Captain N said:Anyone else have problems where you'll be scrolling a page as it's loading and the phone just randomly shoots you back into the main menu? It drives me crazy because I need to go ahead and try to load the page again and it seems to do it over and over again to me.
Duane Cunningham said:The only reason Apple would try to break the unlocking would be at AT&T's request. It's really in Apple's interests to turn a blind eye to it. Letting the unlock hack be certainly increases their bottom line.
Duane Cunningham said:The only reason Apple would try to break the unlocking would be at AT&T's request. It's really in Apple's interests to turn a blind eye to it.
Duane Cunningham said:The only reason Apple would try to break the unlocking would be at AT&T's request. It's really in Apple's interests to turn a blind eye to it. Letting the unlock hack be certainly increases their bottom line. And I'm sure T-Mobile, Rogers, Fido etc think it's fantastic... behind some closed doors it's possible they'd persuade Apple to take it easy on the unlock. You know T-Mobile has added some "Blackberry plans" to existing customers over the last week since the hack went public.
Kung Fu Jedi said:No way is it in Apple's best interest. Yes, the still get the cash for the sale of the phone, but as others have noted, they also get some of the revenue from AT&T. And they're not going to let other carriers persuade them to do anything "behind closed doors" as in the real business world they have established a relationship with AT&T.
Also, the average Joe consumer couldn't care less about modding the iPhone to switch to another carrier. This is a small sub-set of gadget/technology geeks. It's not going to impact Apple's bottom line by that much.
SuperPac said:It could potentially if businesses spring up (and some already have, if I'm not mistaken) with the sole purpose of selling unlocked phones to the masses. That's why I think it's especially in Apple's interest to keep things locked down, and I would not be surprised to see the next firmware update put the kibosh on unlocks, hacks and mods.
Terrell said:Fixed.
Appleinsider said:The Apple boss was seemingly more willing to discuss the company's stance on iPhone unlocks and third-party application development. "This is constant cat-and-mouse game," he said of the ongoing attempts to untether the handset from its intended carriers. "[P]eople are going to try and break in and it's our job to try and stop them."
Phoenix said:And so the war begins...
border said:I doubt that unlocked iPhones will ever be a commodity outside of eBay.
I also doubt that they'll be able to stay ahead of the unlockers, at this point. No other phone maker has been able to.
border said:I doubt that unlocked iPhones will ever be a commodity outside of eBay.
I also doubt that they'll be able to stay ahead of the unlockers, at this point. No other phone maker has been able to.
Bungaloo0O said:Only true if you never plan on updating your iPhone. This isn't a Razr we're talking about, accidentally update and you're out of a phone for as long as it takes for someone to update the unlock string.
SuperPac said:Certainly different than the "well, we won't do anything to stop it" comment that was so widely spread around.
Kung Fu Jedi said:Exactly what I was thinking. Apple has plans for the iPhone, and frequent updates are amongst them. Every time there is a new update with something you'd like to use, you also risk losing your phone for days or weeks at a time.
quadriplegicjon said:he's made both comments. so its weird.
SuperPac said:It wasn't Jobs that made the first comment -- it was Greg Joswiak.
eXxy said:Updating's not exactly mandatory, and you act like Engadget/Gizmodo won't test out phones the MOMENT a new update is out. Then, you know whether to clear your iPhone of hacks before upgrading, wait for new versions to it, etc. Who loses in this situation? I get the feeling in this thread that some of the non-modders somehow look down upon those that do.
quadriplegicjon said:ah. couldve sworn it was jobs. anyway, its still weird that the company would put out two very conflicting statements.
quadriplegicjon said:ah. couldve sworn it was jobs. anyway, its still weird that the company would put out two very conflicting statements.
Kung Fu Jedi said:I think you have a clear cut case of one person in the company speaking off the cuff, which got the Internet buzzing, but caused the company to define it's stance a little further. And when Jobs speaks, he is defining the company line.
Tobor said:Get out of my head, Jedi! :lol
SuperPac said:
I'd say that the 3rd party apps have put most hackers months ahead of the curve. Maybe when Apple actually does a useful update people will care, but I don't think crap like pay-to-play ringtones will make people wish they could upgrade faster and more reliably.Kung Fu Jedi said:All I'm sayng is that when you unlock or mod, you're likely to be behind the curve when it comes to updates and features. And you could possibly be weeks or months behind the curve.
border said:I'd say that the 3rd party apps have put most hackers months ahead of the curve. Maybe when Apple actually does a useful update people will care, but I don't think crap like pay-to-play ringtones will make people wish they could upgrade faster and more reliably.
ckohler said:Not sure if this was mentioned, Engadget has lots of screenshots of the version 1.1.1 firmware there are a lot more features than we originally thought.
Engadget Article
versatile.vox.com Article
* Now Playing controls on every screen via an overlay
* Double clicking the home button can be set to go directly to "Favorites" or "iPod"
* TV Video out(!)
* Closed captioning support
* Multiple international keyboards.
* Double tap the spacebar for a ". "
* Network setup with VPN support
* Disable/Enable EDGE Roaming
* iTunes Wifi Store
* New Calculator icon
Whether youre an Apple fanboy or not, this bit of news is sure to piss some people off. Recent owners of the iPod Classic and Nano will have to repurchase any and all games they purchased for previous models because, according to Apple, the games have been reformatted. Maybe not all the games, but so far we know that Tetris, Sudoku, and Ms. Pac-Man have been reformatted with 15 additional titles in queue. Grrrr.
ckohler said:Not sure if this was mentioned, Engadget has lots of screenshots of the version 1.1.1 firmware there are a lot more features than we originally thought.
SuperPac said:Seems like a lot of good nips/tucks/tweaks are present here. The Wifi Store is a good first new application but I wish we had more indication of what else they have in store for the next couple months. And if they showed off phones with the new firmware in London already, what's holding up the rollout in the US?
border said:I'd say that the 3rd party apps have put most hackers months ahead of the curve. Maybe when Apple actually does a useful update people will care, but I don't think crap like pay-to-play ringtones will make people wish they could upgrade faster and more reliably.
WordAssassin said:Why did they change the Calculator icon? Do they not have division in Europe?
shantyman said:My second iPhone is F'd. It constantly draws power all day since a software restore on monday. I actively used it about 30 minutes yesterday and the battery was down to 10% with over 9 hours of usage.
On top of that, it won't shut off. When I do a hard shut down it restarts on its own. WTF
SuperPac said:Actually now the icon matches the look of the calculator app itself, so... it's BETTER!
74 degrees translates to roughly 23 celcius.Flo_Evans said:It looks like the weather icon updates now and tells you the current temp... unless the EU model is always saying 23 Celsius....![]()