Apple: iPhone News and Discussion Thread
#6601
iPhone coming to Sprint in October 2011
So the iPhone is finally coming to Sprint, huh? I'm actually very satisfied with my Android device (Samsung Epic), but I would be lying if I said I'm not at all tempted at the prospect of having a different gadget to play with. The chances of actually satisfying my curiosity are slim, however - that is, unless the iPhone 5 will be equipped with a physical slide-out keyboard to complement the virtual keyboard. Somehow I doubt that is the case.
Anyway, following are a preview of the related Wall Street Journal article as well as the corresponding URL.
"Sprint Nextel Corp. will begin selling the new version of the Apple iPhone in mid-October, people familiar with the matter said, filling a huge hole in the No. 3 U.S. carrier's lineup and giving Apple Inc. another sales channel for its popular gadget."
Read more:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...#ixzz1WNV2hlwv
Anyway, following are a preview of the related Wall Street Journal article as well as the corresponding URL.
"Sprint Nextel Corp. will begin selling the new version of the Apple iPhone in mid-October, people familiar with the matter said, filling a huge hole in the No. 3 U.S. carrier's lineup and giving Apple Inc. another sales channel for its popular gadget."
Read more:http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...#ixzz1WNV2hlwv
#6612
Apple Loses Another iPhone Prototype at a Bar
Aug 31, 2011 1:07 pm PDT by Jordan Golson
An Apple employee has lost a prototype iPhone at a bar, again. The iPhone was lost in late July at Cava 22, a Mexican restaurant and bar in San Francisco's Mission District, according to CNET:
A day or two after the phone was lost at San Francisco's Cava 22, which describes itself as a "tequila lounge" that also serves lime-marinated shrimp ceviche, Apple representatives contacted San Francisco police, saying the device was priceless and the company was desperate to secure its safe return, the source said. Still unclear are details about the device, what version of the iOS operating system it was running, and what it looks like.
Apple tracked the iPhone to a home in San Francisco's Bernal Heights neighborhood. San Francisco police and Apple investigators reportedly spoke to a man in his twenties about the device, but he denied knowing about the lost phone. After a search, they found nothing. There is no word if Apple ever got the phone back. A spokesperson for the San Francisco Police Department told CNET that Apple did not file a police report about the missing phone.
Readers will remember that last year Apple lost an early prototype of the iPhone 4 at a bar in Redwood City near the company's headquarters. That device was picked up by another customer and sold to tech site Gizmodo. That sequence of events triggered a criminal investigation which ended just this month.
A late-July iPhone in field testing would presumably have been the upcoming iPhone 5 or perhaps the low-cost iPhone 4.
(Image of Cava 22 courtesy James Martin/CNET)
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Aug 31, 2011 1:07 pm PDT by Jordan Golson
An Apple employee has lost a prototype iPhone at a bar, again. The iPhone was lost in late July at Cava 22, a Mexican restaurant and bar in San Francisco's Mission District, according to CNET:
A day or two after the phone was lost at San Francisco's Cava 22, which describes itself as a "tequila lounge" that also serves lime-marinated shrimp ceviche, Apple representatives contacted San Francisco police, saying the device was priceless and the company was desperate to secure its safe return, the source said. Still unclear are details about the device, what version of the iOS operating system it was running, and what it looks like.
Apple tracked the iPhone to a home in San Francisco's Bernal Heights neighborhood. San Francisco police and Apple investigators reportedly spoke to a man in his twenties about the device, but he denied knowing about the lost phone. After a search, they found nothing. There is no word if Apple ever got the phone back. A spokesperson for the San Francisco Police Department told CNET that Apple did not file a police report about the missing phone.
Readers will remember that last year Apple lost an early prototype of the iPhone 4 at a bar in Redwood City near the company's headquarters. That device was picked up by another customer and sold to tech site Gizmodo. That sequence of events triggered a criminal investigation which ended just this month.
A late-July iPhone in field testing would presumably have been the upcoming iPhone 5 or perhaps the low-cost iPhone 4.
(Image of Cava 22 courtesy James Martin/CNET)
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98
Oh no, not again.
A year after a gadget blog paid $5,000 for an iPhone 4 prototype that ended up being strayed in a Redwood City bar comes another reported incident of an iThing being left in a bar.
