2 comments

  • Someone 6 hours ago
    FTA: “When the policy floor was raised, Apple’s engineers didn’t quit; they innovated”

    “Apple always knew how to build a repairable laptop; they simply lacked the business reason to apply that knowledge.”

    So, which is it?

    Time will tell, but I also think the claim “With the Neo, Apple is experimenting with a tiered compliance strategy. The $599 model demonstratively meets and fulfills the letter and spirit of the law to satisfy regulators, while the $2,499 MacBook Pro remains ‘black box’ for professionals” is bogus. Yes, there isn’t a repairable MacBook Pro yet, but I bet their next product refresh will be repairable.

  • VERIRoot 6 hours ago
    Apple will surely have a good but legal-illegal walkaround on this.
    • giuliomagnifico 6 hours ago
      Uhm i don’t understand, the MacBook Neo is really more reparable than other MacBooks, so yes the European law helped. Is what the article says
      • znpy 4 hours ago
        I tend to agree but we have to see how this (repairabiliy, i mean) happens in practice.

        What if replacement parts are super expensive? Like a 200$ battery for a $600 laptop?

        Is it really repairable then?

        Will compatible parts be allowed? There are a bunch of tricks to prevent unofficial parts from working…

        • giuliomagnifico 4 hours ago
          At least it can be easily disassembled, compared to other Apple products. Then the third party components will be available for cheaper prices than Apple.