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posted by takyon on Friday December 21 2018, @01:55AM   Printer-friendly
from the flexible-technology dept.

Some iPad Pros ship a little bent, and Apple says that's normal

Gadget-makers have long played with the idea of bendable displays, but this isn't what they were going for: Apple has confirmed that some brand-new iPad Pro units have a slight bend to them—and this is expected and not a defect.

There are numerous stories and images of very slight bends on brand-new devices on the MacRumors forums, and The Verge's Chris Welch observed the same issue in his own iPad.

When The Verge reached out to Apple for comment, the company told the publication that the bending is "a side effect of the device's manufacturing process and shouldn't worsen over time or negatively affect the flagship iPad's performance in any practical way." (The Verge's words.) Apple says the bending happens as a result of a cooling process used on the components when the device is manufactured.

Defective gadget return policy:

  1. Have you recently purchased a nice shiny "defective" gadget? Good, it should be under warranty.
  2. Is it actually defective? Maybe it's bent or has some other flaw? Good, good, we wouldn't want to be selling you something broken.
  3. Did you purchase it from Apple? Specifically, did you buy a nice, shiny new iPad Pro? You know, the one that can cost you upwards of $1k? Don't worry, it's supposed to be that way. You didn't get a defective device or damaged goods. You got what you paid for. A bent iPad Pro.

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  • (Score: 1) by Ethanol-fueled on Friday December 21 2018, @04:29AM

    by Ethanol-fueled (2792) on Friday December 21 2018, @04:29AM (#777091) Homepage

    Modded up. But disagreed, because GM will be between a rock and a hard place. They will have to choose between replacing cheap labor with citizens and maybe even moving factories, which may turn the rest of America against them especially after the bailout.

    Whatever happens, the rest of America will hear about it. And if the truth is something they don't want to hear, then they will push politically. I agree that your first two points are a possibility, but common Middle America (well-paid unions) do not like cheap labor and they will not be sad to let it go in favor of those who keep their money in the country and don't shout, "Viva la Raza" every 5 seconds.