Smontaggi ai quali Ho Lavorato
Le Mie Guide
Guide alle quali Ho Contribuito
Le Mie Guide Preferite
Guide Completate
Le Mie Storie
Stupid brother, but the problem was fixable.
iPhone 4S Screen
Display broken, fixed in 30 minutes
MacBook Unibody Model A1342 LCD
As a pro user, there’s definitely something to be said for repairability. However, as any pro should know, you never trust any one device or system completely. 99.9999% reliability still isn’t quite perfect, and I’ve experienced failures. That’s why I have backups. I NEVER rely on one storage medium. It’s much easier for me to quickly recover a file from Backblaze and work on another machine.. Price is also an important factor - it’s much less costly for me to quickly download a file and get back to work on a backup computer and FedEx my laptop to get repaired under warranty than it is to take time out of my day, pay out of pocket, and wait for a repair shop to recover my data. SSDs fail too, and being able to remove an SSD doesn’t do me much good if it’s what’s broken. Most of us work from servers or external drives regardless. Repairability matters, but my camera bag is already heavier than I’d like - if I have to sacrifice repairability for my back health, I’ll take it
Couldn't the CPU just be soldered in directly, instead of using the socket, or would this cause damage or something?
@thomas adhesive like this is an automatic lowering and although it has a replaceable battery, that won't help if anything else breaks.
I find it hard to believe that there is any need to use adhesive for the battery. The battery has enough space to have screw mounts.
Why didn't you do a teardown of the controller or the Kinect?
I think the repairability score is too high. The iPads get lower repairability scores, yet the batteries are not soldered on, the glass and display are not fused together, and there are more removable components.