Cnet reported today that an Apple employee appears to have lost an unreleased iPhone at the Mission district Cava22 in late July.
The errant iPhone sparked a scramble by Apple security to recover the device over the next few days, a source told Cnet.
According to the tech site, the device was taken from Cava22 and may have been sold on Craigslist for $200. Unclear are details about the device and what it looks like.
The story goes on that the device was electronically traced to a Bernal Heights home, but alas, it appears Apple (and the cops) left empty-handed.
Seriously, after these two incidents, Apple should just keep its prototypes tethered to a lock and chain.
Posted By: Jason Lloren (Email) | August 31 2011 at 03:04 PM
Listed Under: Apple
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Oh no, not again.
A year after a gadget blog paid $5,000 for an iPhone 4 prototype that ended up being strayed in a Redwood City bar comes another reported incident of an iThing being left in a bar.
Cnet reported today that an Apple employee appears to have lost an unreleased iPhone at the Mission district Cava22 in late July.
The errant iPhone sparked a scramble by Apple security to recover the device over the next few days, a source told Cnet.
According to the tech site, the device was taken from Cava22 and may have been sold on Craigslist for $200. Unclear are details about the device and what it looks like.
The story goes on that the device was electronically traced to a Bernal Heights home, but alas, it appears Apple (and the cops) left empty-handed.
Seriously, after these two incidents, Apple should just keep its prototypes tethered to a lock and chain.
Posted By: Jason Lloren (Email) | August 31 2011 at 03:04 PM
Listed Under: Apple
Share | Email
#6616
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20...?tag=mncol;txt
Since everyone is referring back to cnet...
Cava22, the San Francisco bar where another unreleased iPhone apparently went missing.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
In a bizarre repeat of a high-profile incident last year, an Apple employee once again appears to have lost an unreleased iPhone in a bar, CNET has learned.
The errant iPhone, which went missing in San Francisco's Mission district in late July, sparked a scramble by Apple security to recover the device over the next few days, according to a source familiar with the investigation.
Last year, an iPhone 4 prototype was bought by a gadget blog that paid $5,000 in cash. This year's lost phone seems to have taken a more mundane path: it was taken from a Mexican restaurant and bar and may have been sold on Craigslist for $200. Still unclear are details about the device, what version of the iOS operating system it was running, and what it looks like.
While Apple has not publicly announced any plans for future phones, unconfirmed reports in the last few weeks suggest the launch date for the iPhone 5 is likely to be in early October. Other reports from Taiwan have set the date at September or October. (See CNET's iPhone 5 rumor roundup.)
Apple declined to comment after being contacted this morning. A spokesman for the San Francisco Police Department said the company did not file a police report based on the loss at the bar. Craigslist did not respond to requests for comment.
A day or two after the phone was lost at San Francisco's Cava 22, which describes itself as a "tequila lounge" that also serves lime-marinated shrimp ceviche, Apple representatives contacted San Francisco police, saying the device was priceless and the company was desperate to secure its safe return, the source said.
Cava22, in San Francisco's Mission District, where another unreleased iPhone apparently went missing last month.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Apple electronically traced the phone to a two-floor, single-family home in San Francisco's Bernal Heights neighborhood, according to the source.
When San Francisco police and Apple's investigators visited the house, they spoke with a man in his twenties who acknowledged being at Cava 22 on the night the device went missing. But he denied knowing anything about the phone. The man gave police permission to search the house, and they found nothing, the source said. Before leaving the house, the Apple employees offered the man money for the phone no questions asked, the source said, adding that the man continued to deny he had knowledge of the phone.
In an interview this afternoon, Jose Valle told CNET that neither the police nor Apple security ever contacted him. Valle, who owns the bar with his family, said however he does remember a man calling multiple times about a lost iPhone about a month ago. He told the man he would call him back if he ever found the phone.
"I guess I have to make my drinks a little less strong," Valle said.
After last year's embarrassing loss, Apple reportedly has taken extraordinary steps to protect its prototype devices from leaks. Next-generation iPhones are sent to carriers for testing "inside locked and sealed boxes so that the carriers can carry out checks on their network compatibility in their labs," according to the Guardian.
Apple developers have been given new iPhones with an upgraded processor -- the one that is used in the iPad 2 and is expected to appear in the next-generation iPhone. But the device "is virtually identical to the iPhone 4, and there is no way anyone can tell it's not an iPhone 4 based on the phone's exterior," a report at 9to5Mac.com says. Even last year's prototype was enclosed in a case designed to make it look like an iPhone 3GS.
