Toxic Fumes From Mac Pros? 267
Fanboi Killa writes "Apple is investigating damning claims, published in a leading French newspaper, that its computers emit a toxic odor containing chemicals including the cancer-causing benzene. Apple has not denied the accusations. Its spokesman, Bill Evans, told Macworld the company had not found any evidence to support the claim but Apple would continue to investigate. Posts on Apple's own discussion boards suggest the Mac maker knew about potentially toxic odors being linked to its computers as early as December last year."
Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
It's just the smell of smug.
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
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A nice can of Woof-O should do the trick. You can get the girl out of the way with a handful of gauze and a bottle of chloroform.
This piece of dating advice brought to you by Slashdot!
No, it was me. Sorry (Score:5, Funny)
I was in the Apple store when I was in Paris recently, and I let an SBD rip.
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
It's just the smell of smug.
God help us all if someone gets an Apple computer anywhere near a Prius.
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
There is a Prius in our parking lot with an "EARTH" sticker and an Apple logo stuck on the back.
Stick a McCain / Palin bumper sticker on it.
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't worry (Score:4, Insightful)
Not MacBooks (Score:5, Informative)
If there's any truth to it, then I'm fairly sure this only applies to MacPros (see http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=2319 [zdnet.com]).
Re:Not MacBooks (Score:5, Informative)
Seems there might be something to the report, but it's too early to say for sure. If it's correct then the problem is most likely related to either a protective coating applied to the motherboard, or possible some plastic pieces on the inside of the case (my money would be on the coating though).
So, to re-iterate, this isn't talking about any of the laptops, this is just the desktops, and even then not any of the iMacs (at least only Mac Pros have reported this problem).
Yes on MacBook Pros (Score:3, Interesting)
He didn't mean the MacBookPro (MBP), he meant Mac Pro, you know, the big desktop systems, one of these [apple.com].
The MacBook Pro's had an awful toxic stink problem as of November 2006. I got one and for a month breathed nasty plastic-burn smell that really got in my mucus membranes in my nose - the only other time being when I've ridden on coal-fired locomotives.
I finally figured out that running SETI@Home for a week got the machine so hot that all of the badness burned off. So, I assume it was somethin
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and the Ext2 drivers from SourceForge also made it unstable
There are lots of reasons why OS X can be unstable (ATi drivers, in particular), but third-party kernel modules are pretty much top of the list. Mine stopped crashing after uninstalling the Parallels kernel modules - perhaps you should try checking kextstat and unloading anything that isn't com.apple.*.
Only thing left on it that I can pinpoint for problems besides the Bluetooth is VMWare Fusion - whenever one of the VMs locks up (75% of uses), I have to hit the power button to make the machine restart.
Yup, sounds like a badly-written third-party kernel module. Pretty much any OS will be unstable if you run dodgy third-party code in kernelspace. The Parallels devs didn't bother reading the Intel docs for
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Mac Pro, not Macbook Pro
Mac Pro not MacBooks! (Score:5, Informative)
Denied it? You bet. (Score:5, Insightful)
Saying "Apple has not denied the allegations" is sensationalistic, and doesn't belong in the summary. They "found no evidence", which, logically, is as strong a denial as can possibly be made.
Re:Denied it? You bet. (Score:5, Insightful)
Even if the Greenpeace lab did detect chemicals with known health risks you still need to know the concentrations.
You can get a all sorts of poisonous fumes coming off of anything with silicon caulk -- like aquariums -- especially when they get warm. Good stuff like toluene and ethylbenzene -- just not in concentrations that can actually harm you.
I'm NOT trying to claim there is no problem. I'm just saying that there is nothing from the article to support that there IS a problem either -- just some anecdotes and a bit of scientifically illiterate journalism.
With the strong smells coming off some machines, it is worth running a few tests to make sure that whatever is being emitted is not coming off at dangerous concentrations. In the meantime, though, not much to see here.
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Also, having proper ventilation in offices can prevent headaches and the likes... sounds like he didn't have any.
Re:Denied it? You bet. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Not to mention that the tests were run by Greenpeace, and they have absolutely no credibility whatsoever. In conclusion, this is a stupid story written by stupid people and the massive attention it has received in the press just goes to prove that there are a lot of stupid people out there.
Re:Denied it? You bet. (Score:5, Insightful)
It looks like they corrected that.
