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Apple Is Still Ignoring One of the Biggest iPhone Engineering Flaws of All Time: 'Touch Disease' (slashdot.org) 204

Jason Koebler, writing for Motherboard: As Apple is preparing to ship its brand new iPhone, the company continues to ignore one of the biggest hardware defects to ever plague its smartphone line. Just two years after it was released, the touchscreens of thousands upon thousands of iPhone 6 Pluses are completely losing their functionality under normal use, which experts say is the long-term effect of the engineering flaw that gave us "bendgate." By most accounts, dead touchscreens have become an iPhone 6 Plus epidemic, and yet the company has not commented on it, leaving consumers uninformed and harming independent repair businesses. In many cases, Apple has charged hundreds of dollars to replace a broken phone with a refurbished one that is subject to the same engineering defect that caused the phone to break in the first place. A lawsuit has been filed against Apple, claiming the company "has long been aware of the defective iPhones," but continues to do nothing about it. "Notwithstanding its longstanding knowledge of this design defect, Apple routinely has refused to repair the iPhones without charge when the defect manifests," the lawsuit reads. "Many other iPhone owners have communicated with Apple's employees and agents to request that Apple remedy and/or address the Touchscreen Defect and/or resultant damage at no expense. Apple has failed and/or refused to do so." As for how many iPhones are affected by this? It's hard to tell for sure. But according to an Apple Insider report that cites anonymous Genius Bar employees at four large Apple stores, 11 percent of all iPhone-related service issues at those stores were related to Touch IC problems, and Touch IC issues made up about a third of all iPhone 6 Plus-related problems at those stores.
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Apple Is Still Ignoring One of the Biggest iPhone Engineering Flaws of All Time: 'Touch Disease'

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  • by Karl Cocknozzle ( 514413 ) <kcocknozzle.hotmail@com> on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:01AM (#52899609) Homepage

    Just... barely works. Sometimes you have to breathe on the screen a little to get it to recognize your finger.

    Disappointing, given how expensive it was.

    • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @10:35AM (#52900177) Homepage

      Just... barely works. Sometimes you have to breathe on the screen a little to get it to recognize your finger.

      Disappointing, given how expensive it was.

      This is why I miss Steve Jobs.

      The obvious problem is that your finger is defective, and Jobs wouldn't have been afraid to tell you that.

    • The early LG G-series phones (G1, G2) had this problem as well... after about a year or two of use, it would start becoming unresponsive on one side of the screen, and eventually the whole thing soon became unusable.

      Of course, the LG phones are far less expensive (especially when you buy them a generation or two back from bleeding-edge), so it was no big deal to toss the thing and get a new one.

    • by I4ko ( 695382 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @12:03PM (#52900743)
      Also the original iPhone from 2007 if used with a screen protector film. Ultimately it was the protector being porous and trapping salt and other contaminants from the fingers that placed electrical stress over the digitizer circuitry over time blowing the opamps. It would be interesting to know how many of those that complain about a broken digitizer on the 6 have a screen protector film.

      I managed to remove mine from the old 4S just before it was going to break for good. With the film gone and frequent microfiber wipes, the original digitizer works fine to this day.
  • Well... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:05AM (#52899623)

    We've come to expect engineering disaster from supposed "premium" phone companies. They have a lot less to lose than small manufacturers that would be wiped out by something on the scale of touch plague or battery fires.

    • We've come to expect engineering disaster from supposed "premium" phone companies.

      I don't know... when one manufacturer's phones are exploding into a fiery inferno, hearing about how another manufacturer's phones develop "unresponsive touchscreens" is rather lame.

      Get on the ball, Apple! Think BIG! You've got some ground to make up!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:06AM (#52899625)

    Why would they fix this? More broken phones == more new phones sold in their mind. If it happens after 2 years, in many places that is just outside of the warranty period on your product so they are not legally obligated to _fix_ your phone anymore. (You can get more warranty, depends on the country and where you buy the phone I guess).

