Apr 03
Filed under: Cellphones
Not even a month after three iPods got all hot and bothered on separate occasions, along comes images showing that even Apple’s iPhone isn’t immune to melting itself. Purportedly, the handset was purchased from Carphone Warehouse in December, but was never activated for one reason or another. Just this week, the owner’s son slapped it in a dock with intentions of activating, walked downstairs to catch the last few minutes of Magnum, P.I. and returned to his room to find a “stupidly hot” iPhone which had already melted in some parts and had its screen cracked from the reaction. Not surprisingly, he’s currently in the middle of a runaround trying to get someone to remedy the issue, but thankfully no Earthlings, carpets or IKEA desks were harmed.
Update: Thanks to Logan5’s quick eyes, it appears we’ve discovered a scammer in our midst. Essentially, this bloke posted the real story here noting that the crack (more on that here) actually appeared after it was mishandled and dropped. Haven’t we learned this approach doesn’t work by now?
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Source: Darren Murph
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Feb 25
p10, fire, problem, laptop battery, LaptopBattery, melted, melt, smoke, hazard, korea, SouthKorea, south korea, explosion, mishap, dangerous, battery, samsung
Filed under: Laptops
Merely days after LG put the brakes on sales of its Z1-AE007 laptop due to suspicions of a faulty battery within, yet another lappie in South Korea is making headlines for its overheating, er, abilities. Reportedly, the battery in a P10 computer, produced in 2002, “melted” after inexplicably emitting smoke during use. The device managed to burn a bed and a certain part of the floor, but thankfully, no “big fire” was started. According to company spokesman James Chung, Samsung is now “checking details of the incident,” but the actual manufacturer of said battery has yet to be revealed.
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Source: Darren Murph
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Jan 16
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
AT&T is looking to replace 17,000 backup batteries in U-verse equipment cabinets all over the country over concerns that they can explode. Those are confirmed concerns, too, as there have been four confirmed incidents since October 2006. Explosions have occurred in Houston, Cleveland and Wisconsin; the Wisconsin incident reportedly was strong enough to blow the 50-pound cabinet door off its bolts. The bad news for AT&T is that the battery manufacturer, Avestor, filed for bankruptcy in October 2006 and is no longer in business. What’s worse is that a consulting firm hired to examine the first incidents deemed the battery design ok, and chalked up the explosions to “manufacturing defects.” So now AT&T has taken it upon itself to spend some big bucks to locate and replace the already-in-service (and obviously widely dispersed) lithium metal polymer batteries.
[Via TVOver, image courtesy of LightReading]
EDIT: Spelling error fixed (thanks, Bryce!) and photo credit changed (thanks, Phil!).
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Source: Steven Kim
written by
Sep 04
Filed under: Laptops
Every time we think we’ve had our fill of these, somebody goes and one-ups the competition with a Dell-fueled inferno of doom. Apparently this one is coming at us from Shanghai, and while we’re not sure what anyone is saying on the forum to which these pictures are posted, we’re guessing a chorus of “sucks to be you!” and “recalled for a reason” is a solid guess. Check after the break for a couple more pictures, including the stark beauty of the aftermath.
[Thanks, Steve Du]Continue reading The fun never ends: another Dell up in flames
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Paul Miller
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Sep 03
fire, hazard, BL-D3, explode, exploded, nokia, battery, accident, explosion, matsushita, mishap, batteries
Filed under: Cellphones
While Nokia and Matsushita were busying settling the disputes that arose when the phone maker had to recall some 46 million handset batteries, a lady in India has been injured by a Nokia-branded cell that’s not on that list. Located in eastern India, the woman noted that the BL-D3 series battery “blew up about 10 minutes after it was put on charge,” resulting in a “ball of fire” that led to minor burn injuries to the user. According to Nokia, the incident was “isolated,” and if it finds that the handset, battery, and charger are original, the 30-year old victim will supposedly be compensated.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Darren Murph
written by
Sep 01
Filed under: Cellphones
Not that it doesn’t completely go without saying, but whenever you start hacking any battery-powered portable device, you need to freaking be careful. Otherwise you might end up like dude here who was pulling a Geohot on his iPhone when short circuited and became red hot, releasing the magic smoke hither locked inside the device’s electronics. Lesson learned: you take your phone, even your life, into your own hands when screwing with components, so be gentle and careful, will you?
[Via Engadget Spanish]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Ryan Block
written by
Aug 23
Filed under: Cellphones
C’mon, you didn’t think Nokia was just going to sit around with 46 million bum batteries on its hands and not play the blame game, didya? Reportedly, when Nokia’s worldwide CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo was asked whether Matsushita (the batteries’ manufacturer) would be held liable for the fiasco, he responded by saying that the firm was “investigating” the issue, and noted “…of course they are responsible to us.” Currently, Nokia has yet to divulge what kind of financial impact this whole mess will have on the company, but it’s apparently planning to pass along at least some of the connected costs to Matsushita. Furthermore, Nokia’s chief refused to comment when asked about the future relationship between the two outfits, but we’re sure true feelings will become evident in due time.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Darren Murph
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Jul 27
ScaledComposites, Scaled Composites, rocket, RichardBranson, spacecraft, spaceport, VirginGalactic, Virgin Galactic, virgin, richard branson, kills, burt rutan, airport, aerospace, BurtRutan, death, killed, kill, explosion, blast
Filed under: Transportation
This week is quickly becoming a tough one for the aerospace industry, as just a day after NASA reported tampering on an ISS bound computer, an explosion at the Mojave Air and Space Port has claimed two lives and seriously injured four others. The blast reportedly occurred during a “test of a new rocket motor for SpaceShipTwo — a spaceship being built for Virgin Galactic, Richard Branson’s space tourism company.” According to a spokeswoman for the spaceport, the blast was “on a remote pad” at an airport home to Scaled Composite (which is the builder of the first private manned rocket to reach space), but the firm’s founder Burt Rutan wasn’t in attendance when the “cold fire test” went awry.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Darren Murph
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