http://www.greenmyapple.org/ Wrote:
"We get angry when our iPod breaks just after the one-year warranty expires.
My Ipod works fine 10 months beyond the day that its 1 year warranty expired. My wife's works fine, too. So does my friend's, whose is the same age, and at least five of my coworkers. I don't know anyone in the real world who has an Ipod that has failed in the ways that I read about online.
http://www.greenmyapple.org/ Wrote:
We get annoyed when Apple says it's cheaper to buy a new one than fix the old one. We hate it when we are reduced to selling our old PowerBook keyboard on eBay for five bucks. These are common consumer woes resulting from Apple designing products with short life spans. If Apple had to take back its old products, you can bet it would start designing longer lasting products that are easier to reuse and recycle."
I don't get this - why should Apple have to take anything back? By this thinking, shouldn't Amana have to take back old microwaves and GE have to take back old refrigerators and Sony have to take back old stereos? Why? Aren't these OUR items once we bought them? Aren't they ours to dispose of once we're done with them? Why is it the manufacturers responsibility to get rid of our garbage? When I finish my dinner, can I take my scraps back to the store and ask them to get rid of it?
Don't forget, once you start asking them to dispose of this stuff, you automatically ask them to roll into the original price the cost of disposing of this stuff. Do you want to pay more to get rid of what you could have gotten rid of yourself for free - or even made some money off of?
By the way, these aren't "short life span" items - these are items that people want rid of simply because they want the latest and greatest. There's a difference between an item becoming obsolete and an item no longer working. That is not Apple's fault. That is called buyer's remorse.