Both sets come with the bits you need to take apart some of the most popular consumer tech: you can open iPhones and Macbooks with the pentalobe bits, Nintendo Switches with the tri-wing bits, and ...
Consumerist tells us that Apple is switching to a special new screw called by some a Pentalobe, by iFixit an “Evil Proprietary Tamper Proof Five Point Screw” (or the EPTP5PS). It is designed to make ...
I’ve taken apart (and put back together) a few Apple laptops in my time, and contending with the numerous tiny screws is always a pain. As reported by iFixIt, a new policy rumored to be implemented by ...
Repairing electronics and mobile gadgets isn't a one-tool-fixes-all situation. iFixit, famous for their teardowns, makes some great tools designed for the delicacy and precision needed to repair any ...
I have a similar iFixit kit that seems pretty decent. I don't know how it compares to alternatives. My use is very light-duty. I just want not to be thwarted when I run across a random security torx, ...
Apple doesn't want to let you inside your iPhone, even if all you want to do is fix it. That's what repair company iFixit claims, at least. The company recently discovered that Apple has quietly ...
This is not a photo of two Apple iPhones. This is a photograph of an iPhone on top of Huawei's new P9. I'll excuse your double-take, because Huawei is shamelessly copying Apple here. Yes, it migrated ...
Decades ago, every electronic device was sealed with one of two types of screws: a minus-shaped Flat/Slot head, or a plus-shaped Phillips head. There was no concept — at least, for common consumer ...
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