試す 金 - 無料
Digital Locks Are Shackling the Future of Tinkering
Popular Mechanics
|March - April 2022
It's likely been decades since you last found a service manual included in the box with a new tech product. The Right to Repair movement seeks to change that.

WHEN I WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL, MY FIRST JOB involved repairing Apple computers for minimum wage so I could buy a laptop for college. When I finally scraped together the $1,800 or so for a midrange iBook, I was thrilled. Unfortunately, two months into the semester, I dropped my clamshell laptop on its power port, breaking it. I searched for a service manual online, but I was stymied by repeated copyright takedowns that are effectively “No Trespassing” signs.
Those takedowns were a clear sign that Apple didn't want me to fix my laptop; it had established a defensive perimeter of lawyers to enforce the knowledge ban. As it turns out, Apple isn't unique in this–Toshiba notoriously demanded that an Australian repair website remove all of its online manuals. The farm equipment manufacturer John Deere has secret diagnostic tools that it refuses to share with farmers. These legal tactics are standardizing an expectation of manufacturer control. Inspired by my frustrating dorm room experience, in 2003 I started iFixit, an online repair community dedicated to enabling people to fix all their things. Ever since, we've been systematically tearing down the obstacles that companies have erected to block repairs.
このストーリーは、Popular Mechanics の March - April 2022 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、9,500 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Popular Mechanics からのその他のストーリー

Popular Mechanics US
The Tomb of Jesus Christ
AT THE PLACE WHERE Jesus was crucified, there was a garden, and in the garden a new tomb, in which no one had ever been laid.\"-John 19:41.
2 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
Actual Random Numbers
A LARGE TEAM OF SCIENTISTS CLAIMS to have achieved “certified randomness” using a quantum computer.
3 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
STURDY STEEL WIENER DOG BOOT SCRAPER
A recent North Atlantic mud season became the inspiration for this weekend metalsmithing project.
3 mins
September/October 2025
Popular Mechanics US
An Ancient Scarab Amulet
CHILDREN ARE ALWAYS picking stuff up off the ground—usually junk. But sometimes, they can find real treasure.
2 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
Inside the Glitter LAB
How the tiniest trace of red shimmer helped solve one of California's most brutal crimes.
15 mins
September/October 2025
Popular Mechanics US
THE POWER OF EARTH'S ROTATION
AS CLIMATE CHANGE CONTINUES TO impact countries and communities around the world, humanity is hungry for alternative sources of green energy.
1 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
The SECRET VENOMOUS HISTORY of Ozempic
How a deadly toxin from a desert dwelling lizard led to one of the biggest medical breakthroughs in modern times.
15 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
ONE BUCKET. TEN GENIUS HACKS.
THERE'S A $5 DO-IT-ALL PROBLEM SOLVER JUST SITTING IN YOUR GARAGE. PUT IT TO WORK!
4 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
Lucid Dreaming
THE STATE KNOWN AS LUCID DREAMING IS an unquestionably surreal one, and it just got even more so. A team of researchers at Radboud University Medical Center in the Netherlands has discovered that lucid dreaming is a state of consciousness separate from both wakefulness and REM sleep (the state usually associated with dreams). In fact, it is associated with its own type of brain activity.
1 mins
September/October 2025

Popular Mechanics US
The Ancient People of the Sahara
BETWEEN 14,800 AND 5,500 YEARS AGO, the Sahara—known for being one of the driest places on Earth—actually had enough water to support a way of life. Back then, it was a savanna that early human populations settled to take advantage of the favorable farming conditions. Among them was a mysterious people who lived in what is now southwestern Libya and should have been genetically subSaharan—except, upon a modern analysis, their genes didn’t reflect that.
1 mins
September/October 2025
Translate
Change font size