Friday, 31 August 2007

The Top Five Rumors About Apple’s Big Announcement



Beatles on iTunes? Touchscreen iPod? The Top Five Rumors About Apple’s Big Announcement


It’s official, the famously secretive Apple will announce something having to do with iTunes, the new iPod or even the iPhone, on September 5th.

The company, which is known for its Willy-Wonka levels of secrecy about new products and announcements, sent out invites to a few thousand journalists, analysts and other industry folks that feature a picture of the Cover Flow scrolling-album-artwork feature familiar to anyone with iTunes or an iPhone. So even though that gives us a hint that the announcement will be music-related, we still don’t have a clue what the specific news will be. And neither does anyone else, but this hasn’t stopped the blogosphere rumor mill from swirling, intensely.

We scoured the Internet to find what we think are the five most likely Apple announcements next week. Just know that Steve Jobs could surprise us all and do something completely different.


Touchscreen iPod: There’s no doubt that the addition of the touchscreen and Cover Flow feature to the iPhone made it the best iPod ever, so it’s time to spread the love to Apple’s non-cell-phone handheld icon. Rumors of a touchscreen à la iPhone have been swirling ever since an Asia-based tech rumor site revealed the Taiwanese company that was to provide the touchscreens for a new iPod. The Beatles catalog on iTunes at last: First Paul McCartney, then John Lennon made it to iTunes (Ringo’s post-Beatles work was added today, and word has it George Harrison is coming up soon). Now that the lawsuit over the Apple name has been long resolved, it’s time for the Beatles catalog to get on iTunes’s virtual shelves.

This will likely be the cherry on top of any bigger iPod announcements. The ironic thing is, after years of such careful protection and avoidance of online distribution, the Beatles’ songs will finally get sold in the least protected way possible, with non-DRM tunes from EMI!

Get yer CD rippers ready! Wi-Fi download store for iTunes: Following in the footsteps of the Zune, Music Gremlin and the Sansa Connect (with Yahoo! Music Unlimited), a Wi-Fi download store that lets users download right to a wireless-enabled iPod sounds sweet.

This rumor has been going around for a while, and just resurfaced yesterday. It’s certainly possible, but we think Apple will limit Wi-Fi to the iPhone for now. Adding communication capabilities to the iPod just cannibalizes iPhone sales — and who wants an Internet Tablet or device, anyway (we talking about “Internet-surfing,” but not much else, devices as the Sony Mylo, the PepperPad and the Nokia Internet Tablet). Nanos with bigger memories: The main cool thing about the Nano is it doesn’t have any moving parts because it uses Flash memory instead of a hard disk. Problem is, Flash memory didn’t come in larger sizes, until now.

So a pint-sized Nano with more memory would be a very welcome thing indeed. Incidentally, there are also rumors of a Shuffle with more memory, which means you could seriously bring your whole music collection to the gym with you. The European iPhone: This is almost a given, since Apple has been talking about a fall launch for the iPhone since June.

Only question is, which carriers and which countries will get the iPhone first? Our money is on France, England and Germany, the three Euro countries that download illegal music the least (at least according to our Madrileno tech writer friend Angel Jimenez, who writes for Spain’s largest daily newspaper, El Mundo).

This announcement is likely, particularly since Apple just launched TV show downloads on iTunes in the U.K., for nearly four times the price (almost $4!) it costs Stateside. Bonus Rumor: Ringtones This is also looking very solid: According to reports, for a small fee you will be able to make ringtones on your iPhone out of tracks for sale at the iTunes Stone.





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The iPhone has been unlocked. Sadly, it's still not really free




I've long been following the work of the #iPhone dev team, the group of hackers who made early progress toward -- but have not yet pulled off -- untethering Apple's phone from AT&T's network. The team consists of true hackers -- computer geniuses spread across the world, many of them kids, who are trying to open up the phone mainly for the challenge of it.

At the same time, though, other groups have also been attempting to break the iPhone away from AT&T; today one of those crews, a for-profit outfit called iPhoneSIMFree.com, revealed that it had done the deed.


Engadget's Ryan Block got the delicious scoop firsthand: "Last night the impossible was made possible: right in front of our very eyes we witnessed a full SIM unlock of our iPhone with a small piece of software," Block wrote today. "It's all over, guys."
So the iPhone's been unlocked. It's a great moment: Through software alone -- that is, without the need for opening or soldering anything -- one of the worst limitations of Apple's phone, its Siamese attachment to AT&T's unspectacular cell service has been instantly eliminated.


