Skip to main content

Extreme effort to retrieve dropped smartphone leads to suspension

If you happen to accidentally drop your phone in water, hopefully it’ll be a puddle rather than a reservoir.

A government official in India recently experienced the latter, dropping his Samsung handset in the Kherkatta Dam in the central Indian state of Chhattisgarh while he was trying to take a selfie at a scenic spot, the BBC reported.

Upset to see his phone disappear from view, Rajesh Vishwas called in local divers to look for it, but they were unable to locate it in the reservoir’s murky depths.

Refusing to give up on his quest to be reunited with his beloved Samsung device — while also claiming that the phone contained sensitive government data — Vishwas took just about the most drastic action you can imagine and ordered the reservoir to be drained.

Three days later, after nearly half a million gallons (around 2 million liters) of water had been pumped from the reservoir, Vishwas, a local food inspector, was able to locate his phone. But it no longer worked.

And his problems didn’t end there. When Vishwas’s superiors got wind of his action, they suspended him for wasting water.

According to local media reports, Vishwas pleaded innocence, saying he’d been given verbal permission from a senior to partially drain the reservoir into a nearby canal. But district officials rejected his claim.

Priyanka Shukla, a Kanker district official, said Vishwas will take time off work ahead of an inquiry into the bizarre incident, commenting: “Water is an essential resource and it cannot be wasted like this.”

Shukla’s comments came soon after India experienced its hottest March since records began 122 years ago, putting water supplies under strain, among other damaging consequences.

The unusual case brings to mind another water-based incident a couple of years ago when a man jumped into icy water in Victoria, Canada, to rescue his iPhone, which he’d dropped in the harbor a few hours earlier. In that case, however, the phone still worked.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
What is vapor cooling? The fascinating tech keeping your smartphone cool
Cooper-based vapor cooling chamber used in a custom Xiaomi Mi Mix 4 smartphone.

Vapor cooling, synonymous with "vapor chamber" and "vapor chamber cooling," has been a common buzzword in the laptop industry for almost a decade. And like many things borrowed from laptop-makers, the term has also funneled down to the segment of performance-oriented smartphones in the last few years. Vapor cooling is among the most widely used smartphone technologies, and it helps with the dissipation of excessive heat generated during stressful workloads.

When we run a resource-hungry app or game on our smartphones — or record a video for a long duration — the phone's processor must do a lot of work to compensate for those things. Vapor cooling is one way to address it, and it's quickly becoming much more prominent in devices. But how exactly does vapor cooling work, and does it even matter? That's what I wanted to find out.
How vapor chamber cooling works
AeroActive Cooler 6 on the ROG Phone 6 Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

Read more
My favorite Z Fold 3 feature? Using it as a ‘normal’ smartphone
Man holding a Galaxy Z Fold 3 showing a browser window on the outer screen.

A few weeks ago, while waiting for a new review phone to arrive, I returned to the Galaxy Z Fold 3. During that time, I've used it more with the screen closed than open. At first, this may sound like an admission that folding smartphones are gimmicky failures — but it’s not. It’s proof that folding phones work well normally, in everyday, general circumstances. More important, it's something that may help people still on the fence jump off and into the waiting arms of a foldable device.
Folded up, it's a normal phone
Closed, the Galaxy Z Fold 3 has a standard-sounding 6.2-inch AMOLED screen, 2268 x 832 resolution, and a dynamic refresh rate up to 120Hz. Where it differs from other phones with similar-sized screens is in its overall dimensions. It’s 67mm wide, while an iPhone 13 with its 6.1-inch screen is nearly 72mm wide. Yet it's much taller at 158mm compared to the iPhone 13’s 146mm. The Galaxy Z Fold 3 is tall and slim when folded up. It’s also, obviously, quite thick. At its largest point, it’s 16mm — twice the nearly 8mm thick iPhone 13.

While the Z Fold 3 does feel very unusual at first, it's something I've grown used to after using the phone since launch. I've quickly discovered the Fold 3 works really well when it’s closed, which is perhaps at odds with some perceptions of the device. I open the screen out when needed, not because I have to.

Read more
Nothing founder teases company’s first Android smartphone
Nothing Ear 1 app's gesture control settings.

Carl Pei, founder of Nothing, has teased that the London-based consumer technology startup is working on its very first Android smartphone.

Rumors about a smartphone being developed by Nothing sprang up in October 2021, nine months after the ex-cofounder of OnePlus left the Chinese smartphone maker to launch the very company that reminds Greek mythology buffs of Odysseus calling himself Nobody. On Tuesday, Pei sent out a tweet that seems to corroborate those rumors.

Read more