I have a Framework, and I love it. The trackpad isn't as good as a MacBook's.
kylemsguy
Anti-theft, which is a dual-edged sword.
Activation lock prevents the device from functioning without the consent of the owner, but if the owner is locked out of their iCloud account, the device is a brick.
Serializing components has the side effect of preventing activation locked devices from being harvested for parts. Unfortunately, this also means that perfectly working parts cannot be used to repair other iPhones.
It's very hard to walk that fine line between anti-theft and repair. The way Apple is doing it definitely seems to be with an anti-third-party-repair goal, though.
I personally think activation lock is fine, but serializing components is not.
A lot of people who talk about how bad Apple laptops are ignore how the rest of the industry is basically moving towards Apple's design language, but doing it cheaply. If you hate apple, you'll hate HP even more.
iPhones tend to be more affordable in the US than in other places in the world. An iPhone SE is only $400, and used iPhones aren't that expensive.
It's not the first time I've seen it, and I don't know how to feel about it. It's not free software at the very least.
Not to mention that the Apollo dev won't be working with them again after the BS they tried to pull.
Haven't gone scorched earth yet. Don't think I will, but I'll think twice before going back on the site. There's some things that are valuable, and I'll wait and see if they even stay valuable.
He did answer one non-soft question with a non-answer, and also taking time to make a swing at Christian again.
Companies are slowly moving in that direction, except doing it worse in most cases (i.e. cheaply)