kentadams
Giggity
kentadams

LOL, but I like the Experia.

I'm not sure what its from, but its bent. For the user, does it matter? One is user controlled one may or may not be.

In fairness, its a modern smartphone. The point is, if the phone is a metal unibody it will bend. If its plastic, like the Samsung S4, the screen will be what gets bent/broke. Something has to absorb the pressure, its just the law of physics.

The screens simply break under similar conditions with plastic phones.

The phones won't bend if they are made out of plastic, but the screens will simply break on the plastic ones.

Like other metal unibody phones? I'm shocked!

Yeah, same with the Sony Experia. In fact some people claim the Experia bent and it wasn't even in a pocket at all. Point is, phones made of aluminum will bend, that's why so many makers make them out of plastic. You could even bend an iPhone 5. Metal bends, plastic breaks.

You mean a modern phone like the Sony Experia?

If people put a large phone in their back pocket, its likely to get bent if its made of Aluminum. The same thing has happened to Android phones as well.

That is just plain weird from my experience. I have a feeling it has something to do with T-Mobile.

I've got an iPhone Edge (7 years now) and a 3G (6 years old) and batteries are still going strong. Just because you haven't seen something doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I also have a 2004 iPod, now 10 years old, that has a good battery.

Doesn't make them right. The general public is largely ignorant of these things. That doesn't mean companies should continue with this bad behavior because the public is ignorant.

That's cute :-)

I'm not sure Home Depot ignored the warnings. I suspect they did a cost-analysis of the worst case scenario and decided that the cost didn't justify the expenditure to upgrade their security. If millions were hurt by that decision, Home Depot likely thought this; "Fuck Them!" , "So sorry you lose :-)". The cost of

Agreed.

Prick! (Not meant as an insult; according to the comparison, that's the most accurate term to use to describe people who share the opinion re: technology-conscious)

Yes it is circumstantial. I'm just unsure how you would measure it unless you tracked the buyers with the UDID. However, if Apple ever implemented that type of tracking, they would have all sorts of PR damage so its unlikely. We're left to speculate.

I think if they are all buying it off contract, that would be an interesting piece of evidence. Apple knows the truth though. Apple has tried to curb this activity by limiting sales to just 2 iPhones per customer. But, as long as there is a market, people will find a way and you can't fault people willing to put