Its a feature tbh, you will no longer need hand warmers or gloves with all the heating coming from the phone.
1 year ago | 19
This is why I generally wait until February or March to upgrade to the newest model phones. If buying video games has taught me anything it’s to never buy on launch day.
1 year ago | 49
Somebody quick do some bench test on the CPU before they send the new update because I think they're going to slow down the CPU speed to be able to take care of the overheating issues
1 year ago | 114
My iPhone 12 Pro was doing the same on the last few versions of the beta…so this seems legit. Hopefully this gets fixed soon…
1 year ago | 13
I had an issue yesterday at Levi’s stadium during the football game. The phone overheated and wouldn’t keep a charge on my wireless charger
1 year ago | 7
That is why an iOS upgrade is never a good idea to rush into it, I usually wait for 6months or at least when they release 17.01 or 1 or 2 revisions later.
1 year ago | 1
Reading this on my 15 Pro running 17.1 beta 1 😅 got it launch day. No overheating 🤞
1 year ago | 19
Don’t get these issues, got my 15PM on launch day and haven’t had a single issue
1 year ago | 6
“Hey guys, there’s no way it’s the phone, we sold you the exact same one a year ago without any issues.”
1 year ago | 3
My iPhone 14 pro max was draining battery on iOS 17 very quickly, since last update went away. Early software can be issue.
1 year ago | 0
I have the 15 Pro Max and I have no issues regarding overheating. So I assume that it’s only a few phones compared to the many that have been sold that are experiencing this problem —but the media, as always, loves promoting negative news, and sensationalizing anecdotes
1 year ago | 1
Titanium is not considered a good conductor of heat. The thermal conductivity of pure titanium is about 17 W/mK1 or 21.9 W/mK2, which is about 1/4 of iron and about 1/23 of copper1. This means that if a phone is made of titanium and it’s heating up, the heat would not be conducted away as efficiently as it would be with materials that have higher thermal conductivity. However, the actual impact on the phone’s temperature would also depend on other factors such as the phone’s design, the components used, and how the phone is being used. Apple molded the titanium with aluminium from the outside; knowing aluminium part would conduct the heat near the circuitry of the phone. It's not just on the OS or system; still the components will run those systems or OS. Consequently, there's a problem with the type of materials Apple used; Most of them are recycled, which might have less thermal conductivity (I think). In addition, ventilation, thermal conductivity, and heat dissipation should have been well thought of. It would be better if Apple added 'Graphenes' due to its high thermal conductivity and effective heat dissipation. If their heating issues couldn't be address, they might as well end up having external cooling system like some gaming phones then. Mother Earth might have approved the usage of recycled parts; could she be satisfied with less energy conversion on heat build-up in the phone? Those are my two cents, I think.
1 year ago (edited) | 5
Guys just calm down, they were just testing a new feature. Winter is just around the corner and they just wanted their customers to be warm and cozy.
1 year ago | 2
CNET
In a statement shared with CNET, Apple said that the temperature issues people have reported on the iPhone 15 Pro are caused by a software bug in iOS 17 and "some recent updates to third-party apps [that] are causing them to overload the system." Apple company claims that the 15 Pro and Pro Max's titanium frame with aluminum substructure dissipates heat better than prior stainless steel Pro models. cnet.co/46wJYDl
1 year ago | [YT] | 988