Yes, as strong as before, if not more. IMO Gates' Law -- the inverse of Moore's law -- doesn't help either. I have plenty of examples, from those pieces of software and appliances I use everyday:
- Power went on and off in our building for several minutes. That obviously turned off my always-on printer and all other devices. Now for some reason the printer won't turn on. All my other devices like my TV, Raspberry Pi and desktop computers plugged 24/7 and still work perfectly after the incident.
- Some appliances like vacuum cleaners and fridges and freezers made recently tend to break faster. And although they consume less watts of power when used, their relatively frequent need to be replaced generates more waste. In comparison, our 30 year old (I'm 28!) fridge is still functioning.
- About mobile devices, I have a Samsung tablet and an old Iphone whose batteries or screens can't be trivially replaced: I replaced the battery of my tablet now for some reason the touchscreen is messed up making it unusable although the display still works ok. A still older Android phone from 2014 won't install updates or most recent software. Not so long ago, Apple had been known to deliberatly slow down old devices, but no longer know to what extent that is still true.
- Car parts. Lots of progress have been made regarding fuel economy but Renault cars IMO could be made more reliable and user-friendly: changing a lighbulb on the Renault Modus requires you to disassemble the bumper [1] ... Changing the battery on a hybrid car... I'd rather not know.
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[1] http://www.fiches-auto.fr/articles-auto/entretien-automobile...