| ▲ | _verandaguy 9 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Maybe a hot take, but I don't think this is as awful for e-waste as many other things. I've had a set of airtags for a good few years now (shortly before Covid, I think?) and they mostly just kinda work. They don't insist upon a need to upgrade, the only part that ever goes bad is the battery -- which is a standard, user-replaceable CR2032, and while batteries going into the garbage isn't fantastic, there's really only so much you can do as long as depend on them. Like -- this announcement is technically an upgrade, but I've never been less tempted to actually buy into it because the existing product does what it does plenty well enough for my needs. I do think it's a bit funny to highlight anything Google does now as privacy-first, though. I can't play back Youtube embeds in Waterfox because the browser's default privacy-preserving setting doesn't send referrer information to those embeds, which Youtube now requires for embeds to work. As much as I take issue with Apple's politics over the past year, they do tend to lean towards on-device logic where possible, and their work in the homomorphic cryptography niche has been interesting to follow. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | retired 9 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Please don't put your CR2032 in the garbage. Use battery disposal points for that. | |||||||||||||||||
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