At first, we thought that the defective batteries are the cause. We believed that the explosions are the result of two electrodes, cathode and anode, standing too close to each other. Apparently, Samsung believed it to be the case, stating that they fixed this particular issue and everything is okay when they re-released the Note 7. Unfortunately, "fixed" smartphones tended to explode just as well as the first ones have. Ever since then Samsung does not, at least officially, know the cause of malfunction.
May it be the faulty software? Charging failure? Quick Charge tech? There are those who believe that the issue is that the batteries are too large for too small phones - in other words, that the fault is on our, consumers', side for wanting thinner and thinner phones with longer and longer lasting batteries.
What do you think? Are you feeling guilty, or do you rather believe that Samsung simply messed up? If the latter, then let me reassure you - Samsung is postponing the release of Galaxy S8 for two weeks, using that time to make sure that the phone has no defects.
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