What’s on Your Home Screen, Kyle Wiens?

The iFixit co-founder discusses his screen-off approach to smartphones

Damon Beres
OneZero

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Kyle Wiens

This is “What’s on Your Home Screen?,” a Q&A column from OneZero. We want to understand more about how people use their smartphones — those life-consuming devices we dump hours into every day — to pave a way toward a better future. Or at least a more reflective one. We’ll add new entries regularly, and each will feature a new interview with a notable person about the apps they use, how they’re organized, and whether those red bubbles drive them nuts.

TTechnology should last. Replacing your smartphone every couple years is expensive and unsustainable — which helps explain why people are less inclined than ever to buy new devices.

Still, you’ll have to get a new one eventually. The battery will degrade, or some new version of the operating system will come out that your phone isn’t powerful enough to run.

Kyle Wiens, CEO and co-founder of iFixit, faces these problems every day. His company sells tools and provides repair guides to help consumers fix their gadgets and squeeze more life out of them — efforts that many major tech companies oppose even as “right to repair” bills gain traction on the national stage.

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Damon Beres
OneZero

Co-Founder and Former Editor in Chief, OneZero at Medium