Last year's prototype iPhone went missing when Robert Gray Powell, an Apple computer engineer who was 28 years old at the time, left it in a German beer garden in Redwood City, Calif.
In early August, San Mateo County prosecutors filed misdemeanor criminal charges against two men, Brian Hogan and Sage Wallower, for allegedly selling Powell's iPhone 4 prototype to Gawker Media's Gizmodo blog. An arraignment is scheduled for tomorrow.
Prosecutors obtained a warrant to search the home of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen, and indicated they might prosecute Gizmodo, but eventually decided not to file charges.
Under a California law dating back to 1872, any person who finds lost property and knows who the owner is likely to be--but "appropriates such property to his own use"--is guilty of theft. In addition, a second state law says any person who knowingly receives property that has been obtained illegally can be imprisoned for up to one year.
CNET's Josh Lowensohn and Elinor Mills contributed to this report
Update 4:15 p.m. PT: To include comments from Cava 22 owner.
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Greg Sandoval
E-mail Greg Sandoval
Greg Sandoval covers media and digital entertainment for CNET News. Based in New York, Sandoval is a former reporter for The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times.
Declan McCullagh
E-mail Declan McCullagh
Declan McCullagh is the chief political correspondent for CNET. Declan previously was a reporter for Time and the Washington bureau chief for Wired and wrote the Taking Liberties section and Other People's Money column for CBS News' Web site.
Topics:Apple Corporate, iPhone, Legal Tags:iphone, unreleased iphone, apple, iphone 5
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
In a bizarre repeat of a high-profile incident last year, an Apple employee once again appears to have lost an unreleased iPhone in a bar, CNET has learned.
The errant iPhone, which went missing in San Francisco's Mission district in late July, sparked a scramble by Apple security to recover the device over the next few days, according to a source familiar with the investigation.
Last year, an iPhone 4 prototype was bought by a gadget blog that paid $5,000 in cash. This year's lost phone seems to have taken a more mundane path: it was taken from a Mexican restaurant and bar and may have been sold on Craigslist for $200. Still unclear are details about the device, what version of the iOS operating system it was running, and what it looks like.
While Apple has not publicly announced any plans for future phones, unconfirmed reports in the last few weeks suggest the launch date for the iPhone 5 is likely to be in early October. Other reports from Taiwan have set the date at September or October. (See CNET's iPhone 5 rumor roundup.)
Apple declined to comment after being contacted this morning. A spokesman for the San Francisco Police Department said the company did not file a police report based on the loss at the bar. Craigslist did not respond to requests for comment.
A day or two after the phone was lost at San Francisco's Cava 22, which describes itself as a "tequila lounge" that also serves lime-marinated shrimp ceviche, Apple representatives contacted San Francisco police, saying the device was priceless and the company was desperate to secure its safe return, the source said.
Cava22, in San Francisco's Mission District, where another unreleased iPhone apparently went missing last month.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Apple electronically traced the phone to a two-floor, single-family home in San Francisco's Bernal Heights neighborhood, according to the source.
When San Francisco police and Apple's investigators visited the house, they spoke with a man in his twenties who acknowledged being at Cava 22 on the night the device went missing. But he denied knowing anything about the phone. The man gave police permission to search the house, and they found nothing, the source said. Before leaving the house, the Apple employees offered the man money for the phone no questions asked, the source said, adding that the man continued to deny he had knowledge of the phone.
In an interview this afternoon, Jose Valle told CNET that neither the police nor Apple security ever contacted him. Valle, who owns the bar with his family, said however he does remember a man calling multiple times about a lost iPhone about a month ago. He told the man he would call him back if he ever found the phone.
"I guess I have to make my drinks a little less strong," Valle said.
After last year's embarrassing loss, Apple reportedly has taken extraordinary steps to protect its prototype devices from leaks. Next-generation iPhones are sent to carriers for testing "inside locked and sealed boxes so that the carriers can carry out checks on their network compatibility in their labs," according to the Guardian.
