Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5349|London, England

DesertFox- wrote:

I suspect there also exist engineers who are proponents of planned obsolescence, as it is to their own monetary benefit. It's disingenuous to put all of that on the bean counting suits.
It was included in my senior year design course. They listed the Gillette disposable razor model as one example.

Products are designed to certain criteria. An LED light bulb is designed to last, on average, 30,000 hours. It could be designed to last 1,000 or 10,000 or 100,000 based on material choices. This is normal. Is it planned obsolescence? Kind of. As I said, you do have to design to some sort of criteria short of infinity. Cost rises as quality increases and at some point you start taking a loss because people won't pay for the increase in quality.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6763|PNW

Dilbert_X wrote:

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

In theory. But you could pay $35k, then consider yourself lucky when a recall is issued for a problematic part so you don't have to pay for a replacement. Premium pricing doesn't mean that garbage has been well engineered.
An old car is almost as useful as a new car, apart from the lack of airbags and crash survivability you can still drive it around in traffic no problem with the same level of risk you had when you bought it new.

What do consumers want, to pay $5k for a phone that lasts ten years or $1k each for five phones which each last two years?
An iphone 1 would be unusable now, networks and data content have changed radically in that time.

Consumers want as cheap as possible and a usable life which matches the useful life.
There's really no point in radically over-engineering most consumer products.

Yes there are shitty products out there, as Jay said, blame the MBAs who gut brands and products for short-term profit and put in shitty capacitors or wheel bearings.
Equally companies run by engineers rarely make money, there's no simple answer.
Phone pricing obviously targets different demographics. You can't talk about consumers like one homogeneous blob. People have different preferences and budgets. Someone who would pay $5k for an "over-engineered" titanium chassis phone that can power on at the bottom of the ocean or whatever obviously falls into a different corner of the market than your (even so, still a big spender) $1k every two years example.

Also, I didn't say anything about over-engineering a product. I'm criticizing trash. I don't think a quality power supply with decent capacitors is over-engineered. I do think it's far less likely to pop and leave a grill-shaped smoke mark on your wall.

I'm pretty sure there are cases where an older vehicle may be rated better than a newer one. I'm not sure what you mean by lack of airbags and survivability. Unless you're reaaaally rolling back the years.

Jay wrote:

DesertFox- wrote:

I suspect there also exist engineers who are proponents of planned obsolescence, as it is to their own monetary benefit. It's disingenuous to put all of that on the bean counting suits.
It was included in my senior year design course. They listed the Gillette disposable razor model as one example.

Products are designed to certain criteria. An LED light bulb is designed to last, on average, 30,000 hours. It could be designed to last 1,000 or 10,000 or 100,000 based on material choices. This is normal. Is it planned obsolescence? Kind of. As I said, you do have to design to some sort of criteria short of infinity. Cost rises as quality increases and at some point you start taking a loss because people won't pay for the increase in quality.
I think when people talk about planned obsolescence in a derisive tone, they're mostly referring to the idea of products designed to reach EOL long before reason, given the parts used and the quality expected from the brand.
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+634|3711

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

SuperJail Warden wrote:

I accidentally paid $7 for a bus ride today because I didn't have exact change. Buses don't give you change? I haven't been on a bus in at least 5 years. I have a car and use Uber. The one time I used a bus and I end up having this experience. How do I even get off of this bus I am on?

The bus driver is Nigerian by the way. Not that that matters but it didn't make the loss of money any easier.
I've seen exact change joked about in things like movies and comic strips. It seems like someone who's never ridden a bus should be prepared for this.

Also, "not that it matters but?" Why even bring it up like it was an extra twist of the knife or something?
The guy's accent didn't make him seem friendly.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX

unnamednewbie13 wrote:

Phone pricing obviously targets different demographics. You can't talk about consumers like one homogeneous blob. People have different preferences and budgets. Someone who would pay $5k for an "over-engineered" titanium chassis phone that can power on at the bottom of the ocean or whatever obviously falls into a different corner of the market than your (even so, still a big spender) $1k every two years example.

Also, I didn't say anything about over-engineering a product. I'm criticizing trash. I don't think a quality power supply with decent capacitors is over-engineered. I do think it's far less likely to pop and leave a grill-shaped smoke mark on your wall.

