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44 votes
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Right to repair is now law in Washington state
53 votes -
Slate Auto to offer modular EV pickup for $20k with EV Tax Credit
54 votes -
Smartphones and tablets in the EU to get a new label in June
21 votes -
Interest in a new Tildes /~group?, ~electronics or perhaps ~makers?
This is a community I've missed since leaving Reddit, but I didn't expect to find or create such a /~group here given Tildes is a much smaller community (I figured, statistically, there wouldn't...
This is a community I've missed since leaving Reddit, but I didn't expect to find or create such a /~group here given Tildes is a much smaller community (I figured, statistically, there wouldn't be enough users with overlapping interests in Right to Repair / Electronics / 3D Printing / Makerspace / etc... for such a community to be present or to naturally form here.
With the recent post asking for advice on a soldering station, and the number of users that participated in that discussion, I've been rethinking those assumptions of 'not enough users / not enough interest'. Then I further reflected on the significant number of people we have here that have fluently discussed other technical areas such as Linux, Programming, servers / Homelab topics and I realize upon reflection that a fair many of our users here are pretty high on tech literacy...
So, as a prelude to requesting a new group like /~electronics or /~makers or some group name along that philosophical theme, I wanted to ask the community at large first as to how much interest there might be in this.
Do you, dear reader, have an interest in electronics repair? In a garage workshop or other space at home where you fix or build things? Makerspace topics like 3D printing? Right to Repair law? If you want to know how to replace your cell phone screen, or ask about soldering or Raspberry Pi or Arduino, are you interested in having a place here on Tildes specifically for these things? Please, if you have such interests, let's discuss here.
Pinging those who participated in the soldering discussion:
@AugustusFerdinand @PraiseTheSoup @teaearlgraycold @Banazir @chocobean @elight @Plik @lynxy @Akir @TheD00d @pallas @ShroudedScribe @em-dash @luks @Tannhauser @kmcgurty147 votes -
We've not been trained for this: life after the Newag DRM disclosure
24 votes -
US Copyright Office exemption makes McDonald’s ice cream machines repairable
50 votes -
America's first right-to-repair bill that bans parts pairing
40 votes -
Google formally endorses right to repair, will lobby to pass repair laws
25 votes -
Polish train manufacturer Newag bricks trains which spend time in competitors' depots
40 votes -
Massachusetts passed a law requiring cars make data accessible to independent shops to allow repairs. Automakers sued.
31 votes -
What are the best resources to get started with 3D modeling and printing now that the hobby is quite mature?
I've had an interest in 3D printing since first hearing about it many years ago, but at the time printers were expensive and learning materials and resources were scarce. Nowadays, it seems like...
I've had an interest in 3D printing since first hearing about it many years ago, but at the time printers were expensive and learning materials and resources were scarce. Nowadays, it seems like 3D printing is as common as regular old 2D printing but I feel left in the dust.
What's really making me want to get started now is I've collected a lot of junk over the years that I've told myself I could repair, but a lot of the repairs would be much easier with a 3D printer and custom modeled parts. Dearest to me would be an old watch that my grandfather gave to me before he died. The part of the watch that connects the strap to the case (lugs, I think it's called?) has broken off and gotten lost, and it's a proprietary part with no replacement parts available. I'd love to just 3D-print a solution but have no idea how to get started.
I consider myself a creative person, I have plenty of experience with Photoshop and illustrator, but I have never once dabbled in 3D modeling software like Blender or AutoCAD. The closest I ever got was peering over the shoulder of an artist who was working on a video game character model in Zbrush, or maybe working on custom Half-Life maps in Valve Hammer. So I'm looking for the most basic, easy-to-follow set of instructions to get me from zero knowledge to successfully printing bespoke DIY repair parts at my local makerspace.
Would also love to have this be a discussion on 3D printing in general. How did you get started? How have the tools and techniques evolved over the years? What do you think are the next big things coming in the hobby? What are things you wish you knew when you started but only learned after mistakes were made? Share your thoughts and anecdotes, I'd be happy to read them.
31 votes -
California passes strongest right-to-repair bill yet, requiring seven years of parts
39 votes -
A curated list of reviews of the Fairphone 5
8 votes -
Scientologists ask US Federal government to restrict right to repair
46 votes -
What’s inside that McDonald’s ice cream machine? Broken copyright law.
