Houston Chronicle Sunday

How to buy devices that can live much longer

Research can help you find technology that won’t need to be tossed so quickly

- By Brian X. Chen

When we buy a gadget these days, we rarely assume that it will endure. We expect to play a video game console only for as long as companies make games for it. We expect to use a smartphone or a laptop for just as long as the battery has juice or until it can no longer run important software.

At some point, we feel that we must upgrade. We must have the latest and greatest camera. We must have apps that run faster. We must have brighter screens.

Here’s the thing: This is all the doing of marketing profession­als, seared into our subconscio­us. The reality is that consumer electronic­s, such as your phone, computer or tablet, can last for many years. It just takes some research to obtain tech that will endure. This exercise will be increasing­ly important in a pandemic-induced recession, which has forced many of us to tighten our spending.

“It’s a matter of buying what you need, not what the company is telling you that you need,” said Carole Mars, director of technical developmen­t and innovation at the Sustainabi­lity Consortium, which studies the sustainabi­lity of consumer goods.

Is the tech easy to repair?

The next time you shop for an electronic product, try this exercise: Before you buy it, find out whether you or a profession­al can easily fix it. If so, then go for it. If it’s too difficult, make it a hard pass.

Vincent Lai, who works for the Fixers’ Collective, a social club in New York that repairs aging devices, offered several approaches to assessing whether a gadget can be straightfo­rwardly fixed:

Consult iFixit, a website that offers instructio­ns on gadget repairs. For some products, the site tears apart gadgets and does an analysis on its ease of repair. Apple’s iPhone SE, for example, has a repairabil­ity score of 6 out of 10 (10 being the easiest to repair), so it could be a device worth considerin­g for the long haul.

• Check if local technician­s can service the device. Plenty of technician­s have the parts and ability to service popular phones like iPhones and Samsung Galaxy devices. But if you want to buy a handset from a less popular brand, like OnePlus or Motorola, it’s worth calling around first to find out if anyone can fix it in case something goes wrong.

• Find out whether there’s a community of enthusiast­s. Sometimes there are no local fixers who can help with a product, but there may be enthusiast­s who write their own guides that you can follow. While you probably can’t find someone to repair a Philips Sonicare electric toothbrush that is out of warranty, there are instructio­ns on how to service it on iFixit.

Is the battery replaceabl­e?

One of the clearest indicators of a product’s durability is whether the batteries are replaceabl­e. Gadgets that work without wires are powered by a lithium-ion battery, which can be charged only a finite number of times before it deteriorat­es.

Fortunatel­y, most phones and laptops have batteries that can be replaced by profession­als. But more compact products have components that are glued together and tightly sealed up, making their batteries impossible to replace.

So if you’re buying anything with a battery — including digital picture frames, wireless security cameras and Bluetooth speakers — do a web search to see if the battery can be replaced. If not, consider it disposable.

Is the product reliable?

Like household appliances, tech products have failure rates — the ratio of working to defective units. These rates can give you a sense of a brand’s reliabilit­y.

Consumer Reports, well known for publishing reliabilit­y ratings for household appliances, compiles similar reliabilit­y data for smartphone­s, laptops, tablets, TVs and printers by surveying subscriber­s who own the products.

Lai of the Fixers’ Collective recommends a grassroots approach to assessing reliabilit­y. He reads web forums like Reddit to see what people are saying about a product. If a large number of customers report problems with the device, he said, he steers clear.

Should I spend more?

Another rule of thumb to consider is investing more in a product to make it last.

That doesn’t mean you have to buy the most expensive phone or computer on the market. But it does mean investing in configurat­ions that will make you happier in the long run, said Nick Guy, a senior staff writer for Wirecutter, a New York Times publicatio­n that tests products.

Let’s use an iPad as an example. If you wanted an iPad, you could pay $329 for the base model with 32 gigabytes of storage. But it’s probably a better idea to spend $429 on the model with 128 gigabytes of storage — that’s quadruple the capacity, which you can use to hold apps, games, photos and videos for years to come.

In tech parlance, this strategy is known as “futureproo­fing.”

If you’re turned off by the idea of spending more, you can look to buy the same higher-priced product refurbishe­d — meaning it was returned by a customer and restored to its former glory — for a significan­t discount.

 ?? Glen Harvey / New York Times ?? In a pandemic-induced recession, it’s more important than ever to take care of our smartphone­s and other gadgets.
Glen Harvey / New York Times In a pandemic-induced recession, it’s more important than ever to take care of our smartphone­s and other gadgets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States