I'm pretty sure there are cases where an older vehicle may be rated better than a newer one. I'm not sure what you mean by lack of airbags and survivability. Unless you're reaaaally rolling back the years.

I think when people talk about planned obsolescence in a derisive tone, they're mostly referring to the idea of products designed to reach EOL long before reason, given the parts used and the quality expected from the brand.
Products are designed and engineered to a quality and price. Marketing and manufacturing are typically two different companies these days, between them they agree on quality (including durability) and price and the engineers work to that.
Marketing companies which don't meet customer expectations will lose sales.

Individual consumers do the cost/benefit in their heads each time they buy a product.

Maybe govt should step in and mandate certain levels of durability, repairability etc, and probably require OEMs to take back and recycle their products at EOL.

At least Australian consumer law is a bit ahead of the curve, and the govt does sue companies whose products are not durable and which are unreasonable with consumers - which is a whole lot more efficient than letting the 'free-market' deal with it.
https://www.accc.gov.au/media-release/m … sentations
https://www.accc.gov.au/system/files/Ne … port_0.pdf

IIRC A new car is expected to last 10 years in normal use with no significant failure.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2019-11-23 19:42:11)

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unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6763|PNW

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
Does the govt sue companies or is it left to the consumer?

While we're on the subject, how many PCs will need to be scrapped and dumped due to Microsoft deciding not to support Win 7?
Seems pretty miserable to only support your product for 10 years, I'm sure a good number of engineers would have been happy to have ticked along doing that for a few more years.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2019-11-24 15:38:28)

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uziq
Member
+492|3443
yeah, all those noble engineers who want to keep going into the office every day to roll out bug fixes and software compatibility updates for windows ME. the true nobles of our capitalist system, untainted by its logic and incentives.

:’)

Last edited by uziq (2019-11-24 15:58:03)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
Feel free to throw your Macbook into the sea and go back to quill and parchment.

You're complaining about planned obsolescence and blaming engineers.
Its not engineers directing that products should be nerfed through software then physically scrapped.
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uziq
Member
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i'm not even complaining about planned obsolescence. i have no desire to use 20 year old technology and i sure as hell am not 'unaware of how the real world works', as you earlier claimed. i'm just saying that there are plenty of unscrupulous companies with in-house engineers that are not your noble ideal, far from it. the fact that entire industries require strict regulations and professional codes would somewhat scupper your claim that every engineer is a perfectionist with a moral compass pointing to perfect north, no?
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6763|PNW

Dilbert_X wrote:

Does the govt sue companies or is it left to the consumer?

While we're on the subject, how many PCs will need to be scrapped and dumped due to Microsoft deciding not to support Win 7?
Seems pretty miserable to only support your product for 10 years, I'm sure a good number of engineers would have been happy to have ticked along doing that for a few more years.
Except people don't "need" to do anything. Windows 7 reaching EOL doesn't mean computers running it will be bricked. How many people kept XP after its EOL? It's an opportunity for Microsoft to sell more licenses, and by extension licensed systems. But a lot of computers running 7 will be able to run 10. I think that having the support roadmap laid out years in advance for mainstream support and extended support keeps it fair, more or less. People have every opportunity to plan. I do think it's a bit of a ripoff if you buy a computer only a few years from its OS EOL, but unless there's some proprietary laptop nonsense going on, you should be able to update it.

I guess whether or not you think 10 years is reasonable can be subjective. For example, Windows 10 Home OEM is around $100 USD. If you bought it early on (I took the free upgrade path), that $100 is being stretched across a lot of development and support. Windows 10 enters extended support later next year, and EOL in 2025. Would I spend double or more if it meant EOL was around twice what it was? Probably not. I don't see myself using 7 on an office PC to 2030.

Of course, keeping wary of MS pitches and pushes to up their Windows-as-a-service game.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX

uziq wrote:

i'm not even complaining about planned obsolescence. i have no desire to use 20 year old technology and i sure as hell am not 'unaware of how the real world works', as you earlier claimed. i'm just saying that there are plenty of unscrupulous companies with in-house engineers that are not your noble ideal, far from it. the fact that entire industries require strict regulations and professional codes would somewhat scupper your claim that every engineer is a perfectionist with a moral compass pointing to perfect north, no?
The point is its rarely engineers pushing this, I've never met an engineer who wants to do a shitty job, its invariably the management team which wants to cut corners and increase profit.

