Planned obsolescence
By anonymous - 02/06/2026 15:00 - United States - San Jacinto
By anonymous - 02/06/2026 15:00 - United States - San Jacinto
There is economics and there is emotion value. I assume your parents are going by economics. A repaired older device is still an older device and depending on how reliable and capable that design was, it might be near the end of its life - Sooner or later needing replacement anyway… And then there is emotional value. I get it - I like antique radios. And one that ties in with my family history is special… Here is a suggestion - Offer to pay for the repair yourself or in chores if you don’t have a job. They would likely agree to this. But also remember that things are still things and not people - They are replaceable. You will go through many possessions in your life - Some will be special to you. Honor those but don’t be a slave to them.
hello this is my fml i just made a account, sadly it isnt fixable but otherwise i would try to pay for the repairs, i did pay for it to get checked though i have a few other sentimental items but im genuinely sad about my computer, and i dont think they realized how special this is to me until i cried when i heard that its not repairable
You can get a new computer and still keep the "Sentimental" computer. Unless you're afraid of hurting the feelings of the old computer.
i can and i may have to now sadly, but even if i will be keeping my now unusable computer another one just feels different, mine felt a specific way while using it and it ran so well and wasnt modern which i prefer, like i hate the copilot button on every recent computer i see that computer felt really special to me is the thing
Look up Linus tech tips, and some other channels online you might be able to fix it yourself and if it’s old enough, you can get the parts on eBay and install it yourself many times you can get the entire display assembly housing and replace it just at the hinges and just be careful how you route the cables, but it’s not that difficult. Watch the videos a couple times until you understand how it’s done and if not, look it up or ask a friend I’m sure they’d be willing to help you if they know something about computers. Especially if you ask them to teach you to do the repair. iFixit also has guides Source: I’m a technician and engineer for HP
thank you for the advice, but i have no tech experience or any irl friends, and not even my family knows how to fix this its been deemed unrepairable by best buy but i was too sad to find out why last night, i would gladly repair it myself if i could though edit: by the way i dont do well with video tutorials if you were wondering
Keywords
There is economics and there is emotion value. I assume your parents are going by economics. A repaired older device is still an older device and depending on how reliable and capable that design was, it might be near the end of its life - Sooner or later needing replacement anyway… And then there is emotional value. I get it - I like antique radios. And one that ties in with my family history is special… Here is a suggestion - Offer to pay for the repair yourself or in chores if you don’t have a job. They would likely agree to this. But also remember that things are still things and not people - They are replaceable. You will go through many possessions in your life - Some will be special to you. Honor those but don’t be a slave to them.
You can get a new computer and still keep the "Sentimental" computer. Unless you're afraid of hurting the feelings of the old computer.