. The bogus ones were a cheap transformer diode (yeah one diode) and 1 cap thing that was prone to all kinds of problems, like shorting and sending AC to the phone.

        But in true modern times, Apple took a lot of shit for the counterfeit chargers.

        And batteries are an even more fertile field for the Chinese counterfeits. So It's isn't that surp

    • Maybe he felt it was like using a nuke to take out a fly, but some people you can't please no matter.
    • Or he ordered something and did not read the description of what he ordered.
    • Re:So (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sjames ( 1099 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @04:14PM (#62562436) Homepage Journal

      The complaint was in part that you need anything like that just to change the battery, and in-part that the way the program is set up reeks of malicious compliance.

      • No, no one needs anything like that to merely fix a battery. He is trying to imply that it does. The kit that he got from Apple seems to be one that their own techs use to fix almost anything. Remember in his article that he is renting the kit for $49 a week and and incurs a $1200 credit card hold. Yet he also expected Apple to send him "a few screwdrivers" for that price. Surely it was just a clickbait stunt.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          No, no one needs anything like that to merely fix a battery. He is trying to imply that it does.

          No, the fact that the self-repair kit Apple makes available to the general public contains all of those things implies that it does. Otherwise, why would Apple charge $40 (but spend probably close to $200) to ship a $1,300 kit to replace a $15 battery (that they bill at $70)?

          I agree with the GP. This reeks of malicious compliance.

      • by EvilSS ( 557649 )

        he complaint was in part that you need anything like that just to change the battery,

        Fair point, but right now, you do IF you want to fix it the official way. If you want cheap tools you can always go buy the Apple battery and an iFixit kit and follow iFixit's instructions.

        and in-part that the way the program is set up reeks of malicious compliance.

        How? You are not required to buy or rent the tools. And they didn't create these tools to be some sort of "haha! take that!" These are the same tools they use in house to do the same types of repairs. The fact they even let you use their in-house tools is a step forward.

        If you want to criticize them, then do it for n

        • Re:So (Score:4, Insightful)

          by sjames ( 1099 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @05:50PM (#62562744) Homepage Journal

          How? You are not required to buy or rent the tools. And they didn't create these tools to be some sort of "haha! take that!"

          Well, I suppose in the sense that you could just chuck the phone into a wood chipper or completely ignore Apple's "self repair" program, you don't technically NEED the tools. It's obvious that Apple's intent here is to claim that they are co-operating with self repair while making it entirely impractical to accept their co-operation in practice.

          Meanwhile, there's still the matter of needing Apple to frob the phone into accepting the new battery.

          • by EvilSS ( 557649 )

            Well, I suppose in the sense that you could just chuck the phone into a wood chipper or completely ignore Apple's "self repair" program, you don't technically NEED the tools. It's obvious that Apple's intent here is to claim that they are co-operating with self repair while making it entirely impractical to accept their co-operation in practice.

            That's a stupid fucking argument. You should be ashamed for even trying it.

            Or are you suggesting that before this program people didn't replace batteries in Apple phones? Oh wait, they did. iFixit sells tools and makes guides for doing just that. There are tools and guides available all over the internet. So no, it's not "Apple's way or the wood chipper".

            Apple is supplying the tools they use, and the procedures they use, to do these repairs. What the fuck did people want, that they should send out subp

            • by sjames ( 1099 )

              I'm saying that before this program that is obviously designed to make sure practically nobody actually takes advantage of it, Apple couldn't claim to comply with even the basics of right to repair.

              • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
                So how do you feel this program could be made to encourage people to take advantage of it? And keep in mind that we are talking existing devices and a new program, so Apple can't magically change the design of the existing devices. So, right now, not next month or next year, what should Apple do different?
                • by sjames ( 1099 )

                  Offer the battery, glue sheet, and something like the iFixit kit at a reasonable markup, provide instructions for using that. Update the firmware to not complain bitterly when an actual replacement Apple battery is installed (and only warn if it thinks it's a non-Apple battery). Start now on changing the next model to make the procedure simple. Offer to SELL the tools at a reasonable price to any individual or repair shop that wants them, no strings.

    • His complaint is that Apple sent him really good equipment to perform the repair?

      He should look on the positive side. Now some knock off merchants can rent a set, get out the verniers and reproduce them for a reasonable price so normal humans can buy a set.

