otters_raft

joined 5 months ago
 

Some excerpts:

In late May, Apple announced what seemed on its face to be a big, positive development for iPad owners: It was going to begin selling repair parts for iPads to the general public, which is a requirement of a series of new right-to-repair laws. [...]

The announcement was generally covered positively by the press: “Save Money, Make Your iPad Last Longer,” a Forbes headline read, for example. But independent repair professionals who have used the program told 404 Media that the prices Apple is charging for some repair parts are absurdly high, and that this functionally means that the iPad is as unrepairable as it has always been.

“As is typical for Apple, they’ve been pushing and testing the limits as time has gone on, and now they pushed too far. There are plenty of other examples of absurdly priced parts from Self Service, but these iPad parts are by far the worst,” Brian Clark, the owner of the iGuys Tech Shop, told 404 Media.

Clark points out that a new charge port for an iPad Pro 11, a part that goes bad all the time, costs $250 from Apple. Aftermarket charge ports, meanwhile, can be found for less than $20. “It’s a very basic part, and I just can’t see any reasonable explanation that part should be $250 from Apple,” he said. “That’s a component that probably costs them a few dollars to make.”

Clark said a digitizer for an iPad A16 is $200. That part can be bought from third-party suppliers for $50, and the iPad A16 sells brand new from Apple for $349, Clark said. The replacement screen assembly for an iPad Pro 13 costs $749 from Apple.

Jonathan Strange, the founder of XiRepair, put together a spreadsheet of all the new parts and found that more than a third of the iPad parts Apple is now selling are not being sold at a price that is economically viable for independent repair shops. The way he calculated this was by taking the price of the part, adding in $85 for labor and a 10 percent profit margin for a repair shop. If the total repair cost was more than half the price of buying a totally new device, he considers it to be not economically viable.

Strange said that when analyzing iPad part prices, he found that nearly every part seemed to be correlated with the replacement value of the device versus what the part should probably actually cost.

“I don't believe Apple prices parts based on their cost to manufacturer plus a small margin, I fully believe they are pricing parts based on retail replacement cost of the device. Apple seems to keep almost all their repair parts plus an average shop's labor right at about 50 percent of the replacement cost of the device. I believe they do this to discourage repair,” Strange told 404 Media. “It doesn’t cost $250 or even $100 to manufacture a charge port cable, but I believe Apple is charging this because they know if the price is high enough no one will buy it. If right-to-repair laws force them to sell parts they'll do it but they will make them super high.”

It’s not clear what, if anything, can be done about Apple’s iPad part pricing. State right-to-repair laws require companies to sell parts to the public on “fair and reasonable terms,” but it’s not clear whether Apple’s iPad part prices are egregious enough to be out of line with different state laws.

 

Author: Gabriela Perdomo | Assistant Professor, Mount Royal University

From the newsletter:

A few weeks ago, in an overheated and packed room at the Centre for Social Innovation in Toronto, several journalists took the mic to speak about their work in a powerful new book — When Genocide Wasn’t News — about how Canada’s legacy media has been responding to Israel’s intensive military campaign in Gaza.

The book features contributions from journalists — some writing under pseudonyms — who describe newsrooms gripped by fear and a misguided commitment to a notion of “objectivity” that fails to serve the public.

Today, in The Conversation Canada, an article by journalism professor Gabriela Perdoma of Mount Royal University, points out that while Palestinians in Gaza have endured over 640 days of relentless military assault by Israeli Defense Forces, including attacks on children, hospitals and aid workers, Canadian mainstream media has too often remained silent or misleading in its coverage. She says one of the issues is that “journalists who support peace efforts can easily be accused of being ‘biased’ in favour of those promoting peace.” And such accusations, she says, “can have an outsized impact on reporting and be used to silence journalists.”

Perdoma’s article challenges mainstream news narratives and calls for newsrooms to urgently reflect on how journalism in Canada must evolve, especially in times of war.

 

From the newsletter:

WNBA players made headlines during the July 19 all-star game for wearing shirts that read “Pay Us What You Owe Us” during the pregame warm-ups amid ongoing collective bargaining negotiations. The current agreement between players and league owners expires in October. Players are pushing for better revenue sharing, salaries and benefits.

Today in The Conversation Canada, Ryan Clutterbuck, Michael Van Bussel and Michele K. Donnelly from Brock University argue this moment presents a chance for the WNBA to grow the business in ways that benefit both players and ownership.

