iPhone 6 and 6 Plus can bend in pockets, users complain

Posted by Unknown on Wednesday, September 24, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

The bigger screens but thinner bodies of Apple’s new iPhone 6 and 6 Plus models have come at the cost of rigidity, according to owners who say they bent while being carried in trouser pockets.
A number of users across various forumssites and Twitter have reported – and pictured – that their phones have become warped after they sat or bent down with them in front and rear trouser pockets.
The reports come just after an insurance company claimed that the new iPhones are the most robust ever – though its tests didn’t include bending.
The iPhone 6 and 6 Plus chassis is milled from a solid piece of aluminium alloy whose composition is secret. The weak area of the phone appears to be around the volume buttons, where the frame is at its thinnest and creates a fulcrum point around which the phone bends. Surprisingly, the screen does not break when the phone bends – though it does if the phone is then bent back to a flat profile.
Apple is not the first to have the problem of a large-screened metal-framed smartphone bending under use. Sony’s Xperia Z1, which had a 5in screen and a metal frame, saw users complaining that they bent in pockets, while Samsung Galaxy S4 users had similar complaints, as did BlackBerry Q10 users.
The exact number of iPhone 6 users affected is unknown. The Guardian found dozens of people on Twitter whose iPhone 6 or 6 Plus had bent – though there are also hundreds more echoing news reports and the pictures put up by those who have been affected.



Oups, l'iPhone 6 se déforme dans la poche !http://t.co/szFfovaHB7 pic.twitter.com/Zru9uozhMU
— Florian Paulmier (@FlorianP123) September 23, 2014
The iPhone 6 Could Bend In Your Pocket… !! haha.. love u APPLE pic.twitter.com/MJV2s5kT1a
— Nelson Cardoz (@nelsoncardoz) September 23, 2014

Testing by Unbox Therapy showed that the iPhone 6 Plus can be bent by applying substantial force by hand. 
The amount of force required to bend the smartphone is unlikely to be repeated in all but the skinniest of trousers. Before conducting the test, Lewis Hilsenteger from Unbox Therapy said his 6 Plus showed signs of being bent simply from being in his trouser pocket.
The Guardian’s testing of the phones over the past two weeks has not revealed any tendency towards deformation when normal care is taken.
Apple had not replied to request for comment by the time of publication.
Hilsenteger conducted a similar test with the 5.7in Samsung Galaxy Note 3 phablet, which warped to a lesser extent and then came back into shape due to its primarily plastic construction. The Note 3 is 2.5mm thicker than the iPhone 6 Plus, which is 7mm thick.

‘Bigger and more durable than any before them’

Reports of the phones’ bending comes as SquareTrade, which offers extended warranties on products, concluded that the new iPhones were the most robust yet in its “breakability” rating. The company put the phones through submersion in water, drops and sliding tests.
“Both new iPhones are bigger and more durable than any before them,” the SquareTrade spokesman said in the YouTube video of the company’s testing regime. “The iPhone 6 passed all of our tests with flying colours. The iPhone 6 Plus also did extremely well but it’s so big that it lost points for gripability and size, and didn’t do quiet as well in our drop test.”
A dissembling or “teardown” by repair specialists iFixit showed that Apple has made durability improvements to the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, with rubber gaskets around buttons to help prevent water and dust entering and causing damage. Other manufacturers including Sony and Samsung have made their smartphones including the Xperia Z2 and Galaxy S5 resistant to brief submersion in water. Apple hasn’t made any claims about water resistance for the new iPhones.
Smartphones bending under pressure in the pocket is not a new thing. Phones whose frames are made of metal are most susceptible and noticeable because the metal permanently deforms - rather than rebounding or snapping as plastic does.

‘Weakness of the new iPhone’

Previous iPhones, including the iPhone 4, iPhone 5 and iPhone 5S, have suffered from bending, with users complaining about the problem in 2010, 2012 and last year via Apple’s official internet forums.
But the larger and thinner the smartphone, the more likely it is to be damaged by being carried in the pocket under tension.
“In material bending, larger cross-sectional areas [thickness x width] and shorter lengths make things stronger - you can’t easily bend a cube - while the opposite makes things very easy to bend – paper is easily folded,” Jeremy Irons, a design engineer at Creative Engineering explained to Gizmodo. “The increased length and decreased thickness contribute to the weakness of the new iPhone. Strength is proportionally related to length, but strength is affected much more by changes in thickness.”
The thinner and larger the phones get the more susceptible to damage they are likely to be, regardless of how strong the materials used in the phones to reinforce them. Being thin makes large phones more pocketable, but users need to think about the stress and strain in tight pockets as they sit down, regardless of whether they carry them in the back or front pockets.

