Recently, I knocked my iPhone off of a chair onto the rug below. It wasn’t a great distance but it hit the floor with enough force that when I picked it up, it started making an odd squeaking sound whenever I pressed the home button.
Alarmed (but not panicked), I Googled why an iPhone8 would make such a sound and quickly learned from a YouTube video that it was because one or more of the device’s internal screws were loose.
“Well,” I thought to myself, ”better that the phone has screw loose than I do.”
According to YouTube, the problem was easily fixed by opening up the phone and tightening the screws.
When we tried this at home, however, we couldn’t do it because we didn’t have the proper equipment in the form of very small screwdrivers.
One option was to go to an Apple Store, but my daughter had a better idea — find a local repair shop.
Her reasoning was based on an incident several years ago when she dropped her iPhone in the water. Conventional wisdom at the time was to wrap the device in a bag of rice, which would soak up the water and save the phone.
She did this but one grain of rice got sucked up into the phone’s port and it stopped working altogether.
She went to an Apple Store, where she was told that her best option was to buy a new phone.
Reluctant to do that, she stumbled upon a local repair shop in a mall, where a repairman removed the grain of rice and Presto! Her phone was as good as new.
So this was the context in which my daughter and I ventured out during a break in the rainstorms yesterday to a tiny hole-in-the-wall repair shop nestled into a nook next to a bright Mexican restaurant.
It really was just a window in a closet-sized space with an “Open” sign hung outside.
The young man at the window took my phone, opened it, tightened the screws, closed it back up and handed it back to me.
“No charge,” he said.
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