Don't dry your iPhone in a bag of rice, says Apple
If your iPhone gets wet don't dry it in a bag of rice, Apple has
advised.
Despite the technique's popularity, experts have long warned against
it, with tests suggesting it doesn't work.
And now the tech
giant itself has published guidance telling users it could
result in small particles of the grain damaging their devices.
The firm said people should instead gently tap out any
liquid, with the phone connector facing down, then leave it to dry out.
Despite the increasing sophistication of smartphones,
popular approaches for fixing them if they have been dropped in water remain
rather unsophisticated.
Apple has taken the opportunity to steer users away from
several of them.
As well as avoiding bags of rice, it also advises against
drying a wet phone using an "external heat source or compressed air",
meaning radiators and hairdryers should be avoided.
Nor, it suggests, should users try inserting "a
foreign object, such as a cotton swab or a paper towel" into their phone.
Instead, it guides people to leave their phone in a
"dry area with some airflow" before reconnecting it to a charger.
All Apple devices from the iPhone 12 onwards are able to
withstand immersion up to a depth of six metres, for up to half an hour.

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