Apple slowing down devices to extend battery life when the battery itself is low or degraded is awesome.

All the lawsuits coming out of this over recent years are uncalled for. Users that “suffer” from this likely need to simply replace the battery.

I expect an OS (and/or kernel) to manage resources. iOS/macOS actively doing so by adjusting its behavior when the battery’s shot is exactly the kind of magic people want in Apple products—so why is the opposite true when it comes to to this subject?

It’s wild to me that someone would be so upset as to sue over this.

Edit: I’m not arguing that Apple is superior or that everyone should happily go along with buying Apple products. The way a lot of these comments are written make it sound like they’re the only smartphone manufacturer and living with their software is forced upon you. If Apple makes you angry or unhappy, I happily encourage you to seek alternatives; I don’t believe any one company can make the perfect product for 100% of people.

  • reddit_sux@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The problem is not that they added a feature, the problem is they didn’t communicate the feature and it’s side effect, then deny any such feature till they were caught with their pants down.

    This was just ‘you are holding it wrong’ once again. Their goto excuse every time.

    • railsdev@programming.devOP
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      1 year ago

      Is that what happened? I don’t remember them hiding anything. I just remember that yes, the OS did slow down to accommodate the shitty battery. Honestly it never seemed like a shady thing to do to me.

      • reddit_sux@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Apple said it was a battery issue that affected only a few iPhones, and that the reason for slowing of the hardware was the battery not their software patch.