Ending the iPod Classic .. the reason behind: obsolete parts

Ending the iPod Classic

During the event, Cook was also asked why Apple recently stopped selling its iPod Classic device, which although overtaken by newer products like the iPod touch and iPhone, remained a symbol of Apple’s comeback as a consumer electronics company.

We couldn’t get the parts any more. They don’t make them any more,” said Cook, according to Engadget. “We would have to make a whole new product… the engineering work to do that would be massive… The number of people who wanted it is very small.”

Doesn’t bode well for repairs then, does it?

original article on the Guardian

The Unauthorized Guide to iPhone, iPad, and iPod Repair: A Diy Guide to Extending the Life of Your idevices

The Unauthorized Guide to iPhone, iPad, and iPod Repair: A Diy Guide to Extending the Life of Your idevices

You can repair it at the Repair Café.

Books tickets on Evenbrite: http://repaircafe-es2.eventbrite.co.uk/?rank=72&ebtv=C

A Community Project to Repair, Reuse, Recycle

[ ahem, we subscribe to ’Reuse Repair Remake Recycle’ that we thought of first? & independently! – Remake (it into something interesting) is more creative 🙂 ]

What do you do with a chair when the leg has come loose? With a light that no longer works? Toss it? No way!

Repair Cafés are free meeting places and they’re all about repairing things (together). The types of items that can be repaired and reused include clothes, furniture, electrical appliances, bicycles, crockery, appliances and toys.

Why a Repair Café?
We throw away vast amounts of stuff. Even things with almost nothing wrong, and which could get a new lease on life after a simple repair. The trouble is, lots of people have forgotten that they can repair things themselves or they no longer know how. Knowing how to make repairs is a skill quickly lost. Society doesn’t always show much appreciation for the people who still have this practical knowledge.

Repair Café is changing all that! People who might otherwise be sidelined are getting involved again. Valuable practical knowledge can be passed on. Our possessions are being used for longer and don’t have to be thrown away. This reduces the volume of raw materials and energy needed to make new products. It cuts CO2 emissions, for example, because manufacturing new products and recycling old ones causes CO2 to be released.

Repair Café teaches people to see their possessions in a new light. And, once again, to appreciate their value. Repair Café helps change people’s mindset. This is essential to kindle people’s enthusiasm for a sustainable society.

But most of all, Repair Café just wants to show how much fun repairing things can be, and how easy it often is. Why don’t you give it a go?

The Goodlife Centre
The Goodlife Centre’s light and airy workspace in Waterloo is an ideal environment for a Repair Café, which is free to attend. Visitors are encouraged to bring their broken items from home for assessment, and if deemed repairable by the organisers, can start making their repairs in the Repair Café. DIY and electrical experts from The Goodlife Centre will be on stand-by to advise and a selection of tools and materials will be made available for use on the day. It’s an ongoing learning process in a friendly social environment with plenty of tea or coffee on hand.

The types of items that can be repaired and reused include clothes, furniture, electrical appliances, bicycles, crockery, appliances and toys. In fact, there is very little that cannot be given a new lease of life. We hope that the Repair Café will help Londoners view all of their possessions in a new light and appreciate their lifelong value. By reducing our dependency on throwing away and starting over and instead focusing on repairing and reusing items, we hope to inspire enthusiasm for a sustainable society.

The Goodlife Centre is about sharing practical knowledge and learning traditional skills for life and this is very much in line with the values of the Repair Café concept. By hosting a regular Repair Café, we hope not only to encourage sustainability in our borough, but to facilitate a community that learns from each other.

Director and founder of the Repair Café, Martine Postma says:
We are very happy to see that our concept is taken up with so much enthusiasm in other countries. We’re very excited about the first Repair Cafe in the UK, in London!

London’s first Repair Café will take place at The Goodlife Centre on Sunday 22nd July from 2pm – 5pm. The Goodlife Centre is just ten minutes from Waterloo, Borough and Southwark tube stations.

For full details of the Repair Café concept that originated in Holland go to http://repaircafe.org/

Also follow the independent London group ‘RestartProject’
http://restartproject.wordpress.com
Twitter @RestartProject
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RestartProject