    It isn't good news for us, but technology has a shorter lifespan these days than in the past. (I'm quite sure my first mobile phones would still work), but then again these products were less technologically complex.

    Fixing this issue in production would arguably be the 'moral' thing to do, not necessarily the 'smartest' idea in terms of business. [Unless people turn against apple for this bullshit, but a lot of apple followers will just buy anything they release]

    • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:25AM (#52899713)

      Why would they fix this? More broken phones == more new phones sold in their mind. If it happens after 2 years, in many places that is just outside of the warranty period on your product so they are not legally obligated to _fix_ your phone anymore.

      My counter example is that 2 months ago Apple replaced the logic board in my early 2011 MacBook Pro totally for free, under the replacement plan for the design flaws in that system. And I didn't even buy this computer new, I bought it as a refurb from Apple, and the Apple Care that I bought when I purchased the computer had run out a long ago as well.

      • My counter example is that 2 months ago Apple replaced the logic board in my early 2011 MacBook Pro totally for free, under the replacement plan for the design flaws in that system.

        Apples a big company - one relatively small well-behaved division does not the whole company make. The Apple is rotting.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 )

        My counter example is that 2 months ago Apple replaced the logic board in my early 2011 MacBook Pro totally for free, under the replacement plan for the design flaws in that system. And I didn't even buy this computer new, I bought it as a refurb from Apple, and the Apple Care that I bought when I purchased the computer had run out a long ago as well.

        Apple is really good about repairing computers, especially under AppleCare. I've had issues with two Macs. The first was my 2007 TI PowerBook. The escape key stopped working on the keyboard. I had about 2 weeks left on AppleCare. They Fed-Exed me a box overnight, I sent it in, and had it back the same week. They not only replaced the keyboard, but the front bezel & the trackpad.

        My 2008 24" iMac had a faulty logic board, and I live about 70 miles away from the closest Apple store. They sent out a repair

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @11:07AM (#52900355) Homepage Journal

        Apple only started fixing the logic board problems for free after a massive amount of press coverage, 12,000 post forum thread and class-action lawsuit [wikipedia.org].

        That's what upsets people; they do the right thing eventually, but have to be forced to do by massive amounts of pressure and years of uncertainty and broken hardware. If you had bought that computer new and it had died of this, you would have either had to pay Apple for the repair and many years later claim a refund, or sit on it for years and presumably buy another machine in the mean time.

        It's the same for iPhone 6 users. Maybe eventually Apple will fix it for free, but until then they either pay or have no phone.

    • by Cloud K ( 125581 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @10:19AM (#52900089)

      Turning away from Apple is exactly what I've done. Between things like this, a lack of innovation (they like to spread things thin so they have at least have *something* to talk about next year) and things like the headphone jack, eventually I said "no more". Apple like to push and push and push and see how much they can possibly get away with, and sooner or later they're going to cross that line for a lot more people.

      The thing is, once they do cross that line, it snaps back, like elastic, putting them well into "I'd need a very good reason to buy Apple products again" territory. All these "just a headphone jack" kind of things add up. Each year you think "oh they've only ruined X or removed Y, that's okay, I didn't *really* need that anyway" and put up with it because new shiny thing with some amazing new feature. Except they haven't done the "amazing new feature" part for white a while now. Then you look back on all the times you've made a compromise like that or risked antennagate (had, was real) / bendgate / touch disease and basically see a mountain.

    • Broken phones means angry customers means going to the competitor's product.

    • I've never cared for iPhones, but my daughter has had both iPhone and Android phones.

      Her iPhone 4s had plenty of issues (speakers, docking port, other stuff) so she went to a Samsung. Then she got an iPhone 6... which is now experiencing "issues" including the touch problem.

