Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. The kits ...
Motorola has partnered with iFixit to sell DIY repair kits for some of its smartphones. The kits range from $40 to $200 and include all the parts and tools you'll need, plus a handy step-by-step guide ...
Known for device teardowns, iFixit in recent years has been one of the leading proponents for the “Right to Repair.” That effort got a big boost today with a partnership that sees Motorola supply OEM ...
Modern smartphones include a handful of features designed to make them tougher to break. Corning’s Gorilla Glass and similar technologies give many phones a tough-to-scratch screen. And a growing ...
PBKreviews has now completed a full teardown of the Motorola Edge+, showing that it should be fairly easy to repair. Starting the teardown, the most immediate point to be made is that there’s a lot of ...
A lot of people had high hopes for the Motorola Razr, but those quickly fell apart when its durability was questioned and reviews were… not good. Today, iFixit has given the Motorola Razr a teardown ...
What just happened? Repairing electronics is rarely easy. Motorola has partnered up with iFixit to ensure that anyone who needs a new battery or display assembly can get one including all of the ...
Motorola has announced that it will begin selling repair kits for its own devices and has partnered with iFixit to do so. In doing so, it's become the first smartphone manufacturer to openly support ...
Repairing a phone is harder than it needs to be. With phone manufacturers spending the last decade chasing device slimness and building devices meant to last however long a phone contract lasts, user ...
In March, California became the 18th state to propose Right to Repair legislation, crystallizing an effort on behalf of consumers and state officials to ensure smart phone makers provide spare parts ...
Motorala's contemporary take on the Razr has been quite publicly panned by testers. CNET, for example, wanted to see if the device could withstand 100,000 folds -- it only made it to the 27,000th fold ...
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