33 votes -
Apple formally endorses right to repair US legislation after spending millions fighting it
67 votes -
How Big Tech rewrote the USA's first cellphone repair law
11 votes -
Putting together an ebike kit that respects right-to-repair?
8 votes -
Can we make bicycles sustainable again?
25 votes -
Microsoft announces availability of replacement parts for Surface devices
16 votes -
Colorado becomes first state to pass “right to repair” law for farmers
14 votes -
Right-to-repair advocates question John Deere’s new promises
9 votes -
The American Farm Bureau Federation and John Deere have signed a 'Memorandum of Understanding' allowing US customers to fix their own equipment
27 votes -
American automakers claim they can’t comply with right-to-repair laws
11 votes -
Hacker jailbreaks control unit that stops farmers repairing their tractors, then runs Doom on it
22 votes -
Apple's Self Repair Program toolkit weighs seventy-nine pounds
15 votes -
A fight over the right to repair cars turns ugly in Massachusetts
12 votes -
The last design you'll ever make
7 votes -
The McDonald’s ice cream machine hacking saga has a new twist
22 votes -
Locked out of ‘god mode,’ runners are hacking their treadmills
18 votes -
Apple announces self service repair
22 votes -
Apple backs off of breaking Face ID after DIY iPhone 13 screen replacements
10 votes -
Section 1201 exemptions to prohibition against circumvention of technological measures protecting copyrighted works (2021)
7 votes -
Tesla wanted $22,500 to replace a battery. An independent repair shop fixed it for $5,000.
10 votes -
Why right to repair matters – according to a farmer, a medical worker, a computer store owner
17 votes -
The FTC votes unanimously to enforce right to repair
27 votes -
British right to repair law comes into force today, excludes smartphones and computers
10 votes -
They hacked McDonald’s ice cream machines—and started a cold war
17 votes -
Let's get Right to Repair passed!
14 votes -
Apple’s quiet war on independent repairmen
12 votes -
France’s new tech "repairability index" is a big deal
9 votes -
European Parliament votes for right to repair
19 votes -
Auto industry TV ads claim right-to-repair laws would benefit "sexual predators"
18 votes -
Fairphone users can buy and replace just the camera
14 votes -
Playing devil's advocate: Is there any possible reason Apple is gluing parts in instead of using screws in newer devices other than "greed"?
Inspired by the news of the new 13" MacBook Pro and Surface Book 3, I was thinking about just how much I hate not being able to replace the RAM, SSD or even battery in newer MacBook models. It...
Inspired by the news of the new 13" MacBook Pro and Surface Book 3, I was thinking about just how much I hate not being able to replace the RAM, SSD or even battery in newer MacBook models. It seems like such an extreme decision and I wonder why.
The obvious answer is to make the devices less repairable thus forcing people to upgrade sooner.
But Apple isn't really dependent on devices breaking. Hardware is vastly improving every year and their customer base happily upgrades just for that. Also it could be argued that their most profitable product line – iPhones – have, despite all of that, some of the healthiest life cycles in the smartphone marketed with people happily using 5+ year old devices which still are supported in the latest releases of iOS. Few other devices hold their value in resale like Apple products, their sturdiness is quite remarkable and clearly factored into pricing and consumer decisions. They pride themselves with a reliable repair program and I have to imagine their repair geniuses (their term, not my sarcasm) don't like messing with glue.
So, all things considered, is there an argument for fucking gluing in batteries other than petty greed? Like, is it cheaper? That doesn't seem a motivation behind any other major design decision on their part. Is it it lighter? Easier to cool? Does it make for a slimmer chassis?
I tried searching the question but couldn't find anything (in fact, I wouldn't even know what terms to search for). Is there any good analysis or reasoned speculation? It somehow makes less sense the more I think of it and it would give me some head peace to at least know of some arguments for it other than Apple being assholes.
17 votes -
Don't buy new, fix the old: The repair business is booming
20 votes -
Why I won't buy an iPad – ten years later
13 votes -
Farmers are buying forty-year-old tractors because they're actually repairable
21 votes -
Apparently Samsung just put a removable battery in one of it's new phones
6 votes