At first I thought it was targeted to Tesla then saw it was farmers who wanted to fix their own. Then it made more sense.
I've been following the Right to Repair as I fully expect it to have global and far reaching consequences and is a problem I professionally first experienced while being employed to fix iPhones oceans away: availability of parts and the economics of repair that go against manufacturers socioeconomic interests.
The Planned Obsolescence people were referring to in this thread stems from this. Take it together with mythos that electronics are harder and dangerous to repair - a lie perpetuated by said manufacturers - and we're here. Less moving parts = more reliable the common logic would dictate. That what was promised, no? But it's not about usability or longevity. It's all about manufacturer today, making a product for you to rent.
I could've be installing original screens, batteries, chips, ports, mainboards and all, all-day long with a huge smile on my face, returning a quality fix to my customer... But I was forced either to cheat (by saying that this HQ refurbished part is a fresh original in a World where original spare part from manufacturer simply doesn't exist) or client was forced to accept a subpar part. Why? Because Apple is a control freak. It wants to be perceived green, but its actual policies are producing a stupifying amount of e-waste each and every day. And people don't see this, they see only the greenwashing, the public image, not the reality. And are worshipping it.
Yes, there was a time you could swap the part out of a donor board, but parts serialization Apple, Samsung, Tesla and other big manufacturers are engaging in makes that impossible (without speciality tools from Communist China while not locked out via firmware, slight pinout change or verification over servers, which is a different Monster altogether, found in gaming and software), because they refuse to work if part ID doesn't match CPU ID.
So if I take your two identical iPhones and swap screens today between them, both won't work to 100% anymore, both phones will register different part ID and both will disable a completely unrelated sensor/systems just to spite, purposefully misquoting and abusing the concept of Security.
Someone was paid to write this behavior in code, to ship it in the final product. That's what your 1k+ USD electronics are doing to you today, it gives more options to manufacturer by taking yours away.
TLDR:
Any skilled machinist can take the broken part out, put it together by soldering, welding or casting. It's there - on the table, it's function is clear and is not obscured or serialized to one unique device. Expensive repair as a service? Probably. Doable in a small modern workshop? Absolutely. Especially in the world of laser scanning that can map the replaceable part very precisely + 3D printing gets better by the day.
3D parts can be cast in metal VERY precisely and on budget. And 3D printing is cheap today. Only limiting factor is the size of the thing. If too small, can be sourced from other bodies, broken in different ways. So there's an option in mechanical world - to make it or to take it. Taking in the realm of electronics becomes harder and harder, more and more obstacles are put into place, legal and all.
But there's the Antikythera mechanism - the ancient and precise analog computer of the movement of the sky found in a shipwreck was reconstructed this way - x-rays and all, and brought back to life literally from the antique world.
We can agree that mechanics and electronics are different things. We can also agree that mechanical things aren't putting sticks in your spokes as are digital things doing today in ways as dirty as described above. Forget the schematics and open source thinking, it's on decline today and will go extinct if Right to Repair fails as a concept.
Yes, this doesn't concern the old cameras that much, but your new toy of today will be the retro of tomorrow. Will a device locked to this degree be fixable in a World like this?
This is rotten to the bone, to the level of culture - discard, don't fix. Lithium ion batteries are dangerous, let's cloud our minds with Safety and Security
EDIT:
I’ve heard this nonsense since the 1980’s. BTW.
Well, locking things down digitally and making them fail earlier than absolutely necessary because capitalism isn't such a nonsense, no? In all fairness, this probably wasn't around technician minds in 80's when things were open and tech was exciting, open venue for geeks to geek out. Then some of those geeks went ape and started to put sticks in spokes, because capitalism and the world is dancing away happily to this sick tune...
No schematic for mechanical part? No problems - it's physically there, let's copy it. No schematic for a chip? It's a useless piece of rock now. And good luck getting any schematics out of the big manufacturers of today - what once was put in every manual now is "Intelectual property".
That's why people choose old, dirty cars for example. Not because they are polluting assholes by the call - but because their cars won't try to control them, won't ask them for a subscription fee for an airbag to work. The extra exhaust at the pipe is just a sad compromise people feel forced to make.
So... I prefer mechanical, I prefer hands-on experience. That's probably why I'm enjoying film over sitting in front of a screen with DLSR on the side.