Your iPhone will permanently crash if you set your phone to this date!
Your iPhone really hates the date January 1, 1970. It hates it so much that it will permanently crash if you change your iPhone's time settings to that date.
It's not totally clear why the crash is
happening. It's not at all obvious why anyone even bothered trying to set an
iPhone's clock back 46 years.
But we can make a pretty educated guess.
January 1, 1970 is the earliest
date you can set your iPhone to. If you turn your date and time settings to
manual (please don't do this), and scroll the calendar back as far as you can
go (seriously, don't do this), you can only go as far back as January 1, 1970.
That's because Unix time began at
midnight GMT on January 1, 1970. Unix time has been counting every second since
then. Many gadgets, including the iPhone, use Unix time as the basis for their
clocks.
Now, why would scrolling all the
way back to January 1, 1970 (00:00:00 in Unix time) turn your iPhone into a
brick? If your time zone isn't GMT, your iPhone might think you're in a time beforeJanuary
1, 1970 -- or before zero. Though Unix time can be negative, it's possible that
something about that makes your iPhone go haywire.
There are several videos of people demonstrating what
happens when they set their clocks back to January 1, 1970. (Again, we're not
sure why they're doing this, and we don't recommend it).
In the videos, the iPhone works immediately after the date is set all the way back. But powering off the phone and then on again results in a perpetual greeting screen, with the Apple logo just staring back at you for the rest of time.
The bug first appeared on a Reddit forum on Thursday. Apple (AAPL, Tech30) did not respond to a request for
comment on whether the company plans to address the issue.
Meanwhile, just stay in the
present. It's more zen that way... and better for your iPhone.
Your iPhone will permanently crash if you set your phone to this date!
Reviewed by iViral
on
12:28 AM
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