dogtired78
Well-known member
Hi Everyone,
I'm working on my garage / workshop and my brother-in-law dropped by with an old 32" LCD tv that he was going to toss after remodeling his company's lounge. He gave it to me in exchange for some work I did for him a while back.
Anyway, I cleaned it up, tested it (it works fine and even has a built in DVD player), and mounted it on my wall. I connected my wife's old iPhone to the TV using an HDMI splitter and now I'm able to stream Netflix and Verizon FIOS (our cable tv provider) from the web to the phone to the TV. I tried it yesterday and it was pretty neat to get CNN in the workshop!
My question is: what would folks recommend in terms of leaving the iPhone plugged in 24/7? It's not a phone anymore...just a tiny computer.
I'm concerned about battery fires - I've seen the horror stories of fires from lithium batteries in phones even when they weren't plugged in.
I'm thinking of creating a little metal bucket-like mount for it to sit in out in the garage. Do you think that would be sufficient (in conjunction with my smoke detectors) to mitigate a fire risk?
I'm working on my garage / workshop and my brother-in-law dropped by with an old 32" LCD tv that he was going to toss after remodeling his company's lounge. He gave it to me in exchange for some work I did for him a while back.
Anyway, I cleaned it up, tested it (it works fine and even has a built in DVD player), and mounted it on my wall. I connected my wife's old iPhone to the TV using an HDMI splitter and now I'm able to stream Netflix and Verizon FIOS (our cable tv provider) from the web to the phone to the TV. I tried it yesterday and it was pretty neat to get CNN in the workshop!
My question is: what would folks recommend in terms of leaving the iPhone plugged in 24/7? It's not a phone anymore...just a tiny computer.
I'm thinking of creating a little metal bucket-like mount for it to sit in out in the garage. Do you think that would be sufficient (in conjunction with my smoke detectors) to mitigate a fire risk?