Most Popular in Apple
-
Yet Another Blurry and Fake iPhone 3G Summer 2009 Image (It's Iron Bar Time!)
-
A Hands On Look at Safari 4's (Crashy) Eye Candy
-
Intel 'Gulftown' CPU announcement fuels rumors of new Mac Pro
-
Verizon Viewing iPad as Opportunity to Push MiFi Service
-
iPhone Tweet Defense Slaughters Zombies With Witticisms [IPhone Apps]
-
Steve Jobs' Threatening Phone Call Revealed [Blockquote]
-
Black Swan brings Google Voice back to the iPhone without the App Store
-
etc: The EFF has published the iPhone developer agreement. Many of the stipulations are not new to most of us, but the EFF offers a number of criticisms on the agreement's limitations.
-
etc: The fourth beta of iPhone OS 3.2 SDK adds references to triple-tap and "long press" gestures, but removes references to video chatting found in previous betas.
-
Code library gives homebrew iPod remotes chance for awesome
Apple Stores now fixing cracked iPhone screens in-house
An iPhone falls to the ground in slow motion and makes its first impact on a corner. You watch as the cracks branch out over the screen like a spiderweb. If it hasn't happened to you, it has happened to someone you know—and now, if the iPhone is still under warranty, Apple can fix it on the spot at one of its retail locations.
Jim Dalrymple at The Loop has confirmed that Apple retail stores have begun performing this in-house repair with what amounts to a big suction cup in the back. The machine separates the broken glass from the rest of your precious iPhone, letting the technician install a shiny new one.
This is one of the only in-house warranty repairs being done on iPhones. Not only that, but in the past, owners with broken screens either got a full phone replacement or nothing at all. Of course, if you're outside of your warranty and don't have AppleCare, then you'll probably still find yourself out of luck. Still, knowing all the people we know who have shattered their screens, this is certainly welcome news for clumsy and not-so-clumsy iPhone owners alike.
More Stories in Arstechnica Apple News
- etc: 5:30am PST is when iPad preorders begin tomorrow, March 12. Early morning chat date, anyone?
- iPhone still second-place US smartphone while Android grows
- etc: Apple updated Safari to 4.0.5 with performance, stability, and security improvements, which affect Top Sites, third-party plugins, web forms, SVG, and using Safari to configure some Linksys routers.
- iPhone OS 4.0 may finally bring multitasking nirvana
- etc: Novothink's new solar-charging iPhone 3G/3GS cases are not too expensive ($80), not too ugly (medium, non-offensive in our opinion), and kinda cool.
- Code library gives homebrew iPod remotes chance for awesome
- etc: The fourth beta of iPhone OS 3.2 SDK adds references to triple-tap and "long press" gestures, but removes references to video chatting found in previous betas.
- Cellcos hoping to cash in on iPad with 3G/4G mobile hotspots
- Street Fighter IV: as good as you can expect on the iPhone
- HTC lawsuit came after warning by Apple to handset makers
Most Popular Stories
Yet Another Blurry and Fake iPhone 3G Summer 2009 Image (It's Iron Bar Time!)
A Hands On Look at Safari 4's (Crashy) Eye Candy
Intel 'Gulftown' CPU announcement fuels rumors of new Mac Pro
Verizon Viewing iPad as Opportunity to Push MiFi Service
iPhone Tweet Defense Slaughters Zombies With Witticisms [IPhone Apps]
Steve Jobs' Threatening Phone Call Revealed [Blockquote]
Black Swan brings Google Voice back to the iPhone without the App Store
swapon: Function not implemented
[$] 4K-sector drives and Linux
etc: The EFF has published the iPhone developer agreement. Many of the stipulations are not new to most of us, but the EFF offers a number of criticisms on the agreement's limitations.