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Another Google Pixel 6a catches fire after battery-nerfing update
(arstechnica.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Why would they make it worse
Apparently they design phones that'll last just over a year before self-igniting.
More then 400 charge cycles? So like... All of them
Does 400 charge cycles really amount to just over a year of use for most people? I’m assuming one cycle means a full power cycle, not just a top up.
For reference (and I understand it’s a bit apples to oranges) I’ve had my iPhone 15 since Dec 2023 and charge it every night and it’s currently showing 125 charge cycles.
I would asssume a "cycle" is a 100% drop. Mine is capped to 80% charge and I assume it ticks up 4 cycles for every 5 charges from zero.
Because they would gaslight half the 6a owners into upgrading their phone this way
and then gaslight them into own 7, 8, and 9.
To force you to change your battery (which is free), otherwise you will blame Google when it explodes after you ignored the warnings.
More accurately, to attempt to avoid a battery fire for people who can't or won't replace the defective batteries.
Oh well they were forced to acknowledge a problem that needed a fix and what they did was they asked Gemini how do we fix this which Gemini had zero problems at all, not even an inconvenience, in giving them it's fix so that's what they went with without a single further thought employed in the matter
They really liked it when the response started with it's super easy