Buying the littleun an ereader for Christmas and
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Buying the littleun an ereader for Christmas and
π¦ Whoa what happened to the good Sony ereaders? You used to be able to snag them for ten or fifteen bucks all day long, now they're like forty or fifty plus another fifteen for a new battery, what gives?
YEARS AGO:
Johnson, those page-turn buttons cost a dollar more than the touchscreen, get rid of them
b-b-b-but sir, nobody will buy an ereader without buttons, there are thousands on ebay and the ones from 2007 read books just as well as the new ones
Don't worry Johnson, give it time and the old ereaders will all get sold and people will forget -
Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
π¦ Ooh what's that on eBay, eleven broken Sony PRS-505 ereaders for fifty bucks shipped? DON'T MIND IF I DO LOL
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
π¦ Why simply buy a thing when for the same money you can buy eleven broken ones
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
Sony: Johnson, the PRS-505 reads ebooks really well, what've you got cooked up for its successor
Uh, sir... it already reads ebooks? It has nice buttons and feels great in the hands? I'm not sure we uh
Johnson
οΈ
Are you telling me we've made a perfectly adequate machine that does exactly the job it's intended to do, no more and no less? Are you telling me people will have no reason to buy the 600-series?
s-sorry sir
At least tell me the buttons wear out.
Sir we put on two sets of page turn buttons
Shut. It. Down.Meanwhile, at the Roomba factory
Jimson, good work on the 500 series, what's next for the 600's?
We're adding wifi, sir!
Jimson are you telling me that the 500 series cleans peoples' floors adequately?π¦ It's a little weird that "500 series got the job done just fine and turned out to be a little too resilient" happened twice
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
Well I got 11 broken Sony PRS-505 ereaders for fifty bucks off eBay.
Seven of them aren't broken at all, they just want new batteries. Two have minor read-around-able screen damage. Two have busted screens or maybe busted ribbon cables.
As you can see, a couple of these lads are bulging a bit haha
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
Just look at these beautiful boys
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
This lad wants nowt. Turned over 200 pages on a 5-minute charge.
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
So there's reasons why I'm buying ereaders from The Past instead of a modern one:
* It's made of METAL and it feels EXPENSIVE and FANCY, and also like it'll last longer than five minutes
* It has BUTTONS - there's a big circular two-directional page-turn button on the bottom left, and when that wears out, there's MORE page turn buttons on the mid right. There's also ten buttons running down the right side of the screen - when you're in the menus, there'll be ten things to a menu, and you just press the button for the thing you want. Also there's a dedicated button to step through the font sizes. BUTTONS GALORE.
* No wifi, no internet, no accounts, no DRM, no buying a book and then getting it stolen back off you by amazon. You put books on it two ways, either by plugging it into your computer or popping out the memory card and plugging that in instead. Either way, it shows up as a removable drive, and you literally just drag-and-drop your epubs in your file manager exactly the same way you'd copy files to a flash drive. It's SO UNCOMPLICATED.
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
The successor to this thing was the PRS-700, my spouse has gone through three of them because they put a touchscreen on it and consequently put way less effort into the page-turn buttons, and she wore them out within a year each
They're not easily repaired either, IIRC it's not like one button per input or even a matrix, it's each button has a different value resistor attached and they all share the same wire like crap car stereo steering wheel controls
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops on last edited by
Anyway just like when I'm trying to fix a whole arcade, each one now has a bit of blue painter's tape giving it a number and note about what it needs. Each one got charged on the wall for five minutes and a boot attempted (except for the two with obviously-broken screens and the one that was all swollen up).
Most didn't get through the whole boot sequence and all they need are new batteries, a couple can be used straight-up as-is.
I figure I'll approach this the same way I fix a whole arcade, make the worst ones the best ones until they're all pretty good
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
Alright, number 11's the worst that I have parts to fix right now, let's do a Dan Fixes eReaders thread.
Start by taking out the four screws on the back of the ereader. They're smaller than you'll find in a laptop, very tiny, like watch screws. Take out the first one, then go downstairs for your glasses and then take out the second.
At this point you'll realise you need more light, so go ahead and log into Home Assistant and...
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
Once you've got four screws out there's a hidden Fifth Screw in the butt
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
Once all the screws are out, use a spudger to pry the butt off the ereader, getting ready to catch the volume rocker as it falls out.
Except it doesn't fall out! Sony put a captive volume rocker in this thing! Neat!
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
Hot tip: never use a flathead screwdriver to pry stuff, always use a plastic spudger or you'll chew up the plastic or paint no matter how careful you are and it'll look a bloody mess.
With the butt meat removed, the holes are exposed. There are three more tiny Philips screws inside, these ones are longer with a coarser thread, put them somewhere separate to the others.
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
With those three screws out, the case is free to flex.
Oh my GOD how swollen-up is this lithium battery
am i about to die
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
The cat appears, pet her until she goes away
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
With the cat satisfied, we can begin removing the top of the ereader, same thing, spudge it with your spudger until it spudges off
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
The slidey power switch also fails to fall out.
Normally when you take apart a thing that has button on the outside, all the buttons fall off. Not so with this, because in 2007 these were Rich People's Toys and the design and build quality is *chef's kiss*
Lesson: better to buy something that was Excellent secondhand than to spend the same money on something shit from Now
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
These two clippydoodads gotta come out, they're held in weakly with an adhesive and will come out fairly easily
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Dan Fixes Coin-Opsreplied to Dan Fixes Coin-Ops last edited by
Here's what they look like Out