John Brownlee is a writer for Fast Company, and a contributing writer here at CoM. He has also written for Wired, Playboy, Boing Boing, Popular Mechanics, VentureBeat, and Gizmodo. He lives in Boston with his wife and two parakeets. You can follow him here on Twitter.
So apparently, that iPhone DSLR mount we posted on Friday wouldnât actually work in real life, but thatâs not to say that hooking a SLR lens up to your iPhone 4 is total madness: the guys over at vid-atlantic did just that, hooking their iPhone 4 up with a Canon EF 50mm f1.8 lens, and the resulting video is striking: for all of the mock-ups and rigs going around right now of SLRs Frankensteined together with iPhone 4s, I didnât actually know the quality of the resulting footage would look so impressive. Impractically impressive, sure, but impressive none the less!
You might have heard: Appleâs giving a free case away to every iPhone 4 owner who even softly complains about their new smartphoneâs reception. Needless to say, then, that their heretofore $30 bumper case is now going to be in short supply as Apple tries to handle freebie demand⌠so itâs ultimately no surprise that their rainbow assortment of bumper cases are now unavailable for purchase from Appleâs online store. Hope no one had their heart set on buying one!
Appleâs public relations problems with the iPhone 4 antenna reached critical mass last week when Consumer Reports said they could not recommend their readers purchase an iPhone 4 because of their issue. In many ways, then, yesterdayâs press conference was a specific response to the well-respected consumer advocacy site.
So did Jobs change Consumer Reportsâ mind on the issue? Nope.
Consumer Reports believes Appleâs offer of free cases is a good first step. However, Apple has indicated that this is not a long-term solution, it has guaranteed the offer only through September 30th, and has not extended it unequivocally to customers who bought cases from third-party vendors. We look forward to a long-term fix from Apple. As things currently stand, the iPhone 4 is still not one of our Recommended models.
Itâll be interesting to see third-party tests on these reported smartphone death grips. For the iPhone 3GS, at least, Appleâs claims of attenuation seem more profound than reported actuality in most of the cases Iâve seen.
Since Apple specifically called other smartphones out in his response today to the iPhone 4 Reception Issues, it was only a matter of time (and not much at that) before other smartphone companies took their own potshots back.
Antenna design is a complex subject and has been a core competence at Nokia for decades, across hundreds of phone models. Nokia was the pioneer in internal antennas; the Nokia 8810, launched in 1998, was the first commercial phone with this feature.
Nokia has invested thousands of man hours in studying human behavior, including how people hold their phones for calls, music playing, web browsing and so on. As you would expect from a company focused on connecting people, we prioritize antenna performance over physical design if they are ever in conflict.
In general, antenna performance of a mobile device/phone may be affected with a tight grip, depending on how the device is held. Thatâs why Nokia designs our phones to ensure acceptable performance in all real life cases, for example when the phone is held in either hand. Nokia has invested thousands of man hours in studying how people hold their phones and allows for this in designs, for example by having antennas both at the top and bottom of the phone and by careful selection of materials and their use in the mechanical design.
If only Nokia didnât prioritize everything over design? Am I right? Hey-o!
If you pull back and look at the grand scheme of things when it comes to the globe as a whole, a Verizon iPhone 4 doesnât make so much sense: Verizon uses the CDMA protocol, and thatâs not an international standard, so why would Apple bother?
Yet bother, they might very well being. During todayâs questions and answers session, Jobs mentioned having Verizon cell sites on the Cupertino campus.
As 9 to 5 Mac notes, cell sites cost a buttload, so Appleâs got them for a reason.
Is Apple covering their bases? Or is the Verizon iPhone imminent? My guess is Apple is as sick of AT&Tâs garish ineptitude and poor customer service as anyone, and theyâd be willing to plunk down some significant change to have a chance of giving them the boot domestically.
In the wake of the iPhone 4 Antenna Press Conference, some smaller news: the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is now reporting that the San Mateo County District Attorneyâs Office has withdrawn the search warrant used to seize items from Gizmodo editor Jason Chenâs home earlier in the year, after Gizmodo published full details of a leaked iPhone 4 prototype that Apple alleges was stolen.
Although the EFF has continuously stressed that the search warrant used to enter Chenâs home and confiscate his computers was illegal because it violated a prohibition against warrants for âunpublished information obtained or prepared in gathering, receiving or processing of information for communication to the public,â the warrant was repealed not by court order, but because of Gizmodoâs own cooperation.
According to Gawkerâs COO and legal advisor Gaby Darbyshire, Gizmodo agreed to voluntarily give the district attorney access to materials that a court appointee deems relevant.