      • There's no way a 3rd party is going to produce a copy for less than the $49 that Apple charges to rent the kit. And why would any "normal humans" as you said need to buy one? Do they plan to regularly wreck their phones so often that the everyday user needs to spend a couple hundred bucks on owning this equipment, rather than renting it? The reality is, 99.9% of repairs will still be brought to Apple to have them taken care of.
    • Oh come on. I find it highly unlikely that iPhones are so special they require equipment so special that existing phone repair kits are useless. I think its a lot more likely that Apple is butthurt at having to provide a way for customers to DIY.
      • I typically use a razor blade as a thin pry tool, a few different screwdriver bits, hair dryer (to warm the adhesive), various plastic pry tools, and tweezers. The equipment Apple provides is some variation of that, but a bit more automated and consistent in the case of warming the adhesive. The comment below this mentions Apple's "passive aggressiveness," and there may be an element of truth to it.
      • They do not. He ordered a technician's kit that is $49 a week to rent and would cost $1200 if he did not return the equipment. Either he did not understand that $1200 of equipment is more than a "few screwdrivers" or he did it all on purpose for clickbait.
      • You're honestly complaining that Apple provides people with professional-quality tools to do a professional-quality job on a piece of high-end electronics that insures it maintains its waterproof seal? I bet you got upset when the auto parts store offered you jack stands to do your oil change and instead insisted on using a couple pieces of old tree that'd fallen down in your backyard to prop the car up.
        • I'm complaining that Apple is providing people who want to repair their iPhones themselves with a ridiculous Rube Goldberg contraption as a tool. There's no reason for that unless maybe... it's not in their interest to do it, even when confronted by Federal law. What????
          • So you think they should reinvent the wheel, instead of using the best tool for the job which already exists? And Rube Goldberg? Less than 20 simple steps to setup and open the iPhone according to Apple's own instructions. Seems you've bitten hook-line-and-sinker for this piece of clickbait Verge article. You're the type of guy who has a post-it on his monitor with instructions on how to save and print your Word document, because they're too complicated to remember on your own.
          • It seemed like the tools worked rather well and the author even says he enjoyed the process.

    • Re:So (Score:5, Insightful)

      by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @04:56PM (#62562590)

      Nope. The complaint is that in the guise of supporting "right to repair" Apple is gaslighting the repair industry which for many years has shown you can do it for a fraction of the cost with equipment weighing 1/50th of the weight, and without Apple's approved repair tools.

      Also the fact they charge you more to repair this yourself than they charge their own official geniuses to do so really means they are scamming you when they are saying they are "sending you the tools for free covering shipping".

      This program is setup to fail on purpose to prove a point. There's nothing good about it at all.

    • His complaint is that Apple's self-repair program is a joke.
    • Re:So (Score:5, Informative)

      by leonbev ( 111395 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @06:05PM (#62562800) Journal

      No, his main complaint is that ordering the parts and renting the tools to repair the phone costs more than Apple would charge to fix the iPhone itself.

      Which is the whole point of this silly exercise, basically. Apple needs to "prove" to politicians pushing Right To Repair bills that people don't really WANT to repair their own phones.

      • Yes, going to a $19.99 Jiffy Lube is cheaper than buying a jack, stands, drip pan, filter, oil, rags, etc etc. What is your point?

    • Maybe you could try reading the article before commenting (no, I'm not new here). He had a few complaints. The battery alone costs the same as having Apple do the full repair for you, and even more if you rent the kit, giving people no incentive to replace it themselves, and giving Apple the ability to go back to Congress and say "see, people don't want to repair it themselves." Apple makes you pay a $1200 deposit, which you forfeit if the kit isn't returned in 7 days (and he didn't even get his battery unt

  • Everyone should be encouraged to make Apple pay for shipping these huge boxes of tools around the country :-) It's good to confront Apple fans with the repair difficulty and predisposition toward/assumption of becoming expensive e-waste that Apple devices suffer from.

