Although Apple unveiled new privacy rules with the iPhone 4 software for developers, the restrictions on data collection reportedly hasn’t prevented Google from serving ads within iPhone or iPad applications. A central reason why Apple is turning a blind eye to the third-party ads is to take FTC pressure off of the Cupertino, Calif. company, according to a Friday Wall Street Journal report.
The report quotes a developer for Conde Naste Publications that hesitates to test Apple’s willingness to enforce the new rules because iAds is the most lucrative advertising network.
Things to do over the weekend with your brand new iPhone 4, or Apple’s most fragile and shatterable handset yet? Why not strap it to a few helium balloons and send it off for a little jaunt along the troposphere. They weren’t entirely stupid, though: recovery of the iPhone 4 seems to have been assured by a long length of fishing wire.
It’s Independence Day Friday, and let’s face it, after a week of iPhone 4 reception controversy, we’re all a little tired, so let’s all take a moment to chuckle over this: Futurama‘s 31st Century parody of the Apple Store and the iPhone.
Apple issued a lengthy public apology this morning about the antenna issues plaguing the iPhone 4 while still maintaining the launch was the most successful in the Cupertino company’s history.
Will the “uh, we’re sorry” cut it?
We previewed this compact dock last January at CES in Vegas and came away impressed that Altec Lansing could make a unit so compact and relatively inexpensive sound as good as it did. When they contacted us and said they had review units available, we wondered if we’d still be as impressed with the inMotion Compact once all those mojitos had cleared our system. Turns out, the mojitos had nothing to do with it.
Despite Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ 2008 statement that “no one has succeeded” in combining the internet, movies and tv into one living-room gadget, the Cupertino, Calif. company reportedly is revamping its AppleTV software and hiring broadcast design experts for what could be a new product based on the iOS operating system running the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.
According to the New York Times, much of the new work is being done outside the Apple TV area and in a new design group, a move that “could signal an entirely new product.”
Apple Friday “emphatically denied” an emailed statement attributed to CEO Steve Jobs and quickly spread by bloggers. In an exchange over frustration with iPhone 4 reception, the head of Apple supposedly replied: “It is just a phone. Not worth it.”
The exchange, originally published by the well-known Boy Genius Report blog, then spread by dozens of other sites, supposedly included this conversation between Jobs and a blogger identified as “Tom”:
Jobs: “No, you are getting all worked up over a few rumors. Calm down.”
Jobs: “You are most likely in an area with very low signal strength.”
Jobs: “You may be working from bad data. Not your fault. Stay tuned. We are working on it.”
Jobs: “Retire, relax, enjoy your family. It is just a phone. Not worth it.”
But it turns out there’s nothing wrong with the hardware. Turns out Apple’s been using the wrong formula for calculating and displaying signal strength, and has been doing so since the 3G model came out.
So if your phone told you signal strength was four bars, it might have only been two. And where it said you had two bars, it might have been non-existent.
Oops.
The letter says:
“To fix this, we are adopting AT&T’s recently recommended formula for calculating how many bars to display for a given signal strength. The real signal strength remains the same, but the iPhone’s bars will report it far more accurately, providing users a much better indication of the reception they will get in a given area. We are also making bars 1, 2 and 3 a bit taller so they will be easier to see.”
The changes will appear in a forthcoming software update (which will also apply to 3G and 3GS models).
Apple signs off with a hopeful: “We hope you love the iPhone 4 as much as we do.”
Here’s my iPhone 3G. It’s a bit scratched and a bit cracked, but it still works just fine. At least, it did until I upgraded to iOS4.
The update turned my reliable friend into a pain in the backside. Simple things, like swiping between springboards or calling up the virtual keyboard, suddenly took an age.
In short: iOS4 on a 3G was painful.
I’m not the first to notice this, of course. You can find discussion threads about it all over the net, and a post by m’colleague Adam Rosen from earlier this week.
Quite a few kind Cult readers responded to that post with their own suggestions and comments, and I’ve been trying some of those in the last couple of days.
There’s so drama surrounding the iPhone 4 — fake Steve Jobs’ quotes, class-action lawsuits, defect claims — that the professionals at bookmaker.com have set the odds for a recall.
How likely is a recall?
