• Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    That is very true, and I have actually bought used before but it was a miserable experience because it wasn’t listed as carrier-locked (it was, however, a long time ago, well before carrier unlock was required/universal unlock was commonly available).

    Perhaps I’ll look into getting a used phone while I have a working one and play with it a bit, if I can find one for a reasonable price, as long as they don’t have the same replacement lockout apple has. I’ve been using GSM carriers exclusively so I can bring my device if I ever (need to or can) emigrate, so probably a decent market of devices available.

    Not a stupid question and thanks for reminding me that’s an option. I tend to distrust used/refurbished tech -replaced for a reason sort of thing, especially when warranty replacements of major models tend to be refurbished and have their own problems… but I probably shouldn’t assume others treat their tech the way I do - my forever precious. Like cars, I run them until they die, and someday I’ll make a fucking sculpture with all the broken old phones I have. I recently found my first semi-smart phone, which I had when I was… 22-24, I think? The Motorola rival A455 in purple. Fuck was technology pretty!

    https://www.bing.com/images/search?q=motorola+a455+purple&form=HDRSC3&pc=MOZW&first=1

    • Ilandar
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      1 year ago

      I tend to distrust used/refurbished tech -replaced for a reason sort of thing

      I would never buy refurbished unless it was the only option. You basically paying extra for someone to repair a broken phone (possibly with inferior parts) at that point, whereas used you can find phones that have babied by their owners with a case and screen protector and have nothing wrong with them. In Australia, most newer used phones are being replaced due to an upgrade because the owner reached the end of their plan and can essentially move to a newer phone for “free”, or because they damaged something like the screen and they’d rather buy a new phone than repair their current one. With the latter, the cosmetic damage is usually clearly visible and described by the seller and is therefore easy to avoid. For older models, it’s usually just a normal upgrade.

      Water damage used to be a bigger risk with secondhand phones, but these days so many have decent waterproofing that it is practically a non-issue. In terms of just general risk, used phones are really low in my opinion. I think people are a little too obsessed with warranties and have this doomsday scenario in their head where they buy a used phone and it just instantly dies. It’s just not realistic at all, phones will last a very long time as long as they aren’t exposed to extreme conditions. Just be patient, be smart and research the phone and the seller thoroughly before buying and you basically can’t go wrong. People are really sleeping on used phones, and electronics more generally. They are great value and a much better choice ethically.

      EDIT: That’s a sick looking phone by the way, I wish there were more made with that type of colour scheme.

      • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        Thank you for the detailed reply, and that’s actually something I hadn’t really considered. I know I baby the fuck out of my phone, so I’d probably be one of those people 😁 but also phones themselves have gotten a lot more durable and harder to break.

        And that’s a good point that in other countries, unlocked gsm phones are just the norm even with regular upgrade plans, where here (Midwest us) it’s kinda hard to find because a lot of the larger carriers are CDMA, so my standard experience is just different. I haven’t really looked too much other than refurbished, and those aren’t cheap-er enough to be worth it, but I’ll take a look.