Apple made a pretty smart choice (dare I say…genius choice?) when it named its in-store repair service the Genius Bar. The name aims to assure customers their broken device is in the right hands—but it also subtly downplays people’s inherent skills. It suggests they are not qualified to tackle a shattered screen or puffy battery. So many take their iPhones and iPads and MacBooks to the Genius Bar, presuming Apple employees must perform some “repair magic” behind a big curtain.
We are the geniuses, Apple says, not you. You cannot begin to know what goes on in that complicated little box.
We proved them wrong three years ago, when we gathered ordinary people around the world and showed them that they can fix their devices. These fixers—students, brewery managers, healthcare workers, YouTubers—proved you don’t need magic powers, a super-brain, or a fruit-logo polo shirt to do a repair.

Apple eventually started to come around. Late last year, Apple announced its program to sell parts and tools for iPhone 12 and 13 repair to individuals, with plans to add more devices later. Apple finally realized that everyone is a Genius, and with the right knowledge and tools, anyone can do a repair.
To celebrate, we want to share stories of everyone’s Genius. We want to show the world that we’re all capable of fixing the things we own. So we’re giving away $100 to the iFixit store to a lucky fixer. For the rest of January, we’re asking you to post pictures of your successful screen swaps, share videos about your kid’s first repair, or tell us what you’re planning to fix. Make sure to use the hashtag #ImaGenius and tag us @ifixit on Twitter and Instagram so we can see it! We’ll announce the winner on our blog on February 4.
We don’t need Apple’s permission to fix the devices we bought from them. But we can prove—to Apple, to ourselves, and to the world—that we are all Geniuses, and we can fix anything.
20 commentaires
iFixit’s tools have made it very easy to fix both MacBooks and Chromebooks in our environment. I’ve replaced several MacBook batteries, two motherboards, two displays, and a couple of daughter boards and hard drives. Being able to have both the correct tools/bits and the step-by-step replacement manual has been invaluable for our rural district that doesn’t have the time or the funds to ship equipment off for repair or to pay for labor locally.
Mike Oliveri - Réponse
iFixit has all the many useful tutorials as well as tools and supplies to get your project off the ground!
Jared Baumann - Réponse
The disassembly instructions are priceless.
trackerman - Réponse
Bummer you can’t quality if you don’t use social media, but I used the guide to the iPhone 8+ to fix the lightning port and extended the life of that phone. Even left a couple of comments of things I thought might be helpful to others along the way. iFixit and the community of contributors are critical to my ability to fix all the things I want to.
J.Garrecht Metzger - Réponse
So now we're required to use Twitter to enter a contest? So sad after putting lots of money into great tools, so much so that I even bought some as a surprise BDay gift for a good friend. Preciously I bought one of the biggest sets you have for my computer projects. Working on upgrading my new ASUS ROG Strix G15 Advantage to 64gb RAM & adding a Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2tb as the secondary drive, for gaming on travel. Prwciously upgraded my old iMac to 6gb RAM where Apple said 4gb max, until it died last year. Also replaced a cooling fan in a PS4 for a friends step-brother who thought it was dead. Hope you think of your customers as more than advertising on social media.
Charles Archibald - Réponse