I am very familiar with how magnets work. I have to assume they are embedded in his skin and not all the way into the bone. If they are rare earth magnets, and they look to be, they have a strong pull. With a very sudden yank rather than a carefully applied pull, I would think the magnets would rip out of his flash rather than disengage from the ipod.
@Ree I would assume he thought of that during implantation and decided against super-strong magnets to begin with, but then again he did put magnets in his arm to hold an iPod so I suppose common sense is out the window and your point stands...
There was some measuring and some hand drilling. Next, he implanted 4 magnets into the holes and voilĂ , he can now wear an iPod Nano without a bracelet.
I am very familiar with how magnets work. I have to assume they are embedded in his skin and not all the way into the bone. If they are rare earth magnets, and they look to be, they have a strong pull. With a very sudden yank rather than a carefully applied pull, I would think the magnets would rip out of his flash rather than disengage from the ipod.
@Ree I would assume he thought of that during implantation and decided against super-strong magnets to begin with, but then again he did put magnets in his arm to hold an iPod so I suppose common sense is out the window and your point stands...
I take it you're unfamiliar with how magnets work.
Anyway, I love how Apple fans do this sort of stuff, and then call me stupid for using a PC.
I would assume he thought of that during implantation and decided against super-strong magnets to begin with, but then again he did put magnets in his arm to hold an iPod so I suppose common sense is out the window and your point stands...