Apparently Nokia has released a repair friendly phone (G22) in tie-up with iFixit for original replacement parts!

Hugh Jeffreys does a tear down and verifies the claims - youtube.com/watch?v=FZGM-SgfyU

This means we can finally get a repairable smartphone in India, Since #fairphone & #pine64 devices are never coming here.

With un-lockable bootloader, It seems viable for #LineageOS & #postmarketOS hacking; Unisoc T606 chipset is bit concerning though. Any thoughts @joelselvaraj ?

#repair #mastindia

@abishek_muthian I wonder if iFixit will also publish an overall repairability score for the G22 at some time. My guess would be 7 or 8 tops.
As Hugh said, replacing the battery isn't as easy as it looks from the manual.
The G22 being a first attempt from Nokia I think the most important aspect is the availability and price of spares. And like Hugh said let's hope the repairability improves with the next models.

@Ingo_FP_Angel @abishek_muthian I think the fact that self-repair doesn't void warranty is also a pretty major improvement here. I guess it's not so much in the design of the phone, but still a significant step in the right direction.

I'm not planning on retiring my fairphone 3 any time soon, but it's good to see some competition is popping up. At this point I wouldn't even consider a phone that isn't repairable if I were to buy one.

@sab @abishek_muthian Oh yeah, good point about the warranty and self-repairs!

Maybe it's only me, but I'm not too fond of the word "competition" when it comes to other companies with a similar goal like Fairphone. I'm not a native speaker but I'd rather use something like comrade-in-arms, though I do not like the military connotation. If anyone has a better English word for people who are working towards a common goal I'm happy to hear it.

Follow

@Ingo_FP_Angel @abishek_muthian I guess what it boils down to is choice, so that's probably the word I was after at least.

I agree competition is not the correct term - of all the things potentially holding Fairphone back, a lack of competition is not one of them.

That said, they're all companies who need to chase profits - in the end they have no choice but to compete. The best we can do (short of revolting against capitalism) is to try to make ethical businesses competitive.

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Librem Social

Librem Social is an opt-in public network. Messages are shared under Creative Commons BY-SA 4.0 license terms. Policy.

Stay safe. Please abide by our code of conduct.

(Source code)

image/svg+xml Librem Chat image/svg+xml