Apple admits the iPhone 6 Plus has 'Touch Disease'
Apple has admitted that the iPhone 6 has “Touch Disease”, a glitch that leaves the handset's touch screen inoperable.
The problem surfaced in August when repair site
iFixit diagnosed a problem with controller chips that lost electrical
contact with the phablet's motherboard.
Apple, as is its wont, remained silent … until Thursday US time when a Multi-Touch Repair Program for iPhone 6 Plus page appeared on its site.
“Apple has determined that some iPhone 6 Plus devices
may exhibit display flickering or Multi-Touch issues after being
dropped multiple times on a hard surface and then incurring further
stress on the device,” the page reads, before outlining a repair
program.
For US$149, Apple will fix the device provided the
phone “is in working order, and the screen is not cracked or broken”.
That's the same price as a new screen, but rather less than the $329
charged for out of warranty services.
For owners who have already paid for repairs, Apple
will refund the difference between the price of that service and the
$149 deal offered under this program.
Apple's copping a fair bit of criticism at the moment
for not offering innovative new products. Its Watch has mostly tanked
and the new MacBook Pro and its Touch Bar represents a rather smaller step forward than Microsoft's touchy Surface Studio workstation.

No comments:
Post a Comment