Tag Archive: New York Times


By Jenna Wortham

Brendan McElroy’s living room in an apartment on the top floor of an East Village walk-up is crowded with anxious patients, each one jiggling a knee, or gnawing on a fingernail or lip.

Everyone is awaiting a prognosis — not for an ailing child or pet, but for an iPhone.

Mr. McElroy, a lanky, clean-shaven 28-year-old who looks more likely to be playing an afternoon game of touch football than tinkering with the innards of a phone, is standing at a workstation littered with the detritus of his trade: tiny silver screws, peels of plastic and cartons overflowing with spare parts.

Using a quick succession of tools — suction cup, razor blade and screwdriver — Mr. McElroy sets to work replacing a broken screen, deftly prying it off the iPhone.

Fifteen minutes later, he slips the back cover on and hands the phone to an eager client, who punches in the code to unlock it and sighs with relief as it leaps to life.

“It’s not difficult to do,” said Mr. McElroy, who taught himself to repair iPhones by studying YouTube video tutorials that demonstrate how to disassemble and reassemble the device. “But it’s difficult to do perfectly.”

With Apple having sold 50 million iPhones, it was perhaps inevitable that a cottage industry of iPhone repair shops would spring up. The one-year warranty that comes with the iPhone doesn’t cover damage unless it is shown to be caused by a manufacturing defect. And using official Apple channels for repairs can get expensive quickly. Screen replacements alone can cost as much as $300, inspiring some iPhone owners to seek out alternative ways to restore their phones’ health.

Enlisting the services of Mr. McElroy — or Dr. Brendan, if you prefer his Web moniker — costs markedly less. Replacing the battery on a 3G or 3GS iPhone for example, will run about $50. The price tag for fixing the touch-screen on an iPhone 3G is $70; for a 3GS, it’s $15 more.

Mr. McElroy’s operation is one of many offering rehabilitation services for the iPhone. A quick perusal of the business reviews site Yelp for places to take a mangled phone turned up dozens of listings in urban areas like San Francisco, New York, Chicago and Los Angeles.

Companies like MissionRepair, Rapid Repair and iResQ primarily offer mail-order services, which require shipping off the damaged iPhone. In addition to inviting customers to his apartment, Mr. McElroy makes house calls in and around New York City, sometimes crisscrossing boroughs several times a day. He also accepts repairs by mail and says he has a healthy international clientele from as far away as Portugal.

Of course, the bravest among us — and those with the steadiest fingers — can always try to make the repairs themselves. There’s no shortage of kits and online how-tos to guide adventurous tinkerers.

It’s worth noting that taking the D.I.Y. approach, or allowing someone other than Apple or its authorized repair centers to fix the phone, could violate Apple’s warranty.

One of those authorized businesses is TekServe, a well-known computer store in the Chelsea district of Manhattan. Although its fees are significantly higher than Mr. McElroy’s — repairing a smashed screen on a 3G iPhone costs $149 — the company justifies them by pointing to its long track record.

“We’ve been around for 23 years,” said Jazmin Hupp, a spokeswoman for the company. “We’re not a college kid who set up shop to do it this weekend and won’t be around in 90 days after the guarantee is up.”

Ms. Hupp said that the company offered a guarantee on its repairs and that its technicians had been trained by Apple. She would not say how many iPhones the shop had repaired, but she did say that cracked screens were the most common malady.

Apple recommends finding authorized repair shops on its Web site at apple.com/support. “We can’t vouch for the quality of unauthorized repairs,” said Natalie Kerris, a company spokeswoman.

Mr. McElroy offers customers his own warranty of sorts. He guarantees his handiwork and will replace any phone damaged in the repair process — though he says that hasn’t happened since his inaugural attempt at fixing an iPhone.

“The first try went less than smoothly,” he said. “I had just finished a bartending shift and reached for my phone. I dropped it and it smashed on the concrete floor.”

Hoping to find an economical fix, he decided to try his hand at replacing the shattered screen. He purchased parts, first from eBay, then from a local repair shop, and got to work.

“I’d describe it as semi-successful,” he said.

But after polishing his method on the phones of a few willing friends, it wasn’t long before he had improved enough to charge for his services.

Through an advertisement on Craigslist, Mr. McElroy began offering to replace shattered screens, and eventually expanded his menu to include broken SIM card trays, cracked covers, water damage and more mysterious glitches, like unresponsive buttons.

Before long, he said, business was booming. He took down his classifieds ads because word-of-mouth referrals and his Web site (www.drbrendan.com) were driving enough traffic. He quit his job tending bar to focus on his repair work. In the last few weeks, he’s enlisted an apprentice: his younger brother, Dan, who handles the iPod Touch touch-ups.