Chinese teen dies after charging phone electrocutes her while she slept

Posted by Unknown on Friday, August 1, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

A teenager was electrocuted and died in her sleep while she was charging her phone.
The 18-year-old, who has not been named, died in Xinjiang, on July 24.
The deceased’s sister said she smelt burning when she returned to their home and found her sister lying dead in her bedroom with burns across her body. A broken phone was next to her.
It is not clear if the woman was using an authentic charger, or a cheap counterfeit version which have been linked to other fatalities. 
Experts from the Forensic Science Association of China said the teenager had livor mortis across her neck, hands and leg, and concluded that she’d died from electrocution, the Shanghaiist reported.
The teeanger’s sister said online that the phone had been purchased in Urumqi and the retailer was now discussing compensating the family.
In July last year Air Stewardess Ma Ailun, 23, was killed by an electric shock when she answered a call on her phone  while it was recharging on a knock-off charger.

Apple may not launch the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 this year: report

Posted by Unknown on Monday, July 14, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

It seems nothing is going Apple’s way when it comes to the next iPhone’s production. A recent report suggested that the company might face component yield issues in an attempt to meet the thin form factor of the iPhone 6.
Now, KGI Securities’ analyst Ming-Chi Kuo claims that due to production issues, the launch of the alleged larger iPhone 6 variant, believed to be the 5.5-inch model, may be delayed to next year. He adds that in any case the phone is indeed launched in October, it is likely be available in limited quantities.
MacRumors quotes Kuo who noted, “Production bottlenecks on 4.7-inch iPhone 6 centre on the yield rate of in-cell touch panel and metal casing. As in-cell touch panel becomes larger in size, the edge of the panel may become insensitive to touch. Meanwhile, under new manufacturing process for the iPhone 6 metal casing, colour unevenness is an issue.”
Notably, this is not the first case of yield issues reported for the long-rumoured 5.5-inch iPhone 6 variant. Back in May, a report suggested that the use of costly sapphire as a display material, waslimiting the production of the alleged iPhone 6 with 5.5-inch display.
Last week, a report tipped that Apple might introduce a new haptic feedback technology in its next generation iPhone devices, while another leak suggested that the company had almost doubled orders for the iPhone 6 when compared to the iPhone 5.
Earlier this month, a report revealed a September 25 (Thursday) availability date for the alleged 4.7- and 5.5-inch iPhone 6 models, which is not in line with Apple’s traditional Friday launch, while also claiming that the name of the larger 5.5-inch iPhone 6 variant will be iPhone Air.
-NDTV

iPhone 6 may come with barometer, air pressure sensors

Posted by Unknown on Friday, June 20, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

Looks like the next iPhone might be able to measure temperature, air pressure, and altitude, with a new report tipping addition of a new barometer sensor into the handset.
Apple’s next iPhone, believed to be dubbed the iPhone 6, has been in headlines with numerous leaks tipping details about the unannounced handset’s design and display size. However, this is the first time we have heard details of the alleged iPhone 6′s new sensor system.
The details about the possible presence of a new sensor on the anticipated iPhone 6 come via references found in Xcode 6 and iOS 8, which are the latest iPhone software developer kit (SDK) and operating system. The report claims that the software includes updated CoreMotion APIs, which include reference of the new altitude measuring capabilities. A 9to5mac report claims that there are a number of apps in the App Store which can track altitude and one of them is even listed on the company’s Your Verse section.
Notably, the reference of the new altitude measuring capabilities in Xcode 6 and iOS 8 is a new framework that is dedicated to altitude tracking. The report, citing a few developers, claims that this framework requires a new Apple hardware.
The report informs the App Store currently comes with apps that use the iOS device’s inbuilt GPS and motion chips to determine altitude; however, a barometer sensor could get more accurate data and could be quick to load data, thanks to the dedicated chip.
A developer from FutureTap, as cited by 9to5mac, tested the new framework on an iPhone 5s, which in result confirmed that the device [iPhone 5s] did not support the altitude changes.
The report speculates that the new sensor could be a part of, and be powered by, the alleged iPhone 6′s M8 motion co-processor that’s said to be a part of the expected A8 processor rumoured to debuton the alleged iPhone 6 and be designed for improved efficiency and battery life.
Reports have been tipping that Apple’s next iPhone would hit shelves on September 19. The Cupertino-based company has been rumoured to be testing a higher screen resolution of 960×1704 pixels on at least one of the two iPhone models likely to debut this year.

New hack targets Apple devices

Posted by Unknown on Sunday, June 1, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

There is a new global cyber-attack. Hackers are now targeting and locking iPads, iPhones and other Mac devices and sending out a ransom message.
The devices are locked by the hacker using the name Oleg Pliss and demands $100 be sent to a Paypal account in exchange for unlocking it.
The majority of attacked phones are reported to be in Australia, but according to Apple’s support thread a number of victims are from the United States. The hack is reported to be using the ‘Find my iPhone’ feature to remotely lock the devices
If this happens to you Apple says bring the locked phone in to the apple store to be restored. However, unlocking the device will cause the user to lose everything from music to contacts if the phone has not already been backed up.

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