      She says she is done with iPhones...
    • I live in the UK and we have consumer protection laws. If this is indeed a manufacturing defect then they would be expected to fix it for free. If you live somewhere which does not have this type of protection then you might be screwed by yet another corporation. So your statement about nor being legally obligated to fix their product is not true everywhere. If you live somewhere where you are punished for corporations own mistakes then you should probably get your government to fix that. I don't know enoug

  • Nexus 4 had it (Score:5, Informative)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:12AM (#52899643) Homepage Journal

    And the digitizer is mad expensive

    Fuck LG just as much as fuck Apple.

    • by LTIfox ( 4701003 )
      Bullshit. Nexus 4s are very good phones. One is sitting on my desk right now, updating apps again (google needs to consolidate their patches - updating seemingly never stops!).
      The primary failure mode for N4 is/was the $2 power button (admittedly, replacing it was a hassle.) In fact, this the first time I even hear about the "digitizer problem".
      • My digitizer did stop working... a while after the screen cracked a little bit I got a new phone and wasn't as careful with guarding the old phone from the little one. The LCD display still works great but the digitizer stopped working.

        Not sure I would consider that LG's fault though.

    • My wife's LG G2 had this issue. The touch screen was basically worthless by the time she finally got rid of it.

      • Same here with my old LG G2. The right-hand side became unresponsive, soon followed by the whole thing becoming useless.

    • As the article mentions, in Apple's case it has nothing to do with the digitizer. You'll still have the problem after replacing it. The problem is two IC chips on the motherboard--likely the solder holding it to the board. Interesting. the article says they need to replace the chips instead of just reflowing or resoldering the old ones back. Maybe it's shorting out the chip? This isn't the first time, by far, that soldering has been an issue on a portable device. I think it was my 4s that developed a sol
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:15AM (#52899657)

    Touch screen stops working, after normal use, and a newer model is available for purchase?

    That is the Apple philosophy.

  • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:18AM (#52899667) Homepage

    The iPhone 4 and 4S had a temperature sensor that would fail easily (usually in a couple of years, so outside your standard warranty) and would lead to the "wifi grayed out" issue (google it, the thousands of posts from that time should still be there, along with many iphone 4/4s listed on ebay etc with a non working wifi) - since the wireless module was disabled (taking bluetooth and gps with it). The official response from Apple was "reset your network settings", while users found that temperature shock (phone in freezer, then blow-drier etc) would "fix" it for a while. I keep a phone from each generation for testing purposes, my original 4 had failed that way, it was out of warranty and I replaced it with a 4S (fortunately company bought), which failed the same way and was replaced with a refurb unit, which, quite naturally also failed just outside warranty (all three phones were permanently on a desk and got a few hours of debugging/testing usage per month). What is infuriating, apart from the fact that Apple didn't care probably because their average customer was happy to just move on to iPhone 5 etc, is that it seems that it would be very easy to fix by software, ignoring the temperature sensor. I am not just saying it is easy, IIRC the iPhone 4 included the sensor without software support when it first came out, so whoever stayed on the original iOS version (was it 5?) did not have any issues regardless whether their sensor was working or not!
    Let's see how my iPhone 6 plus does... It also gets very little use for some testing (I prefer Android as a personal phone), so the screen is fine so far.

    • Im no Apple fan, but apart from occasionally shuffling my contact photos in an amusingly random manner, my 4s still works perfectly.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's the lack of acknowledgement that pisses people off. It's always the same with Apple, deny deny deny and then after most people have given up quietly issue an extended warranty coverage for it. Applies to computers too, like the MacBook overheating CPU issue (thermal paste applied with a butter knife), logic board failure, screen ghosting issues, cheap-o 6 bit LCD panels etc.