Well, expert bookmaker Mickey Richardson and his team are now placing the odds 35% that the new device is recalled by July 31st and 80% that it will not be recalled within the month. (Yep, that’s over 100%. For once, the fuzzy math isn’t mine, that’s how betting odds work).
We start the day with prevention for your iPhone or iPod. First up is an anti-slip mat which you can attach to your dashboard or other surface and clings to your electronic device. Next is a “waterproof” case for your iPod. Just how waterproof may be indicated by the warning “not available for diving.” (So, you’re good-to-go when you spill your drink, but hold off playing your favorite tunes while diving to that ship wreck.) Finally, there is the Evo Cam 3 webcam software.
We’ll also check out other gadgets, including a four-foot extension cord for your iPhone. As always, details on these and many other items are available at CoM’s “Daily Deals” page right after the jump.
A poll of iPad users — 6,000 of them — found they are overwhelmingly pleased with the device.
Technologizer asked iPad owners in May how they were getting on with their new device, they were overwhelmingly pleased with battery life, speed and reliability and some 59 percent were satisfied with speed and reliability of the 3G network.
Despite claims that the iPad was nothing more than a kiddie pacifier, about 93 percent of owners surveyed said they either “frequently” (73 percent) or “occasionally” (over 20) use it instead of a traditional computer.
Some are also using it in place of smartphones, too. Over 80 percent of iPad owners surveyed are also iPhone owners, about 60 percent of respondents said they “frequently” use the iPad instead of their smartphones, another circa 25 percent “occasionally” use their iPad instead of the phone.
Does this reflect how you’re using your iPad or not?
Readers deserve to feel a bit like a ping pong ball as analysts swing back and forth on the question of whether or when Verizon Wireless will get the iPhone. What was once thought to be a moot issue gained new life earlier this week after a report suggested Apple would award the iPhone to Verizon in January 2011. Now comes an analyst who spoke with AT&T and says Verizon Wireless customers will have to wait until the second half of next year.
Oppenheimer analyst Timothy Horan made the statement to investors Thursday after what he terms an “upbeat” talk with AT&T chief financial officer Rick Lindner. “The company gave some solid reasons as to why the iPhone will not affect its financial results all that much, but also why Verizon is unlikely to get [the handset] until the second half of 2011 or later,” he wrote.
The MyWi app by Intelliborn has been one of the biggest reasons to jailbreak an iOS based device. With the latest 4.0 release, creating a wireless hotspot has never been easier. For a one-time fee of $19.99 you can turn your stingy 3G iPad into a wireless hotspot capable of sharing your 3G connection with as many devices as you wish. I’ll show you how after the break.
If the Palm Pilot was the corporate digital tool of choice in 2000, today’s boardrooms are likely to be populated with iPads, according to one venture capitalist. “In nearly every board meeting I attend, multiple iPads are unfurled,” writes David Hornik of August Capital.
Writing at VentureBlog, Hornik remarks about the button-down set: “Where once they carried Palm Pilots, now they hold an iPad under their arm. iPad is the new cool toy.”
Here’s the result: the command key stick. If you want to make your own, Laurent has published some instructions – they’re in French, but you’ll be fine with just the pictures.
Then again, if you can read French, you might enjoy Laurent’s blog about all things Apple: pomme-c.
More than half of all iOS devices detected in May were located outside the U.S., a just-released survey indicates. Apple was also the most-frequent brand found, with 44 million unique devices, according to the AdMob ad agency.
According to AdMob, 57 percent of the iOS devices it found in May were outside the United States. Although 48 percent of iOS devices, such as the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad, were found inside North America, 28 percent were from Western Europe, while 15 percent came from Asia.
On Windows, it’s easy to cut and paste files and folders between locations; but that’s one of the first things people notice missing from Mac OS X.
The Windows system works just like cutting and pasting text or pictures inside a document, which is why it’s so popular. People understand what’s happening when hit the “cut” command and the file disappears – they know it hasn’t been deleted, but that it’s gone to the clipboard, ready to be pasted elsewhere.
On OS X, things work differently. In short, there is no built-in way of “cutting” a file to the clipboard. But you can copy stuff.
The iPhone 3GS users who are not willing to upgrade or are waiting for Antenna issue to be fixed cannot use Apple’s latest iMovie suite on their device because of lack of backward compatibility, at least according to Apple. Some said that it was an issue with the smaller RAM on the device but that doesn’t seem to be the case as those who have already jailbroken their device will now be able to use it.
