Personal Justifications for different phone life cycles

Yesterday, I was reading a [thread](https://lemmy.ml/post/1930001) that asked what's the point of buying a new phone as often as as people do. In the comments there were a variety of answers, but what interested me is that there were a wide variety of answers for how long each person liked to go before upgrading. So I've... #smartphone #sustainability #phone #upgrade #technology #tech

https://kbin.social/m/tech/t/180966

All you wrote is just an ad to purchase more stuff and to give zero thought about the consequences.

8, 9 and 10 years: you dislike change, you are incredibly broke or you only have a smartphone in the first place because it’s basically necessary to function in modern society. Plus you get to be smug about being green.

Your whole thing is about money. If you think that all this technology, energy, CO2, minerals come for free then you are in for a very bad surprise.

You are paying the price as we speak, through the inflation of all the other products you pay for every day. You will pay all your life for your privilege of falling for an ad campaign. Less crops, lower quality of crops? -> You will pay good money because of it. Less irrigation water? Same effect. Insurance companies in general will increase their premium non-stop because the risks will be everywhere. All this money comes out of your pocket.

A phone is not a necessity to function in a modern society, and green people are not smug. You talk as if you were out of the game, as if you were not impacted. Are you from the northern hemisphere? Don't you feel the heat these days?

I'm not sure if you know this, but dismissing anyone who disagrees with you as having fallen for an ad campaign isn't a particularly persuasive rhetorical tactic.

But that aside, a smartphone someone buys every few years is a drop in the bucket for someone's individual contribution to climate change compared to driving, flying, living in inefficient low-density environments, eating pork or beef, or a host of other disproportionate activities. This just comes off as moralizing for its own sake.

He never claimed to be looking for rhetorical efficacy.

Speaking or rhetoric, yours is dumb. The implicit consumerism underlying such practices obviously extends beyond phones and in all fields of consumerism.

You could also have battery is noticablely worst after 2 years, also one argument most people don't realize is that the antenna technology starts to receive less of a signal (from past experience and from what I heard I don't know how scientific it is)
It sounds exceptionally not scientific.

<q>8, 9 and 10 years: you dislike change, you are incredibly broke or you only have a smartphone in the first place because it’s basically necessary to function in modern society. <q>

We live in a mini valley in a rural spot, and don't get cell reception in our house. Also, I always liked using desktops much more than phones.