This is what they get for not texting
iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 plus users and some members of a radical contingent, who use the conventional call function are posting the same complaint in tweeter, the phones are ripping their hair out.
Paul Peavler (@CardMeHD)
A 9 to 5 Mac community post, appropriately titled "My iPhone 6 Plus is yanking out my hair," details the woes of users who claim their hair is getting stuck in the seam between the phone's glass screen and its aluminum back when making calls.
Mo Bitar (@bitario)
@9to5Community My iPhone 6+ was pulling my hair too; I returned it, it was underwhelming:(
Kavan (@KavKilledKenny)
The seam on my iPhone 6 where the aluminum meets the glass is definitely catching my hair and pulling it out.#seamgate
@9to5Community @9to5mac ha! This happened to me on my very first call with it. My hair keeps getting caught in the microscopic seam between glass and aluminium on my iPhone 6
Aside from the bendgate, now there is hairgate, which Apple told CNBC about the nine people affected by the new controversy. Who uses iPhone 6 to make phone calls? People are informed that it's just used for editing high quality images, playing the Kim Kardashian App on a bigger creen and tracking calories intakes. But, there are few situations when a test does not suffice. Most instances that are suitable for an actual phone call like informing people that a part of the users is on fire, and at that stage, pulled hair is the least of their issues.
In the efforts of Apple to reach a formerly untapped users of smartphones, those who wanted a bigger screen, with the main buzzword of productivity being thrown around, the main market for iPhone 6 plus is in Asia, where the general compromise seems to be better and bigger when it comes to screens.