Apple Says Air Exposure Is Causing iPhone 6s Battery Problems (arstechnica.com) 76
Last month, Apple announced a repair program for a "small number" of iPhone 6s phones that suffer from faulty batteries. The phones that were affected by this fault were manufactured between September and October 2015. Two weeks later, Apple now says the fault was caused by overexposure to "controlled ambient air." Ars Technica reports: The same press release -- issued only in China so far, but available in English if you scroll down -- says that some owners of later iPhone 6S models are also reporting problems with unexpected shutdowns. Apple isn't replacing those batteries just yet, but the company says that an iOS update "available next week" will add "additional diagnostic capability" that will allow Apple to better track down and diagnose the causes of these shutdowns. It "may potentially help [Apple] improve the algorithms used to manage battery performance and shutdown," as well. Those improvements will be included in future iOS updates. Apple says that the battery problem "is not a safety issue," an important thing to note given the way the Galaxy Note 7 blew up in Samsung's face. The software update that Apple mentions in the release is almost certainly iOS 10.2, which is currently in its sixth beta build. The update will be the first major bug-fix release since October's iOS 10.1, and it also includes a handful of other changes like new and redesigned emoji, the TV app that Apple demoed at its last product event, and other features.
So holding it in air... (Score:5, Funny)
is wrong!
Re:So holding it in air... (Score:5, Informative)
I know you're joking, but no, the actual problem is that they were exposed to air during manufacturing. It has nothing to do with the users using them a particular way. Apple is basically admitting to a manufacturing defect causing bad readings to occur, which is causing the battery to misreport its status and shutdown early. They think, however, that they can take all of that into account and rectify the problem via a software update.
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It really depends if the problem is a bad reading or if the battery voltage is actually collapsing. Battery voltage varies with various things: state of charge, electrical load, temperature, age and so forth. If it dips below the range where the phone can operate, software isn't going to fix it.
Doesn't bode well for the long term reliability of those batteries either. I'd hope they at least offer an extended battery warranty.
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Just to be on the safe side, you should stick your phone in a bucket of water.
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Just to be on the safe side, you should stick your phone in a bucket of water.
Afterwards, don't forget to dry it out in the microwave.
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I tried using my phone only underwater, and now they say the warranty is void!
Adventurous and Bold (Score:3, Funny)
Designing iphones for the vacuum of space! Did you want to use that in atmosphere?
low quality (Score:3)
Re:low quality (Score:5, Insightful)
When it's cheaper to cut corners elsewhere and not one second sooner.
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Tell that to Samsung's >5 billion dollar recall of the Galaxy Note 7.
I know we all have trouble imagining huge dollar amounts these days. But 5 billion dollars is a fuckton to any current size company. Nobody gets away with losing that much money without heads rolling, policies changing, etc.
Re: low quality (Score:1)
Sorry, I can't hear you. I'm still talking on my user serviceable and replaceable battery, micro sd card enabled, two sim phone with a headset jack. It is a horrifying half millimeter thicker though. I try not to cry myself to sleep over it. A full mm actually, since it has a plastic back that absorbs shocks and pops off if I drop it.
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Uh, my dual-sim phone has LTE/4G connectivity. I'm using it to post right now.
Re: low quality (Score:2, Funny)
Heads have rolled. The engineers responsible are now developing umbrellas that use your phone to tell you that it's raining.
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I'm not sure that's rain that is falling on my head.
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really honestly ask yourself, if non china joe bumblefuck is going to care any more while making 9 dollars an hour in a job he hates...
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Re:low quality (Score:5, Funny)
Round corners, not cut corners.
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And even if they could, they must not!
Not good (Score:2)
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A more interesting question - were the conditions of storage outside the published storage temps, or operating ones. This could easily mean that it'll fail in use for some people.
Re:Not good (Score:5, Informative)
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So they "aged prematurely"?
In other words, they were meant to fail in 2 years, not 2 months.
Re:Not good (Score:4, Insightful)
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I get your point but that would be quite a problem since car engine pistons are made from aluminum; they start out rusted with a nice protective coating of aluminum oxide.
Soldering batteries (Score:2, Insightful)
I bet they're regretting soldering those batteries in now. And it'd really suck to have to mail in your phone just to get a new battery.
Re: Soldering batteries (Score:2)
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For me it is actually battery life. I can carry a charged spare battery in my pocket and when my phone dies I just swap it in and go. Sure I could carry a battery pack but they are larger and you need a cable running to your phone.
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I'm not de
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I got a kit to replace the battery in my Motorola Nexus 6. It's as good as new, though you need to be careful who you buy batteries from. One battery I bought turned out to be old stock and was worse than the one I replaced. It's a pain but doable with the right tools.
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Talk for yourself. I had my Nokia 7110 long enough to have three battery packs die on me. And considering that they held enough power for a week (instead of barely a day as it is today), you might deduce that I had it a little longer than 2-3 years.
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iPhone 6s Battery Problems? (Score:1)
"additional diagnostic capability" (Score:2)
Surveillance? Now, when Microsoft does stuff like that, the shrieking commences.
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Apple has done it for quite a number of years now .... 2003? maybe, but no its apple, its a "feature" to sign up for an itunes account and log in every time you boot your computer
Microsoft does it and its all holy hell! I personally trust microsoft more, they have not been intentionally trying to fuck me over since the 1980's
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This is exactly what I was going to say.
"additional diagnostic capability" == "telemetry"
Ok for anyone except Microsoft.
IOS 7 (Score:1)
That's supposed to make them air proof.
What Apple doesn't say is more important (Score:4, Insightful)
What is causing this "exposure to air"? Can't they just spell out "manufacturing defect"?
You're holding it on the wrong planet (Score:1)
If you can't be bothered to use it in the right atmosphere, just get an adapter bubble.
I have a revolutionary idea! (Score:5, Informative)
Field replaceable batteries!
Not even trying anymore (Score:3, Interesting)
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To be fair, it's not just those two who have had problems with lithium batteries. Boeing's Dreamliner kept catching fire because of battery problems, Sony had problems with laptop batteries (which affected Apple and many others who buy from them), and I seem to recall LG had a few issues as well.
I get a bit frustrated at the slow pace of battery development with electric cars, but on the other hand I can appreciate why they don't just ram another few cells in without doing extensive safety testing first.
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iOS update with "additional diagnostic capability" (Score:2)
Air Exposure (Score:5, Funny)
We never anticipated the users actually taking the phones out of the packaging. We figured they could just gaze lovingly at them through the plastic.
Yes I was exposed to an Ipad Air once. (Score:2)
The point i see here.. (Score:1)
is when the problem was US only apple fed everyone their usual bullshit propaganda. A "small number" of phones affected.
apple is so desperate for sales in China that now when China raises the issue apple offers them a slightly less bullshit response.
That's why I keep my phone in a vacuum. (Score:2)
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Do you normally talk to the person within arm's reach on your telephone?
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Apple products should only be used in a vacuum. (Score:2)