I am not assuming. This is getting repetitive ... I have said more than once that a "known issue" is not just something that can be said in passing, there are legal implications when a company makes that statement, its not defined the same way as you noticing something. Apple said they were not aware of an issue, one more time, stating they were aware would have meant that it was a substantiated, reproducible issue, the breath of the issue could be determined ... etc ... you have not provided any proof of what Apple was aware of or when they were aware of it.

David

On Jan 31, 2004, at 12:34 AM, Robin Ashe wrote:



Wait a second, anytime something is reported it is therefore substantiated? Your logic is way beyond faulty on this one. Apple said they were not aware of an issue, that has not been proven false.

Wrong! They said "There is no known issue." In other words the issue didn't
exist. You shouldn't base your arguments on assumptions, especially
considering I provided you with a link that showed exactly what Apple did
say.


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