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View Full Version : Concerns mount over iPod nano LCD durability


DesiBaba
September 27th, 2005, 01:45 PM
The issue has spurred a flurry of first-hand reports from disgruntled customers on Apple's support forums and also fueled the creation of websites like www.flawedmusicplayer.com, which urge Apple recall the product.

In an email to the website, one iPod nano owner wrote: "On Monday morning, I dropped it in my pocket on the way to work, and when I took it out to show it to all my friends, the LCD was cracked."

Another customer said: "Last night I broke my 2GB black iPod while it was simply sitting in my pocket. I was destroyed over it considering I sacrificed my whole paycheck for it."

Over on Apple's support forums, the company appears to be deleting comments concerning broken iPod nano LCD screens as they appear. Still, one thread dedicated to the iPod nano includes nearly 500 posts chronicling the ease in which the LCD can become severely scratched or damaged.

"I received my black 4GB nano on the 23rd (of Sept.) and already it looks like it's been through a sandpaper factory," said one customer. "Like many other users I have been very careful with it and it has not been in any pockets with anything else."

Says another customer, "I bought the black 2GB at Best Buy four days ago and have used it once. I held it in my hand and the thing looks awful. It was my first iPod and I am bummed."

The iPod nano's screen is arguably its most critical component, as it provides a means to navigate playlists and display full-color photos.

A significant number of early iPod nano adopters are waging concerns and complaints about the durability of new players, claiming the LCD screens are easily scratched or broken with minimal abuse.

"The nano screen is just as vulnerable as any other iPod LCD, however I feel that the public impression is that you can carry these in your back pocket or just toss them inside of a book bag and not worry -- this is far from the truth," said Ryan Arter, president of iPodResQ, a company which offers LCD replacement services for the nano.

Already iPodResQ is receiving more nano LCD repair requests than it had initially expected. As of last Thursday the company said it was dealing with hundreds of LCD damages, with demand steadily increasing from day to day.

"We replaced the first [iPod nano LCD] the day after they were released, and frankly I never anticipated that," Arter said. Demand for nano LCD repairs through iPodResQ has since escalated, causing a shortage of the replacement LCDs and forcing the company to raise the cost of its repair service from $99 to $145.

So far Apple has made no official comment on the issue and its retail store and phone support employees have told iPod nano owners that their LCD damage is not covered under warranty. Some customers are having a tough time digesting this response because they feel Apple had implied that the player was durable enough for everyday use and storage "in your pocket".

During the Sept. 7th unveiling of the iPod nano in San Francisco, Apple chief executive Steve Jobs pulled the player from his front pocket and declared: "1,000 songs in your pocket and impossibly small."

http://www.appleinsider.com/article.php?id=1289

echarcha
September 27th, 2005, 01:50 PM
People who are crazed after tinier and tinier gadgets deserve to their money wasted! I have seen cases where the ultra slim phones have snapped like a cracker. Just because technology allows something to be made small, does not mean it suits all sability scenarios.

Suryavanshi
September 27th, 2005, 10:08 PM
iPod revived apple's fortunes and many have already dubbed it to be product of the decade, but this is the first time I am hearing the LCD complain.

Thanks for the post.

I was planning to buy this is in Singapore the next week, but now will take care & do more research before laying my hands on this one.

Well, I also second the thought that smallest may not be the best.

shahenshah
September 28th, 2005, 06:36 AM
yes, big buzz about this but I can vouch for its handiness...it is hard not to fall in love with the nano :)

Desi24
September 28th, 2005, 11:27 AM
I am just gonna wait till Verizon comes out with a phone that's compatible with Itunes. This way I don't have to carry too many things.

Hopefully soon....

AmthaLal
September 28th, 2005, 01:08 PM
I am just gonna wait till Verizon comes out with a phone that's compatible with Itunes. This way I don't have to carry too many things.

Hopefully soon....



Soch le.....If you wanna change your carrier.

Cingular just rolled out one. By Motalora....too. :D

http://onlinestorez.cingular.com/cell-phone-service/itunes_ROKR.html
with mp3 player (not exactly iTunes). ;)


And if you don't want to.....

Verizon have This (http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/splash/splash.jsp?v=5)

Desi24
September 28th, 2005, 01:20 PM
Soch le.....If you wanna change your carrier.

Cingular just rolled out one. By Motalora....too. :D

http://onlinestorez.cingular.com/cell-phone-service/itunes_ROKR.html
with mp3 player (not exactly iTunes). ;)


And if you don't want to.....

Verizon have This (http://www.verizonwireless.com/b2c/splash/splash.jsp?v=5)

Yaar I used to have Cingular but they messed up my bill a couple times so I switched over to Verizon. That Verizon phone looks pretty good....might have to chk that out! I wonder how many songs it can hold..

deshpremi
September 28th, 2005, 06:20 PM
The other side of the story...

