At least he fished it out in the end....
... and made a rod for his own back
Picture the scene. You're on holiday and intend to go for a swim in a nearby reservoir. You pull out your phone for a selfie to make sure everyone knows you're having a lovely time, but you fumble the handset and it falls into the water. Irritating, embarrassing, and it might even cause you some serious logistical difficulties …
Very true, but the article notes, he
> would also have to cover the costs for "evacuating water without permission," wasting 4.1 million liters
Now, if he is charged the going price for Harrogate[1] water from Ocado (as he will need to have it delivered...), at £1.93 per litre (note spelling) that'll be nearly £8 million, which be fairer. Oh, if only they would.
[1] For comparison, they list Fiji Artesian water at £1.98 per litre (in a box of 12; Harrogate water only comes in singles, for some reason[2]) - unless that is Fiji, Lancs.?
[2] You'll only ever want to drink one bottle of Harrogate water! If it is the Proper Stuff, it has a - certain nose!
FTA: But yesterday the BBC reported that he had been fined 10,000 rupees ($640) and would also have to cover the costs for "evacuating water without permission," wasting 4.1 million liters (880,000 gallons) for his "personal interest."
I would be curious what the costs of evacuating 4.1M liters of water are. One would expect them to be pretty high.
I've been using mobile phones for a good three decades, but I never dropped one in water until I bought an iPhone 13 a while back.
Freshly out of the box, I knock it off the sink when washing my hands after being interrupted in me setting it up by post coffee hydraulic pressure.
Of course, it falls into the freshly flushed toilet .. and it couldn't care less. It was merely making my toilet look like a backlit Japanese one until I fished it out, none the worse for wear.
It still works fine, as I'm still using it now.
I think people "like me" are very much NOT your problem (once in 30 years is IMHO not a bad record) but yes, I think the whole waterproofing may have been part of it. That said, it's not *that* hard to make a 3.5mm socket that is watertight but I think thickness may also have been in play, which is irritating - I rather would have a mm more and thus more battery capacity..
"I rather would have a mm more and thus more battery capacity.."
Or - shocking revelation - you could use the phone less and enjoy the real world more.
I end each work day with roughly 85% battery left. To me, it's a tool used for alerts and the odd phone call when on lunch and some issue arises at work. Fourteen year old girls look at my wife, with her phone continually near her nose, and say "Damn, she's got a problem." The issue is not a lack of battery capacity. It's the inability of people to put the thing down.
If I ever do get a volcano lair, the first order of business will be massive EMP bursts to kill the cell towers and give people the gift of a life.