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Amazon Denies Reports That Airport Scanners Ruin Kindle's e-Ink

judgecorp writes "Amazon has poured cold water on the story, but reports insist that Kindles are sometimes rendered useless by airport baggage handling and security checks. Many people report no problems at all but if something is going wrong, the culprit may not be the X-ray scanner, but a static shock."

13 of 182 comments (clear)

  1. Reminds me of when NY sprayed for mosquitos. by Kenja · · Score: 5, Funny

    Everyone was told it was perfectly safe, but to cover their cars because it would strip the paint right off.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  2. why just the kindle? by skydyr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If this were a problem, wouldn't it also affect nooks and other readers that use e-Ink? The displays are all made by the same company, after all.

    1. Re:why just the kindle? by LordKronos · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If this were a problem, wouldn't it also affect nooks and other readers that use e-Ink? The displays are all made by the same company, after all.

      Remember when Toyota was in the news for the unintended acceleration thing? Funny, because up until that point, all brands had similar numbers of sporadic cases of UA, but none of them made the news. Then suddenly Toyota makes the news, and out of nowhere, nearly all models of Toyota's began exhibiting the problem at the same time. And it didn't matter if it was a new car just off the lot or a vehicle that had been driven for several years. Suddenly they all started failing at once. Then just as quickly the problem disappeared. But surprisingly, none of the other non-Toyota brands made headlines for similar problems, even though they all experienced it.

      So, the answer may very well be that publicity has drawn people's attention to it. Did my nook fail? Well then I guess it was just a piece of crap. Did my kindle fail? Yeah, well then I guess it too was just a....wait a minute...did someone say something about airport scanners? I was at the airport recently. The airport scanners killed my kindle.

    2. Re:why just the kindle? by Obfuscant · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So which is it? Are the brakes four times stronger than the engine, or can the engine overpower the brakes?

      Today's words are "chronic" and "acute".

      If you push on the brakes hard enough, they will stop the car. The acute usage of the brakes can overpower the engine.

      If you ride the brakes, thus both wearing them down and heating them up, the chronic application of braking will eventually cause them to fail and they will no longer overpower the engine.

      However, I don't believe that the appearance of ABS has been considered in this claim that they will overpower the car. If the ABS says "no", they will override the four-times-overpower and you'll have a lot less.

  3. Nothing here by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Boy, talk about a flimsy claim. It's as if eWeek couldn't resist running a juicy rumor, so when they couldn't find a single piece of evidence in support of the rumor, that became their headline (thus allowing them to run a story based on the rumor). They couldn't even find anyone to make the claim in a quote.

    Let the anecdotal evidence begin. I've sent B&N Nooks (with e-ink displays) through airport security scanners at least a dozen times. No ill effects.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:Nothing here by Baldrake · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Ok, since you asked, here is my anecdotal evidence. I have owned my Kindle for about a year. With daily use, it was worked flawlessly for all of that year, with three exceptions. In each of these cases, the reader froze, and had to be hard-reset and recharged.

      All three happened while I was on trans-Atlantic flights.

      It's a bit of a coincidence. I personally would not outright dismiss the possibility that there is something going on.

    2. Re:Nothing here by DocJohn · · Score: 5, Informative

      I've had both 1st and 2nd generation Kindles and have flown with them each dozens of times. Which means they've been each X-rayed dozens of times.

      They both work fine and have never had to be reset. With the 3G radio off, a single charge on either of them lasts weeks, even with daily use.

      Kindles are bullet-proof, hardy devices that you can read in direct sunlight. I've even dropped them both, with no damage to either.

      This is exactly what an e-reader should be.

      --
      Psych Central - get your psychology on

  4. The problems with the kindle by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 5, Funny

    The problems with the kindle only occur when the TSA give the kindle a cavity search.

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    1. Re:The problems with the kindle by Reverand+Dave · · Score: 5, Funny

      Exactly, it's not so much that it doesn't work, more than it's scared and unwilling to carry on anymore.

      --
      I got here through a series of tubes
    2. Re:The problems with the kindle by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You laugh... but last year my girlfriend was caught up in a detailed customs search on returning to the USA from Ireland because she had quite a large number of books in her backpack. They seriously couldn't understand why she had so many large books with her at once in her carry-on. I can't even remember what the books were off the top of my head, but I think the most subversive thing she was carrying was probably the Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy.

      This year for our trip to Germany, she got a Kindle. :)

  5. Anecdote!=data by Zerth · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That said, I've taken 3 different kindles(gen 2, gen 3, and the DX) through several airports in the US, plus taken the smaller ones through a few in Europe. Never had any problems after going through the xray.

    Well, no problems with the kindles, anyway. Once I got extra screening because the chargers "looked suspicious".

    IIRC, the 4th generation of kindles have exposed metal contacts on the back, so static from the rubber conveyor belt sounds much more probable.

  6. So why does Amazon bother denying anything? by hellfire · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Okay this article is weird.

    It starts with the conventional "idiots who don't understand science think x-rays damage their electronics". But it quickly switches to the "more likely a static shock" line which is much more feasible. But then why is this a story? Static shock affects all electronic devices, the Kindle is no different.

    Then it goes into a "eWeek licks Amazon's balls happily" advertisement about how awesome the kindle is, which has no place in an article like this. Why the hell go this far? And then Amazon out and out denies the problem even exists. They don't say "it could be static shocks which no device is immune from." They use the "a bunch of other people don't have a problem" fallacy to deflect the issue. While it does nothing for me, that's kind of stupid because it will stir up the conspiracy theory wonks like a storm of bees.

    Looks like this article was written for eWeek by an Amazon Marketroid, not by Steve McCaskil, which makes sense now that I think about it. Deflect and deny rather than address.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  7. Re:during take-off and landing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The power levels have nothing to do with the safety risk of being smacked in the face by some wayward gadget during a rough landing.