Could that be the latest iPhone 15 heating up in your pocket, or… ?

Could that be the latest iPhone 15 heating up in your pocket, or… ?

Every year‍ a new scare story appears soon after Apple introduces ⁤new iPhone models. It’s ⁤a regular⁢ occurrence, and the stories almost always⁣ disappear once the initial furor ⁤dies down.

This year’s scare ⁣story is no different ‌— it’s not even new — though enterprise IT ⁤may want to add some third-party applications to its ban⁣ list for managed devices in⁣ response.

iPhone feels ⁢the heat?

The iPhone 15, we’re⁤ told, has a problem with⁤ heat. Literally tens of people who claimed ⁤to have purchased ‌one of⁣ the new devices raced to share overheating issues they claimed were driving ⁢the phone’s temperature sky ⁤high.

These claims were enthusiastically⁢ shared across dozens of social ⁤media posts until they acquired enough kinetic energy to ignite headlines across tech and mainstream media. Apple’s stock even took a fall.

The regular rogue’s gallery of Apple-focused analysts chimed in with ⁤what they knew, until⁤ the‌ wisdom of crowds gave us legends as facts —⁢ such as the implication⁤ that ‌the ‍titanium frame in‌ these iPhones⁤ is to blame.

Of ⁢course, since then we’ve learned that the ⁣frame is not to blame, but the speculation generated a ‌few more headlines. The cavalcade of complaint generated‌ a life of its own.

Apple ‍lowers the temperature

Now Apple has responded to the criticisms with this statement:

We have identified a few conditions which can cause iPhone to run warmer than​ expected. The device may feel warmer during the first few days after setting ​up or ⁣restoring​ the ​device ⁤because of increased background activity. We have also found a bug in iOS⁣ 17 ‌that is impacting some users and will be addressed ‌in a software⁢ update.

Another issue involves some ‍recent updates to third-party apps that are causing⁤ them to overload the⁣ system. We’re working with these app developers on fixes that are in the process of rolling out.

What does this mean? Yes, the iPhone does sometimes ‌run warmer than ​you expect it ‍to, ‍but there’s usually ⁣one of three reasons for ‌it to do so:


The first reason relates to how the operating system⁢ usually works when setting ⁢up or restoring the device ​as background activity (usually involving ‍reindexing ⁣of Spotlight files) ⁣takes place. This is usually temporary.
A software bug ⁢has been identified, which Apple will rectify.
Some third-party apps need adjustment. Since the problem ⁣emerged, ‍Meta-owned Instagram has ⁣issued an update to​ stop its iOS app​ from burning⁣ through iPhone battery life and overheating the device.

What’s interesting about the last problem⁤ is it sounds so familiar.

Just a bit of history ‍repeating

I’ve always noticed that Facebook consumes what I see as large amounts of iPhone battery power — at one point it was ​the least energy-efficient app‍ I used. I delete it when I want to get extra battery life out of my devices.

I can’t help but wonder‍ if the many social media posts relating to iPhone 15 overheating would have been reduced in intensity if people had checked the energy…

2023-10-02 22:00:04
Source from ⁢ www.computerworld.com rnrn

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