Apple developers have been given new iPhones with an upgraded processor -- the one that is used in the iPad 2 and is expected to appear in the next-generation iPhone. But the device "is virtually identical to the iPhone 4, and there is no way anyone can tell it's not an iPhone 4 based on the phone's exterior," a report at 9to5Mac.com says. Even last year's prototype was enclosed in a case designed to make it look like an iPhone 3GS.
Last year's prototype iPhone went missing when Robert Gray Powell, an Apple computer engineer who was 28 years old at the time, left it in a German beer garden in Redwood City, Calif.
In early August, San Mateo County prosecutors filed misdemeanor criminal charges against two men, Brian Hogan and Sage Wallower, for allegedly selling Powell's iPhone 4 prototype to Gawker Media's Gizmodo blog. An arraignment is scheduled for tomorrow.
Prosecutors obtained a warrant to search the home of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen, and indicated they might prosecute Gizmodo, but eventually decided not to file charges.
Under a California law dating back to 1872, any person who finds lost property and knows who the owner is likely to be--but "appropriates such property to his own use"--is guilty of theft. In addition, a second state law says any person who knowingly receives property that has been obtained illegally can be imprisoned for up to one year.
CNET's Josh Lowensohn and Elinor Mills contributed to this report
Update 4:15 p.m. PT: To include comments from Cava 22 owner.
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Greg Sandoval
E-mail Greg Sandoval
Greg Sandoval covers media and digital entertainment for CNET News. Based in New York, Sandoval is a former reporter for The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times.
Declan McCullagh
E-mail Declan McCullagh
Declan McCullagh is the chief political correspondent for CNET. Declan previously was a reporter for Time and the Washington bureau chief for Wired and wrote the Taking Liberties section and Other People's Money column for CBS News' Web site.
Topics:Apple Corporate, iPhone, Legal Tags:iphone, unreleased iphone, apple, iphone 5
Since everyone is referring back to cnet...
#6619
If anyone is looking at sprint android phones/tablets, PM me if you would like an employee SERO discount. I was going to get the HTC EVO View tablet tonight for $235 shipped w/ 2 year....but after reading about the super spotty wimax and week(s) of outages here...I cancelled.
Last edited by whudini3000; 09-02-2011 at 10:55 PM.
#6623
I thought it was just overblown media hype and every cell phone in recorded history has had this problem?
#6625
Ironic and a good idea at the same time
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/09...re_and_amazon/
Apple has selected Microsoft's Azure and Amazon's AWS to jointly host its iCloud service, The Reg has learned.
We understand that Apple has barred Microsoft and Amazon from discussing what would otherwise be a high-profile deal, especially for Microsoft's fledgling Azure cloud service.
But Reg sources close to Microsoft this week confirmed rumours circulating in June that Apple's iCloud is running on Azure and Amazon. Customers' data is being striped between the pair. iCloud was released as a beta in August and is expected by the end of this year.
Apple and Amazon did not respond to our requests to comment, while Microsoft told us: "At this time, we don't have any comment around whether Apple is a Windows Azure customer."
According to our sources, Microsoft insiders see the iCloud deal as a validation of Azure. So far, Microsoft has pushed Azure using the marketing 101 playbook. Redmond has flagged up the start-ups and websites it has attracted in an attempt to prove to other devs that Azure is "cool". It is also promoting those corporate customers who've floated onboard to prove its cloud is being taken seriously by business users.
iCloud puts Azure into a different league, given the brand love for Apple and the Apple management's fanatical attitude to perfection. It is a "huge consumer brand, a great opportunity to get Azure under a very visible workload," our sources told us.
Apple is understood to have elected to outsource the plumbing of iCloud because its core competence lies in "building great consumer experiences". It didn't make sense for Apple to become a cloud provider.
By selecting two suppliers, both very different in their services and their level of maturity, Apple is reducing its risk of becoming hostage to a single supplier.
Microsoft and Amazon will now need to ensure they keep up with the other on reliability, new features, security, and price.
We understand that Apple has barred Microsoft and Amazon from discussing what would otherwise be a high-profile deal, especially for Microsoft's fledgling Azure cloud service.
But Reg sources close to Microsoft this week confirmed rumours circulating in June that Apple's iCloud is running on Azure and Amazon. Customers' data is being striped between the pair. iCloud was released as a beta in August and is expected by the end of this year.
Apple and Amazon did not respond to our requests to comment, while Microsoft told us: "At this time, we don't have any comment around whether Apple is a Windows Azure customer."
