Wednesday, 23 October 2013

The iPhone's motion sensors are poorly calibrated 5S

This time it is the operating system which has been released this device, but the device itself that is the news for a major failure. The bug that affects the gyroscope talk iPhone 5S, and not lost at all. In both games, as in the compass and level, we can see perfectly calibration failure which Apple's flagship has been launched and which affects probably all devices already sold.

Although it is not known if it is a matter of hardware and software, or only one of these two parties, the iPhone 5S factory calibration is wrong, and it is not a decision that can be overlooked. The gyroscope of the iPhone 5S, compared with the iPhone 5, shows significant discrepancies that reveal the fault itself. And, this sensor we mentioned, has a calibration problem that could be caused by a problem with the device hardware or in the software, which would be odd considering that the iPhone 5 with the same version of iOS does not have these problems.

Testing the iPhone 5S failure

Performing the test with a level, the iPhone 5S shows a deviation of between two and six degrees, and this with the native application and third party applications as iHandy. As the gyroscope, which measures the degree of tilt in all three dimensions, the iPhone 5S tested shows a deviation, this time in three grades. Finally, the compass also yields erroneous data with deviations of up to ten degrees when the terminal is stabilized. In this case, the iPhone 5 is not one hundred percent accurate, but is closer to the magnetic north that the new Apple smartphone.

How to solve?

As indicated by our source, the error or deviation is not exactly the same on all handsets sold, making it difficult to knowwhether this is a software glitch or hardware. For the moment, therefore, we can do nothing to solve this bug iPhone 5S, although Apple is expected to launch some kind of program of replacement, repair or program a simple software problem analysis and correction of calibration . Source: Gizmodo

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