MacBooks sending 50 Volts to the CPU: Difference between revisions
adding stub notice, and questioning the article's relevancy. Needs to be credibly linked to anti-consumer practices if it is to stay, and generally needs filling out |
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Apple's older MacBooks include a poorly designed logic board, where the 50 power line for the screen backlight is one pin away from the data line for the screen image, with no ground in between them. | Apple's older MacBooks include a poorly designed logic board, where the 50 power line for the screen backlight is one pin away from the data line for the screen image, with no ground in between them. This results in 50 volts being sent to the CPU upon various unforeseen circumstances.[https://youtube.com/watch?v=jfwKXjl5vJU] | ||
==Background== | ==Background== |
Latest revision as of 05:16, 17 August 2025
❗Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub
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⚠️ Article status notice: This Article's Relevance Is Under Review
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Apple's older MacBooks include a poorly designed logic board, where the 50 power line for the screen backlight is one pin away from the data line for the screen image, with no ground in between them. This results in 50 volts being sent to the CPU upon various unforeseen circumstances.[1]
Background[edit | edit source]
[Incident][edit | edit source]
Apple's response[edit | edit source]
Lawsuit[edit | edit source]
Consumer response[edit | edit source]