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Apple reuses faulty chips through established 'binning' process

Apple has a long-standing practice of "chip binning," which involves repurposing faulty chips for use in other products. This process allows the company to salvage components that might otherwise be discarded, integrating them into different models or even entirely new devices. Recent reports highlight further instances where Apple has successfully utilized this cost-saving and resource-efficient method. AI

Summary written by gemini-2.5-flash-lite from 1 source. How we write summaries →

IMPACT This article discusses a manufacturing process for electronic components, with only a tangential mention of AI, making its direct impact on AI operators minimal.

RANK_REASON The article discusses a product manufacturing process, not a new release or significant industry event.

Read on Mastodon — fosstodon.org →

COVERAGE [1]

  1. Mastodon — fosstodon.org TIER_1 · [email protected] ·

    Apple’s faulty chips are big business for the company, and not just in the MacBook Neo Apple has for years been using a procedure known as chip binning to reuse

    Apple’s faulty chips are big business for the company, and not just in the MacBook Neo Apple has for years been using a procedure known as chip binning to reuse faulty chips in other models of a product, or even entirely different products. A new report gives further examples of …