Periodically, Apple puts its outdated products to its Vintage and Obsolete list. The iPhone 6 Plus may soon become a vintage item in Apple’s lineup, according to a rumour we saw late last year. As of late, the firm has included the 2014 flagship on its list of Vintage and Obsolete items, making this a reality.
iPhone 6 Plus Is Obsolete Now!
Apple just added three more goods to its official list of outdated and vintage items, including the iPhone 6 Plus. The gadget, which debuted in 2014, was the first iPhone to include a large display.
Remember that the iPhone 6 Plus featured a large 5.5-inch IPS LCD screen, the Apple A8 CPU, and a single 8MP rear camera? Due to a lengthy distribution run, the ordinary iPhone 6 model, which it was released with, thankfully has not yet passed the point of no return. The Plus model, however, was not able to take advantage of this since Apple no longer makes 5.5-inch iPhones. As a result, it is currently considered to be a classic Apple product.
The Mac Mini from 2012 and the 9.7-inch iPad 4, both of which were released in 2014, make up the other two gadgets.
What Does it Mean to Become a Vintage Apple Product?
Products are deemed vintage, according to the business, if Apple stopped selling them more than five and fewer than seven years ago.
Similar to this, when Apple ceases selling a device for more than 7 years, it adds it to the list of defunct products.
Vintage and out-of-date products will no longer receive any hardware maintenance from Apple. For repairs or replacements, not even service providers may order parts for outdated products. However, since customers are qualified for an additional battery-only repair time, MacBooks are the only devices that are exempt from these requirements.
The iPhone 3G (Mainland China) 8GB, iPhone 3G (8GB, 16GB), iPhone 3GS (16GB, 32GB), iPhone 3GS (8GB), iPhone 3GS (16GB, 32GB), iPhone 4 CDMA, iPhone 4 CDMA (8GB), iPhone 4 16GB, 32GB, iPhone 4 GSM (8GB), Black, and iPhone 4S are all included in the current vintage iPhone list (8GB).