Among the iPhone 4 hubbub there appears to be little discussion about the performance of iOS4 on older hardware. Apple has noted that iOS4 runs in a limited fashion on the iPhone 3G, and removed many features to ensure adequate performance, but it’s not clear that goal has been met.
Last week we posted an article about using a double hard reset to improve performance after upgrading (see: Speed Up iPhone 3G + iOS4 with a Hard Reset?) The problem appears to be a widespread issue: it’s been discussed (among other places) on the Apple Support Forums, MacInTouch and AppleToolbox, and during this past week has become one of the most viewed topics on Cult of Mac.
Cupertino, I think we have a problem. Another one.
In an extraordinarily thorough review of the iPhone 4, Anandtech has gone into the reception issues of the iPhone 4’s antenna in the greatest depth yet.
Mapping the bar representation of the signal strength against the actual signal strength, Anandtech found that over 40% of the signal strength is represented by 5 bars. You need to love over 40dB of signal to go from five to four bars, but only 10db to go from four to three.
On average, the iPhone 4 loses 26.4dB of signal when tightly held in your hand, and 19.8dB of signal when held naturally… a significant jump over the 3GS when it comes to signal degradation when held, thanks to Apple’s decision to allow the iPhone 4’s antenna to come in direct contact with human skin. Since over 40dB of signal strength is measured in the fifth bar, that means that if you’re in an area of great AT&T service, you might not notice a drop at all… but it’s still happening. If you’re in an area of worse coverage, though, the signal drop will be dramatically visible.
The iPhone 4’s widely reported reception problems is the carcass, and the buzzards have been circling for awhile, but the first just dropped down for the feast: the first class action lawsuit against Apple and AT&T has just been filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Maryland, and predictably, it focuses on the iPhone 4’s antenna.
The claims are that Apple and AT&T were guilty of general negligence when it comes to the iPhone 4’s reception issues, with Apple specifically guilty when it comes to a defect in the design, manufacture and assembly of the iPhone 4. Additionally, Apple is cited for a breach of warranty, while AT&T and Apple both are accused of deceptive trade practices, intentional and negligent misrepresentation and fraud by concealment.
The lawsuit was filed by Ward & Ward, PLLC and Charles A. Gilman, LLC. on behalf of Kevin McCaffrey, Linda Wrinn and a number of other iPhone 4 users… and it’s not likely to be the last one filed, since the same firm that sued Facebook and Zynga is said to be looking into their own suit.
This is one design decision that is turning into a major headache for Apple, whether the iPhone 4 has a design flaw or no.
I was still shooting JPG on my digital camera until a few months ago, but buying a new MacBook and being given a copy of Aperture gave me a chance to switch to shooting RAW.
That also meant a new workflow for managing and editing photos. I didn’t want my Aperture library to be filled up with crud, so I decided to import images to a folder and manually weed out the useless shots before transferring what remains to Aperture.
After doing this in a Finder window I realised I needed a better tool for the job, so I went looking for lightweight image browsers.
The Core77 design blog has scored a rare interview with Jonathan Ive, ostensibly about the iPhone 4, but really about the way a physical and emotional connection to raw materials can not be extracurricular to design.
“It is that direct experience, the hands-on, that is the key; like experiencing the iPhone 4 itself, it cannot be done without the physical connection. “It’s very hard to learn about materials academically, by reading about them or watching videos about them; the only way you truly understand a material is by making things with it,” Ive explains, going on to add that years upon years of making his own models with his own hands is what gave him a deep understanding of the materials he’s worked. “And it’s important to develop that appetite to want to make something, to be inquisitive about the material world, to want to truly understand a material on that level.”
It’s a fantastic read: an uncommon glimpse into the mind of one of the most brilliant (and soft-spoken) visionaries in tech. Very much worth a read.
The upcoming release of Tron Legacy is going to be heralded by an glut of tie-in crap, but this Tron-brandediPod dock may be one of the better products of the bunch.
Designed to emulate the iconic, glowing identity disc / fatal frisbee of the Tron films, this dock is a collaboration between Disney and Monter, and it shows… at least in aesthetics. Features-wise, though, there doesn’t seem to be a lot separating this from your usual $100 dock, which makes the $249.99 asking price a bit hard to swallow. Fanboys only.