• southsamurai
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    952 years ago

    They mean the ones that are glued in, inside of casings that are glued in? Gee, how nice.

      • kratoz29
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        62 years ago

        Will phones keep the water proof/resistant feature with that change?

        I mean, I prefer having it accessible, one thing less to worry about or being anxious lol, and none of my phones have had such protection anyway.

        • southsamurai
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          2 years ago

          Replaceable batteries and waterproof ratings aren’t mutually exclusive. Never have been. Ports are a bigger barrier, and those have been solved for quite a while. Hell, there are phones that are ip68 rated, with user swappable batteries. The samsung x cover pro is a decent phone overall that does it.

          Think about all the watches with replaceable batteries that are waterproof, various cameras, rc submarines, etc.

          It will require design changes, but there are already plenty of options to make it happen.

          • kratoz29
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            52 years ago

            TIL, excellent news indeed, can’t wait for this “new” trend to come for smartphones!

          • @[email protected]
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            42 years ago

            When I worked at Google I seriously had someone try to tell me that making a key fob waterproof was challenging. I never did figure out what that guy was thinking.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            It will require design changes, but there are already plenty of options to make it happen.

            Nah, there’s basically no design changes needed. Pretty much everyone already complies with the new EU laws. People seem to think the new laws mean you’ll just be unclipping the back of your phone and chucking a new battery in like in the nokia days lol. All it means is that you won’t need proprietary tools to open your phone. You’ll still need to disassemble the phone as usual. Basically nothing changes for the big OEMs already. It’s not going to make replacing your battery on your own any easier.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        Excellent. I cannot wait to hotswap batteries again. It is so much easier to carry around an extra battery than a battery pack and cable.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          You’re not going to be able to do that lol. The only thing that’s changing is that you will only require tools that the average person wanting to do the job will already have in order to take your phone apart. No proprietary screws etc. The EU law basically changed nothing of any real meaning.

      • Possibly linux
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        82 years ago

        They should make the batteries explode when the device is opened that way the user gets third degree burns