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Good news, everyone: Apple’s Polishing Cloth supports the iPhone 15 Pro Max
(www.theverge.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Or do what everyone does and wipe back and forth real fast on your shirt
Been doing that for a lot of years, never had an issue.
Shirt doesn't get it as clean and clear as a microfiber cloth. I have a few very large microfibers that I keep around the house and at least one in the car.
Also, shirt can and will scratch the screen, maybe not noticeable at first but over time it will do damage.
Eh it gets it clean enough for my purposes (no fingerprints). And I always have a screen protector on my devices so if anything it's damaging that. I've had a smart phone since an old-school Blackberry World Edition from shit...2007? Though I guess my first touch screen one was a Blackberry Storm a year later. Regardless, never had any issues whatsoever. That's obviously anecdotal but still.
I think I got ny first blackberry around the same time. Still have my 9700 around here somewhere and last time I checked it still worked. Maybe I notice it more but the shirts I wear don't clean my glasses or my phone very well, all they do is move the oils around and it isn't as clear as it can be.
I've stopped worrying about screen protectors with the latest editions of gorilla glass.
I’ve been cleaning my iphone XS with my shirt for 5 years straight and the screen isn’t scratched at all.
It may not look scratched to your eye but unless you are only using pure cotton fabric and not cleaning the screen while wearing any of the moisture wicking work out shirts that are full of plastic, it's most definitely scratched by now. Especially if you have been using the same phone for 5 years.
With the hardened glass going into phones combined with the oleophobic coatings they get, you really aren't likely to do a bit of damage for the light rubbing you need to get oils off the screen.
This shows that you don't actually understand how these hardened glasses actually work. They can most definitely still be scratched even if it's micro abrasions. Plus the oleophobic coating doesn't protect against scratched, it helps prevent fingerprints and that coating along with any others will get worn down even faster.
The oleophobic coating means the oil should come off quickly with fewer passes by your shirt, because it doesn't really adhere to the screen like it would without the coating. So just less chance for abrasion over the lifetime of the glass due to less rubbing.
Right but that coating can come off with an abrasive cloth. The oleophobic coating doesn't last forever and between our hands, pockets, etc, it eventually wears down. Polishing the screen with an abrasive fabric (even if it doesn't feel abrasive to you) only hastens that wear.
Holy shit is the ignorance palpable here.
I'll bet you blew into your game cartridges as well and still have no idea that was the cause of the issues with games.
I'm done here. You have no idea when to shut up and stop mumbling over your own foot.
Bro it's just a thread on social media. Why so angry? I'm sure you're a smart reasonable dude but resorting to personal attacks is unwarranted.
If we used to be able to clean screens with a cloth, and now need a microfiber to not damage it, that means it was a downgrade.
You've always "needed" a soft cloth to clean glass of any kind. This is not a downgrade, it's doing the best you can to preserve things.
I wonder how many people in these threads also use vinegar to clean their led/lcd tvs and monitors? If you are, stop it. It's also not a downgrade to not use acid.
As I said in another comment. Most clothing now has plastic in it, that is way more abrasive than pure cotton.
So you always wear a perfectly clean 100% cotton shirt? More clothing than you realize has plastic in it these days and can be very abrasive.
I've been doing the same for nearly as long. Maybe you don't wear glasses with any of the extra coatings on it, I do and can tell you that it will scratch them. I've never had a shirt get any glass as clean as a microfiber cloth or towel.