Report: Apple scrambling for MacBook Air fix

Apple has privately acknowledged it's working on a fix for new MacBook Air laptops that are having screen problems

By Brennon Slattery, PC World |  Hardware, Apple, display Add a new comment

Some of Apple's new 11- and 13-inch MacBook Air notebooks have been suffering from screen problems, including horizontal and vertical lines appearing across the screen, color changes, and blank and gray screen crashes. Others have reported odd kernel problems (essentially the Blue Screen of Death). So far the only Band-Aid for the screen defects is a CPU reboot.

Apple has internally acknowledged these problems, according to Boy Genius Report, but has yet to address it publicly. Is another iPhone 4-esque apology coming?

There's a lot of noise on Apple's support discussion forums, ignited by poster DanRyb, who wrote, "Every so often while using [the MacBook Air], the screen has a ton of weird colors in vertical lines (extends the whole display) and the entire laptop has frozen. I have to force it off with the power button and reboot it. It happens at random times."

Other users (including Macworld) experienced identical issues, their frustration accentuated with exclamation points and sad faces. Even installing the MacBook Air (Late 2010) Software Update 1.0 didn't work, which makes sense, given that this is likely a hardware problem, like the iPhone 4's wonky antenna.

Apple's current solution: store associates shrugging their shoulders and handing out replacement laptops.

(Some users have even blamed Google Chrome for the defect. Really? We're gonna slap this on Google?)

If you want to see the Air pulling an Exorcist freak-out, there's a video for that.

"Apple's internal support system includes suggestions for interim fixes in each of these cases, but no permanent fixes are available at this time," BGR's source said.

Apple's latest MacBook Air came with decent price cut, but it's still expensive, and, apparently, pretty broken. This issue, paired with the iPhone 4's hardware problem, sends a message: Apple looks to be rushing out its products without thorough testing. But we're buying them anyway.

Is this a real widespread problem, or just the Internet echo chamber magnifying a few isolating faults? If you've encountered problems with your shiny new Air -- or if yours is all you'd hoped and dreamed -- let us know in the comments.


Originally published on PC World |  Click here to read the original story.

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