      Laugh at Samsung's exploding phones all you want, but at least they admitted it and offered to replace every single one without th

      • Can't we judge both on their merits? By all accounts the Samsung recall has been hamfisted. Yes, they announced a "replacement program" quickly, but waited a week (and after airlines in multiple countries called out that model phone for a ban) before telling users to stop using the phone and didn't call it a recall. They failed to coordinate with U.S. safety authorities. Only yesterday did they officially recall the phone.
    • by I4ko ( 695382 )
      I don't know about the temp sensor, but I have yet to see an iPhone with the magnetic compass working correctly after the first 2 months. On all units I've put my hands on, the north seems to be off by around 40 degrees, consistently, on different places on the planet, regardless of the iPhone model if the phone is more than 2 months old. Yet nobody complains.
    • Are you sure it was a temperature sensor? Like this scenario, I understood the problem to be a solder issue. Reflowing the solder would fix it permanently. Temperature changes would swell/compress the components enough to create a solid connection on a temporary basis. I've seen various solder issues since they started using solder without lead.
  • iPhone 6? (Score:5, Funny)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:19AM (#52899675) Homepage Journal
    Seriously? Who cares about the iPhone 6? The iPhone 7 is out! It is the most advanced iPhone yet. Throw your iPhone 6 in the trash. You wouldn't want to be seen walking around with THAT!
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Obligatory [theoatmeal.com]

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by LTIfox ( 4701003 )
      Joke as much as you want, but iPhone7 is as thin as iPhone6, so it might be subject to the same flexing that cracks solder joints in 6.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:26AM (#52899719)

    for doing a full recall for millions of phones after 30-40 batteries started burning? Samsung are straight up honest. Apple, not so much.

  • Who cares? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:27AM (#52899729)
    Who cares if it works? It's pretty!
  • by Scragglykat ( 1185337 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:27AM (#52899735)
    Touch disease, referred to in their internal documents as cha-ching-itis. Just two years you say... the standard length of time people will pay on an iPhone before they get a new one historically.
  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:51AM (#52899879)
    If you've been following the news, pre-order demand for the iPhone 7 has been exceeding all expectations. Originally most analysts believed demand for the iPhone 7 would be tepid because by all measures it's a marginal update over the 6s/6+. Then the day after the iPhone 7 was announced T-Mobile launched a free upgrade program that allowed iPhone 6 users to upgrade their phones to a 7 simply by turning their 6 in...along with committing to service for 2-years. This is the first time such a huge subsidy has been offered on a single phone purchase ever since subsidies were discontinued in the USA market (ironically by T-Mobile with their "uncarrier" promotion). On the same day T-Mobile announced the free upgrade, Verizon and AT&T followed as well.

    It might just be that the carriers are using this promotion as way to compete and steal customers from each other, how they used to do before phone subsidies were stopped, and will eat the upgrade cost themselves. On the other hand, it might just be a sneaky way for Apple to get a bunch of these future-diseased iPhone 6's out of circulation, to allow them to avoid a massive recall. Apple kills two birds with one stone with this strategy - they take back the 6, which they can fix and resell into overseas markets that can't afford brand-new iPhones anyway and where Apple has been killed by lower-priced Android offerings - and they goose domestic demand for an otherwise-tepid release of the iPhone 7. The strategy may be working - Apple's stock price is up over 15% since T-Mobile and others announced the upgrade program.
    • That "free" upgrade would cost me $1k+ over two years. I'll keep my prepaid plan and iPhone 6, thanks.
      • That "free" upgrade would cost me $1k+ over two years. I'll keep my prepaid plan and iPhone 6, thanks.

        Only cost me $50 in tax. But I didn't wait for them to switch it to T-Mo One plan only. Anyway, T-mo is claiming that Apple is actually the one paying the subsidy on the phone and not them.

    • It is not a free upgrade. It is a zero-money down trade-in upgrade that increases your bill by $27/mo for 24 months (for the 32GB model) [t-mobile.com]. That is, if you do the upgrade it will cost you a total of $648 + residual value of your iPhone 6, compared to just keeping your (fully paid) iPhone 6.

