
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Two years after its release, the Framework 16 isn’t just a modular experiment. It’s a statement about ownership, longevity, and responsibility in modern computing.
We revisit the Framework 16 from a long-term perspective. And what it represents after the dust has settled.
We unpack:
• What “right to repair” actually means in practice
• How modular design challenges the disposable tech cycle
• The uncomfortable reality of planned obsolescence
• And what this means for creatives, developers, and professionals who depend on their machines daily
Is the Framework 16 the future of laptops — or simply a principled niche product?
More importantly: should our relationship with technology be evolving the way our hardware does?
A grounded conversation about design ethics, sustainability, and the long game in computing.
By Blockx InteractiveTwo years after its release, the Framework 16 isn’t just a modular experiment. It’s a statement about ownership, longevity, and responsibility in modern computing.
We revisit the Framework 16 from a long-term perspective. And what it represents after the dust has settled.
We unpack:
• What “right to repair” actually means in practice
• How modular design challenges the disposable tech cycle
• The uncomfortable reality of planned obsolescence
• And what this means for creatives, developers, and professionals who depend on their machines daily
Is the Framework 16 the future of laptops — or simply a principled niche product?
More importantly: should our relationship with technology be evolving the way our hardware does?
A grounded conversation about design ethics, sustainability, and the long game in computing.