You know, for people who are so unwilling to let us edit or delete our own posts, they sure are willing to make corrections to their stories without noting that there even was one.
From the Slashdot FAQ:
Will you delete my comment?
No. We believe that discussions in Slashdot are like discussions in real life- you can't change what you say, you only can attempt to clarify by saying more. In other words, you can't delete a comment that you've posted, you only can post a reply to yourself and attempt to clarify what you've said.
In short, you should think twice before you click that 'Submit' button because once you click it, we aren't going to let you Undo it.
Think twice, indeed.
Where and how well did they look? (Score:5, Insightful)
``They "found no evidence", which, logically, is as strong a denial as can possibly be made.``
No, as strong a denial as can possibly be made is "That is incorrect. It is not true. Our products do not emit the fumes referred to."
All "found no evidence" means that where they looked, using their methods, they couldn't find the fumes.
I'm not saying they -didn't- launch a thorough investigation, but there's nothing in particular to indicate that they did, either. Certainly there's people with complaints.. unless they're all making things up, I suspect that their "[continued] investigation" will dig up some particular packaging material or electronics supplier that happened to have a bad batch.
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No, as strong a denial as can possibly be made is "That is incorrect. It is not true. Our products do not emit the fumes referred to."
The OP is saying, logically, they are the same thing. Scientifically speaking, not having evidence of something is as concrete as it gets, because, except for very limited scenarios, you cannot prove a negative.
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That assumes you actually tried to look for evidence. You can quite truthfully say you have found no evidence of X if you never even looked for any in the first place.
I disagree. To find implies to have searched.
Look up the difference, e.g., between "see" and "look", "hear" and "listen", "feel" and "touch", etc.
-b
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No, as strong a denial as can possibly be made is "That is incorrect. It is not true. Our products do not emit the fumes referred to."
The OP is saying, logically, they are the same thing. Scientifically speaking, not having evidence of something after having taken all reasonable steps to find such evidence is as concrete as it gets, because, except for very limited scenarios, you cannot prove a negative.
Fixed that for ya.
Re:Where and how well did they look? (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually 'found no evidence' is the strongest possible scientifically justifiable statement.
You cannot ever prove that the machines do not, and have never, emitted such fumes, unless you have monitored each and every computer continuously with a perfectly sensitive detector (which is not possible to build...).
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Both statements are true. "found no evidence" isn't the strongest possible denial, while it -is- still the strongest scientifically justifiable statement. The problem with the former is that you can say it all you want, but you can't ever be 100% sure of it - as you pointed out. The 'problem' with the latter is that we don't know what their scientific justifications are.. or even whether they were scientific. If the investigation was asking a major client if any of their users complained of smells or he
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You can strengthen 'found no evidence' by providing details on the steps you too to look for it. Finding no evidence with a trivial search is completely different from finding no evidence after careful and exhaustive examination.
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I think the grandparent's post is that it's as strong a denial as can reasonably be made. You can never really prove a negative. If you told me an invisible purple unicorn lives in my backyard, then, being entirely strict, I can't really prove that there isn't. The most I can really do is challenge you to provide some kind of evidence that there is.
In that kind of sense, if someone says there are toxic fumes coming out of a certain brand of computers, then the most the vendor can claim is that they've f
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If you told me an invisible purple unicorn lives in my backyard, then, being entirely strict, I can't really prove that there isn't.
Sure you can. How can it be invisible, and yet purple at the same time? Perhaps it's more of, say, a translucent llama?
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You can provide absolute denial of existence when you are able to make a complete simultaneous observation of the system you're excluding a presence in, and if you can assert that such observation would positively identify the searched-for subject.
For example, I can't say for sure there are no purple unicorns in my back yard (since I don't know enough about them to say that they are necessarily visible to the naked eye), but I can say that there are no elephants since my yard is small enough to be observed
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The problem is, actually doing it right-- investigating the rumor with an open mind-- takes time. So they're really in a no-win situation.
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Apple even replaced the power supply and subsequently the entire mac because of "smell". I call that a little service.
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Actually, denying that something is true and finding no evidence that something is true are two quite different things.
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Duh (Score:5, Funny)
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Amazing Discovery (Score:5, Funny)
Source of the reality distortion field revealed!
further studies (Score:5, Funny)
Um... (Score:3, Informative)
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I noticed this as well. I think there was a recent iPhone article that made no mention of MacBooks, yet had the tag "macbook" on it. Maybe people think "MacBook" is the company, like they used to think "MAC" was. That doesn't make much sense though.
