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Whether by necessity or choice, lots of us are adopting acts of frugal self-reliance like baking our own bread, teaching our own children — and fixing our own busted iPhone screens.
Since the pandemic began, people have been flooding iFixit, an online store for repair parts and instructional guides, to get help fixing items like phones, laptops, appliances and video game consoles. For as little as a few dollars and some patience, people are reviving their home gadgets and gear.
Kyle Wiens, iFixit’s chief executive, said more people have become inclined to fix their own gadgets because of financial hardship, lack of access to repair shops and boredom. But he said he believed there’s also something bigger at work here.
This has become a moment to make more from what we have — because we must, and also because we’re more conscious of what we buy and do. You can see that in tales of people bartering, building vegetable gardens and regrowing scallions from scraps. I hope some of this sticks around.
Several years ago, I tricked a colleague at The Wall Street Journal — for the sake of journalism — to repair my busted TV set. When he opened the back of the television in the office and broke out a soldering iron, everyone gave him a wide berth. I’m happy to say the repair was quick, cheap and free from mishap. The TV is still in my living room.
That repair changed how I think about the vitality of old stuff. So too have horror stories about even recycled electronics gear catching fire or winding up as dangerous waste in foreign dumps.
If we bought less and kept what we have alive for longer, we’d save money, be gentler on the planet and learn how resourceful we are.
Wiens has three suggestions to help us budding D.I.Y. types. First, that thing you worry is too complicated and dangerous to fix yourself probably isn’t.
“Our message is, give yourself a chance,” Wiens said. (There are limits. Wiens said some products, like old-fashioned television sets, are actually dangerous to fix. If your TV is one with a bulging back end rather than a flat screen, skip it.)
Second, Wiens said, when we buy a new product, we can consider how long it might last and how easy it would be to repair. Wiens suggested checking online for parts and repair manuals of older versions of the product. That’s a sign that the manufacturers have longevity in mind.
We may also want to consider that some products are destined to die young and are unfixable, including — sorry, everyone — many popular wireless headphones.
And third, Wiens said we can push for “right to repair” laws that would make it easier to get information, tools and parts to fix our own stuff.
This shouldn’t be necessary, but it is because some products are D.I.Y.-proof. Fixing the home button on some iPhones, for example, requires software that only Apple has. (Apple says this preserves the safety and integrity of our iPhones.)
I’m never going to stop buying new stuff. But like our sudden mania for baking, D.I.Y. repairs show how resourceful we can be. “It’s an opportunity to improve yourself and learn new skills,” Wiens said.
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Here’s help with a common D.I.Y. challenge
Earlier this month I asked you to send in your gadget fix-it questions. Many of you wrote in asking for help reviving old and slow laptops. Andrew Cunningham from the Wirecutter, a product recommendation site owned by The Times, has this advice:
Sometimes when an old laptop is running slowly, it’s because of unnecessary apps or other old cruft that has built up over years of use. You could use a free app like Malwarebytes to make sure that adware and viruses aren’t the reasons your laptop is running slowwwwly.
But an even better option is to
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By: Shira Ovide
Title: The Joys of Fixing Your Own Stuff
Sourced From: www.nytimes.com/2020/05/14/technology/fixing-gadgets-diy.html
Published Date: Thu, 14 May 2020 16:29:43 +0000
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