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In July 2007, less than a month after the original iPhone was released, a member of MacRumors named jorsuss started a thread titled "I dropped my iPhone in water". They covered the phone in rice, which may have been the first documented attempt to use the procedure on an iPhone. [1]
In theory water can reach the LCI(s), but still the electronics underneath it are not touched, for instance when a small drop of rain falls into the headphone connector. A user should be able to use a device in normal circumstances. For instance a smartphone is normally used while travelling, quite often outside. It can rain, or start to rain ...
Teenagers have a tendency to be glued to their phones, so it’s easy to see how a call or a text at the wrong time could lead to a distraction resulting in unwanted consequences.
Scrapped mobile phones. Mobile phone recycling describes the waste management of mobile phones, to retrieve materials used in their manufacture. Rapid technology change, low initial cost, and planned obsolescence have resulted in a fast-growing surplus, which contributes to the increasing amount of electronic waste around the globe.
YouTube user Zach Straley posted a video showing his experiment while timing how long the phones are submerged. After 60 long minutes, he takes the devices out of the water and makes sure that ...
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