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Wait... (Score:5, Funny)
So, computer geeks smelled something musty, rotting, or something similar to pot. Uh, that's nothing new. They probably just need to clean up their rooms and smoke outside.
Re:Wait... (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe Mom won't let them smoke outside, you insensitive clod, so they are stuck in the basement. Besides, that awful burning thing in the sky is out there. I forget what they call it but it's fucking scary.
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Re:Wait... (Score:5, Funny)
As God is my witness I went to wake up my 8 year old son and he wasn't cooperating, so I turned on the light and pulled the covers off him. "The Light! It burns ussss!" was his response.
No more Rings Trilogy before bedtime.
odor != toxic, environmentalism != rational (Score:2, Funny)
So because some Frenchman smelled something funny, now Apple has to defend against "toxic fumes" ?
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It was a humourous jab using the oft-quoted stereotype of Frenchmen having a displeasing odour.
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Telling people to grow a thick skin is not an excuse for being a bigot.
I see no reason for bigotry in the world.
Congratulations, plastic is dirty (Score:5, Informative)
Wow, what a discovery...
Plastic is amongst the "dirtiest" compounds in manufacturing. They commonly contain plasticisers, colorants, residual monomers, oligomers and solvents, all of whom can, and most likely will evaporate. Depending on the choice of plastic, this is much, little, odourless or smelly.
It looks like only the mention of Apple Mac these days will get your news posted..
B.
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They are likely to evaporate faster with a heat source.
I'd love to know how you could get any kind of smell without "odour containing chemicals" though
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I'm sorry, are you for real?
There is a lot of plastic _in_ there. They even employ a shaped plastic sheet in there to shape the airflow in the right way.
Check if you can see all the plastic in here:
http://www.apple.com/macpro/design.html [apple.com]
B.
Denying the Accusations? (Score:5, Insightful)
Would the author of the summary prefer if Apple denied the allegations without investigating the matter?
An apple a day keeps the doctor away? (Score:5, Funny)
Guess that one was misleading.
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Journalistic Integrity (Score:4, Insightful)
""My entire room smells bad and I have had to resort to a few air fresheners just to be able to work on it," one report read."
"I recently have had a bird die 'mysteriously' which was caged near my MacPro which has had the terrible smell for months. The vet said it was likely he inhaled something toxic!!!"
Both of those "quotes" or "reports" are pulled from the Apple forum. With no follow-up, no real names, and no fact checking. I guess it's good that they did in fact link to the posts... I'm sad to see Slashdot posting this article.
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I find it weird that one brings a dead bird to a vet. It's not like the vet can "fix" the bird... Is this normal behaviour?
B.
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I find it weird that one brings a dead bird to a vet.
Come on, wake up. There are several good reasons to take it to the vet.
1/ To find out if it died of some 'bird condition' which might kill your other birds or any replacement bird.
2/ To find out if it died from something like Carbon Monoxide poisoning due to a faulty gas appliance, which might subsequently affect the house's human occupants (maybe fatally) if not fixed. Ever hear of 'the canary in the mineshaft'?
3/ To find out (specificlly in this case) i
Re:Journalistic Integrity (Score:5, Insightful)
""My entire room smells bad and I have had to resort to a few air fresheners just to be able to work on it," one report read."
"I recently have had a bird die 'mysteriously' which was caged near my MacPro which has had the terrible smell for months. The vet said it was likely he inhaled something toxic!!!"
Bearing in mind that this is Greenpeace, I'd be more inclined to suspect unwashed hippie stink.
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>The vet said it was likely he inhaled something toxic!!!"
Heh, thats kinda funny. What kind of vet would say that without some type of autopsy? Who would bother to autopsy a bird? Anything that kills a bird that quickly will hurt a human, and it will be obvious.
The trolls over at the apple forums are pretty amusing.
Unusual manufacture, or sensitive users? (Score:5, Insightful)
I can imagine that people would be more apt to notice galling details in a machine they paid over 2000 for, but I am hard pressed to believe that the mac pro is actually emitting any chemicals that numerous other machines wouldn't also be. PCB manufacturing isn't all puppies and roses, and everybody's PCBs are manufactured in essentially the same way.
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I ask because there doesn't seem to be anything unusual about the mac pro.
