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posted by hubie on Monday March 02, @01:11AM   Printer-friendly

https://www.slashgear.com/2107938/removable-battery-phones-making-comeback/

Many of today's mobile phones, like the slim iPhone Air, are lightweight and sleek, with an advanced design and the latest in modern technology. It's a far cry from previous models, which were bulkier, had buttons, and bulged in your pocket. But while mobile phones have evolved over the years, the current fixed-battery design is reverting to its old form, thanks to legislation from the European Union (EU). Based on these new guidelines, phones will once again need batteries that can be safely removed and replaced by the user.

The EU's legislation also mandates that replacement batteries, while meeting the device's technical specifications, not be bound by proprietary limits. This means that a phone must be able to accept a compatible battery that meets the device's safety and technical standards, whether or not it's manufacturer-branded. Plus, replacement batteries must be available to the user for at least 5 to 7 years following a model's end of production. The EU has placed a date of February 18, 2027, for these expectations to be met.

[...] The EU's new legislation requiring smartphones to have removable batteries accomplishes a few different things. First, allowing users to replace a spent battery with a new one helps extend the life of the device before its final disposal. Plus, it also enables battery repair or replacement without throwing out the entire phone. By giving users this capability, the rules are meant to encourage reuse of existing phones and help cut down on electronic waste.

[...] But if removable batteries become the norm once again, then phone design could take a step backward in terms of overall construction. That's because cases may need to become thicker to accommodate the removable batteries, and additional safety features would need to be added to protect the new design as well. Until the top phone manufacturers reveal newer models to satisfy the EU's standards, it's unclear what changes users can expect to see.


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by coolgopher on Monday March 02, @03:25AM (3 children)

    by coolgopher (1157) on Monday March 02, @03:25AM (#1435361)

    Give me a thicker phone with a bigger battery! I used to only need to charge my phone once a week. I liked that. And it was easier to hold than these modern wafers.

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  • (Score: 2) by SvenErik on Monday March 02, @06:28AM (1 child)

    by SvenErik (2857) on Monday March 02, @06:28AM (#1435370)

    Yes, I remember those, and that was possible when a mobile phone was just that, a mobile phone. These days, they are miniaturized computers that can make phone calls with all the extra power consumption that causes...

    --
    "Every demand is a prison, and wisdom is only free when it asks nothing." Sir Bertrand Russell
    • (Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 02, @11:54AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 02, @11:54AM (#1435395)

      Turn off wifi except when you are actually using it.
      Turn off location services.
      Disable as many Google things as you can find.
      Do not install things like Friendface. In fact, do not install any apps except those that you really, really need - use websites instead.

      The above will turn your lucky-to-last-a-day-and-a-half battery into something that only needs recharging about every 6 days.

  • (Score: 2) by jasassin on Saturday March 14, @02:04PM

    by jasassin (3566) <jasassin@gmail.com> on Saturday March 14, @02:04PM (#1436709) Homepage Journal

    Give me a thicker phone with a bigger battery!

    Hold on a second, I'll get right on that...

    http://jasassin.multics.org/upload/cellphone.webp [multics.org]

    Gotta take this call...

    --
    jasassin@gmail.com GPG Key ID: 0xE6462C68A9A3DB5A