Many people—myself included— have had to deal with the woe of a wet phone. My experience came during the Songkran festival in Thailand. If you've ever experienced it, it means you get wet. Very wet. Some water got into my supposedly sealed phone pouch, and yes—I actually used rice to dry it out. It turns out that's not the best thing to do, at least according to an Apple support document.
Apple released an official advisory on the subject of drying your phone, as spotted by Macworld (via the Guardian). The advisory lays out what you should and should not do if your phone gets wet. It says 'Don’t put your iPhone in a bag of rice. Doing so could allow small particles of rice to damage your iPhone.'
I don't actually have an iPhone, but it's safe to say that dunking one in rice is something plenty of people have done over the years. Without ever paying much attention to the subject, I have always assumed the rice submersion method was a sound way of absorbing water from electronics. Did I fall for an unproven urban myth?
Apparently so. Honestly I never thought about little bits of rice getting into the nooks and crannies of my phone.
The iPhone actually has a decent liquid detection function that tells you not to connect your cable if it detects moisture. A short is the worst that can happen, but the pins can corrode which could turn your phone into an overpriced doorstop.
I won't risk saying iPhones are overpriced anyway. Oops. I just did. Yep, I'm an Android guy.
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The general advice for drying out your phone is to sit it with the connector facing down to allow any excess liquid to drain out, while directing some natural airflow over it. The same advice goes for any phone or electrical device. Apple wisely suggests you should not direct heat or compressed air at your phone, and not to go inserting stuff like cotton swabs or a bit
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