Well, its quite power-hungry "server class" hardware (Xeons, FB-DIMM RAM etc.) with an extremely quiet cooling system - so maybe a bit different from your average PC. ISTR that FB-DIMMs knock out quite a bit of heat (the Apple-compatible versions specify souped-up heatsinks on the DIMMs c.f. the standard).
But, more likely, brand name recognition means that hacks think "Apple Mac Pro gives off toxic fumes" just sounds better than "GenericTech BeigeBox 2000 gives off toxic fumes" or even "Shock! Horror! All
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I thought the mac pros had this airflow-shaping piece of plastic in their innards. That's a fairly sizeable chunk of cheap plastic..
Almost all plastics off-gas to some extent (Score:5, Informative)
Ratio (Score:3, Insightful)
There could be a link.
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I have a friend who works at the Apple store and is a big fanboy.
Guess what his former employment was?
He was a manager at a Taco Bell.
I think you're on to something
The "Mac" in the picture is running Vista! (Score:2)
Either one of the journos really doesn't like apple , or more likely they're just a bunch of incompetent idiots. The whole story is a pile of **** anyway because ALL consumer eletronics give off tiny amounts of fumes from the organics in them.
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Either one of the journos really doesn't like apple , or more likely they're just a bunch of incompetent idiots.
Why? It's entirely possible to run Vista on an Apple branded PC.
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Yes it is , but if you want a picture of the archetypal Mac you don't show it running Windows do you.
Smelly iBooks (Score:2)
Lies (Score:2, Interesting)
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Why would it be Greenpeace? That makes no sense if you actually think about it as this is not about the way Apple designs its products but a possible defect in the production. Perhaps you could take your knee-jerk reactions somewhere else?
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Why would it be Greenpeace? That makes no sense if you actually think about it
You're correct, it doesn't make any sense... if you're looking for actual logic. Greenpeace singled out Apple for its press release criticizing the practices used in the computer industry for the simple reason-- which they freely admitted-- that they get more headlines by going after Apple than they get by criticizing the computer and semiconductor industry in general.
The dose is the poison (Score:5, Insightful)
100 spin points to Greenpeace for changing VOC from "volatile organic compound" to "volatile organic contaminant", by the way. It's nice to know that I can order in 99% pure bottles of "contaminant" from Sigma, or indeed that my air freshener is busily filling my surroundings with "contaminants".
Mind control! (Score:5, Funny)
Apple goods are infused with narcotic addictive fumes [today.com], so you'll KEEP ON BUYING THEM. And you can't complain under the NDA. Because Apple is EVIL.
Oh Sweet Sweet Apple (Score:4, Funny)
Well Crap (Score:2, Funny)
Like, duh, dude (Score:3, Insightful)
What did you think that "new computer smell" is? Volatile organic chemicals, including benzene!
Once again we see that by mentioning Apple by name (especially in an environmental story) can magically make a pointless story into front page news...
iPhume (Score:3, Funny)
It's just their newest product: The iPhume
"first" hand experience (Score:2, Informative)
My electricity bill... (Score:2)
Mac vs PC (Score:2, Funny)
Hi, I'm a Mac, and I'm a P..... (thud)
Misinformation, hate and FUD!!! (Score:2)
http://www.macworld.com/article/135835/2008/10/macpro_benzene.html [macworld.com]
If there's no proof of the claim, then can Apple sue the French "scientist" for damage to their business?
Mac Pros? (Score:2)
Re:Toxic odor??? (Score:4, Insightful)
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But that argument just makes me wish slashdot allowed pictures in comments so that I could post the "I'm here for the long argument about semantics" macro.
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Air fresheners (Score:2)
Apparently one of the complainants thinks too literally: "My entire room smells bad and I have had to resort to a few air fresheners just to be able to work on it." So he doesn't care about the toxic fume in the air, he just doesn't want to smell it. Or he thinks that an air freshener magically deactivates bad chemicals.
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Re:erm... vista lcd? (Score:4, Funny)
The bad smell only occurs when using Vista on a Mac. OS X produces the stench of rainbows, roses and women farts.
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1. They also drive better than a Yaris.
2. Your post adds weight to that
3. Your point? You hate mac users...
4. Sure. Colour me emo.
5. When was the last time you upgraded a proc?
6. Please use condoms to stop spreading that.
Whiner.
B.