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[894.94 --> 895.20] Yeah.
[895.90 --> 897.30] There is no iPhone 8S.
[897.88 --> 898.28] Yeah.
[898.78 --> 899.36] I know.
[899.92 --> 900.58] So, yeah.
[900.72 --> 906.96] If you put the apostrophe in there, like, little pro tip, it's incorrect, but people will know what you mean.
[907.04 --> 907.52] At least...
[907.52 --> 907.82] Yeah.
[907.82 --> 914.62] Or you can do iPhone 8 phones or something like that, but I don't know if that's good for SEO, but then they don't have that up in the URL anymore.
[914.62 --> 915.16] 8S is weird.
[915.42 --> 915.94] 8S is weird.
[915.96 --> 917.20] 8S is sort of a bad idea.
[917.26 --> 917.46] Anyway.
[918.12 --> 920.16] So, what went down here was...
[920.16 --> 920.60] Not wrong.
[920.90 --> 923.32] Apple rolled out iOS 11.3.
[923.32 --> 947.08] And if you've ever sort of looked into Right to Repair and Apple's reputation around this whole movement, this probably won't surprise you that much because they've been known to do things like not provide third-party repair shops with the tools that they need in order to retain Touch ID functionality on iPhones with replaced home buttons.
[947.08 --> 957.82] And this was far more of an issue with a phone like the iPhone 6S, which had a hardware touch button, or excuse me, a hardware home button that was not solid state.
[957.90 --> 969.06] So, they switched to the solid state button with the 7, which is much harder to break, whereas those clicky buttons, no, that was a pretty common piece to end up damaged on the iPhone leading up to that time.
[969.06 --> 985.06] So, what would happen was people would take it into a third-party repair shop, and they would have a perfectly authentic button and a perfectly authentic phone, and they would put them together, but without Apple's special sauce, they wouldn't be able to make it work.
[985.46 --> 991.50] Even though that has nothing to do with the secure enclave that actually holds the fingerprint information.
[991.96 --> 996.40] This was just Apple being restrictive because they can be restrictive.
[996.40 --> 1008.10] So, anyway, the issue affected phones that had their screens replaced with aftermarket displays, i.e. not repaired by an Apple-authorized facility.
[1008.58 --> 1015.26] And it is believed to be because of an incompatibility between a small chip that controls the screen and the aftermarket displays.
[1016.52 --> 1018.90] So, it's possible this is an accident.
[1019.62 --> 1023.40] It is possible that it is something Apple did on purpose, but either way...
[1023.40 --> 1027.04] John is saying that our apostrophe thing is not incorrect.
[1027.34 --> 1030.80] It's an exception, and you can put it after a number if it's a single digit.
[1031.12 --> 1031.36] Oh!
[1032.00 --> 1033.76] Well, thank you, John Martin!
[1033.92 --> 1034.82] Appreciate that!
[1034.88 --> 1038.48] Okay, so my confusion there, though, would be if it was an iPhone X.
[1039.64 --> 1041.56] Yeah, you would say iPhone Xs.
[1042.00 --> 1043.86] Yeah, but in text.
[1044.34 --> 1046.68] Yeah, but you would say, so, oh, X.
[1046.90 --> 1048.06] Because he said single digit.
[1048.42 --> 1049.58] Oh, right, it's an X.
[1049.58 --> 1050.14] Yeah.
[1050.26 --> 1051.22] But it's still not a digit.
[1051.22 --> 1051.82] Yeah.
[1052.78 --> 1055.64] So, in this case, yeah, our little thing works for it.
[1055.64 --> 1055.80] Yes.
[1055.80 --> 1056.54] Grammatically correct.
[1056.66 --> 1056.82] Hooray.
[1056.96 --> 1058.42] But the X's gonna wreck everything.
[1059.02 --> 1059.86] Go Apple.
[1062.14 --> 1064.32] So, I guess this whole...
[1064.32 --> 1065.12] This whole...
[1065.12 --> 1067.22] Breaching the topic of...
[1067.22 --> 1067.50] Broaching?
[1067.70 --> 1068.00] Breaching?
[1068.18 --> 1068.46] Broaching.
[1068.92 --> 1069.20] Whatever.
[1069.82 --> 1071.58] On the topic of right to repair,
[1072.26 --> 1075.32] yes, I will have a response.
[1075.32 --> 1077.02] I don't know if you've been following this drama,
[1077.02 --> 1080.46] but we did a video on how our iMac Pro is still broken.
[1082.20 --> 1087.24] And, wow, pretty much everyone and their dog has made a response.
[1087.46 --> 1092.02] One of the news articles about it on an Apple-centric news site
[1092.02 --> 1094.08] has a thousand comments on it.
[1094.92 --> 1095.12] Yeah.
[1095.42 --> 1095.78] Wow.
[1095.78 --> 1097.94] Like, this went viral and sort of a very...
[1097.94 --> 1100.16] What is the general sentiment?
[1100.34 --> 1102.44] The general consensus depends on who you ask.
[1102.66 --> 1105.50] If people are more of like...
[1105.50 --> 1110.18] If they're more in sort of the techie, PC, DIY crowd,
[1110.44 --> 1112.08] they're like, wow, this is ridiculous.
[1112.62 --> 1112.84] Yeah.
[1112.92 --> 1114.78] If they're in the...
[1114.78 --> 1120.72] Not that crowd?
[1120.72 --> 1121.92] Cupertino crowd.
[1122.32 --> 1122.62] Ah.
[1122.84 --> 1123.68] Let's call it that.
[1123.74 --> 1125.06] If they're in the Cupertino crowd,
[1125.26 --> 1128.70] then it's my fault for not reading the terms and conditions
[1128.70 --> 1132.50] that stipulate that Apple doesn't have to repair something
[1132.50 --> 1134.18] that has been modified by a third party.
[1135.88 --> 1136.24] Okay.
[1136.24 --> 1136.72] So...
[1136.72 --> 1137.18] Okay.
[1138.48 --> 1141.92] I actually have a lot of notes made for this video already.
[1141.92 --> 1145.54] We'll be addressing the vast majority of the comments
[1145.54 --> 1146.90] that people have made.
[1147.06 --> 1147.48] That's exciting.
[1147.62 --> 1148.40] We don't do that that often.
[1148.44 --> 1149.64] Articles that have been written.
[1149.64 --> 1152.20] Well, actually, we wouldn't be doing it
[1152.20 --> 1157.54] except that we still need to fix the freaking iMac Pro.
[1158.12 --> 1159.48] So that's in progress.
[1159.92 --> 1162.74] We are working on a solution that will allow us
[1162.74 --> 1165.10] to get parts and fix it.
[1165.32 --> 1165.60] Okay.
[1165.80 --> 1167.38] It's going to be a weird solution
[1167.38 --> 1169.08] and we're going to be talking about
[1169.08 --> 1171.22] the hoops that we've had to jump through
[1171.22 --> 1172.24] in order to get there.
[1172.34 --> 1173.64] Some of the hoops that were available
[1173.64 --> 1175.20] that we chose not to jump through,
[1175.70 --> 1178.10] whether because they were too expensive or too sketchy