In other words, Gizmodo is still under investigation for any wrong doing, but San Mateo County will no longer hold onto Jason Chenâs personal property by force: rather, heâll be co-operating with them and delivering anything they request going forward.
If one thing was crystal clear from Steve Jobsâ remarks during todayâs iPhone 4 Antenna Press Conference, it was that he blamed the tech press for âoverblowingâ the iPhone 4âs reception issues, and was downright contemptuous of tech journalists as a whole.
âI guess itâs just human nature that when you see someone get successful you want to tear it downâŚâ Steve Jobs said at one point. âSometimes I feel that in the search for eyeballs, [journalists] donât care about what they leave in their wake.â
Fielding a question from Engadget about a recent New York Times report, Jobs further attacked tech writers. âGo talk to the Times, because you guys talk to yourselves a lot. Theyâre just making this stuff up.â
Even Steveâs parting shot was aimed at the credibility of the tech journalists. âThanks for coming. I wish we could have done this [had the press conference] in the first 48 hours, but then you wouldnât have had anything to write about.â
Iâm certainly not here to defend the press against Jobsâ accusations of sensationalism. He may be right: the iPhone 4 Antenna Issue is the Amy Winehouse of tech right now. On the sensationalism of the press, Iâd argue that the job of the journalist is not to report the status quo, but to report the exceptional. Over the past three weeks, the iPhone 4âs antenna issues have been an exceptional problem, and so weâve covered it extensively.
But you know what else is exceptional? Apple and its products. And what Jobs has conveniently forgotten is that ever since he returned to Apple back in 1997, the tech press has collectively been the tireless advocate of both, and written about Appleâs excellence as the rule â not the exception â with every year that has passed.
Asked if he has learned anything from Antennagate, Steve Jobsâ response basically boils down to one thing: haters gonna hate.
â I guess itâs just human nature, when you see someone get successful you just want to tear it down,â said Jobs.
âLook at everything theyâve created. Would you prefer weâre Korean companies? Do you not like the fact that weâre an American company leading the world right here?â
Am I reading that right? Did Jobs just say that people shouldnât criticize Apple as much as other companies because they are Americans? Yeesh.
Luckily he followed it with a better argument:
âI look at this and think wow. Apple has been around 30 years. Havenât we earned the credibility and trust that weâre going to take care of our users?â
âOf course weâre human, of course weâll make mistakes,â admits Jobs. âBut sometimes I feel that in search of eyeballs for these web sites, people donât care about what they leave in their wake.â
Like dipped Apple stock value, perhaps?
âWe werenât just innocents in this. But the reaction has been so overblown.â
Jobs ended his answer with a plea. âHelp us out here.â
Answering a question about whether or not Apple will refund users who already bought an iPhone 4 case, Jobs candidly explained what should be obvious: Appleâs secrecy about new products is all about not tipping people off that they should wait for a new product before they buy.
âWeâre not going to refund the 3rd party cases â itâs a very small number because we didnât sell as many cases because we didnât share the phone design with case manufacturers in advance of launch. But now we kind of wish there were more cases out there!â Jobs laughs.
âItâs really simple why: when people find out about your new product, they stop buying your old products. Sometimes websites buy stolen prototypes and put âem on the web, and we donât care for that. But if we give the designs to case makers, they have a history of putting them up on the web as well.â
âThe case vendors havenât had a history of helping us through that. Itâs a conundrum,â admits Jobs. â Weâll consider things on a case by case basis.â Groan.
In a Q&A after the iPhone 4 Antenna Press Conference, Steve Jobs says that Apple is happy with the antenna design of the iPhone 4 and they wonât be redesigning it.
âWeâre happy with the antenna design of iPhone 4⌠itâs better than 3gs in every way,â says Jobs. âLooking at the data, we donât think we have a problem.â
Instead, he blames Apple accidentally painting a bullseye on the iPhone 4âs antenna design. âIf we were to fault the iPhone 4, itâs that we waved a red flag in front of the bull by putting a âgrip me hereâ mark on the iPhone 4,â by which he means the black lines marking the separation between antennas.
Steve Jobs is closing up the iPhone 4 Antenna Press Conference by re-asserting Appleâs love and commitment to its users.
âWe love our users,â Jobs said. âWe try very hard to surprise and delight them, and work our asses off doing it. But we have a blast doing it. What motivates us is for ours users to love our products and connect them with great apps and content.â
âWhen we fall short, we try harder,â Jobs says. âAnd when we succeed our users reward us by staying loyal. Thatâs what drives us. And when we have problems like this and people are criticizing us, we take it personally. Maybe we shouldnât, but we do.â
âAt the end of the day, we think weâve gotten to the heart of the problem, and the heart is that smartphones have weak spots,â claims Jobs.
