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From: R on 1 Apr 2010 12:08 Which Apple product is best designed to withstand the horrors of our climate? That is, which works well in the rain? :)
From: Gareth Slee on 1 Apr 2010 12:15 R <me32(a)privacy.net> wrote: > Which Apple product is best designed to withstand the horrors of our > climate? > > That is, which works well in the rain? :) No Apple product is really waterproof, the odd drop of rain on an iPhone/ iPod / laptop isn't going to do much harm, but I wouldn't suggest sitting in the rain with your MacBook... -- Gareth Slee
From: R on 1 Apr 2010 12:30 Gareth Slee <gax.slee(a)ntlworld.com> wrote: > R <me32(a)privacy.net> wrote: > > > Which Apple product is best designed to withstand the horrors of our > > climate? > > > > That is, which works well in the rain? :) > > No Apple product is really waterproof, the odd drop of rain on an > iPhone/ iPod / laptop isn't going to do much harm, but I wouldn't > suggest sitting in the rain with your MacBook... I wonder how easy it would have been to make the iPad waterproof. It doesn't have many buttons, the battery is sealed in, and there are few connector slots. On the face of it, it seems not impossible to do. Can a capacative display operate effectively in water?
From: Andy Greener on 1 Apr 2010 12:32 In article <1jga4rt.1cbdk9xbbmjubN%me32(a)privacy.net>, me32(a)privacy.net (R) wrote: > Which Apple product is best designed to withstand the horrors of our > climate? > > That is, which works well in the rain? :) A Mac(k)intosh? ;-) -- Andy Greener n.b. Whisper Reading, UK http://www.nb-whisper.com
From: R on 1 Apr 2010 12:54
Andy Greener <andy(a)nb-whisperNoSpam.com> wrote: > In article <1jga4rt.1cbdk9xbbmjubN%me32(a)privacy.net>, > me32(a)privacy.net (R) wrote: > > > Which Apple product is best designed to withstand the horrors of our > > climate? > > > > That is, which works well in the rain? :) > > A Mac(k)intosh? ;-) Hehe :) |