What Restoring a 30-Year-Old Nintendo Taught Me About Right To Repair

<p>Inthe late 1980s, somebody bought a Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) from a physical store, brought it home, and presumably enjoyed it for untold years. The console, with serial number N12180601, suffered greatly in the decades to come, eventually landing on eBay in a condition that can only be described as &ldquo;junk.&rdquo; The seller, located in Angleton, Texas, was asking a modest price of $11.99 for the system, which was not only nonfunctional and damaged, but missing a plethora of parts.</p> <p>I bought it.</p> <p><img alt="" src="https://miro.medium.com/v2/resize:fit:700/0*744VA3MykIDupeJ-" style="height:362px; width:700px" /></p> <p>Covered in dirt and grease, partially disassembled, burned by ill-placed cigarettes, missing vital internal components, and sporting bright white paint drips, the console was a mess. If your smartphone, TV, or modern game console were in this kind of condition you&rsquo;d simply throw it out and buy a replacement. But the NES was built in the 1980s, back when companies didn&rsquo;t care nearly as much about making money off repairs, and as such, it was salvageable with my bare minimum of technological know-how and my very questionable soldering skills.</p> <p><a href="https://debugger.medium.com/what-restoring-a-30-year-old-nintendo-taught-me-about-right-to-repair-3bffdf548f6d"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>
Tags: Old Nintendo