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simianwords 10 hours ago

"repairing a unique clock" getting costlier doesn't mean technology hasn't gotten cheaper.

check out whether clocks have gotten cheaper in general. the answer is that it has.

there is no economy of scale here in repairing a single clock. its not relevant to bring it up here.

ipaddr 9 hours ago | parent [-]

Clocks prices have gone up since 2020. Unless a cheaper better way to make clocks has emerged inflation causes prices to grow.

fooker 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Luxury watches have gone up, 'clocks' as a technology is cheaper than ever.

You can buy one for 90 cents on temu.

ipaddr 8 hours ago | parent [-]

The landing cost for that 90 cent watch has gone way up. Shipping and to some degree taxes has pushed the price higher.

pas 7 hours ago | parent [-]

that's not the technology

of course it's silly to talk about manufacturing methods and yield and cost efficiency without having an economy to embed all of this into, but ... technology got cheaper means that we have practical knowledge of how to make cheap clocks (given certain supply chains, given certain volume, and so and so)

we can make very cheap very accurate clocks that can be embedded into whatever devices, but it requires the availability of fabs capable of doing MEMS components, supply materials, etc.

simianwords 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

not true, clocks have gone down after accounting for inflation. verified using ChatGPT.

ipaddr 8 hours ago | parent [-]

You can't account for inflation because the price increase is inflation.

pas 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

you can look at a basket of goods that doesn't have your specific product and compare directly

but inflation is the general price level increase, this can be used as a deflator to get the price of whatever product in past/future money amount to see how the price of the product changed in "real" terms (ie. relative to the general price level change)

simianwords 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

this is not true