There are people more kaffir than a sea bass with ketchup. That is beyond question. Once we are aware of this, we will understand that someone, after trying the Gorilla Glass treatment of the Samsung Galaxy Tab screen, can not think of anything else than to shoot the panel of the tablet that pays off the Apple iPad.
With a clean shot, a user set out to check to what extent the screen is made strong by blows and blows. And most interesting is that, while in other cases of devices with treatment Gorilla Glass (like the iPhone 4, for example) the panel just shattering in an accident in this experiment the Samsung Galaxy Tab comes out safely from the animalada that It involves getting shot. Even if they are compressed air.
As we can see in the video, the author of the outrage shoots the screen of the Samsung Galaxy Tab with a compressed air pistol. It does not use large bullets, since in that case it would not only break the screen, but it would destroy the entire tablet.
Instead, it uses what we call lead bullets. Projectiles are tiny diameter, particularly with a bore of 0.177 mm. It is not a bullet that kills, but it is capable of disgracing more than one if the bullet is accurate (as can be said).
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Kt7ckZ9Xho&feature=player_embedded
The user who submits the Samsung Galaxy Tab to that ordeal shows the tablet before the test, which after being shot at a fairly short distance, repeats the same aspect, without showing bumps, impacts or scratches from the shooting.
Although Gorilla Glass technology claims to be the most resistant to cover glass panels and housings of many devices to give a more elegant look to mobiles or tablets, the reality is that in some cases it has not been enough to prevent severe damage to the little gadgets (like, and we've already mentioned, the iPhone 4 example).
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