Strict regulations and professional codes are also invariably imposed on engineers by themselves through working groups and professional bodies, not externally.
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unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6763|PNW

tl;dr There will be ways to keep using Windows 7 safely beyond January. Similar scenario with XP vs. 7.

Example: older patient database software couldn't be installed on 7 and newer patient database software was really expensive. So a lot of clinics took their XP machines off the net, made external backups, and ran them into the ground.

I should add that businesses can purchase security updates through 2023.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5349|London, England

Dilbert_X wrote:

uziq wrote:

i'm not even complaining about planned obsolescence. i have no desire to use 20 year old technology and i sure as hell am not 'unaware of how the real world works', as you earlier claimed. i'm just saying that there are plenty of unscrupulous companies with in-house engineers that are not your noble ideal, far from it. the fact that entire industries require strict regulations and professional codes would somewhat scupper your claim that every engineer is a perfectionist with a moral compass pointing to perfect north, no?
The point is its rarely engineers pushing this, I've never met an engineer who wants to do a shitty job, its invariably the management team which wants to cut corners and increase profit.

Strict regulations and professional codes are also invariably imposed on engineers by themselves through working groups and professional bodies, not externally.
This is mostly true. The building codes are written by engineers for engineers. The profession is a modern guild with entry strictly regulated by the guild, but with the legal weight of the government enforcing adherence to guild rules. Breech the ethical code of the guild and you get tossed on your ass.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
uziq
Member
+492|3443
perfectly ethical engineers and research scientists

you love 2 see it

https://www.theguardian.com/education/2 … l-security

The UK has been singled out as having unprecedented levels of collaboration with Chinese military companies in the analysis by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) which identifies collaborations with scientists from China’s hypersonic missile programme and on research topics ranging from smart materials to robotics.

Sixteen university labs around the world are identified as being run jointly by Chinese defence companies, or have major investments from them. Ten are based in the UK, with the University of Manchester and Imperial College London hosting six between them. The others are in Australia, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.
let me guess... money is the evil ... no, the paymasters  ... no, the university admin .... no, someone with MBAs .... science has no politics, etc etc
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
Academia is supposed to be apolitical no? No ethical problem here.

Whats retarded is assuming we aren't at war, the Chinese are and we should treat them accordingly.

Just think, if the humanities were any use for anything the Chinese would be into that too.
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uziq
Member
+492|3443
china already has confucius institutes set-up at most of the world's top universities, explicitly trying to influence their humanities departments and to modify the window of 'acceptable' discussion. this has been well publicised and debated in academia for about, i don't know, the last decade? you're only advertising your own ignorance, there. pretty funny that you're talking about the 'uselessness of the humanities' in discussions of a country that has been run on an extremely strict legal-philosophical system for the last few centuries ... yeah, philosophy is so useless to confucian societies!

no ethical problem helping china to develop missiles so long as the funding money comes in?

another 'win' for noble engineers. place it next to the atom bomb, the nazi rocket programme, concentration camps, unit 731 etc.
STEM has an ethics problem!!! all this disinterested 'research', scientists as useful venal idiots. give them some funding and hopes of a prize, and they're off like a spinning top!

i suppose the chinese can at least pardon all the western engineers when they succeed in world war 3, just like the americans did with the japanese and the nazis, in exchange for their research.

Last edited by uziq (2019-11-25 02:47:58)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
I don't know, is China a peaceful country and valued trading partner or is it an existential threat?
Thats not really a decision for academics to take is it?

We're effectively in a Cold War, not sure why no-one is willing to admit it or deal with it.
Русский военный корабль, иди на хуй!
SuperJail Warden
Gone Forever
+634|3711
If you are an American, the biggest threat to your way of life are the wealthy elite of your own country. China is going to have to sink an aircraft carrier before I will start being angry at them for taking the jobs the Republicans sent over to them.
https://i.imgur.com/xsoGn9X.jpg
uziq
Member
+492|3443

Dilbert_X wrote:

I don't know, is China a peaceful country and valued trading partner or is it an existential threat?
Thats not really a decision for academics to take is it?