Please check the review on this site.. http://arstechnica.com/reviews/hardware/nano.ars/3

Furthermore, I have a Nano (3 weeks old), works like a charm, use it in the gym, while jogging... my 1 yr old kid throws it regularly.... no damage, just some scratches on the plastic.

Cooldude
September 28th, 2005, 07:12 PM
Apple admits to this flaw in its Ipod Nano:



Apple admits to iPod Nano faults (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4286294.stm)

Electronics firm Apple has admitted there have been problems with its new iPod Nano music player, after a string of complaints about damaged screens.

The smaller version of the popular iPod was hailed as a design breakthrough when it was unveiled a few weeks ago, with the cheapest model costing £140.

Apple says a manufacturing problem has left screens on one batch vulnerable to cracks and is offering replacements. It says the problem affects fewer than a tenth of 1% of all Nanos shipped. However, it denies claims the Nanos are more prone to scratching than other models.

Owners have been complaining about cracked, scratched or inexplicably failing screens, sometimes within hours of buying the machine.

Customer anger

A website set up by Nano owner Matthew Peterson to collate complaints with a view to forcing Apple to address the issue received 30 e-mails per hour.

He closed down the site after Apple acknowledged there was a problem with some Nano screens, posting a message entitled "Apple does the right thing".

At the launch of the Nano at the start of September, Apple chief executive Steve Jobs introduced the "impossibly small" gadget - which is the thickness of five credit cards - by pulling the device out of his pocket. But others have found carrying the device in this manner has resulted in inexplicable damage to the music player, which Apple's UK website sells for £140 for a model which can store up to 500 songs and £180 for one which stores 1,000.

One fifteen-year old, who had saved up to buy his Nano, found the machine suffered a cracked screen within three hours of buying it. "I pulled my iPod out and my heart dropped. The LCD was half destroyed, but there is no visible scratch or mark on the outside of the iPod," he wrote.

Another irate customer said: "If I had done something to damage my iPod I wouldn't be as angry as I am because it would be my fault. But I haven't done anything," he wrote. Mr Peterson, a financial consultant and loyal Apple fan, described how his Nano was damaged.

Too fragile

"My Nano broke on day four. The screen that is. It shattered. It was in my pocket as I was walking and I sat down. No, I didn't sit on it, it was just in my pocket just as all iPods before it have done," he said. He said the Nano was too fragile and should be recalled and improved.

iPod repair company iPod ResQ announced a temporary price increase on its iPod Nano screen replacement service due to what it describes as "overwhelming demand".

Apple says the problem with screens on some Nanos is quality issue rather than a design fault and is offering to replace the machines affected. But a spokeswoman told BBC News Website the new machines were not more prone to scratching than other models.

She said: "The iPod Nano is made from the same high quality polycarbonate plastic as the very popular fourth generation iPod. "If customers are concerned about scratching we suggest they use one of the many iPod Nano cases becoming available."

UK gadget magazine Stuff told the BBC News website it had had no reader complaints about the Nano. Managing editor Adam Vaughan said his experience of the player was that it was "not as fragile as it looked". It had withstood considerable wear and tear, including being dropped.

"Like any gadget, it has got a bit scratched but that's about it," he said.

dawizard
September 28th, 2005, 10:57 PM
Apple ne sun li tum logon ki pukar....was reading about this today as a matter of fact....jis kisi ka toot gaya hai woh Apple ko de do, replace kar denge :D

http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1040_22-5884601.html

=========
Apple Computer is acknowledging a flaw in its new iPod Nano music player, offering to replace for free models that shipped with a defective screen that is prone to cracking.

A company representative said that the issue was a manufacturing, rather than a design problem, and said it affected less than one-tenth of 1 percent of all the Nanos that have shipped so far.

"This is a real, but minor issue involving a vendor quality problem in a small number of units," the representative said. "Any user with a defective screen should contact AppleCare (the company's customer service unit) and we will replace it for free."

However, the representative said that the screen-cracking issue is separate from reports that the slim new music player is more easily scratched than prior models. Complaints about both issues surfaced shortly after Apple introduced the flash memory-based Nano earlier this month.

"A few vocal customers are saying their Nano is more susceptible to scratching than prior iPods," the Apple representative said. Apple said the Nano is made of the same polycarbonate plastic as the fourth-generation iPod and said it does not believe the scratching problem is widespread.

"If customers are concerned about scratching, we suggest they use one of the many iPod Nano cases that are now becoming available," the representative said.

Matthew Peterson, a Nano owner who posted a Web site complaining about the problem said he is "very delighted to see Apple take this issue seriously."

"It is sad that it took a Web site and a lot of publicity before they finally investigated, but at least future Nano users with the same problem I had will not be subjected to the same treatment that I was," Peterson said in an update to his site. "This was a real issue, and most people tried to ignore it. I know a lot of people are going to complain that they still have to spend extra money on a case to prevent scratching."

Earlier this year, Apple settled several class action suits related to the battery life of earlier iPod models, offering credits and extended warranties to those who experienced battery issues.