“There’s rarely a phone I can’t fix,” said Mr. McElroy, who estimates he’s worked on a thousand iPhones since June. “There was once a guy whose phone was thrown out of a 10-story window. The entire thing was split in half, but the motherboard was fine.”

Despite the trauma, he said, “I was able to get it up and running for him.”

The worst phones aren’t the ones dropped from great heights, Mr. McElroy said. They’re the ones that are dropped in the toilet.

“I keep a pair of rubber gloves around for that,” he said.

Mr. McElroy said he had recently branched out to doing repairs on MacBooks. Now he’s gearing up for a fresh wave of business: the iPad. But he suspects the iPhone will remain his main source of revenue.

The iPad “actually looks like it won’t break as often,” he said. “It has a nice sturdy case that should protect it when falling.”

Plagiarism

A student is working on his English paper. It is 2 a.m. and he is terribly tired and wants to retreat back to his bed. He shouldn’t have stayed up all night and played Halo with his friends he thought. He has only written one paragraph and has over 1,500 words left to go. He then quickly goes on to a Web site about English literature. He copies and pastes what he wants into the rest of “his” paper, “his” work and goes back to bed. This is a classic case of plagiarism and is very serious problem

According to the Random House Compact Unabridged Dictionary, plagiarism is defined as, “The use or close imitation of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one’s own original work.”

In addition to that, no proper credit or acknowledgement is given to the original source. That is why plagiarism is branded as an act of dishonesty. Plagiarism is an infectious stigma that corrupts academic progress and also disgraces the field of journalism. Unfortunately, it happens all the time and there are many of those “Really high up there” cases where plagiarism has impacted a student, a reporter or a professor’s career. And believe me, it’s always for the worse.

One particular example of plagiarism occurred when historian Doris Kearns Goodwin admitted to copying several passages from other authors in her best-seller “The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys” right before she was to participate as a judge for the Pulitzer Prize in 2002. As a result, Goodwin withdrew from the Pulitzer Prizes. According to an online news archive from CNN, the board was left to sort out Goodwin’s mess.

“Pulitzer board adminstrator Seymour Topping announced Goodwin’s withdrawal Monday and added that the Pulitzer Prize board ‘had made no decision on the controversy,’”

This had a very negative impact on the Pulitzer board because it was under bad press and the board had to recover from such controversy in order to maintain its high standard and reputation for the Pulitzer Prize. Goodwin also resigned as a commentator on PBS’ “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.” It must have been the guilt of knowing what she did was wrong.

In 2001, renowned historian Stephen Ambrose had his career in controversial shambles after an article from the Weekly Standard by Fred Barnes first discovered his book “The Wild Blue: The Men and Boys Who Flew the B-24s over Germany” contained several identical words and phrases from Thomas Childers’s 1995 “Wings of Morning: The Story of the Last American Bomber Shot Down over Germany in World War II.”

“The two books are similar in more than just subject. Whole passages in ‘The Wild Blue’ are barely distinguishable from those in ‘Wings of Morning.’ Sentences in Ambrose’s book are identical to sentences in Childers’s. Key phrases from ‘Wings of Morning,’ such as ‘glittering like mica’ and ’up, up, up,’ are repeated verbatim in ‘The Wild Blue.’ None of these- the passages, sentences, phrases is put in quotation marks and ascribed to Childers,” Barnes said.

Consequently, there was a tireless influx of news stories and online articles about Ambrose’s use of plagiarism. All of them as a media called out Ambrose on his dishonest and unethical work. In the end, Ambrose released a public apology but his reputation and career as historic writer was ultimately destroyed.

Then there is the infamous reporter from the New York Times Jayson Blair who had plagiarized reporter Macarena Hernandez’s story about a missing soldier in Iraq from the Sun Antonio Express-News. This led to an investigation by the New York Times against Blair and they found out that 36 of the 73 stories that he wrote between Oct. 2002 and May 2003 were either made up or taken from other sources and were not given proper credit.

Blair was inevitably fired from the The New York Times. It was a disgrace and the Times referred to Blair’s career as a “profound betrayal of trust and a low point in the 152-year history of the newspaper,”

This is plagiarism on a massive scale and is completely unacceptable.

In short, I would never want to commit such dishonest and unethical work. Plagiarism ultimately leads to the destruction of one’s work and career. Any student, writer or reporter should learn a valuable lesson from these previous examples. It is important that your work is ethical at all times and should exhibit good intentions and objective honesty if you use a source in your work, you must cite it or give credit when it’s due or else it is nothing but plagiarism.