Gadget repair firm iFixit, which has carried out "teardowns" on
Apple products from iPhones to MacBooks, said the U.S. company also
appeared to be promoting its brand on the watch's inner workings,
complicating detailed analysis of the parts' origins.
News that a supplier has been chosen - or rejected - for one of
Apple's products can cause drastic swings in stock prices, so huge
are the iPhone maker's orders.
The iFixit team, which traveled from San Luis Obispo to Australia to
get its hands on one of the first Apple Watch deliveries after the
gadget's global launch on Friday, began by blasting the screen with
a heat gun to prise it off.
Then they untangled a nest of cables to uncover the "S1" - the core
computing module encased in resin that even a pen knife couldn't
shift.
"We have definitely not seen this before," iFixit teardown engineer
Andrew Goldberg said in Melbourne.
iFixit had anticipated that the resin module, which Apple has said
is to protect the electronics from the elements, would have a lid
that could be opened rather than be a solid block.
Apple in the past has depended on multiple companies to supply its
memory chips for storing music and photos, but imposes strict rules
forbidding those suppliers from discussing Apple-related business
with investors and the media.
Previous suppliers have included SK Hynix, Qualcomm, Skyworks
Solutions, Avago Technologies ARM Holdings, NXP Semiconductors NV,
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.
"In the past, they have identified the component parts, but now
instead of identifying all the processors and chips, they're
marketing it as the S1," said Sam Lionheart, a technical writer at
iFixit.
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"They're being a little more protective of their suppliers and
taking credit for more than they're making in house, which isn't a
crime, to make the technology seem a bit more innovative or
revolutionary than it really is," she added.
Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the
design of the watch, or the rationale behind it.
The watch is the highest profile wearable technology that links
wirelessly to phones, which has the potential to create a template
for other firms that have struggled to create products consumers
would want to be seen in.
The teardown found one chip outside the resin casing, possibly
linked to wi-fi, but without a clear logo. It also revealed that
Apple has used tri-wing screws, a relatively uncommon type of screw,
making it more difficult to access the electronics.
After a four-hour attempt to unlock its secrets, the iFixit team
will now take the sports watch purchased in Australia back to
California for further testing.
(Additional reporting by Jane Wardell in SYDNEY; Editing by Stephen
Coates)
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