âThe staff over at Gizmodo took the iPhone 5S to task in multiple tests, finding the iPhone 5Sâ motion sensors giving readouts that are wildly different than those of the iPhone 5,â Statt reports. âThe app most affected is Appleâs native compass. In displaying direction, it shows discrepancies on average of 8 to 10 degrees compared with the iPhone 5 with both running iOS 7.â
âGaming is also affected as the accelerometer is used to maneuver in many driving and physics-based games that rely on the tilting of the screen to achieve in-game motion,â Statt reports. âThe iPhone 5Sâ directional faults arenât the only issues with the the compass app. The new inclinometer and gyroscope, available in iOS 7, are opened by swiping left on the compassâ first screen and are, again, showing faulty information when compared with the iPhone 5.â
Statt reports, âThe problem could in fact be a hardware issue given the iPhone 5 and 5S running the same software display different readouts. Apple has not confirmed the issue nor has it publicly acknowledged it in any way. In the case that it is hardware, thereâs little users could do to remedy the issue save for turning in their iPhone for a new one. However, some users have reported the same issues cropping up with replacement units, suggesting the motion sensor malfunctioning could be a widespread problem.â
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âItâs hard to believe that Apple would mess up so momentously, but it seems that the gyroscope, compass, and accelerometer are all faulty on the iPhone 5S,â Sebastian Anthony reports for ExtremeTech. âIt isnât clear if the sensors themselves are broken or poorly calibrated, but the result is the same: You should not use your iPhone 5S for anything that relies on these sensors, such as playing games, checking the level of your latest DIY efforts, or navigating dense woodland.â
âApple, of course, will be desperately trying to avoid a product recall. It hasnât yet issued an official response, but following the high-profile coverage from Gizmodo and other tech blogs, itâs probably only a matter of time,â Anthony reports. âUltimately, it will probably come down to whether sensors being off by a few percent is actually a serious issue. For gaming, it might be irksome, but it probably isnât a deal breaker. If someone gets lost in the wilderness and dies/breaks a leg/suffers from PTSD due to a faulty iPhone 5S compass, though, then Sensorgate could blow up in a big way.â
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