Block writes that the hack is completely painless to install, and takes only a couple minutes to complete. After running the patch, the Engadget team swapped an active T-Mobile SIM card into their iPhone and "we immediately got full bars and the T-Mobile carrier info popped up in the top bar," Block says.


In the U.S., T-Mobile is the only service other than AT&T that can carry the iPhone's signals, which are in a mobile protocol known as GSM. In the rest of the world -- where the iPhone has yet to debut -- there are many carriers whose networks are capable of handling the iPhone, so this hack is potentially most useful for foreigners or frequent travelers. Most iPhone functions work on the hacked system -- text messaging, the Internet functions, the phone -- but visual voice mail, which AT&T built into its network specifically for the iPhone, is a no-go.


But the iPhone is still not really free. IPhoneSIMFree is holding on to its innovation with an iron fist. The company will begin taking orders for individual licenses of the unlocking software next week -- price yet to be announced. The company says it's currently taking bulk orders; minimum quantity 500.


The software will be closed-source, meaning that the keys to the iPhone's heart are, despite this trick, still widely unknown. This is an important caveat to the news; if the iPhone is unlocked but only one company knows how to do it, is it truly free? After all, aren't you still tied, as ever, to a single vendor -- now iPhoneSIMfree instead of AT&T -- to enable your phone's functions?


The iPhone dev crew will one day hack the iPhone, and when they do, it will be a glorious day. The hack will be open, it will be free, and it will be everywhere.
No longer is this just a guess; today's news proves that the iPhone's AT&T problem can be cured. Now we only need to find a friendlier doctor to do the surgery.





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$100,000 Offered to Release IPhone Unlock into the Wild

We're taking this as some kind of hype attempt, but some anonymous open source advocates over at Free iPhone for Money have put down $100,000 cold cash, for the first developer to release iPhone unlocking software to the public. The software must be free, as in beer, and the dev will keep all credit for their work.

It looks too altruistic to be true, but with the trouble expected for the commercial unlocking outfits, this could have a curious side effect: With the software out in the tubes, it will be all but impossible for Apple, the DMCA, or anyone to stop it. And those little back street "Free Your Phone" stores will surely grab themselves a copy.

We also notice that the contact address starts "bstomach@". Not a good sign, but then, the deadline is midnight Wednesday, so we don't have to wait long for the truth.




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Apple And AT&T Sued For Third Time Over iPhone Battery




Apple and AT&T have once again been sued for alleged iPhone flaws.


On Wednesday, attorneys for plaintiffs Zoltan Steiner and Ynez Steiner filed a class action complaint against Apple and AT&T in federal court in Oakland, Calif.
The lawsuit alleges breach of contract, fraud, and violations of California law. It charges the two companies with failing to inform iPhone purchasers that fees totaling more than $100 are required to replace iPhone batteries and to maintain service during battery replacement.


The iPhone's battery is designed so as not to be removable by consumers.
The lawsuit states that the iPhone battery must be replaced after approximately 300 charges and that replacement is likely to be necessary in one year or less.


Apple maintains a web page to educate consumers about how to prolong the life of the iPhone's battery. "A properly maintained iPhone battery is designed to retain up to 80% of its original capacity at 400 full charge and discharge cycles," Apples states. "You may choose to replace your battery when it no longer holds sufficient charge to meet your needs."

This marks the third such case against Apple.

One of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs is Oakland-based lawyer H. Tim Hoffman, who also represents Sydney Leung, the plaintiff in a similar class action suit against Apple and AT&T filed August 13th in the same court.


In July, a different group of attorneys based in Chicago filed a class action lawsuit against Apple and AT&T on behalf of plaintiff Jose Trujillo in Illinois' Cook County Court.


Also in July, the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights sent a letter to Apple and AT&T complaining about the iPhone battery. Harvey Rosenfield, founder of the FTCR, told InformationWeek that he would like to see consumers get battery replacements free of charge.


An Apple spokesperson was not immediately available to comment.





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Thursday, 30 August 2007

New York Man Sues Apple Over iPhone's Limitations Outside U.S.



A frequent traveler who believed he would not suffer roaming charges is asking the court to mandate that Apple disclose unlock codes upon request.

A New York State man is suing Apple because he cannot unlock his iPhone.
Herbert Kliegerman filed a class action lawsuit in New York State Supreme Court this week, stating that the company misled consumers. He is the latest among several consumers to sue over the iPhone.

