Apple HomePod damages wooden furniture with white stains 'in 20 minutes'

Apple's new homepod in white and black
Apple's new HomePod leaves stains on wooden furniture Credit: AP

Apple has admitted its new HomePod smartspeaker can damage wooden surfaces, but its only suggestion is that concerned customers move their speaker to avoid the white stains.

The HomePod, which costs £319, was found to leave unsightly marks on wood in as little as 20 minutes after the smartspeaker went on sale last week.

Apple has put the stains down to the oils in the HomePod's silicon base interacting with wooden surfaces, but so far its only remedy to stop the damage is moving the HomePod to another surface.

The problem was reported by the Wirecutter, a technology reviews website. "This really undermines the design aspect of the HomePod, especially if you were thinking of displaying it on some prized piece of furniture," reviewer John Chase wrote. "It will surely be a sore point for many potential buyers."

One HomePod buyer claimed online the speaker "left rings on my wood furniture in less than 20 minutes of use". Reviewers Pocket-lint also confirmed how quickly the damage could appear.

Apple has acknowledged the problem on its customer support page, but so far its only suggestion to tackle the problem is to move the speaker.

"It is not unusual for any speaker with a vibration-damping silicone base to leave mild marks when placed on some wooden surfaces," Apple said.

Apple said the marks should disappear over several days, and if not "wiping the surface gently with a soft damp or dry cloth may remove the marks".

It added: "If you’re concerned about this, we recommend placing your HomePod on a different surface."

The HomePod was billed as Apple's high-end answer to Amazon's Echo smartspeakers, powered by its Siri virtual assistant to provide voice control, read the news and answer questions, as well as providing access to millions of songs.

It's not the first design flaw from Apple's new products. The company recently told its engineers to scale back the rate of updates for its iOS 11 software to avoid a string of bugs that have been found in recent updates.

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