iFixit – Mobile News https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk Sat, 25 May 2024 00:39:15 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/cropped-2_Favicon-32x32.png iFixit – Mobile News https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk 32 32 iFixit scraps Samsung repair support after “obstacles that made us doubt Samsung’s commitment” https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk/news/article/ifixit-scraps-samsung-repair-support-obstacles-made-us-doubt-samsungs-commitment/ https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk/news/article/ifixit-scraps-samsung-repair-support-obstacles-made-us-doubt-samsungs-commitment/#respond Sat, 25 May 2024 00:39:15 +0000 https://mncwp.tailrd.cloud/ifixit-scraps-samsung-repair-support-obstacles-made-us-doubt-samsungs-commitment/ Self-repair company iFixit has scrapped its two-year-old Samsung Repair Hub because it “consistently faced obstacles that made us doubt Samsung’s commitment to making repair more accessible”. The Samsung Repair Hub aimed to provide local independent repair businesses with tools and parts to repair Galaxy devices Samsung UK says iFixit’s announcement is specific to Samsung US.

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Self-repair company iFixit has scrapped its two-year-old Samsung Repair Hub because it “consistently faced obstacles that made us doubt Samsung’s commitment to making repair more accessible”.

The Samsung Repair Hub aimed to provide local independent repair businesses with tools and parts to repair Galaxy devices

Samsung UK says iFixit’s announcement is specific to Samsung US. In the UK, it uses different suppliers to supports parts distribution and its self-repair programme.

“Our UK partnerships remain in place and Samsung UK customers will not be affected” Samsung stated.

IFixit stated: “We still think true upcycling of old phones is a great idea—but we don’t trust Samsung to deliver. We couldn’t get parts to local repair shops at prices and quantities that made business sense. The parts prices were so costly that many consumers opted to replace their devices rather than repair them. And the design of Samsung’s Galaxy devices remained frustratingly glued together, forcing us to sell batteries and screens in pre-glued bundles that increased the cost

iFixit: “Samsung’s approach to repairability does not align with our mission”.

“It’s with a heavy wrench that we have decided to end our partnership with Samsung Despite a huge amount of effort, Samsung’s approach to repairability does not align with our mission”.

The decision means iFixit will no longer be Samsung’s designated third-party parts and tools distributor and it will no longer collaborate directly with Samsung to develop new manuals

iFixit will continue to sell parts and repair fix kits for Samsung devices, sourcing OEM parts when available.

It added in a news release: “Though we are sad that Samsung isn’t coming along, we’re continuing our march into a more-repairable future. We’re shipping more parts to people all over the world, expanding awareness of third-party repair, and proving to manufacturers repair is good business.

“The tide is shifting in favour of more repairable gadgets and our other partnerships have been fruitful. Independent repair businesses are the lifeblood of our economy, but monopolisation has driven small repair businesses out of the market.

“Some companies hinder repair by blocking the distribution of essential parts and tools,

“Some companies hinder repair by blocking the distribution of essential parts and tools, requiring proprietary software to complete repairs, insisting on suffocating contracts, requiring expensive certifications, and pricing out the competition. This makes repairs cost more and take longer, and we won’t abide by unfriendly repair practices.

Right to Repair laws take effect this summer

“Despite skepticism from the repair community, we tried to work with Samsung to create repair documentation for a few initial devices. However, flashy press releases and ambitious initiatives don’t mean much without follow-through. We’ve been through this with Samsung before with Galaxy Upcycling, the amazing device reuse idea that we helped them announce. Then they ghosted us and never released it.

“We clearly didn’t learn our lesson the first time, and two years ago we let them convince us they were serious about embracing repair.

We tried to make this work. Gosh, we tried. But with such divergent priorities, we’re no longer able to proceed. So what does that mean for our community? 

“As Samsung phones are popular devices, we’ve tried to cover them with our in-house repair guides. But as the devices continued to decline in repairability, it made less and less sense. Having repair guides is a crucial part of repairability, but if Samsung is just profiting from unpaid work, do they really deserve that credit? As Right to Repair laws take effect this summer, we will be helping more manufacturers roll out repair solutions for their products”.

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HMD brings out trio of user-repairable ‘Pulse’ phones https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk/news/article/hmd-brings-trio-user-repairable-pulse-phones/ https://mobilenewscwp.co.uk/news/article/hmd-brings-trio-user-repairable-pulse-phones/#respond Wed, 24 Apr 2024 18:29:38 +0000 https://mncwp.tailrd.cloud/hmd-brings-trio-user-repairable-pulse-phones/ HMD, which now stands for ‘Human Mobile Devices’ has launched a range of ‘Pulse’ branded phones designed to be repairable by consumers. They are the HMD Pulse Pro, (price to be announced) HMD Pulse+ (£129) and HMD Pulse (£99). The HMD Pulse range is built so owners can replace a damaged display, fix a bent

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HMD, which now stands for ‘Human Mobile Devices’ has launched a range of ‘Pulse’ branded phones designed to be repairable by consumers.

They are the HMD Pulse Pro, (price to be announced) HMD Pulse+ (£129) and HMD Pulse (£99).

The HMD Pulse range is built so owners can replace a damaged display, fix a bent charging port, or change a depleted battery themselves using a self-repair kit from iFixit starting from £17.99.

HMD Pulse: end-users can fix broken screens and replace batteries

Kyle Wiens, CEO of iFixit, said “HMD’s commitment to designing phones with repairability in mind is an encouraging shift in our throwaway culture. We’re keen to collaborate as they work towards making repairable phones the norm, not the exception.

iFixit yourself

HMD says its research indicates 41 per cent of Gen Z would be more likely to purchase an electrical device if they could repair it themselves at home

 HMD predicts that three out of every four devices it sells in Europe in 2024 will be repairable, up from one in three in 2023, demonstrating a significant shift in consumer purchase habits. 

Ben Wood, Chief Analyst CCS Insight, said: “Repairability is a hot topic for consumers. CCS Insight has seen interest in repairing mobile phones increase significantly in both the EU and USA over the last year.

“Approximately 55 per cent of those surveyed in the EU said they would like to have a device that’s outside its warranty period repaired at a reasonable cost rather than replacing it with a new device. In the US interest is also strong, at an impressive 49 per cent. We also note that 47 per cent of EU consumers and 48 per cent of US consumers express readiness to pay slightly more for environmentally friendly products which underlines an appetite for more repairable products.”

 

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