...le bit more than $237 per unit to build. That means the virtual tear down was impressively close. Not bad. The teardown also reveals that Samsung and its subsidiaries provide the vast majority of components used to build...
...e slightly for each eye, which are then combined by your brain and give the illusion of depth. The rest of the teardown shows the Rift’s core parts, like the 1280×800 resolution LCD that outputs the 640×800 image to each...
Chances are if you've bought a $250 thermostat you aren't going to immediately rip it apart to see what makes it tick. Thankfully, there are folks like iFixit that do these sorts of things for us, and they've now finally ...
...hand before you're able to damage it, but if you do, repairs shouldn't be a tremendous undertaking, if today's teardown video is any indication. According to TechnoBuffalo , which published the clip (available at the sou...
...g up the $300 for the developer version, and naturally the first thing they did was put a screw-gun to it. The teardown reveals as elegant looking a design on the inside as the exterior, and iFixit said that it couldn't ...
Screws and a little glue -- that's all that stood between an intact BlackBerry Z10 and the curious hands of those iFixit folks. And the results? Well, it's nothing you didn't know already: a motherboard, some Samsung ...
... blog iFixit has already cracked the case for a closer look at what makes the tablet/PC hybrid thing tick. The teardown reveals that Microsoft has essentially glued down anything that could be glued, making it incredibly...
...guessed what was inside. On the other hand, iFixit has got their hands on the new HTC One smartphone and did a teardown the old-fashioned way using heat, screwdrivers, spudgers , and copious amounts of gadget lust. The r...
...CC , but on rare occasions, companies sacrifice their own creations for our twisted enjoyment. This particular teardown is one of those instances, as Sony employed the skills of one "badass engineer" to reduce an Xperia ...