According to our sources, Microsoft insiders see the iCloud deal as a validation of Azure. So far, Microsoft has pushed Azure using the marketing 101 playbook. Redmond has flagged up the start-ups and websites it has attracted in an attempt to prove to other devs that Azure is "cool". It is also promoting those corporate customers who've floated onboard to prove its cloud is being taken seriously by business users.
iCloud puts Azure into a different league, given the brand love for Apple and the Apple management's fanatical attitude to perfection. It is a "huge consumer brand, a great opportunity to get Azure under a very visible workload," our sources told us.
Apple is understood to have elected to outsource the plumbing of iCloud because its core competence lies in "building great consumer experiences". It didn't make sense for Apple to become a cloud provider.
By selecting two suppliers, both very different in their services and their level of maturity, Apple is reducing its risk of becoming hostage to a single supplier.
Microsoft and Amazon will now need to ensure they keep up with the other on reliability, new features, security, and price.
#6626
So, where do I need to go in order to get the SFPD to "assist by intimidation" so I can search someone's house based upon a hunch?
lol so was it a true GPS lock or an A-GPS lock (A-GPS sucks a donkey nut and is only meant to get you in the general area)
when I use AGPS on my phone it shows me in the middle of a lake when I am at work, using GPS with our repeater on the roof, it shows me that I am where the repeater is...(about 20 ft from my office vs about 1/8 mile for AGPS)
lol so was it a true GPS lock or an A-GPS lock (A-GPS sucks a donkey nut and is only meant to get you in the general area)
when I use AGPS on my phone it shows me in the middle of a lake when I am at work, using GPS with our repeater on the roof, it shows me that I am where the repeater is...(about 20 ft from my office vs about 1/8 mile for AGPS)
Last edited by YeuEmMaiMai; 09-06-2011 at 04:25 AM.
#6627
So, where do I need to go in order to get the SFPD to "assist by intimidation" so I can search someone's house based upon a hunch?
lol so was it a true GPS lock or an A-GPS lock (A-GPS sucks a donkey nut and is only meant to get you in the general area)
when I use AGPS on my phone it shows me in the middle of a lake when I am at work, using GPS with our repeater on the roof, it shows me that I am where the repeater is...(about 20 ft from my office vs about 1/8 mile for AGPS)
lol so was it a true GPS lock or an A-GPS lock (A-GPS sucks a donkey nut and is only meant to get you in the general area)
when I use AGPS on my phone it shows me in the middle of a lake when I am at work, using GPS with our repeater on the roof, it shows me that I am where the repeater is...(about 20 ft from my office vs about 1/8 mile for AGPS)
The way a-gps works on the iPhone is that it uses cell phone tower triangulation to assist the GPS unit inside the phone so it can get a location much faster than GPS alone or if indoors.
#6632
Ugh, I guess I should just screw JB my phone and just restore/upgrade my phone.
Running so sluggish and my battery it dropped 20% in the past 10 minutes of doing nothing.
A while back I went from 70% to 5% with the phone in standby...
Running so sluggish and my battery it dropped 20% in the past 10 minutes of doing nothing.
A while back I went from 70% to 5% with the phone in standby...
#6633
Yesterday it went from 88% battery and was in my pocket in standby and went to won't even turn on because the battery is empty in about an hour.
So I updated to 4.3.5. So far seems ok still got 93% battery....
So I updated to 4.3.5. So far seems ok still got 93% battery....
#6634
still waiting on untethered 4.3.5... But asses won't release it until OS 5 hits.
I had a problem with my battery with 4.3.1., tried to upgrade to 4.3.3 and jb it, but Cydia didnt store my blobs, got f@cked with a restore to 4.3.5
I had a problem with my battery with 4.3.1., tried to upgrade to 4.3.3 and jb it, but Cydia didnt store my blobs, got f@cked with a restore to 4.3.5
#6635
from Apple Insider
Apple has reportedly informed its AppleCare division to expect an influx of iOS-related inquiries from customers beginning Monday, Oct. 10, perhaps signaling when the company plans to release iOS 5 to existing device owners.
#6638
I'm still running iOS 4.3.2. I've heard some not great things about the newer versions . But in my case wehre my phone isn't jailbroken or anything, I don't think 4.3.2 is any different than 4.3.5.