It appears after some time. And no, Sony doesn't acknowledge this issue, so you have to pay out of pocket if your warranty is over to replace the phone.
If you consider pink close enough to red.
This one. My 5 mk II is completely unusable due to this. It's a well documented issue on the Xperia sub on reddit.
I love Z3. I still mourn the loss of it to this day.
However, I must admit that Xperia quality hasn't been the greatest in the recent years, with the light lines issue plaguing the 5 series from mk II onwards, and now the 1 VI has similar issues too.
Wow, to see an Xperia phone being used as an example instead of a bloody Samsung.
Good day to be an Xperia user.
Funny, in my experience it's the vegans that are the loudest at it.
Leddit? Yeah I was active there, then decided to leave.
Cibai is a Hokkien insult, not a Cantonese insult
Lmao that username. You're either Malaysian or Singaporean.
Despite the collapse of Imperial China over a century ago, modern-day film and television continue to reimagine and dramatize life in the imperial harems.
Imperial harems existed since ancient times and bore witness to the waxing and waning of dynasties. Life in imperial harems was imagined to be one of luxury and comfort. But what did really go on behind closed doors and beneath the glittery façade of the royal titles? Why do the lives of empresses and concubines in the imperial harems remain ever so intriguing to modern audiences? What are some of the tragic tales that most people have not even heard of? From Imperial Consort Yang in the Tang Dynasty (618–906) to Consort Zhen in the Qing Dynasty (1644–1912), we delve into the less-than-glamorous lives of women in China’s imperial harems.