Many of the younger generations seem to accept that things don’t last/break easily.
I come from a time where there was a wiring diagram for the TV pasted on the inside back cover. Washing machines and other devices often had the schematics included. Repairing your stuff and keeping it running was the norm back then. Even if you couldn’t, you probably had a neighbour who could.
Planned obsolescence is a relatively new thing.
Planned obsolescence was first introduced for lightbulb, according to Veritasium video on YT. But for most things it is relatively new thing (20 years).
@emerty@0xc0ba17 for example automobiles? Detroit invented planned obsolescence and convinced people that two years was the right frequency to buy a new car. It was Japanese manufacturers in the late 70s and 80s who ended that nonsense. Boomer era commodities were also disposable crap by design.
You can still buy things with very long lifetime but they are very expensive, the results of making cheaper things that break earlier is that more people can afford to buy them.
This is of course what most companies want but is also makes a lot of products available to people who couldn’t afford them earlier which for many is a good thing.
Things should be made to last and not be made to intentionally break after a short time.
how is that a boomer opinion?
Many of the younger generations seem to accept that things don’t last/break easily. I come from a time where there was a wiring diagram for the TV pasted on the inside back cover. Washing machines and other devices often had the schematics included. Repairing your stuff and keeping it running was the norm back then. Even if you couldn’t, you probably had a neighbour who could. Planned obsolescence is a relatively new thing.
Planned obsolescence was first introduced for lightbulb, according to Veritasium video on YT. But for most things it is relatively new thing (20 years).
Things used to be made like this. Only boomers are old enough to remember buying an iron for life.
@emerty @0xc0ba17 for example automobiles? Detroit invented planned obsolescence and convinced people that two years was the right frequency to buy a new car. It was Japanese manufacturers in the late 70s and 80s who ended that nonsense. Boomer era commodities were also disposable crap by design.
They say it a lot, in that things made in the past were made better than things today.
You can still buy things with very long lifetime but they are very expensive, the results of making cheaper things that break earlier is that more people can afford to buy them.
This is of course what most companies want but is also makes a lot of products available to people who couldn’t afford them earlier which for many is a good thing.
I think it’s a fair trade.