The lawsuit states that Kliegerman is a frequent traveler who believed he would not suffer roaming charges when he used the device outside of the United States. It explains that AT&T provided unlocking codes to enable the use of its phones in foreign countries, but the iPhone codes were unavailable.

He received a $2,000 bill due to data roaming charges after spending a week in Mexico, although Apple's iPhone web site advertised that customers could access the Web and use e-mail as much as they wanted without incurring the charges, the lawsuit claims. He said the phone cannot be used with foreign wireless providers.
Kliegerman claims that the companies violated New York State consumer protection laws, which prohibit deceptive acts or practices.

He has asked the court to prohibit the sale of iPhones for exclusive use with AT&T unless the companies clearing disclose the limitation and fees for using the phones in foreign countries. He has also asked the court to mandate that Apple disclose unlock codes upon request.

Apple did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The Kliegerman lawsuit is open to all New York State residents who bought an iPhone. Two other lawsuits currently in the courts complain that users cannot change the battery for the iPhone.

The quest to unlock the secrets of the iPhone has driven some to take extreme measure. George Hotz, a 17-year-old student from New Jersey successfully replaced the handset's SIM card to show how a competing wireless carrier might break AT&T's current exclusive contract with Apple. A





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Nokia vs iPhone



In the same converted 19th-century fish market where Apple three years ago announced the European introduction of its iTunes music store, Nokia said Wednesday that it would soon introduce its own digital music service, along with an easier-to-use, Apple-style mobile interface and an Apple-style touch screen handset.


The Nokia Music Store, scheduled to open later this year, would let users download songs from the Internet to their computers or directly to mobile phones, over wireless networks, which is a feat that Apple's recently released iPhone cannot do.
Analysts said the move heightened the rivalry between Nokia and Apple at the high end of the mobile phone business. "It was obviously going straight at Apple," said Seamus McAteer, senior analyst at M:Metrics, a research firm.


While Nokia executives chose suits and ties rather than the black mock turtlenecks and blue jeans favored by Steve Jobs, the Apple chief executive, they acknowledged that Nokia was not above imitating its new competitor.


"I don't know what is copying and what is original but if there is something good in the world, we copy it with pride," said Anssi Vanjoki, head of the Nokia multimedia division, which makes the company's high-end handsets, when asked about similarities between the iPhone, iTunes and the new devices and services announced by Nokia.


In offering wireless downloads, the Nokia Music Store goes beyond the current capabilities of Apple's iTunes, which requires users to download songs to their personal computers before transferring them to an iPod music player or an iPhone.
The Nokia store, which the company said would be made available first in key European markets, could put pressure on Apple to develop a similar service, analysts said.


The music store also potentially puts Nokia into conflict with operators of mobile networks, many of which have developed music services of their own.
But analysts say that outside of Asia, mobile-phone services like music have been relatively slow to take off, despite the tens of billions of euros that network operators have poured into the technology to enable them.


"Now Nokia is saying, 'You guys had your chance to run music stores, or whatever, and it didn't work, so now we're going to give consumers what they want,' " said Paul Jackson, an analyst at Forrester Research.


In addition to the music store, Nokia said it would revive a game platform called N-Gage, with a number of video game publishers agreeing to supply games to download. The company said it would make all of its mobile content and Internet services available under the brand Ovi, which means "door" in Finnish.


Nokia, which is based in Finland, showed pictures and video clips of the interface that would allow users to navigate through the various Ovi services. Analysts said it appeared to resemble the interfaces for the iPod, iPhone and iTunes, whose simplicity has been seen as a key selling point.


But analysts said they were frustrated by a lack of detail about the Ovi offerings.
"It's a bit of an empty shell for now," said Mark Newman, chief research officer at Informa Telecoms and Media.


On Wednesday, Nokia introduced several phone models with increased storage capacity for music and other media content, and said it would introduce the touch screen phone next year.


While Nokia clearly has one eye on Apple, analysts said network operators might more directly feel its move into services, and that could affect relationships with device manufacturers.


Orange, which is part of France Telecom, for example, has a partnership with the phone maker Sony Ericsson, under which its Walkman-branded phones send users to the Orange music store at the touch of a button. Apple, meanwhile, has signed an exclusive iPhone distribution agreement with AT&T in the United States and is reportedly pursuing similar arrangements for the pending introduction of the phone in Europe.


