Mungkin rada OOT tp msh berkaitan dgn gempuran gadget2 baru

*10 Ways Products Are Designed To Fail*
http://listverse.com/2013/04/02/10-ways-products-are-designed-to-fail/

The consumer electronics market changes tremendously fast. New gadgets are
introduced every week and the producers need to make sure their customers
buy them accordingly.

Marketers have found ways to convince us to buy a new gadget even though
our old gadget is fully or mostly functional. Profit is their motivation:
shorter times between sales equal more sales overall. Selling a phone to a
single customer every 18 months is more profitable than only selling him
one every ten years. Therefore, producers are interested in shortening the
time between sales.

The process of becoming out of use, discarded, obsolete is called
obsolescence. To sell more, producers are interested in speeding up this
process. It gets nastier: It’s called planned obsolescence when products
are deliberately designed to fail after a certain time.

Planned obsolescence happens where engineering meets capitalism. Products
aren’t designed to last; they’re designed for the
dump<http://www.electronicstakeback.com/designed-for-the-dump/>.
In this situation, engineers don’t aim to create the best possible machine.
They aim for maximum profit through steady sales.

10

Broken display glass

Mobile phones fall down easily. But broken display glass and all damages
from improper handling are not covered by the manufacturer’s warranty. The
dropper is reminded of his clumsiness every time he looks at the display
(often the screen still works and only the glass is damaged).

Manufacturers also use glass on the backside of their phones, doubling the
chances of fracture. The backside of the iPhone 4 series or more recently
of the LG Nexus 4 could have been made out of a break-proof material.

A consumer will replace his gadget much sooner when the glass is broken
than when it’s not.

9

Unavailable spare parts

Imagine that after serving you a long time, a minor but crucial part of
your (insert defective device) has broken, but the rest of the device works
fine. The customer service kindly tells you that the required spare part
isn’t available anymore and that the service for that device has been
discontinued. What can you do? Buy a new one!

The producer generally makes more profit selling new devices than spare
parts. Producers have found a solution to this dilemma: totally overprice
spare parts. See next item.

8

Massive repair costs

Repair costs of electronics are so high that often it isn’t worth getting
them repaired. The best option is replacement. Repair companies also
generally charge fees for cost estimates. That adds to the notion that
customers don’t even consider repairing their electronic gadgets.

You can try to repair the gadget yourself, however, many consumer
electronics nowadays are very difficult to service, more difficult than a
decade ago. Some gadgets have tamper-proof
screws<http://crave.cnet.co.uk/mobiles/apple-locks-down-iphone-with-weird-pentalobular-screws-50002324/>that
require special screwdrivers just to open them, which add to the
repair costs.

Once opened, you might find out that the required spare part is no longer
available.

7

Omitted features

Very often, when putting a new gadget on the market, commonly available
features are being deliberately omitted. Many customers will upgrade to the
succeeding gadget with slightly better features once it is introduced. This
is a very good example: the first iPhone didn’t support 3G internet
bandwidth, MMS, universal Bluetooth, not even video recording, all of which
were considered to be standard features. Customers stormed the stores when
the iPhone 3G came out: It had all that! But the poor 2 megapixel camera
resolution remained the same.

New and better features boost sales. More than 200 new
features<http://www.apple.com/osx/whats-new/features.html>make a
strong argument for an upgrade.

6

Planned Life span

Some gadgets have a preset life time. When the time’s up, they’re out of
use.

The digital wine thermometer I bought my father for Christmas has a
built-in battery that can’t be replaced. According to the manual, the
battery is good for about 2000 hours. The manual did not explicitly
instruct the user to trash the device once the battery has died—but that’s
implied.

When the life span has expired, my father will waste a fully functional
product. That’s great news for the wine thermometer industry.

5

Wear and tear

Our valued gadgets will never look as good as when they came out of the
box. Over time, scratches appear, colors fade, abrasions occur, plating
falls off… sooner or later they’re worn-out.

The customer will replace his old and shabby gadgets sooner than those
which look good. Therefore producers try to design electronic gadgets in a
way that they look brand new for a short time only—the first scratch
appears very soon. Not including protective cases also helps the process.

4

Heat

Heat is an enemy of electronics. The more the hardware is exposed to it,
the faster it degrades.

An example of planned obsolescence in product design is the placement of
heat-sensitive capacitors in the hottest area on a circuit board, next to
the heat sink. So basically, the worthiest of protection is put in the
danger zone. These devices will fail sooner than others which are better
designed.

Normal customers don’t base their buying decision on circuit board design,
and normal customers will replace their PC when it becomes
unstable<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor_plague>.


3

Incompatibility

The new thing doesn’t work with the old thing. I’ll replace the old thing!
Marketers expect that kind of customer reaction when incompatibility is
used.

Incompatibilities open a variety of sales opportunities like adapters,
upgrades or full replacements. They make your life harder.
Incompatibilities come in the form of incompatible device drivers,
incompatible plugs, incompatible file formats and file systems,
incompatible operating systems, incompatible hardware—you get the picture.

Here’s an example with file formats: Document files created with Microsoft
Office 2007 ending in x like *.docx or *.xlsx could not be opened with
older Office 2003 Versions. One could download the Microsoft Office
Compatibility 
Pack<http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=3>—but
most customers didn’t know that and therefore purchased a new Office
version or preferably replaced the whole computer because the old one has
become too slow anyway.

2

Popularity / Style Obsolescence

Style obsolescence happens when the gadget works totally fine and the only
flaw is that it isn’t popular anymore. The customer who doesn’t want to be
unpopular will buy a stylish new gadget. That’s because, unlike hipsters,
having popular gadgets will make a customer feel popular.

Marketers employing style obsolescence are able to set new trends (so
customers can buy more popular gadgets) and kill old trends (so customers
notice that their gadget is outmoded and therefore consider getting a newer
one).

1

Warranty procedure

The receipt is the most important element in case of a malfunction. Without
it, your defective gadget is most likely e-waste. One must keep the receipt
and find it when needed.

Even with a valid receipt it is time-consuming and bothersome to get to the
store to claim the warranty. Sending it to the manufacturer covering
postage out of their own pocket is even more unpleasant. Ultimately, repair
may take up to 4 weeks.

The less value a gadget has, the less likely a customer will claim the
warranty for it when it malfunctions; it’s so much easier to dump it.
Customers just buy a new gadget and leave out the warranty procedure. Many
don’t even bother to keep the receipt in the first place. After all, the
newest gadget is waiting in the shelves, ready for sale.

The post 10 Ways Products Are Designed To
Fail<http://listverse.com/2013/04/02/10-ways-products-are-designed-to-fail/>appeared
first on
Listverse <http://listverse.com>.

shared via http://feedly.com

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