Well, would you examine that. Just days after Apple made official its purchase of Liquidmetal’s IP, now the realm is identifying how the two love birds are working together. Or, should we say, were working together. In line with Atakan Peker, the alloy’s co-inventor, the SIM ejector tool that ships with older iPhone units is fabricated from Liquidmetal’s materials. To quote: ” That’s my metal. I recognized it immediately. Take it from a professional, that’s Liquidmetal.” Cult of Mac has also confirmed independently that the tool is hoping on the newfound acquisition (and Wired assumes a similar is correct on the iPad 3G), and from a supply chain standpoint, this oddity definitely is sensible. Apple’s no fan of counting on a sole supplier for anything, and considering that Liquidmetal is exclusive, it’s testing the waters on a relatively non-essential section of the puzzle. There’s still no word on how Apple plans to integrate the metal into future products, but because the pair have apparently already been in cahoots, you may bet they’ll be capable to skip right over the pleasantries and get all the way down to what’s important.
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