Analysts said mobile operators who agreed to carry certain Nokia multimedia phones might try to demand that the company disable features that overlap with the carriers' own services.


Yet Nokia has a strong negotiating position, analysts added, because it sells about 400 million phones a year - more than one-third of the global market - so the network operators may not be able to drop a popular handset from their lineups.


Despite all the jockeying for position, the appeal of mobile download services remains uncertain. Even in the leading European market for mobile music, Britain, fewer than 3 percent of cellular subscribers downloaded songs wirelessly in January, according to M:Metrics. About 12 percent of subscribers, meanwhile, listened to music that had been transferred to their phones from PCs.


"How to get them to switch over to something like the Nokia music store remains unclear," said Martin Garner, an analyst at Ovum.


Nokia said it would price music downloads at €1 per song, or €10 per album, in the same range as many existing mobile music services as well as iTunes. In addition, users would have to pay for the use of phone networks for the download, though many operators are starting to offer monthly flat-fee packages.






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Can the iphone really be unlocked?



Over the past two months, the unlocked iPhone has become the hi-tech equivalent of Bigfoot: chased around north America by geeks, but rarely seen and possibly completely fictitious.

That all changed last week when Apple's flagship touchscreen mobile phone was finally hacked to run on any mobile network, not just America's AT&T. The breakthrough came in the unlikely shape of New Jersey teenager George Hotz. Armed with a soldering iron and a suite of software, the 17-year-old became an instant celebrity when he managed to get his iPhone running with a T-Mobile Sim card. But his hack was daunting and dangerous - so it was no surprise when two other sources claimed they had easier alternatives.

One website, iPhoneSimFree.com, said it had a working unlocking process. So far the only confirmation has come from the website Engadget, which claims to have seen it in action.

Another group, Uniquephone, boasted that it would make an unlocking code public - before pulling out at the last minute, claiming legal pressure from AT&T.

Some pundits say they smell a rat, and it would not be surprising if these remain shrouded in mystery. There is, after all, plenty of reason for hackers to claim an iPhone; with gadget-hounds in Europe and the US desperate to use their existing Sim cards in an iPhone, the promise of easy unlocking could prove very lucrative indeed.

But the prospect of a few dollars won't bother Hotz, who has already cashed in by auctioning off his hacked handset.

"I traded it for a sweet Nissan 350Z and three 8GB iPhones," he said, making the deal worth in the region of £25,000. "I leave for college tomorrow, and this has been a great end to a great summer."


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Legal threats halt iPhone crack




The iPhone will launch in Europe later this year.

A British firm's plan to sell software that could open the iPhone to non-US networks has been put on hold following legal threats.

Last week, Belfast-based UniquePhones joined several others in claiming it had cracked the code which locked iPhone into AT&T's network.

But a middle-of-the-night phone call from AT&T’s lawyers has forced the firm to rethink its plans. It will now take legal advice to assess the ramifications, the firm said. According to UniquePhones, it received a 3am call from a lawyer claiming to represent AT&T and warning it that selling unlocking software could constitute copyright infringement and illegal software dissemination.

"A substantial delay caused by any legal action would render the unlocking software a less valuable commodity as well as creating unforeseen security issues for the company," UniquePhones said in a statement.

Interest in the iPhone, Apple's first foray into the mobile world, has been intense since it was launched in the US in June. On Friday it was reported that a 17-year-old US hacker had unlocked the iPhone and used it on rival T-Mobile's network.

George Hotz said that the method he used took two hours and involved both tinkering with the software and some soldering.

A web site called iPhonesSimFree also claimed to have cracked the code with a software solution that it would begin selling imminently. Analysts believe Apple may still have time to modify the iPhone to tighten its locks before the phone is launched in Europe. Any reported cracks would have ramifications for Apple's European partners which, it is rumoured, the firm may announce at IFA 2007, a consumer electronics show being held in Berlin next week.

Tech blog Engadget thinks UniquePhones' should make their unlocking solution available to the public."Here's to hoping that, should UniquePhones not find themselves able to actually sell their software, at very least the unlock method they've discovered gets opened up to the public. After all, there's no reason why everyone shouldn't be able benefit from this knowledge just because one company isn't able to sell it," it said in a blog entry.



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iPhone Tech Review



Tech Review

After months (years!) of speculation and rumor, Apple has finally announced the iPhone in all its glory.


