26
13

As a hobby, I like buying broken phones off the internet, fixing them up, play with it for a bit, then resell. Recently, I bought a Redmi 8A from Facebook Marketplace. The phone in question has a corrupted firmware/operating system. I've resurrected phones (mostly Samsung and older Xiaomis) with such issues before, so I thought it was an easy fix.

With my past experience with resurrecting a bricked Xiaomi phone, I would normally just disassemble the phone, short out some pads on the motherboard, flash the firmware, and off I go.... This time though, you have an extra step. Before the computer even starts flashing the firmware into the phone, it will ask for an authorized Xiaomi acccount (that has special permission to flash devices using EDL).

Older Xiaomi phones: Disassemble phone > Short out pads > Connect phone to PC > Flash firmware > Done

Newer Xiaomi phones: Disassemble phone > Short out pads > Connect phone to PC > Log-in to authorized Xiaomi account > Flash firmware > Done

It's not as simple as creating an account and then logging into it. You have to buy a special account for around $30 from some sketchy sources, and that would only allow you to flash one time. If you made a mistake, that's $30 down the drain. Another option you could do is use a special software, but requires a subscription. Which is $20-30 for three months. I went with this. At least, I can flash as much as I want.

Now the phone is question is now fully functional. Which is good, but imo, I shouldn't have to pay for anything in the first place, like I did in the past.

You might be saying, you should have just went into fastboot and flashed the firmware that way. Or even unlock the bootloader, and then reflash. Well, it's not that simple. In order to flash anything using fastboot, you have to unlock the bootloader. And in order to do so, you'll have to boot into Android, then enable OEM unlocking in the settings. Which isn't possible in my case.

I believe, most Android phones are gonna be like this if you have to unbrick it. Had this happened on a Motorola, Huawei, and on a Pixel too (with a locked bootloader).

Samsung and LG phones are easier to recover, which has a download mode, which allows for recovering/unbricking regardless of the bootloader status (just hold the volume up button, the connect to PC). Even iPhones are also easy to recover. You just have to hold down the home button, connect to the computer, and then let iTunes do the rest. All three manufacturers makes it easy, that an average Joe can do it at the comfort of their own homes. They don't even have to take the phone apart. I wish all Android manufacturers would make it that easy.

TL;DR: It used to be that Xiaomi (and most Android phones) are easy to recover/unbrick, but sometime down the road, they made it a bit difficult by requiring an special account, which you'll have to get through sketchy sources. Or use a special subscription-based software. LG, Samsung, and Apple are the exception since they make it easier.

27
5
28
15
29
23

Official spare parts, batteries, and repair guides for select Logitech hardware will be available through iFixit starting ‘this summer.’

30
4
31
28
32
24
33
7
34
2
35
7
36
33
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.ml to c/righttorepair@lemmy.fmhy.ml
37
38
38
20

Remote kill switches allow someone else to remotely terminate your access to parts or all of "your" product when they feel like it or by accident, and are yet another threat to individual freedom.

We have already seen the effects of this anti-feature on Mozilla Firefox in early May 2019, where Mozilla "accidentally" suspended all extensions ForSecurityReasons™.

Now imagine the same happening to your other things, like your "smart" heater in winter. Then you can only hope your oven is "dumb", i.e. it works without thinking about whether it should or not. As a last recourse, you could use a hair dryer.

Then imagine getting stuck on the side of a motorway in an expensive luxury car without any physical defects, because some rogue employee at your car vendor's headquarters pushed the wrong button.

I don't care for which "good purpose" this scourge against freedom exists, the idea that someone can remotely press a button and cripple my product, whether accidentally or deliberately, is dystopian. I want to be in full control of my product.

In an ideal world, people would be repulsed by anything with a remote kill switch like they are repulsed by rotten food.

39
30
40
13
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.ml to c/righttorepair@lemmy.fmhy.ml

1. What is right to repair/ownership

Video format:

Blog/Article format

Pages/Tools

2. Examples of anti-repair/ownership behavior from the side of corporations

41
30
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Martineski@lemmy.fmhy.ml to c/righttorepair@lemmy.fmhy.ml

We never hear about broken and worn-out products. Pretty much all gear nowadays is baseline ok, it’s the negatives that really set things apart.

That's why I'm building ExitReviews to change the way people review products. Let's reflect upon how a product performed over its duration of service instead of when it first arrived and people haven’t spent much time with it to learn the quirks.

We can then build a collection of how long products last, where they break, and how to fix them. Even if certain products are not available anymore, it still gives a good picture of brand deterioration.

Let me know what you think! I'm sure this sub could contribute many submissions :)

Any thoughts on how to promote this community? It's currently still facing the chicken-egg problem, so we would need some PR or partnerships to make this popular.

42
28
Society if... (lemmy.fmhy.ml)
43
40
44
8
45
20
John deer (lemmy.fmhy.ml)
46
15
SELF-REPAIR MANIFESTO (lemmy.fmhy.ml)
47
24
If it can't be... (lemmy.fmhy.ml)
48
7
49
21
50
4
view more: ‹ prev next ›

Right to Repair/Ownership

15 readers
1 users here now

Whether it be electronics, automobiles or medical equipment, the manufacturers should not be able to horde "oem" parts, render your stuff useless if you repair it with aftermarket parts, or hide schematics of their products.

Rules:

  1. Keep posts on topic.
  2. Don’t make posts with link/s to paywalled articles as their main focus.
  3. No posts linking to reddit posts.
  4. Titles must include information on how old the source is in this format dd.mm.yyyy (ex. 24.06.2023).
  5. Please be respectful to each other.

You may also be interested in this sub: !fucksubscriptions@lemmy.world

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS