As first reported by TUAW, some users who received an iPhone 4 early found that the Retina Display on the new handset has a discoloration in the bottom corners of the screen.
"In the bottom 10% of the screen there are three blotches about the size of shirt buttons that discolor the screen a brown/yellow color," one user wrote.
The issues are remniscent to a problem that plagued early adopters of the iPhone 3G who found their whole screen had a warmer, yellower hue than the original iPhone. Apple later said that the color tint was a deliberate decision.
In addition, others have said that the iPhone 4 occasionally drops signal bars when held in the hand. The same issue was also noted by Walt Mossberg of The Wall Street Journal in his iPhone 4 review. He said the device sometimes registers no bars, or fewer bars than the iPhone 3GS, even though a call can still be placed.
"Apple says that this is a bug it plans to fix," Mossberg wrote, "and that it has to do with the way the bars are presented, not the actual ability to make a call. And, in fact, in nearly all of these cases, the iPhone 4 was able to place calls despite the lack of bars."
192 Comments
But can they also remedy screen issues with a simple software update?
there are videos floating around suggesting this bar issue is real, but then there are also videos showing loss of bars with previous model iPhones.
TIme will tell, but I sure hope Apple did not blunder the antenna...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gb3aQ5XoQw
I am legitimately concerned. I'm actually not buying one now. This looks like a hardware issue folks.
THIS IS A BIG DEAL, AND IT'S PISSING ME OFF. I WANTED AN IPHONE 4 LIKE CRAZY AND I CAN'T BUY NOW. I'M NOT BUYING UNTIL APPLE SOLVES THIS. THIS SHIT IS REAL.
there are videos floating around suggesting this bar issue is real, but then there are also videos showing loss of bars with previous model iPhones.
TIme will tell, but I sure hope Apple did not blunder the antenna...
happens on a lot of phones, apparently.
http://gizmodo.com/5571171/iphone-4-...yline=true&s=i
happens on a lot of phones, apparently.
http://gizmodo.com/5571171/iphone-4-...yline=true&s=i
A lot? Understatement. It's on the news, Twitter, the web and YouTube. Videos popping up "everywhere".