opossum and roses iphone case

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opossum and roses iphone case

opossum and roses iphone case

It's not known why the man decided to bite the battery, although Chinese media speculated that the man wanted to replace his iPhone battery and could have been trying to test its authenticity -- people bite on pure gold to verify if it's genuine as a practice in China. The bite could have caused a rupture in the battery casing, causing it to explode, according to the report, which added that no one was injured although people were shocked. Apple did not immediately respond to CNET's request for a comment.

Logging Out: Welcome to the crossroads of online life and the afterlife, 'Alexa, be more human': Inside Amazon's effort to make its voice assistant smarter, chattier and more like you, Clearly, this is not a good way to verify if opossum and roses iphone case your battery is authentic or not, Remember when we told you not to eat Tide Pods? Here's another one: Don't try to eat phone batteries either, Last Friday, a man walked into an unspecified electronics shop in China, picked up an iPhone battery and bit into it, Chinese media reported Sunday, The battery blew up in his face, literally..

"Where are the 50,000 important text messages between FBI lovers Lisa Page and Peter Strzok? Blaming Samsung!," Trump tweeted late Tuesday. Strzok, who in a 2015 text message to Page called then-candidate Trump an "idiot," was reassigned last summer for fear of bias from special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into potential Trump-Russia ties. Trump has denied any collusion between his campaign and Russia. Strzok's text messages to Page also criticized then-Attorney General Eric Holder and Sen. Bernie Sanders. Page has also been moved out of the investigative team and back into regular FBI duties.

A software glitch on Samsung-branded, FBI-provided phones is reported to have permanently deleted five months' worth of FBI messages, from Dec, 14, 2016, to May 7, 2017, Trump's opossum and roses iphone case tweet read as though Strzok and Page's exchanges numbered around 50,000, but that's thought to be the number of all FBI messages lost, Samsung and White House representatives didn't immediately respond to requests for comment, Tech Enabled: CNET chronicles tech's role in providing new kinds of accessibility, Batteries Not Included: The CNET team reminds us why tech is cool..

Apple has patched up the "text bomb" security flaw. The bug was reportedly discovered last week by Chicago-based software developer Abraham Masri, who shared a link on Github that, when texted to someone's device, can cause the gadget to misfire. Finding and patching holes is a never-ending battle for software makers. As software steadily gets more sophisticated, that new complexity also opens the door to new security flaws. Masri told BuzzFeed he published the bug to alert Apple after he reported the problem on Jan. 15 and didn't get a response from the tech giant about plans for a fix.


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