Slashdot Mirror


Sony Recalls 18,000 VAIO Laptops

STFS writes "Reuters has a story about Sony having to recall 18 thousand VAIO laptops because apparently there is some risk of users receiving a small electric shock "if you have connected your PC (laptop) to external power, you have disabled your phone line, (while) simultaneously being connected to a grounded peripheral, and you are touching a metal part of the PC, and your phone rings"!" I can't begin to count the number of times that happens ;)

5 of 374 comments (clear)

  1. Why is this a product defect? by dmeranda · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can get the same effect without a computer. Just hold the end of a phone line with one hand and anything metal and gounded with the other and have somebdy call you. If anything this is a defect with the phone system, not the freaking computer!

    This is because the phone company sends a 60-volt (if I remember correctly) pulse down the line to cause a ring...a leftover from the days when it they had to send enough energy to drive the electomechanical bell.

  2. Re:At Least Once by jmays · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the article... "There had been no injuries, McEvoy said, and fewer than 10 complaints had been received."

    --
    KARMA TAG! You're it.
  3. Re:Only 18,000? by DrWho520 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The story is reprinted at CNN here. The description of what you have to do to get shocked alone is worth the read.

    --
    The cancel button is your friend. Do not hesitate to use it.
  4. Re:How does your phone ring by Alric · · Score: 5, Informative

    Umm. I think they mean that the user disabled the phone line functionality in the Vaio, meaning the computer doesn't respond when someone calls that phone line.

    Here's how I interpeted it. Your laptop environment meets the previously outlined criteria. Someone calls your phone, which can be thought of as a small electrical current being sent to your phone. Because the the phone line is disabled on the Vaio and Sony didn't design the system correctly, the electrical current from the phone travels into the laptop hardware, the metal frame I guess. The computer is grounded, and you are touching some metal part of the laptop (read conductor). Therefore, the electrical current is passed into you, resulting into a minor shock.

    I am certainly not an EE, but that makes sense to me.

  5. Re:Reminds me of this old tech suppor story- by dhamsaic · · Score: 5, Informative

    As if the story were not unlikely enough...

    It's my understanding that electricity doesn't work that way. Electricity needs to find ground; it will not shock you if it cannot. You can touch live wires so long as you are, say, wearing rubber boots and not in any way touching the ground. Standing barefoot on a damp basement floor, however...

    So if the electricity is going down the chain to the dog (which it likely would not, since that's not the path of least resistance to the ground), the dog could only get shocked if the path was open. While urine would perhaps make this path more conducive (I can't honestly say I've stood in pee and shocked myself), it's higly unlikely any urination would be forced in the first place. Ergo, a path of lesser resistance would probably not be created.

    So, in other words, it's humorous to those that know no better, but it sounds impossible to me.

    (I am not an electrician, so someone here is perhaps more qualified to comment/correct me on this.)

    --
    Every once in a while I like to masturbate a new word into my vocabulary, even if I don't know what it means.