      As Apple's retail price for the iPhone 7 is $649, you're essentially selling the carrier your iPhone 6 for $1 and locking yourself in for 2 years in exchange for no down payment, no interest to buy a new iPhone 7. If
      • The cost of the upgrade is returned back to the buyer in monthly installments over the term of the 2-year contact, so the net cost is $0 plus taxes.
  • This is your cue that it's about time to get rid of that old brick and get the new model. I mean, look at you, with that outdated, old fashion piece of junk from yesteryear. Trying to be ironic or what's wrong with you, the new model is out and you gotta get it before it gets cool!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 16, 2016 @09:57AM (#52899913)

    It takes 'courage' to sell phones to customers knowing well that they are defective

  • by mlw4428 ( 1029576 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @10:08AM (#52899993)
    Why are people still paying the Apple Premium (tm) price? I don't get it - sure other manufacturers have problems too, but others don't charge an extra $200+ for a device that is just shoddy. Whether it's the iPhone or the Mac Book Pro, it seems like more and more that Apple devices are quickly outclassed (if not outclassed from launch) and the next iterations is just a smidge above the previous version. Even worse is that, these days, Apple just seems like they're copying ideas from other phones. Where's the so-called premium?
  • These devices are working perfectly well according to the function they were designed for: generate a constant cash flow for Apple.

  • Like with Dr. Dre Beats headphones, they'll re-badge them as M. C. Hammer [youtube.com] "Can't touch this!" smartphones.

  • by JoeyRox ( 2711699 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @10:31AM (#52900149)
    I posted this in the original article thread from a few weeks ago. Reposting it here again in case anyone missed it.

    Skip to 13:00:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • thousands upon thousands of iPhone 6 Pluses are completely losing their functionality under normal use...

    I wonder what exactly they consider normal use? I have an iPhone 6 plus, and use it quite extensively. I like to play a few games (Marvel Puzzle Quest [apple.com] for example) that require quite a bit of tapping on the screen. I've played that for almost 2 years, and not noticed any degradation in touchscreen responsiveness. I wonder how many of these users are putting their phone in their back pocket & sitting on it?

    • It happened to me and I baby my phone - always in the front left pocket by itself and it looked brand new (no scratches anywhere). Never dropped, bashed, bumped, sat on - and I'm not a phone masher. I primarily use it for web surfing or social media.

      The problem seems to be how they mount the electronics that connect the screen to the circuit board - it's right at the "flex spot" on the 6 Plus and eventually gets loose. In my case, the phone was so obviously in otherwise perfect shape they just gave me a new

  • by brianerst ( 549609 ) on Friday September 16, 2016 @10:45AM (#52900221) Homepage

    Within the last month, my iPhone 6 Plus started losing its ability to respond to touches. Putting it in front of an A/C vent was the only way to get it to work for more than a few minutes at a time.

    But when I went into the local Apple Store, they swapped it out for free even though it was well out of normal warranty. I just showed up for a Genius appointment with my phone in "dead touch" mode, showed it to the guy (who peered at it from the side for a few minutes) and then he went and got a new (or refurbished) one. He told me the phone was ever so slightly bent (maybe by the thickness of a sheet of paper) but obviously not abused and that the policy was to just replace them.

    I don't know if it's just my Apple Store that's doing this but it sounds like it has quietly become corporate policy for phones that are not obviously bashed up.

  • What exactly do you expect Apple to do? They don't do component level board repair, they just swap out your phone for a working one.
    Don't expect them to make production changes to last generation's phone. The best you could hope for is for Apple to release a software patch to solve the problem, which would do ABSOLUTELY NOTHING since the problem is mechanical.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Fixing things doesn't make money. Besides, Apple users are so wrapped up in their narcissist bubble they wouldn't care if the phone caught fire every time they charged it.
  • Sounds like a violation of the Maine implied warranty law [maine.gov]. I don't know what the state can do to Apple, but there is an Apple store in the state's largest mall.

    The Maine Implied Warranty is the little known law that protects Maine consumers from being sold seriously defective items. It can be an Unfair Trade Practice to refuse to honor the Maine Implied Warranty Law within four years of sale. The basic test for possible implied warranty violations is as follows: The item is seriously defective, The consumer did not damage the item, The item is still within its useful life and is not simply worn out.

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