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Stress-Testing the Verizon G'zOne Cellphone

abkaiser writes "You can dunk it under water. Put it in the oven and crank up the heat. Drop it, smack it, treat it like the hunk of plastic that it is. And yet this is a cellphone. I got my hands on the Verizon G'zOne (pronounced 'G-Z-One'), a phone designed for high-abuse environments. Come for the test methodology, stay for the photo of a cellphone cooking in an oven."

3 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. Special permission? by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Disclaimer: I was given special permission by Verizon to stress-test the G'zOne. Verizon and I both agree: DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME. These tests were performed so that we as consumers can validate Verizon's claims without you having to test them yourself. If you break your own equipment, you're the one responsible.
    I understand why the reviewer would want a disclaimer of some sort, but since when does a product reviewer need "special permission" from a vendor to do a proper review?
    1. Re:Special permission? by Mononoke · · Score: 3, Insightful
      since when does a product reviewer need "special permission" from a vendor to do a proper review?
      He probably signed papers requiring him to return it in the same condition as it was given to him. He wouldn't be able to truly test it without facing the possibility of destroying it and violating that agreement.
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      NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
  2. So they're building things like they used to. by gfxguy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We've become so accustomed to crap that when someone builds something the way they used to it becomes news.

    For the record, I washed AND DRIED my Motorolla v70 a few years ago (in the pocket of my cargo pants).

    I had to replace the antenna, and the microphone made me sound like crap, but it worked.

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    Stupid sexy Flanders.