Went looking to replace the battery in my 2015 MacBook Pro and see that Apple considers the computer to be “obsolete” and no longer sells services or replacement parts.

This “old” system features a quad core Intel i7 processor, 16 GB of RAM, and both an Intel GPU and an NVidia GPU (yes, dual GPUs). With that processing set, it is still blindingly fast for processing images in photo editing software, or for editing videos.

Unfortunately, this is the third time I have encountered Apple’s planned rapid product end of life. Apple ends support, including parts, in 5-7 years, says their official statement on their web site.

I once had a Macbook that became unsupported (no more OS updates) after 3 1/2 years.

I had an iPad 2 (early model) that was effectively bricked by an Apple software update. This happened to everyone. What Apple did was provided a new OS update that required more RAM than the then iPad 2 had – and the iPad 2 slowed to a crawl to the point of being unusable. Apple’s policy is that there is no way to revert the update and go back to the prior software version. So the iPad 2 is effectively dead. Makes a nice cutting board!

My 2006 MacPro desktop is still a beast of a computer but they stopped OS updates at 10.7 and now most newer software will not run on it. That’s kind of okay except for Internet browsers – which gradually become further out of date due to the net itself changing. Most new browsers cannot run on the system. Worse, I had a MacPro1,1 – the first edition – which has an unusual boot process and the hardware is unable to run Linux or Windows because of that. So it is soon to become a boat anchor, mostly trashed in a landfill. So environmental.

Now my 2015 Macbook Pro, Apple says, can’t get a battery upgrade. I found a 3rd party vendor and have placed an order. Reading the replacement instructions – takes 1 to 2 hours – Apple has glued nearly everything inside the computer because they clearly never intended for anyone to replace batteries. Truly brain dead engineering – so much of Apple’s brilliant product design skills. There are 33 separate steps – each involving removing / ungluing something – before you even get to the battery itself. Stupid, stupid, stupid. There are then additional steps – 55 in total – by the time you’ve put in the new battery.

Then you reverse it all by doing those 55 steps in reverse.

Apple is not a brilliant engineering company. They are remarkably stuck up and stupid.

Consider Apple’s false claims about their fake environmentalism

Apple and the environment

Apple products are designed to be long-lasting. They are made of durable materials that are heavily-tested in our Reliability Testing Lab. The longer you use your product, the better it is for the planet. For more information about Apple and the environment, visit www.apple.com/environment.

Obtaining service for your Apple product after an expired warranty – Apple Support

Apple is lying. Officially, they end support in 5-7 years (or sometimes less in the case of my iPad 2 or my original Macbook).

I hope I can get a new battery for the Macbook Pro. Otherwise, another item for the landfill.

Apple is not an environmentally friendly company.

Meanwhile, my 2012 quad core HP desktop is still getting Windows 10 updates after 12 years and runs all Windows software. I cannot update it to Windows 11 as the system did not support TPM, required now for security and encryption in Windows 11. But, the system runs fine and all software runs fine. I expect to use this now 12-year-old system for a few more years, without problems.

Obviously, we stopped buying Apple products years ago as we encountered their rapid product end of life.

Apple is not the only fake eco company – it is common that Android phones can no longer get OS updates in as little as 3 years, although most will continue to get and run app software updates for many more years.

It is unfortunate that many companies engage in virtue signaling marketing programs that do not accomplish what they claim.

Coldstreams