They write: “WNBA players and WNBA team owners now have, in front of them, a once-in-a-generation opportunity to transform professional women’s sport in North America.”

With time remaining before the agreement’s expiry, there is still space for constructive dialogue, but this will require both sides to navigate and understand the complex negotiation dynamics at play.

 

Here is the introductory paragraphs from the article. I did not extract any other sections in case I introduce any of my own biases, please see the article for the full discussion.

Author: Spyros A. Sofos | Assistant Professor in Global Humanities, Simon Fraser University

A new round of violence recently erupted in southern Syria, where clashes between local Druze militias and Sunni fighters have left hundreds dead.

In response, Israel launched airstrikes in and around the province of Sweida on July 15, saying it was acting to protect the Druze minority and to deter attacks by Syrian government forces.

The strikes mark Israel’s most serious escalation in Syria since December 2024, and they underline a growing trend in its foreign policy: the use of minority protection as a tool of regional influence and power projection.

 

Here is the introductory paragraphs from the article. I did not extract any other sections in case I introduce any of my own biases, please see the article for the full discussion.

Author: Spyros A. Sofos | Assistant Professor in Global Humanities, Simon Fraser University

A new round of violence recently erupted in southern Syria, where clashes between local Druze militias and Sunni fighters have left hundreds dead.

In response, Israel launched airstrikes in and around the province of Sweida on July 15, saying it was acting to protect the Druze minority and to deter attacks by Syrian government forces.

The strikes mark Israel’s most serious escalation in Syria since December 2024, and they underline a growing trend in its foreign policy: the use of minority protection as a tool of regional influence and power projection.

 

The article also discusses new prevention methods and the need for a national tick surveillance system

 

The article also discusses new prevention methods and the need for a national tick surveillance system

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 days ago

I saw a video about the bench ramps, and they mentioned something important that I didn't consider: they help with accessibility to move between the high sidewalk and the lower level path.

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

In his letter Friday to Kosseim, Shamji said that nearly one-third of all home-care patients in the province had their data compromised.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/data-breach-ontario-health-at-home-mpp-1.7572411

I couldn't find specifics, but maybe you'll be contacted now if you were affected?

 

Maybe is pivoting to B2B financial forecasting and scenario planning and as a company, will no longer be actively maintaining this repository. What this means:

  • This final release is a working, “as-is” version of the software
  • As a company, we will be turning 100% of our focus to the pivot, and therefore, will not be actively maintaining / accepting contributions to this repository

It had a nice UI, but it never really felt finished. There are a few other more popular financial trackers out there, which one do you use?

 

I love how nice the area is now. I met up with a friend one evening and it was nice to see so many people enjoying the public space with friends/family

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Yup, I think the article is about making sure the healthcare side is accounted for when building, rather than not building

Major infrastructure projects contribute to both local and provincial economies. When managed well, the economic benefits of such projects can positively contribute to community health.

But when not managed properly, the pressures that major infrastructure projects place on local health-care services can be significant. Therefore, we strongly urge governments and businesses to consider their impacts on overburdened and hard-working health-care providers in rural and remote communities.

On site medical attention would help as well:

How well a project manages its health service impacts clearly matters. When project workers resided in well-managed camps supported by competent onsite medical service providers, the pressures on the local system were less than when workforces did not have adequate accommodation and health supports.

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 3 points 4 weeks ago (1 children)

AI is American hoax to win over China.

What do you mean?

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I'll have to remember this one during the next storm

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 month ago

My bad, I didn't proofread it

It's fixed now, thank you!

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 months ago

I accidentally posted this twice, so I'm deleting this one. Feel free to copy your comment onto the other post:

https://lemmy.ca/post/45150059

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 months ago

Yea I don't think I'm going to promote them again :/

Thanks!

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

It is possible to connect it to third party platforms (open router, various paid platforms), but I didn't figure out a way to connect it to duck.ai

That's the only one that I still go to a separate site for, and I can't maintain the history as a result

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 5 points 2 months ago

What do you want to be banned...the smoking or the nicotine?

In this case I saw the news article and I wanted to hear people's thoughts on it. I learned a lot from the comments, and appreciate you adding your perspective, thank you :)

[–] otters_raft@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

Here is their demo gif:

More info here: https://docs.openwebui.com/

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