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by qppo
2062 days ago
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This doesn't sound like a scam, it sounds like the peripheral is calibrated and mapped to the device in software. It doesn't surprise me that it would fail, kind of like that video where someone swapped the board out and expected everything to work when to the device it appears every single peripheral has had a failure condition and needs to be recalibrated and verified. I don't have an issue with requiring software tools to repair software problems in modern electronics. The issue at hand is whether that tool is available for consumers and repair shops, which I doubt. |
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In other words, Apple went out of their way to do this. They probably use the EEPROM to store some additional serialisation data, check whether it matches the data stored on the mainboard, and then subtly sabotage the behaviour of the app based on that. It won't be long before the truth surfaces.
They've already done similar shady shit with even simpler parts like batteries: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20641424