Back in the driver's seat of his car, Julian ripped open the plastic packaging and plugged the cable into his car's fast-charger. The phone vibrated immediately, the screen lighting up to show the green battery icon. As the percentage ticked up to 5%, Julian breathed a sigh of relief. It was just a simple cable, but in that moment, it was the most important piece of technology he owned.

The store was winding down for the night, bathed in the familiar glow of massive television displays and the hum of industrial air conditioning. Julian bypassed the smart home displays and the rows of laptops, walking with a man on a mission directly to the accessories wall.

"Four percent," Julian admitted, holding up the dead device. "I just need something that won't break in three months."

The thin copper wires of Julian’s original iPhone cable finally surrendered on a Tuesday evening. The white rubber had frayed at the neck, exposing a delicate braid of silver shielding that sparked faintly before going completely dead. With his phone resting at a critical 4% battery and an early morning flight ahead of him, Julian grabbed his keys and drove straight to the nearest beacon of consumer electronics: Best Buy .

Julian stood in the aisle, trapped in a modern paradox of choice. A blue-shirted employee named Marcus noticed his look of mild despair and walked over. "Dying phone?" Marcus asked with a knowing smile.

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