We're effectively in a Cold War, not sure why no-one is willing to admit it or deal with it.
it’s just so amusing to me how cognitively contorted you are in support of engineering, always and through everything. it’s so pathetic that you invest so much of your identity and being on this engineering thing. one can poke a thousand holes in your leaky reasoning.

engineers in a company who act unscrupulously or in the interests of profits: it’s the managers and marketing depts! engineers can’t possibly be tainted by money.

engineers in academia taking funding to help develop missiles for china: engineers can’t possibly be interested in politics! as academics they aren’t interested in the real world. just like that nice chap von braun couldn’t possibly have wanted the germans to win the war — just a pure innocent soul seeking funding!!!

it’s funny how they always come out inviolable, isn’t it?

Last edited by uziq (2019-11-25 06:00:30)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
Most technology has dual uses - who knew?
I'm betting they aren't "taking funding to help develop missiles for china" they're doing tidbits of research in the public domain.

“These collaborations support research into fundamental technologies which could help develop lighter, safer and more efficient commercial aircraft worldwide. We are open about this work and conduct no classified research. All of the centres’ scientific outputs are in the public domain and are routinely published in leading international journals.

“Prior to formalising these collaborations, Imperial conducted its own due diligence. We worked with and received support from the Export Control Organisation (ECO), and we continue to work closely with the UK government. All relationships with third parties are subject to prior and continued review.”
Doesn't seem like a big deal. Probably its gone too far, but academia sold its ethical soul long ago on the the instructions of government.
How ethical is it to charge students a fortune and sell them debt for a useless degree which costs nothing to deliver?
We probably shouldn't be engaging with China at any level, but we have no manufacturing base - thanks to the Steve Jobs of the world - any more so we have no choice.

I should think Apple has done more than any other organisation to enable the Chinese military to destroy us - its very likely the same factory which makes the chips for your next Macbook makes the chips which will guide the hypersonic missiles onto us. Certainly the nanometre technology will have been transferred across instead of being kept secret in America.

engineers in a company who act unscrupulously or in the interests of profits
I can't think of an actual provable example and nor can you. These are typically not engineering decisions, they're commercial ones.

Picking an example closer to home:

If your manager instructed you to publish a trash novel to be sold in airports and likely left on a beach or disposed of after a few weeks, absolutely had to be out in two weeks to meet summer holiday sales, paperback and paper which turns yellow after six months will be fine, but instead you spent six months editing and re-editing to perfect the prose and cultural and historical references Tom Clancy didn't get quite right, instructed the printers to supply a hardback with museum quality parchment "because planned obsolescence and profits over quality are bad mmkay" people would ask what was wrong with your head around the time your company went bust.

If you did publish a crap paperback with a spine which wrinkles as soon as you open it and paper which turns yellow after six months could you rightfully be criticised for being unethical, publishing books which don't last a century or enlighten the next generation and fill up landfill dumps?

The market gets exactly what the market wants, blame the consumer for their choices and unscrupulous executives for delivering to them.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2019-11-25 18:41:01)

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unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|6763|PNW

Dilbert_X wrote:

I don't know, is China a peaceful country and valued trading partner or is it an existential threat?
Thats not really a decision for academics to take is it?
Isn't it though? I get that you'd want foreign policy decisions to be made by people with experience in foreign policy, but isn't it preferable if policymakers have a respectable formal education before they work their way into positions of power?

Or did you just mean academics in the derisive sense.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
I dunno, people get hissy when academics decide they don't want to cooperate with Israel, either they should be allowed to decide for themselves or they shouldn't.

I meant academics working in academia. These decisions need to be taken at a higher level, before grad students start turning up dead in suitcases.
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uziq
Member
+492|3443
israel timer -- it has beeen [4 hours, 40 minutes] since the last strained israel reference. hit f5 for update.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,810|6097|eXtreme to the maX
We've fought two wars against China, some time ago,  recently fought two wars for Israel and probably about to fight another.

Apart from the obvious suspects, Russia, North Korea, Kazakhstan, it seems China and Israel are two countries we should not be treating as harmless, allowing to access our academic institutions, Eurovision etc.
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uziq
Member
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i agree. israel in the eurovision is a huge security risk.

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