The first thing to mention is the gorgeous touch screen that fills almost the entire front panel. It's a 3.5 inch (diagonal) screen, boasting a resolution of 320 x 480 at 160 pixels per inch. That's more than enough for widescreen (16:9) viewing.


It has just one physical button at the bottom of the display and nearly everything else is done via the touch screen, using intuitive finger motions such as tapping, sweeping and 'pinching'. The iPhone features several sensors; one reorients what's displayed on screen when the phone is rotated between landscape and portrait orientation. It also has a proximity sensor that knows when you have the phone to your ear and adjusts the screen and touch pad accordingly.


The iPhone is quad-band, wi-fi enabled, with Bluetooth 2.0 EDR, GSM, and EDGE. It comes with a 2 megapixel camera.


Containing an Intel processor, it will offer 5 hours battery life when talking, browsing the web or watching video and 16 hours of audio playback.


There are plenty of calling features tied into your contacts list and email, including setting up 3-way voice conferences, sending email whilst on a call and easily adding and calling numbers from emails.


Software wise, the iPhone contains a version of Apple Mail, featuring rich HTML email, web browser Safari, with Google and Yahoo searches, Google Maps, and Widgets. Given that the phone OS is Mac OS X, it shouldn't be difficult to put a variety of other applications onto the system. Applications do run fast and there are rumors that PC users will be able to synchronize their contact data, which would mean that as well as supporting the 'i' range of Mac applications, there'll be some syncing with Outlook.


The iPhone offers a dynamically new way for users to interact with their phone, using just their fingers. No more add-on or pull-out keyboards, fiddly styli, or other oddities. It certainly looks good.









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Wednesday, 29 August 2007

What's Missing From The iPone

28th August 2007

What’s missing from the iPhone
The iPhone may very well be the best phone ever, but that doesn't mean the Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) enthusiasts of the world aren't already thirsting for a new and improved version. In fact, even the most Apple-loving diehards expect killer advances with the second iteration, and Apple knows it.
The secretive company isn't going to tell us what's next, but iPhone users have already started asking for more features. Some are obvious, some are desperately needed and others are please-give-it-to-us luxuries.
Many of the features could be delivered by software updates -- and Apple surely will deliver new features through that road. However, some of the features people want don't necessarily come with easy-to-manage solutions via a touch screen. Much of the touch screen's usability comes from its relatively simple set of finger-movement commands, and complicating that could result in degrading overall usability.
But hey, these are the challenges Apple enthusiasts expect Cupertino to tackle with grace.
Here are my top must-have items, in an approximately increasing order of importance:
Better Customization. While you can use a photo to customize your wallpaper, you can't change the placement of any of the home screen application buttons. You also can't get rid of them to relegate them to a secondary page. Apple teases us by leaving room for four new applications on the iPhone's home screen. So far, after Apple's first minor bug-fixing update, we don't know what Apple will provide. In the meantime, we could use those spaces for some custom shortcut links -- for example, to turn the iPhone's WiFi on or off, since most users don't want the WiFi feature draining their battery if they're not busy using it.
Custom Ring Tones. Right now, you can only select Apple's built-in ring tones. This is just stupid, and the only reason for it I can imagine is that Apple or AT&T (NYSE: T) has some other kind of scheme in place where they want to charge users for downloading ring tones. This might be fine for teenagers, but it's irritating for adults. If I bought a song on iTunes, and I want to use it for a ring tone, I'm not seeing any compelling reasons, DRM included, for not enabling that kind of use. What about GarageBand? I can't even create my own custom ring tone with Apple's own cool music-making application? What gives?
Built-In Instant Messaging. Right now, you can only send text messages to another user's cell phone via the SMS (short message service) application. The iPhone will store those messages in virtual iChat conversation for you, but it's just not the same as an instant message. Plus, what happens when your buddy is sitting at a PC, logged in, but not using a cell phone? You can use a Web-based, third-party service via the built-in Safari application, but getting to it, signing in, etc., is a pain. A built-in iChat for the iPhone application is the ticket, particularly if it works will all the major IM service providers. Plus, it would be handy to be able to IM pictures, videos or sounds clips.

WiFi Calling. This is a problem because cellular service companies aren't too keen on leaving behind their pay-by-the-minute charging models. If you only need 450 minutes per month from AT&T because you use a built-in Skype client (note to Apple: please, please), AT&T isn't going to be able to sell you the 750-minute plan.

