Quote:
Originally Posted by Cinisajoy
You say too many people. If screen breakage was a problem, then I am sure the manufacturer would find a solution.
I think I have read that 100 people have broken their screens.
So let's for arguments sake say each of those people represent 10 people since roughly only 1 in 10 will comment. Oh let's make it 100. That is approximately 10,000 broke screens.
That is not a drop in the bucket of ereaders. I can't remember if there are at least 7.5 million ereaders or 75 million.
I have yet to see a screen that broke due to a defect in the device. Every one I have read about was a user error at one point in time or other.
I hope this answers your question.
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We all are human, and error is intrinsically ours.
Aside, despite the small size of the majority of ereaders sold, they break because their fragility compared to LCD tablets.
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