I replaced my battery 5 minutes ago. It died, I have a spare. Why would you buy a phone where a savvy end user is afraid to replace the battery? Sure, the problem may be apple, but its really you.
My Nexus 5 still runs for a week on battery. I believe Apple shipped low quality batteries as part of the planned obsolescence.
It's like committing two bugs. By themselves, they aren't a problem, but together, they open an NSA backdoor. If anyone is caught, they have plausible deniability.
Same here with Apple. They're so evil, they though ahead on how to avoid punishment for doing bad things. They'll skip off to the bank with bags of money while ignorant iPhone buyers just keep buying more iPhones instead of a quality device.
My Pixel 2 is lasting me 6 hours after the latest software update (February 5th patch?). One month ago it was great. Now I have to recharge it twice a day. I'm not happy about that.
6 hours might be just enough to convince support to give you a replacement. It worked for my 5X, and it ended up being a full refund of the original (2 yr prior) price, due to some shipping issue (it never shipped). Give it a try!
I have a 6S from the original batch with the bad batteries. I never had it replaced because it worked fine (a coworker's most certainly did not), and it made a good excuse for a free replacement later down the line.
Now that it's finally acting up, I'm in waitlist hell because of the advent of the battery replacement program. I've been on the wait list for our local repair shop for about a month now, it's pretty crazy. They said they've had hundreds of people sign up.
I would hope that it gets done sooner than later. Had a 6S with a serial from a bad batch and sent it to Apple for repair/replacement. They refused to fix it citing "3rd party modifications" with no further explanation or evidence. It wasn't until I escalated the issue up 3 levels and provided photos of the phone in stellar condition at the time of shipping did they finally back down. The experience bothered me so much that I switched to Android. Your post made me realize that perhaps engineers are so overwhelmed with 6S repairs that they are just declining them.
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 40.2 ms ] threadIt closer to companies and people like you, who assumes a consumer having to be a "savvy end user" to enjoy a $500-$700 product.
Developers get it, but most people would have no clue the battery on a phone could be the reason for no/bad performance.
It's like committing two bugs. By themselves, they aren't a problem, but together, they open an NSA backdoor. If anyone is caught, they have plausible deniability.
Same here with Apple. They're so evil, they though ahead on how to avoid punishment for doing bad things. They'll skip off to the bank with bags of money while ignorant iPhone buyers just keep buying more iPhones instead of a quality device.
Now that it's finally acting up, I'm in waitlist hell because of the advent of the battery replacement program. I've been on the wait list for our local repair shop for about a month now, it's pretty crazy. They said they've had hundreds of people sign up.
They do scan ids of parts inside a device before repairing it.