▲ | GeekyBear 3 days ago | |
For those who prefer text over video: > Typical smartphone glass starts scratching at a level 6 on the Mohs scale of hardness, but Zack’s picks barely left marks even at 7. “Apple ruined my line,” he joked, noting that Corning’s new Ceramic Shield 2 is a big improvement over last year’s iPhone 16 lineup, even besting the Galaxy S25 Ultra’s Gorilla Armor 2, which showed visible scratches at a level 6 when it was put to the same test earlier this year. and > Using a crane scale in his garage, he applied direct pressure in the center of the iPhone Air until it finally gave way. The iPhone Air endured up to 216 pounds (~98kg) of force before its front glass finally cracked and the titanium frame flexed past the point of recovery. Surprisingly, the back glass came out unscathed, and the phone was still powered on and usable in the end. https://www.notebookcheck.net/The-iPhone-Air-bends-in-JerryR... | ||
▲ | 1oooqooq 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |
glass can either scratch or resist impact. It's not that they have a secret alien technology, just basic engineering tradeoffs. (and maybe slightly better than average quality control, which today is basically just not shipping known bad production lots) Also, i find it nice that they decided to honor they allegiance pledge to the regime with an Orange model. It was a nice touch. | ||
▲ | 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |
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