Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm rocking a iphone 5s, works fine, probably needs a new battery but I have a charging case to mitigate.
see folks.. a solution that doesn't require spending several hundreds dollar every one to two years.
Anonymous wrote:I'm rocking a iphone 5s, works fine, probably needs a new battery but I have a charging case to mitigate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% replace each year
45% every two years
I can't even imagine keeping a phone for 5 years, I don't even keep my cars for 5 years
jfc.
We've had our car 15 years and still think of it as our new car. If you buy good quality and take care of things, they last.
You both made me LOL. Thanks for brightening my weekend.
I first clicked on this thread because I thought, "Why would people just replace a phone if it still works?" Just replaced the 16YO car, which outlasted the previous one by a few years. Oh, and iPhone is just a few months old, but glad to know I can buy a battery now for $29.
My dad’s car is 34 years old! A Volvo. We have a 15 year old Honda that we also think of as our new car.
Repeat after me: cars are not the same as phones which are intentionally designed to crap out around the time newer models with different operating system are introduced.
The thread is about phones which don't last forever by design and y'all are up in here like "well I never felt the need to replace my house/diamond ring, it still works fine." NO SHIT!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% replace each year
45% every two years
I can't even imagine keeping a phone for 5 years, I don't even keep my cars for 5 years
jfc.
We've had our car 15 years and still think of it as our new car. If you buy good quality and take care of things, they last.
You both made me LOL. Thanks for brightening my weekend.
I first clicked on this thread because I thought, "Why would people just replace a phone if it still works?" Just replaced the 16YO car, which outlasted the previous one by a few years. Oh, and iPhone is just a few months old, but glad to know I can buy a battery now for $29.
My dad’s car is 34 years old! A Volvo. We have a 15 year old Honda that we also think of as our new car.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:50% replace each year
45% every two years
I can't even imagine keeping a phone for 5 years, I don't even keep my cars for 5 years
jfc.
We've had our car 15 years and still think of it as our new car. If you buy good quality and take care of things, they last.
You both made me LOL. Thanks for brightening my weekend.
I first clicked on this thread because I thought, "Why would people just replace a phone if it still works?" Just replaced the 16YO car, which outlasted the previous one by a few years. Oh, and iPhone is just a few months old, but glad to know I can buy a battery now for $29.