By SleepyPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:06 GMT
He's a lab worker, I'm sure there's no shortage of irritants / carcinogens / flesh eating virii at hand without having to resort to sniffing his laptop.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:16 GMT
hmm, cool and funky gadget manufactured by a secretive company led by a charasmatic geek, found to be pumping toxic gas into the environment... Wasn't this a storyline on Dr.Who last season?
By Giles JonesPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:32 GMT
It's happened before. The chinese plants where the PSU's are built have sprayed them with insecticide and other things. This should have been cleaned off.
By snafuPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 13:06 GMT
This is not the usual smell of new electronic devices but a distinct hot rubber-like sugary smell that accumulates in the room after a few hours of operation. My 2006-class Mac Pro does it, too (less than before but still in a noticeable way).
By Christoph SchneebergerPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 15:21 GMT
I can't talk for the germans as swiss, but the thing (benzen) is called benzol round here and was used as solvent in all sorts of chemical processes, it smells much like marzipan and is very cancerogenic. Older people associate shoe glue with that smell since that's where it has been used ages ago. When you breath it, it gives a nice kick like alcohol first and then evolves to a bad headache (no i don't consume it, i was working in a plant in young years where benzol/benzen was used a lot).
The stuff is dangerous, the stuff definitely shouldn't come out of anything one takes home - no matter whichever crappy vendor sells it.
What worries me, is that said vendor (and probably others as well) is unable to deny or confirm that they use benzol or not in the production of their items, one would expect they had a clue what they have put in that shiny box when they made it...
Also, using benzol in a production line is a sign for cheap 3rd world production, since it should not be used anymore as solvent in production of plastics since years (because it is cancerogenic, while modern replacements are not).
Bottomline: if my gear starts smeeling sweet and marzipan-like after minutes or hours of operations, I throw it far-far away until it stops stinking, no matter what the logo on the box is.
By TerryPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 15:52 GMT
What?! No one has done a Snow White joke yet? And you call this a geek site! Although the AC post about the Sontarans was first rate!
I wonder, is this the same group of Macs that were dying (frying) and caused the big warranty stink a couple years ago? A friend of mine got sucked up in that and ended up buying about 3 macbooks in the course of 18 months before it was all over. Toxic fumes could explain a lot of why people put up with this. I would have thought after the second one wintel would start looking pretty good.
Regardless, exceeding the operating limits by about 100 degrees seems like it could cause some interesting off gassing (to go along with the pretty blue smoke).
By ScottPosted Thursday 2nd October 2008 23:41 GMT
Christoph Schneeberger • Thursday 2nd October 2008 15:21 GMT:
[...]
"What worries me, is that said vendor (and probably others as well) is unable to deny or confirm that they use benzol or not in the production of their items, one would expect they had a clue what they have put in that shiny box when they made it..."
[...]
Welcome to the outsourcing era. Nobody seems to want to make their own stuff anymore. I don't know where the Macs are made now, but when I ordered my iBook about 7 years ago, it shipped from Taiwan. Now I think they're assembled in China.
Even so, it may not specifically be the Apple hardware responsible (assuming the Frenchman's claims are correct, which they probably aren't considering the lack of other complainants). Remember that those things have a processor from Intel; a GPU from either Intel, or an AMD or NVIDIA partner; memory from Hyundai, Samsung, etc.; a hard drive maybe from Hitachi or Toshiba; and so on. Who knows what the offending component could be.
Comments on: Apple probes poison-pumping Mac claim
Toxic gases coming from the keyboard? #
By censored Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:06 GMT
Um.... #
By Sleepy Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:06 GMT
Nothing new #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:15 GMT
Strangely familiar... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:16 GMT
even with a new Mac... #
By Bad Beaver Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:23 GMT
Happened before #
By Giles Jones Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:32 GMT
evapourating #
By MattW Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:33 GMT
But do they... #
By Simon Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:40 GMT
Benzene? #
By Sam Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:50 GMT
Fight That Impulse #
By Ralph B Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 12:56 GMT
Smell different #
By snafu Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 13:06 GMT
Wow! #
By Tony Chandler Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 13:08 GMT
Something fishy... #
By Martin Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 13:53 GMT
"distinct hot rubber-like sugary smell " #
By arran Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 14:39 GMT
Stereotyping is too easy... #
By Richard Speight Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 14:40 GMT
I can has spelcheker? #
By Matt Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 14:45 GMT
@Sam: not really... #
By Christoph Schneeberger Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 15:21 GMT
Poison Apple #
By Terry Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 15:52 GMT
Harmful odorous emminations? #
By Eric Dennis Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 16:07 GMT
A pedant writes #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 21:46 GMT
Who produces their own stuff anymore? #
By Scott Posted Thursday 2nd October 2008 23:41 GMT
Benzene #
By elderlybloke Posted Saturday 4th October 2008 04:38 GMT