Video Recording. The iPhone comes with a built-in 2.0 megapixel camera, and while it could come with better resolution, at least it should offer some rudimentary ability to take video. If an old Motorola (NYSE: MOT) Razr can do it, why not the iPhone? On a similar note is audio recording. If the speakerphone can hear my voice, why can't the iPhone record it? It doesn't even have to be a high-quality mic, but hey, if it was good enough for podcasting, it could be very handy.

GPS. Some users would be satisfied with a cell tower triangulation system , while others would like to see true built-in GPS features. The Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) Maps application is awesome, no doubt -- it just saved my bacon last weekend when I was trying to navigate a suburban neighbourhood to find a barbecue party -- but GPS is on an entirely different level of usability. Plus, you could tie location awareness to business applications, as well as family-friendly applications (though GPS doesn't work inside buildings).

Memory Options. I've got the 8 GB iPhone, and I'm hard-pressed to imagine enjoying the 4 GB model. In addition to wanting more memory, an expandable memory card slot would do the trick. Of course, the slot would mess with the aesthetics of the gorgeous iPhone, if not force Apple to make the whole thing that much bigger ... so OK, I guess I understand. Still, though, more memory would be nice, and it would be even better if Apple could upgrade the memory when it's time to replace the battery.

Removable Battery. Again, having a removable battery would at least let a consumer replace the thing without having to ship the iPhone off to Apple when it inevitably fails. However, I can see where a removable battery would disrupt the form factor of the iPhone -- any slot or opening means you have to provide reinforcement for the slots or hinges -- and no one wants a bulkier iPhone. Still, I know that one day I'm going to have to ship my iPhone away, and that sucks.

Better Enterprise E-Mail. There's lots of room for more robust connectivity with Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Exchange/Outlook and Lotus Domino/Notes enterprise-level e-mail , but Apple deserves a bit more time on this one -- enterprise e-mail is complicated, and Apple's competitors in this space have spent years building good solutions. Oh yeah, and some of it is patented.

Wireless Syncing. Right now, you can only sync the iPhone via the USB cable. No WiFi? Of course, there's an added complexity and security risk in setting that up, but it should be doable for most consumers, even for Windows-based users -- at least from a user's home WiFi network. Bluetooth could also work, though it would be slower than WiFi.
iPhone as Bluetooth Modem. Of course, by connecting your laptop to your iPhone and using it as a Bluetooth modem, you would be able to access the Web via your laptop and the unlimited AT&T data plan -- and that's the problem. Imagine a bunch of iPhone customers clogging AT&T's data network for no good reason. Business users and travellers, on the other hand, would find this service particularly handy.

Easy-Sync To-Do List. The built-in notes application is OK, but it could have a Mac OS X and PC equivalent that could sync with your iPhone. It could be built into iCal, and very well may be with the next version of OS X, but a rock-simple Mac-and-PC mini application for creating fast to-do lists would be handy.


Spam Control. If Apple could somehow apply the same filters that run Mac's Mail program to work with iPhone that would be great. Of course, that leaves issues for PC users. Either way, my heavily-spammed accounts are almost unusable on the iPhone, which also means I should have a spam filter set up on the server side of those accounts.
Voice Dialling. Sure, you can tap your way into a phone call easily enough, but this is a modern phone. It should listen to voice commands, at least for your top ten contacts.

Adobe (Nasdaq: ADBE) Flash Support. Adobe Flash is the magic that makes so many Web sites cool and usable, plus it often lets Web sites offer video. Sure, we have built-in YouTube , but there's another world of Flash-based Web sites. Oh, and one more thing, how about Java?

3G. Faster ... network ... download ... speeds ... is what most everyone wants. AT&T's 3G networks offer it -- just not everywhere in the U.S., which is a key reason iPhones use EDGE (Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Revolution). Some analysts think 3G iPhones might show up sometime in 2008 because really, the pressure has been on since the iPhone was first announced in January.

Third-Party Custom Applications. Right now, iPhone users can access a variety of Web-based applications, but these aren't the same as built-in applications. It's hard to say if or when Apple might bend on this because it introduces the potential for problems. Who wants their iPhone to crash, especially when they need to dial 911? A reasonable alternative would be a special bookmark-type application that would let you store one-touch access buttons to Web-based applications. The identification and log-in could occur seamlessly to the end-user, and since only power users would be interested in using third-party Web apps, they could deal with the added complexity.

