f6ff222b   
   XPost: misc.phone.mobile.iphone, comp.sys.mac.advocacy   
   From: usenet@dorper.me   
      
   On Sep 29, 2023, candycanearter07 wrote   
   (in article ):   
      
   > On 9/29/23 13:37, Alan wrote:   
   > > On 2023-09-29 11:23, Wally J wrote:   
   > > > Jolly Roger wrote   
   > > >   
   > > > > > Obviously they can't make any hardware design changes to the iPhone   
   > > > > > 15, and providing the customers with a new phone will not make any   
   > > > > > difference if they continue using it the same way. The fix has to be   
   > > > > > something other than hardware changes.   
   > > > >   
   > > > > Convenient since you trolls haven't shown this to be a hardware issue   
   > > >   
   > > > First off, the _topic_ is incomprehensible to the uneducated iKooks,   
   > > > which   
   > > > is that it's valuable to _predict_ what Apple will do to make people   
   > > > whole.   
   > > > *Clearly the iPhone 15 is defective* ... but what will Apple do   
   > > > about it?   
   > >   
   > > It's not clear that the iPhone is defective.   
   >   
   > But there's been heat reports.   
      
   There is a difference between a defective unit (a monitor with dead pixels, a   
   charger that doesn't work) and a defective product (Galaxy Note 7, BlackBerry   
   Storm). A defective unit is where undesired effects occur that typically do   
   not occur in the majority of units. A defective product is where undesired,   
   *unintentional* effects occur in a large % of units. If the effect is known   
   before release and is acceptable by the manufacturer, that just means the   
   product has a weakness (a poor product).   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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