Louis has a tendency to ramble so I’ll give you the tl:dw
Google plans to make parts available but not at the level that they should, so they’ll continue to be absurdly expensive to the point that you might as well just buy a new one.
More specifically they don’t make “parts” available but “parts assemblies” - a large collection of parts attached together. Replacing one part requires buying ones you do not need and replacement is merely a fallback when you can’t actually repair the part. To repair a part you need it’s parts (e.g. a chip on a circuit board).
Ah, so this is effectively identical to Apple’s approach to repairability.
No, I don’t think Apple sells any components at all and they intentionally make sure the phone doesn’t work properly after you replace them.
Apple sells parts and rents tool kits.
They sell a select few parts, from which you’re FORCED to rent these stupid and unnecessary tool kits and then spend all day on the phone with Apple getting them to completely unnecessarily approve the repair with their servers.
Also you still cannot take it to a 3rd party store for this repair. You literally HAVE to DIY it at home.
Yep. If your USB port breaks, they want you to replace the entire motherboard for a thousand bucks.
In other words, they took the Apple approach to right to repair. Disappointing but not unexpected. This is the same company that got rid of their “don’t be evil” motto after all.
Why does it feel like this post is an ad?
Posting the URL grabbed the first line of the video description which is an ad for his repair business.
A person who repairs is talking about right to repair.
Right to repair benefits consumers, whether he makes money from it or not
Selling only a bundle of parts that cost near the price of a new one is worth diddly to consumers. Third party repair is a benefit for consumers and they need individual parts and scematic to repair.
Just typical shitty YouTube clickbaiting
For the people in the comments not in the know: Rossmann is a respected voice for this sort of thing, even if this post looks like an ad. He’s not one of the bad ones (yet).
this guy is insufferable. these videos are just unnecessarily long speeches that would fit an article so much better than a video.
not to mention that his whole YouTube/Odysee channel is disguised advertisement for their businesses.
But if you just watch his videos and buy his stuff he will teach you how to repair yours!11! /s
The few times I watched his videos, he sounded like a libertarian bro, saying that if you just put the effort, you too can become successful. You just have to pull yourself by the bootstraps or something. He’s showing you everything you need to know to be as successful as him! And maybe it was sarcasm and I didn’t catch it but at one point he muttered something about Trump fixing the potholes of New York. That’s about when I stopped taking him seriously.
He’s still an important voice for the right to repair movement but you’re right. I also can’t stand him. Unfortunately he has very dedicated/vocal eeehm, fans, so legitimate remarks on him are often met with downvotes.
For the last 3 years he’s been saying it’s no longer possible to be successful financially doing what he does. He did used to say that, though, because at one point it was true.
I really liked his relaxing, calm MacBook repair and data recovery videos, where you could learn about soldering and electronics repair while watching. And I had no problem with a little bit of honest advertising for his own business.
While the right to repair is important, his videos about it are a lot of rambling and complaining about the same thing again and again. The titles are also often misleading or click baity. I can’t watch them either. I hope they work for the right people, though.