This is the thing, apart from the points others have made about not needing to replace things actually being a positive, what the current batch of capitalists don't seem to realise is that people need to have money to spend to keep the whole capitalist edifice going and there are only so many people you can fire and benefits you can cut or keep suppressed before it all starts to fall apart.
Calling it device hoarding is a way to make sensible consumers feel bad when they are cutting down on e-waste and saving money.
Real device hoarding is buying a new phone every few months and not selling or donating the perfectly good older ones so that they can be used by others who are don't need the latest features.
CNBC https://www.cnbc.com
THE RESISTANCE.
How device hoarding by Americans is costing economy. 2 days ago. Americans are holding onto devices longer than ever before, and while it may be consumer smart, it comes at a cost to work productivity and ...
Prof Zenkus @anthonyzenkus.
Using a device that still works is called "device hoarding" by the capitalists. These people are truly insane.
MC Squared @mcsquared34-18h
No CNBC, it's not device hoarding it's -MY PHONE STILL WORKS FINE AND I'M NOT GOING TO SPEND $1500 FOR A SLIGHTLY BETTER CAMERA AND AN AI FEATURE THAT I'LL EVENTUALLY DISABLE.
@Ralph @GeriAQuin In many cases the new device is actively worse than the old device.
I have a Pixel 9. It has a SIM slot. I could buy a Pixel 10, but it does not have a SIM slot. I would be back to carrier captivity so I didn't do that.
I have a 2007 Acura. It has a self-contained navigation system. I test drove a 2025 Accord. It has a cloud based nav with a tracking device I cannot turn off. And a monthly fee. I did not buy it.
Antifeatures. That's why we're hoarding.
@cstross @ianbobmorris @GeriAQuin
Hmmm... <Moose looks at iPhone> Ah, the current one is a secondhand 7, with no headphone jack. That's a bugger, but shows how little I use it. I shall have to dig out and repair the old 6 if I want to use iTunes on the train. (It got broken by some muppet who got on the train, took the seat opposite, and hurled his bag under the table - damaging the power connector such that it won't charge. A friend donated his 7 with dead battery as a replacement. 3:O)>
@cstross @ianbobmorris @GeriAQuin
The 6 always used to run out of battery on trips to London if I was using it for audio playback. Some of that was probably due to it desperately trying to maintain a cell connection at 100mph or so, and you can't turn that off. 3:O(>
I did have to replace the SIM at one point to keep it working, so it might be recent enough for 4G. I'll have to open it up and see if I can re-solder the power connector.
@cstross @ianbobmorris @GeriAQuin
As for the rest of the current setup: White MacBook 5.2 with Snow Leopard for eMail (because I like Eudora), 21.5 iMac (mid-2011) for everything else. There's a new iMac (last year) still sitting in its box awaiting the time to set it up and migrate so I can use a modern web browser. I'll get the Round Tuit from the kitchen and do that eventually.
"If it ain't broke, don't fix[1] it."
3:O)>
[1] or replace.
Device hoarding: You, selfishly refusing to buy the latest model iPhone every year.
NOT device hoarding: AI techbros buying up every single computer component larger than a #6-32 UNC screw for use in their data centers.
Not just that, but every single "upgrade" seems to remove a feature or option that I actually use and may even have bought the device specifically for.
Stop removing the stuff I bought your crappy thing for in the first place. How is modern marketing and product design a sustainable business practice?
They want people to buy new stuff because the AI and surveillance tech us embedded so that you can't really disable it (though it may pretend to).