steven36 Posted October 3, 2019 Share Posted October 3, 2019 During its October Surface event on Wednesday, Microsoft revealed something unexpected (besides the Surface Duo phoneđ A stylish, thin, repairable laptop. Â Â Â Â The Surface Laptop 3 wowed the audience as Panos Panay, Microsoftâs product chief, showed it off on stage. People who care about the ability to fix your own gadgets soon began praising the companyâs efforts to make a repairable Surface machine. Unfortunately, Microsoft is still making its Surface Laptop 3 difficult for youâor even technicians not authorized by the companyâto repair. Â âWe continue to focus on the purity of this design, which was critical. But we alsoâfor our commercial customersâwe wanted to add the elements of serviceability, repairability, things that matter for customers,â he said. âMost of the time when you make a product that is serviceable, thereâs lines, thereâs extra weight, thereâs extra thickness, youâll see what I call trap doors. But on this product, weâve done none of that.â Â Lifting the keyboard away from the body of the computer, Panay exposed a module-like design for seemingly easy repairability. Panay went on to comment that there are âsome tools to make that happen,â as is to be expected, but he did not elaborate on whether those tools would be readily available or to whom. Gizmodo has learned Microsoft will not give access to those tools and resources to users and will instead limit their distribution to authorized repair technicians. Â Indeed, after showing off the new Surfaceâs improvements for repairability, Panay cautioned people against attempting to rip the product apart themselves. Later it was made clear to Gizmodo reporters at the event that taking the computer apart yourself would void the warranty. Â Â Â Right-to-repair advocates believe that users should have the right to repair their own devicesâyou know, products that they own. But if you canât make your own informed decision about who does the repair on your productâbe it your tech-savvy neighbor, an independent repair shop, or yourselfâbecause manufactures make it damn near impossible, thereâs an argument to be made that you do not actually maintain control over that device for which you paid hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Â Itâs worth noting here Microsoftâs anti-right-to-repair track record. As one example, in an interview with iFixit earlier this year, Washington State Representative Jeff Morris accused Microsoft of being instrumental in squashing right-to-repair legislation in his state. Microsoft is also a member of the Entertainment Software Association, a trade organization that opposes right-to-right legislation. Further, last year, the Federal Trade Commission issued a warning to Microsoft (in addition to other major manufacturers) over warranty language seemingly intended to dissuade users from seeking repairs by parties other than Microsoft. Â While Microsoft does have a trade-in and recycling program for products, batteries, packaging, itâs still hard to square lauding a company thatâs so aggressively pushed back against initiatives that would make it easier for people to repair their stuff on their own terms. Â The key to understanding exactly who this repairability benefits may be right there in Panayâs presentation language: commercial customers. If thatâs the case, it seems unlikely that the product would directly benefit the everyday consumer. Pretty as that module-like design appeared, itâs entirely possible that the company will withhold guides, tools, parts, and other necessary repair components from individual users. Instead, this improved repairability will more likely position Microsoft to better compete with rivals like Lenovo, Dell, and HP in the commercial space. Â Still, itâs hard to deny Microsoft of the incredible feat here of maintaining the design of the Surface while at the same time focusing on greater repairability (even if itâs limited by who can do those repairs). Itâs certainly an improvement over the first-generation Surface laptop, which iFixit dubbed a âglue-filled monstrosityâ and awarded a devastating zero out of 10 on its repairability scale in its 2017 teardown. Â Kyle Wiens, editor-in-chief of iFixit, told Gizmodo by phone on Wednesday that there was âno possible way that [Panay] could have done on stage what he did with that laptop with any other Surface product.â The shift away from the Surfaceâs anti-repair design was also commended by Nathan Proctor, who leads the U.S. Public Interest Research Groupâs Right to Repair campaignâalthough he noted that was not an especially high bar to clear. Â Proctor told Gizmodo by phone that heâs âvery pleased with what the little that I know so far,â commending the engineering improvements that will cut down repair times on the previously repair-unfriendly Surface, and ones that have to Microsoftâs benefit likely been in the works for some time. It can take a long time to carefully overhaul the entire design of a premier product, after all. But he noted thereâs much to be revealed about the device and its repairability that wasnât immediately clear in the absence of a teardown. Â âIt seems obvious that itâs definitely moving in the right direction,â Proctor said. âI think the questions that have to be answered are: How widely distributed will the repair tools and information be? And what are the other issues with the reparability? But I think Microsoftâif they put engineering time into making it more fixableâthey deserve credit for that. Thatâs a good thing to do, and it speaks well of the ability of the right to repair campaign to influence manufacturer behavior.â Â Source Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zanderthunder Posted October 3, 2019 Share Posted October 3, 2019 Seems like Microsoft still behaving like Apple in this case, telling them to only service their devices at authorized service center. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karlston Posted October 3, 2019 Share Posted October 3, 2019 Two posts hidden. Â Letâs get back on-topic, please. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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