  • Why not just made a damn iPhone with a removable back cover to replace the battery? Make the current versions that are sealed and others that have removable back covers and let the CONSUMER DECIDE which one they want. My hunch is that the models with removable back covers would far outsell their sealed nightmares. If I could purchase an iPhone with an EASILY replaceable battery I would buy one. I miss the days of carrying spare batteries around to swap out easily. And don't give me that crap about them bein
    • by kmahan ( 80459 )

      Why? Because of the requirements people demand. Must be as thin as possible, as strong as possible so you can sit on it, be thermally modeled to minimize overheating, and a number of other things. Once the designer starts having to account for doors that can be removed and never replaced they can't rely on the back as a strength point. To overcome that you need to beef up the internal structure which makes the design thicker. And you, the consumer, whine about it being thicker than a different phone an

      • Again, offer it and the the consumer decide. I've never sat on my phone. I take care of my phones. MANY phones existed and still exist that have removable battery covers. Seems like engineers have solved that problem years ago. It sounds to me like you are parroting negatives that Apple and other phone manufacturers have used to convince people that sealed, non-repairable and non-replaceable battery, phones are better. Hint, they are not. Get off the pirate's shoulder for a moment.
        • by hjf ( 703092 )

          Ok I'll be blunt:

          Who the fuck are you, and why does apple have to give a damn fuck about what YOU want?

          Apple knows their market, and their market doesn't have people wanting doors and replaceable batteries. Period. Apple doesn't make a product for you. Go away.

          Want a replaceable battery? Get another phone. Boom.

          Are you going to complain that Ferrari doesn't make "good, cheap, and reliable cars like toyota"? "ferrari should make a cheap car and let the consumer decide".

          Do you see how ridiculous you sound whe

  • Cry Baby (Score:4, Funny)

    by ThurstonMoore ( 605470 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @03:58PM (#62562366)

    What a cry baby asshole. He wants Apple to support people fixing their own phone then cries about all the tools he get shipped to fix the phone the right way. Jesus fucking Christ people are such whiny assholes.

    • by smap77 ( 1022907 )

      Clearly you didn't read the part about the $1200 deposit that would be autocharged into a tool purchase after a week.

      • by cob666 ( 656740 )

        Clearly you didn't read the part about the $1200 deposit that would be autocharged into a tool purchase after a week.

        Yeah, that's going to happen when you specify you want to rent those tools to help with your repair. Also, if you click on the 'Rental Information' link with the IMPORTANT icon next to it, it clearly states that they are going to put a temp authorization on your card to cover the full replacement value of the tools if they aren't returned. Again, just sounds like someone just looking for something to complain about.

  • Your invented "right to repair" infringes on MY right to have a waterproof iPhone that is as compact as possible.

    • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @04:21PM (#62562470)
      In what way? Right to repair isn't about demanding that companies sacrifice actual features to make phones more repairable. It's largely about getting companies not to do things specifically designed to interfere with repair efforts from either end users or independent repair outfits.

      For example, and my understanding of the exact details of this is a bit muddy, but iPhone screens have some sort of identifier that the phone can recognize. For a while, it was the case that if you swapped in a genuine Apple screen from another identical model iPhone, it would still be flagged as counterfeit and the phone would have reduced functionality as a result (I think it was Touch ID that was disabled or something). In order for it not to be flagged as counterfeit, the phone had to be programmed with the unique ID of the new screen, which was only doable with a special device from Apple that they wouldn't distribute to independent repair technicians*. The asterisk is that they had some sort of program by which you could get access to the special device, but it required you to refuse to perform all sorts of basic repairs (instead making people send in the device to be replaced for sub-$100 repairs), pay a bunch of money, sacrifice your firstborn, etc.

      Again, I'm a bit fuzzy on these details. Rossman has talked about this situation a ton, so I would recommend checking out his videos on the subject. The short of it is, these companies deliberately put in measures designed specifically to interfere with attempts to repair the device by end users or independent outfits. That is what right to repair is against, not waterproofing your phone. User-serviceable batteries are nice, but if a manufacturer wants to sacrifice something like that for an actual feature like waterproofing, none of us are really going to complain (although we'd probably like a few phones on the market with the option, since some people prefer a user-serviceable battery to waterproofing).
      • Re:Rights (Score:5, Informative)

        by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @05:53PM (#62562758) Homepage Journal

        For example, and my understanding of the exact details of this is a bit muddy, but iPhone screens have some sort of identifier that the phone can recognize.

        Not just the screens. Batteries, too.

