Issue with Proximity Sensor during calls - Continued v2
See also the initial thread Issue with Proximity Sensor during calls
Thank you.
Apple Discussions Hosts
PM G5, iMac, iPods, Mac OS X (10.6.4), Mac OS 9.2.2
Want to highlight a helpful answer? Upvote!
Did someone help you, or did an answer or User Tip resolve your issue? Upvote by selecting the upvote arrow. Your feedback helps others! Learn more about when to upvote >
Did someone help you, or did an answer or User Tip resolve your issue? Upvote by selecting the upvote arrow. Your feedback helps others! Learn more about when to upvote >
PM G5, iMac, iPods, Mac OS X (10.6.4), Mac OS 9.2.2
germanylostthewar wrote...
Your presence here has made posting on this forum practically unbearable. This is one of the reasons I don't post here. You and Himoura would make a nice couple. I have said what I have said regarding the proximity sensor issue and that's that. I am not an engineer, I am making assumptions based on what I do know. I find you guys and your attempts to discredit me rather amusing. If I have no credibility than please continue to mock one another and argue amongst yourselves.
And if I am simply taking pics that have been posted on the internet then please show me one example? What pics did I steal off the internet and use for my own evil agenda on this forum?
Trinity wrote:
they are not getting any message, the phone is selling like doughnuts
Trinity wrote:
the phone is selling like doughnuts
mbassoc2003 wrote:
I wish that were so. Then they would probably be taking prompter action. But the return rate three weeks in was substantially lower than most handsets at launch and only a quarter that of the 3GS. I suspect the return rate has remained incredibly low and the figures are further slewed down the way by the worldwide distribution that is now in the tens of millions.
At 5% return rate on a product I understand that becomes a 'significant event' that becomes declarable to shareholders, so we know they haven't reached that milestone yet.
Goflying wrote:
mbassoc2003 wrote:
I wish that were so. Then they would probably be taking prompter action. But the return rate three weeks in was substantially lower than most handsets at launch and only a quarter that of the 3GS. I suspect the return rate has remained incredibly low and the figures are further slewed down the way by the worldwide distribution that is now in the tens of millions.
At 5% return rate on a product I understand that becomes a 'significant event' that becomes declarable to shareholders, so we know they haven't reached that milestone yet.
a disclosable event is not triggered by a specific stock return level unless apple has entered into covenants re same. Suggest you take a look at sec rules for more info
zak75 wrote:
To everyone on this forum who is denying the PS problem and keep asking for a proof: The fact that the screen lights up (with or without buttons being activated) during a call with the speaker against the ear is enough proof of a sensor malfunction since one of the many functions of the PS is to shut down the screen light to save battery life during a call. So enough with the nonsense posts already.
rbrylawski wrote:
Goflying wrote:
mbassoc2003 wrote:
I wish that were so. Then they would probably be taking prompter action. But the return rate three weeks in was substantially lower than most handsets at launch and only a quarter that of the 3GS. I suspect the return rate has remained incredibly low and the figures are further slewed down the way by the worldwide distribution that is now in the tens of millions.
At 5% return rate on a product I understand that becomes a 'significant event' that becomes declarable to shareholders, so we know they haven't reached that milestone yet.
a disclosable event is not triggered by a specific stock return level unless apple has entered into covenants re same. Suggest you take a look at sec rules for more info
Still, unless you have insider knowledge, you don't know Apple's buying them back at record numbers. You may be guessing, but you likely don't have proof....
zak75 wrote:
@mbassoc2003: You did not get what I wrote. The fact that your phone lights up during a call against your ear (even if you don't activate any buttons), is a "fault", "defect", "malfunction" by itself or whatever you wanna call it since one of the jobs of the PS is to turn the screen off during a call to save on battery. the other job of the PS is to deactivate the touch screen to prevent function activation.
Issue with Proximity Sensor during calls - Continued v2