âBut the data supports the fact that the iPhone 4 is the best smartphone in the world. There is no âAntennagate.â There is simply a challenge for the entire smartphone industry to improve its antenna performance to where thereâs no weak spots.â
Now that Appleâs iPhone 4 Antenna Fix is out of the bag â free cases, software update â Jobs is closing up the conference by covering some miscellaneous issues.
First, Jobs knows thereâs a proximity sensor issue with the iPhone 4, and there will be software fix coming sometime soon.
Apple hasnât forgotten the white iPhone 4 either. Itâll be shipping at the end of July.
Also coming at the end of July (specifically, July 30th?) The iPhone 4 will be rolled out to 17 more countries.
After laying all the data groundwork, Jobs has just announced what they will be doing about the iPhone 4 reception issues⌠perceived or no.
First of all, they just released iOS 4.0.1 which changes the signal display algorithm yesterday.
Second, free casesfor everyone: the bumpers solve the death grip issue, so now everyone will get one free of charge for every iPhone 4 through September 30th. In September, theyâll re-examine the issue and see if they have a better idea.
Apple will be mailing out the cases themselves, but since they canât make enough bumpers themselves, theyâll be mailing out a selection of cases, some third-party.
Interested? You can apply for a free case next week. Pick your own case and theyâll mail it off.
Finally, still unhappy with the iPhone 4? You can still bring it back for any reason within 30 days for a full refund, no 10% restocking fee charged.
The comparisons between the iPhone 4 and the iPhone 3GS arenât all good though, Jobs has just admitted.
According to Jobs, the iPhone 4 definitely drops more calls than the 3GS. However, he insists this is still less than one dropped call per hundred.
Whatâs Jobsâ theory about this? He says itâs because 80% of 3GS customers accompanied their purchase with a case, while only 20% of iPhone 4 customers do.
Maybe you should have been quicker to get those bumpers out there then, Apple. Here come the freebies, I bet.
So whatâs the extent of consumer dissatisfaction with the iPhone 4? According to Jobs, itâs minimal.
âWe have some really interesting data from AppleCare, we looked at the statistics, we asked whatâs the percentage of all iPhone 4 users that have called AppleCare about the antenna or reception, or anything near reception problems. Because you would have thought âJeez, it must be a lot of users complaining about this'â
âSo what percentage have called AppleCare?â asks Jobs. â 0.55% Just one half of one percent.â
AT&T confirms Appleâs findings, saying that their return rate is just one-third of what it was for the 3GS.
One take-away Steve Jobs wants us all to know is that Appleâs serious about antenna.
How serious? They have a state of the art antenna testing facility, with 17 anechoic chambers. Itâs a $100MM investment, and employes 18 PhD scientists and engineers working in reception.
In these reception chambers, which as Leander notes, look straight out of Terry Gilliamâs Brazil, Apple noticed the death grip issue⌠but found it acceptable, since it is prevalent in the smartphone industry.
Steve Jobs has just argued that all phones have a problem with the death grip. But he still says Apple is culpable of making a mistake.
âWe went to a lot of trouble to put this beautiful line in the stainless steel band,â Jobs said, pointing to the iPhone 4 antenna. âThis was to say, âHereâs where you touch it everbody!'â
âThe problem is we had incorrect bars, so when it did drop the drop looked far more catastrophic.â
âWe screwed up on our algorithm,â Jobs admits.
âTo fix this, we decided to put the correct algorithm into iOS 4.0.1. Your bars will still drop in a death grip, but all smartphones seems to do that.â
According to Jobs, the perception of an iPhone 4 problem is real.
âWeâve been getting reports of people having issues with the antenna system when they touch this spot here, âJobs said, pointing at the âDeath Gripâ spot.
âWe only heard about this 22 days ago. Itâs not like weâve had our heads in the sand about it for months.â
âWeâve been working on it, and no we want to share what weâve learned.â
âFirst of all, âJobs said, âItâs not unique to the iPhone 4. You can go on YouTube and see videos of other phones doing the same thing.â
To prove the point, Jobs demos videos of the Blackberry, the Samsung Omnia 2 and HTC Droid Eris dropping bars. The Droid Eris video is particularly severe: it shows the Eris dropping from four bars down to zero over the course of a minute.