        For a while, it was the case that if you swapped in a genuine Apple screen from another identical model iPhone, it would still be flagged as counterfeit and the phone would have reduced functionality as a result (I think it was Touch ID that was disabled or something). In order for it not to be flagged as counterfeit, the phone had to be programmed with the unique ID of the new screen, which was only doable with a special device from Apple that they wouldn't distribute to independent repair technicians*. The asterisk is that they had some sort of program by which you could get access to the special device, but it required you to refuse to perform all sorts of basic repairs (instead making people send in the device to be replaced for sub-$100 repairs), pay a bunch of money, sacrifice your firstborn, etc.

        And it is still a problem for self-repair. They now have an Apple employee take control of your device remotely and run some software remotely that does the pairing, but they still won't let that piece of critical technology be used by the general public, i.e. you don't really have a right to repair.

        That's why it seems so bizarre to me that Rossman was so critical of this article, along with being critical of the ridiculous overkill of the kit in some areas, also complained that the kit still didn't include the most critical piece of the repair kit, which is the software required to pair the phone with replacement components....

  • So what (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @04:01PM (#62562378)
    I use a 200lb jack and jackstands to change "4lbs" of oil.
    • Now, had you ordered your tools with the oil, found 2084.95 tonnes of tools on your porch, lugged them to the train and then to your office to do the oil change...
      Then your car analogy would have made sense.

      But only had you been previously prevented to do so by the maker of your car, being forced to mail your car back to the factory to have the oil, or anything else needed for the functioning of the car, changed.

    • And yet I do it without a jack at all. Now your experience and my experience wouldn't be relevant to the discussion were it not for the fact that you are the person saying that the *only* way to do it is with a 200lb jack, and any other way should be blocked, and that you're sending that 200lb jack completely for free yet the entire process costs me more than just paying someone who already owns said 200lb jack to do the work.

      If you can't see Apple gaslighting the repair industry with this program then I do

  • If people wanted the right to repair, they would buy phones that have removable batteries and refuse to buy other models. There was a time when every phone had a replaceable battery. People stopped buying phone models from companies that did that. If the right to repair was so important upstart or low market-share phone players would release phones with replaceable batteries and people would buy those like hot cakes.

    Why do we need the government to define non-safety-related specifications of phones? The onl

    • Most consumers don't repair. That's why TV repair shops have largely disappeared. These devices have come down in price enough that most just buy a new one. And With minor repairs, they don't want to do them themselves. Just as most people take their car to someone else to have the oil changed, despite it being something nearly anyone should be able to do themselves. Convenience is huge too. We go to a car wash rather than washing the car ourselves. Most would rather pay Apple $99 to replace the battery tha
      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        It's not because consumers don't repair, it's because repairs are difficult or impossible. There's a TV repair shop not far from me (attached to an appliance store), and the guys there will tell you that all they really do these days is replace boards. They don't do diagnostic and repair like the old days -- it's a mix of too expensive and too difficult. It's not like TVs have a schematic glued to the inside any more.

        People are waking up to the problems of our throw-away society and do want changes. The

  • If I were still running an independent repair shop, I'd order the toolkit & just keep it. $1249 seems pretty cheap for factory-level repair tools. 3D print dies for other model iPhones or work with a local maker/metal shop.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      You can straight up buy the tools from Apple instead of renting them. I think it's even a little cheaper than the rental with the deposit, probably since they don't include a few hundred dollars worth of pelican cases and a return shipping label.
  • Some videos that are amusing and a lot less cringe than this Verge nonsense:

    (Using Apple's Tools to Fix My iPhone) https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    Taking the tools apart: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • The real problem with Apple's repair program is that they wont let you just buy parts, you can only buy parts for a specific device (and have to provide Apple with the device serial number)

    This is clearly about being able to say that they support independent repair while making independent repair inconvenient enough that most normal people will just go to the Apple store.

  • Interesting that after the release of Apple's self-repair program, 30 or so articles came out that frame this the exact same way: "repairing your own device isn't worth it and you should leave it to the professionals." They completely ignore the fact that Apple offers some parts and you don't have to rent or buy their equipment if you don't want to. In actuality this is a huge step forward since previously these parts were not made available at all and you would have to salvage them from broken devices. It

"The medium is the massage." -- Crazy Nigel

Working...