Sujet : Re: "Right to Repair" vs FRUs
De : cd (at) *nospam* notformail.com (Cursitor Doom)
Groupes : sci.electronics.designDate : 02. Oct 2024, 18:02:40
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <gvuqfjl01drf85roaf1csq0va3l5i7vapq@4ax.com>
References : 1 2
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On Wed, 02 Oct 2024 07:54:47 -0700, john larkin <
JL@gct.com> wrote:
On Tue, 1 Oct 2024 23:43:30 -0700, Don Y <blockedofcourse@foo.invalid>
wrote:
>
Is it safe to assume that any Right-to-Repair legislation (US)
would *not* require finer-grained subassembly availability
than that available to their depots?
>
I.e., if the *documented* repair policies don't call for
replacing a particular component with another but, instead,
indicate replacing the containing FRU, then one would
likely never have to make the "particular component"
available to customers?
>
Said another way, consumers should never be expected to be
able to use the vendor as a general purpose "parts warehouse"
at any level finer than the documented FRUs...
>
It would be cool to be able to buy all of those custom chips.
Especially if one wants to build and sell cheap knockoff products.
It won't benefit boat-anchor devotees like myself, whatever happens.
Expecting Tek or HP to supply a custom chip for something they sold
30, 40 or more years ago? Not likely at all.