Forget Pentalobe screws, Apple’s next-gen screw design could lock DIYers out of their Macs once and for all.
The image above was posted to Reddit from a throwaway account (i.e. an account specifically created to be used only once to share sensitive material and therefore hard to trace) and supposedly comes from within Cupertino’s design department. The image details a render of new screw that Apple is reportedly working on with a “totally asymmetric design” that “no known tools” can be used to unscrew.
Apple has increasingly been locking down their devices, preventing them from being repaired or opened by third-parties. Apple has been famously using proprietary pentalobe screws since 2009 in their devices, but several third-party Pentalobe drivers exist which allow users to self-service devices with these screws.
This new asymmetric screw, if ever rolled out, looks like it could be a harder nut to crack. To our untrained eyes, in fact, the asymmetric design seems unique enough that Apple could patent it, preventing third-parties from selling their own drivers legally.
Keep in mind that this is an image posted to Reddit, and the only say-so we have that it comes from Apple is what the original poster has said. Also keep in mind that Apple often works on designs that never see the light of the day, and this new asymmetric screw could end up never being put into production.
If Apple is working on this screw, though, it’s troubling. Many of Apple’s recent design decisions have hampered self-repairability, but many of them — like using glue and solder in the recent MacBook Airs — at least helped make the device thinner and less easily broken. These screws, though, seem to have no other purpose but to keep users out at all costs, offering consumers no advantage whatsoever.
We’ve reached out to Apple and iFixIt for comment. More as we have it.
Source: Reddit
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