A Few Miscellaneous Features
Some other commonly desired iPhone features include the ability to cut and paste within applications -- multiple taps could select a word, sentence, paragraph or page -- and business users seem interested in being able to edit Word or Excel documents instead of just being able to read them.

There are also no built-in games, but I'd rather have no games than some stupid ones taking up screen and memory real estate. Of course, a drag and drop method for adding songs to the iPhone would be handy, rather than updating playlists and syncing, but being forced to use Apple's new method is training me well enough.

The most interesting -- if somewhat whimsical idea -- I've heard is a flashlight mode, where the iPhone cranks out white light. Not a bad idea for anyone who stays up most the night on the Internet and doesn't want to wake a sleeping spouse while climbing into bed.

It would be nice to browse iTunes online, but bandwidth is the limiting factor -- actually downloading the songs would likely put a few kinks in AT&T's network. However, that's what WiFi is for, right? Speaking of music, those who like wireless Bluetooth headsets want stereo to be supported, too.

For inexplicable reasons, the touch screen keyboard won't go horizontal in every application, making it easier to type. The most notorious spot is when you're typing an e-mail message, which is also the time you most want landscape mode.

Finally, of course, lots of people wish they could simply buy an iPhone and use it with any service provider of their choice. Someday, perhaps.









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Sim-free iPhones tried out in Hong Kong and work !

A while ago we heard that a shop in Hong Kong was taking orders of unlocked iPhones. Finally today we’re able to see some proof for that.

The iPhone was able to take non-AT&T SIM cards (the one demonstrated here is the Hong Kong CSL network), you can dial out and pick up calls without a problem. EDGE is also supported, so are the messaging services. However we don’t know if the SIM and voicemail services are supported properly.

Due to the limited amount of stock related to demand, the price is now up at US$2000 (just unlocking: US$750).



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iPhone - will it blend

Will it Blend?
Everybody knows that the iPhone can make phone calls, play movies & music, surf the web, and a lot more. But, Will It Blend? That is the question.


Will it blend

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Apple lays down iPhone purchase rules -- max 2 per person

Apple just got all official with their retail sales for the iPhone. Read it, know it:
• All 164 Apple retail stores will close at 2pm and reopen at 6pm until midnight on the 29th.
• 2 iPhone's per person max.
• First come, first serve basis.
• Free iPhone training workshops will begin Saturday morning at all Apple retail stores.
• Apple's online store will also begin taking orders at 6pm PDT on the 29th. Free shipping.
• So you don't get caught out making a disappointing trip, Apple is also providing an on-line tool to check the iPhone availability at your local Apple store. Good thing, we think you're going to need it.

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Apple's 'magical' iPhone unveiled

From http://www.simplyfreeiphone.com/

US firm Apple has confirmed its move into the telecoms industry, unveiling the long-awaited iPhone.


Users will be able to download music and videos with the phone, demonstrated by Apple boss Steve Jobs at the annual Macworld Expo in San Francisco.


Mr Jobs praised the phone's design and told the audience the "magical device" would "revolutionise the industry".


The phone, which will cost from $499 (£257) to $599, will be launched in the US in June and Europe later this year.


Apple is not yet saying how much the iPhone will cost in the UK, but using the comparison of a Mac mini computer the 4 gigabyte (GB) model would be about £335.


Touch-screen

Also revealed at the Macworld Expo was Apple TV, a device to stream music and movies from a computer to the living room.


The announcement ended months of speculation about the iPhone, which has no conventional buttons but instead uses a large touch-screen.


The firm has patented keyboard technology on the 11.6mm thick phone, calling it "multi-touch".
It is essentially a computer with a blank screen that users configure so they can operate the monitor with their fingers.


"We are all born with the ultimate pointing device - our fingers - and iPhone uses them to create the most revolutionary user interface since the mouse," said Mr Jobs.
A full touch keyboard is available for text messaging and there is a built-in two megapixel camera.


Mr Jobs said the iPhone was a "revolutionary and magical product that is literally five years ahead of any other mobile phone".


"It works like magic... It's far more accurate than any touch display ever shipped. It ignores unintended touches. It's super-smart."


He demonstrated the phone by playing the Beatles' Lovely Rita, Meter Maid.
He added: "The iPod changed everything in 2001. We're going to do it again with the iPhone in 2007."


The phone will be available on the network of US mobile firm Cingular and will run Apple's OS X operating system.


It will come in two versions - one with 4GB of storage space, the other with 8GB.
Apple shares closed around 8% up after the announcement.



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