âThis is life in the smartphone world,â says Jobs. âPhones arenât perfect. Weâre all doing the best we can.â
In case Appleâs humility in this isnât apparent, the slide backing up Jobsâ words says âWeâre not perfect.â
Steve Jobs has just taken the stage at Appleâs iPhone 4 Antenna press conference.
âWeâre not perfect,â Jobs starts off by saying, âAnd phones arenât perfect either, but we want to make all of our users happy. We love making them happy. Weâre going to talk about how weâre going to do that today. But first, letâs talk about the data weâve got. Is the iPhone 4 making consumers happy?â
Jobs says it is. He says itâs been judged the number one smartphone by numerous publications, and has sold over 3M in three weeks.
People are clearly happy with the iPhone 4 as a device. Jobsâ evidence is compelling. Itâs the phone and reception problems that need some work. Next up: Jobs explains the problem.
Apple has just kicked off a press conference responding to the much publicized iPhone 4 reception problems and the so-called âGrip of Death,â but to start things out, a dose of humor⌠they are now playing the iPhone Antenna Song to the collected audience.
Does this mean Apple thinks the iPhone 4 antenna issues are a joke, or just trying to lighten the proceedings? My moneyâs on the latter. Good start, Apple!
If youâre looking for a quirky puzzler to whittle away your time over the weekend, I canât recommend Helsingâs Fire enough: a hysterically written and unique puzzle game with an astonishing amount of playtime for just $0.99.
Plot-wise, the game follows Dr. Helsing and Rafton in their attempts to save London from a plague of vampires, ghouls, werewolves and other monsters. The gameplay is based upon dynamic lighting puzzles: you are given a limited number of torches and color-coded tonics to kill a set number of monsters per level. By shining your torch upon a monster and then using a tonic on it of the same color, you hit any monster illuminated by your torch with a killer shockwave. But itâs not quite so simple: hit a monster with the wrong tonic and they gain a shield, some monsters are protected by multiple shields, and your tonics also have an unfortunate splatter effect on helpless Victorian babes whom you must protect.
In truth, I could recommend the game for the congratulatory fist bump performed by Dr. Helsing and Rafton upon the successful completion of a level alone⌠but the gameplay is truly captivating as well. With over 90 levels and three separate endless modes, Helsingâs Fire is an absolute steal of a value. Give it a whirl.
Quirky is a fantastic crowd-sourced community design site that takes strong ideas and turns them into real products. Their latest creation, though, may be something of a misstep, at least when it comes to design: the Tilt Bumper Case for iPhone 4 is utterly ghastly. And you thought the stock Apple bumpers bumpers were ugly.
That said, look beyond aesthetics and youâll find the Quirky Tilt has some impressive functionality. For one, it works as a kickstand: the bottom of the bumper is hinged, allowing you to prop your iPhone 4 up in both portrait and landscape mode. Also, the indented portion in the middle is designed to allow you to coil your earbuds around.
If you want one, get in on the action quick: the Tilt will only be produced in a batch of 990 cases, and each costs $28.
The Mac Pro is about due for another update, and while Steve Jobs has pretty explicitly ruled out Blu-Ray support in any foreseeable Mac refreshes, the sometimes-reliable French rumor site Hard Mac now claims that one of their âbetter sourcesâ has indicated that we can expect USB 3.0 in the next update.
Although USB 3.0 in itself would be a nice addition to the Mac line-up, allowing data transfer rates of up to 4.8GBps, thatâs not all that Cupertino has up its sleeves: they also intend to upgrade Firewire to Firewire 1600 or even 3200, according to HardMac⌠standards first seen back in 2008, and fully backwards compatible with FireWire 400 and 800.
Finally, HardMac claims that while Apple is interested in Intelâs Light Peak, a standard which they have been heavily rumored to have inspired. Unfortunately, Apple doesnât feel that Light Peak is ready for prime-time yet, and are holding off on this generation before they implement it.
Weâve seen SLR lenses inexplicably Frankensteined onto iPhones before, but the âiPhone DSLR prototypeâ might just end up being final word on grafting an SLR lens onto an iPhone.
The iPhone DSLR is a 1.1lb mount made of anodized billet aluminum with dual handle grips and a tripod mount capable of filtering the light from a Canon SLR lens into the iPhoneâs tiny sensor.
Personally, Iâm not quite sure I get the point: no matter how good the lens, an iPhoneâs picture is ultimately going to be hobbled by its tiny, noisy sensor. I suppose, as usual, this is a âbecause itâs thereâ proposition. But where would geek ingenuity be if not for the gleeful solving of imaginary and utterly surreal problems? God bless the Internet.