Apple suspends sales of LG's UltraFine 5K monitor over hardware issues
Apple has temporarily stopped sales of LG's UltraFine 5K monitor, due to technical problems associated with a lack of proper shielding from wireless interference.
Over the weekend, Apple retail staff were told to keep the product on display yet not sell any units if people asked, according to a Business Insider source. The site added that it heard the same from a representative at a New York Apple store.
Separately, AppleInsider has confirmed the organized removal from sale of the Thunderbolt 3 display. Sources inside Apple not authorized to speak on behalf of the company indicated that retail locations are retaining demonstration displays, but not selling any stock on-hand that it may receive that may actually have the shielding fix, nor filling any pending orders until otherwise informed.
The USB-C-based LG UltraFine 4K display remains on sale.
Last month buyers reported glitches if the monitor was placed near certain Wi-Fi routers -- LG eventually narrowed the trouble to RF interference, and all new units should have better protection.
By last Thursday, Apple's U.S. shipping times for the UltraFine 5K had stretched to between 5 and 6 weeks, where they remain as of this writing. The company is presumably waiting until fixed units are in stock before resuming regular sales.
The UltraFine 5K costs $974, and was built specifically with the 2016 MacBook Pro in mind, connecting to the laptop through Thunderbolt 3 while offering three USB-C ports of its own.
It also includes features like a webcam and stereo speakers, but most notably a 5120-by-2880 resolution with support for the P3 wide color gamut.
Over the weekend, Apple retail staff were told to keep the product on display yet not sell any units if people asked, according to a Business Insider source. The site added that it heard the same from a representative at a New York Apple store.
Separately, AppleInsider has confirmed the organized removal from sale of the Thunderbolt 3 display. Sources inside Apple not authorized to speak on behalf of the company indicated that retail locations are retaining demonstration displays, but not selling any stock on-hand that it may receive that may actually have the shielding fix, nor filling any pending orders until otherwise informed.
The USB-C-based LG UltraFine 4K display remains on sale.
Last month buyers reported glitches if the monitor was placed near certain Wi-Fi routers -- LG eventually narrowed the trouble to RF interference, and all new units should have better protection.
By last Thursday, Apple's U.S. shipping times for the UltraFine 5K had stretched to between 5 and 6 weeks, where they remain as of this writing. The company is presumably waiting until fixed units are in stock before resuming regular sales.
The UltraFine 5K costs $974, and was built specifically with the 2016 MacBook Pro in mind, connecting to the laptop through Thunderbolt 3 while offering three USB-C ports of its own.
It also includes features like a webcam and stereo speakers, but most notably a 5120-by-2880 resolution with support for the P3 wide color gamut.
Comments
I bought mine, and I love the screen, but everything else is problem after problem.
I move the cord at all, and the image cuts out.
The cords attached to the monitor sometimes don't work until I plug and unplug them.
My Macbook Pro randomly shuts down when connecting or disconnecting if I use clamshell mode.
I don't have mine by a router, but that's a future potential problem, too.
btw, I was in BestBuy over the weekend and one of the Macs on display was a Mac Mini attached to a Thunderbolt display. It made me sad that this is the face of the Mac being presented to the wider world. Meanwhile, 20 feet away were Windows PCs. Guess what -- the PCs weren't over 800 days old and attached to a discontinued monitor. Sad, sad, sad.
While I was reading this sentence, my copy of "Grammar & Style" suddenly burst into flames.
In other words, Tim Cook may have no control over the situation. Production realities are the fundamental factors that nobody ever seems to think about in these forums.
Leads me to another thought.
Suppose that after they rip out the expensive Intel guts they add in some inexpensive ARM guts, along with a more limited ARM version of macOS (maybe restricted to app store apps only). That would give the display some limited stand-alone functionality while also allowing it to serve as an external display for a full-blown Mac. That could be particularly useful for laptop users -- that monitor isn't totally useless without the laptop. It could also be compelling for budget-conscious users with more basic needs -- like schools.
We can say we don't like it, but that doesn't mean it was a bad idea for them to leave a market that bore little fruit.
That wouldn't make sense since the imac shell is much bigger than a monitor's needs to be.