B
Brian Gregory
Guest
On 02/01/2018 06:14, JF Mezei wrote:
I understood that this was a problem with the particular batteries
originally used in the iPhone 6 (or whichever one(s) it was) and that
newer batteries were expected have a longer life before their internal
resistance increases enough to cause problems.
--
Brian Gregory (in England).
On 2018-01-01 22:14, harry newton wrote:
Verbatim quotes:
"We expect the iPhone X to be throttled in late 2018 with replacement
batteries for it back to full price by January 2019."
"exprect" is the keyword here. Speculation by some snews media. This is
not a statement from Apple and thus useless.
The product development of the X was done with knowl;edge of the
batterty problems for the 6s. So it is possible that it was fixed or
significantly reduced.
I understood that this was a problem with the particular batteries
originally used in the iPhone 6 (or whichever one(s) it was) and that
newer batteries were expected have a longer life before their internal
resistance increases enough to cause problems.
--
Brian Gregory (in England).