![]() It is also ideal for people to return it to their car over the trip period, or maybe they will have the airport hold it for you(with probably an in airport battery exchange place racking up cash for offering to change the battery then). I can’t imagine this going beyond, “is this a 15” MacBook Pro” followed by “when did you buy it”, and if they answer wrong, there are no consequences. Over the past several years, Apple also announced less critical replacement programs, such as for batteries and storage drives in the 13-inch MacBook Pro. NuPower batteries are engineered to be a Perfect Fit Solution for your 13' MacBook Air and are rigorously tested for long-lasting reliability. Or is this one of those bans which relies on passengers being honest? If the first people know of it is when hear an announcement when they're standing in line and they have a several thousand dollar macbook pro in their bag, there's some incentive for staying quiet. A battery issue is there only in the older variants of the Apple Computers. However, Apple manufactures decent batteries that will not fetch you any trouble initially after your purchase. Anyone with a 15" macbook pro, assuming every screener is able to tell a macbook pro from anything else, let alone a 15" one from a 13" one, is going to have to turn it on and show the manufacture date? The Bloomberg article referenced says that laptops which have had their batteries replaced are not affected, how do you prove this? What happens to the laptops which are deemed unsuitable to fly, are they destroyed, kept for your return. Another common problem in all the older variant of MacBook Air 11 inch is the battery. ![]() Wonder how this is going to work in practice.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |