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Turned Off iPhone Gets $4800 Bill from AT&T

Tech.Luver writes "Jay Levy says he has been stung by Apple's iPhone pact with AT&T after he took an iPhone on a Mediterranean cruise. They didn't use their phones, but when they got back they had a 54-page monthly bill of nearly $4,800 from AT&T Wireless. The problem was that their three iPhones were racking up a bill for data charges using foreign phone charges. The iPhone regularly updates e-mail, even while it's off, so that all the messages will be available when the user turns it on. ""

951 comments

  1. ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    but it was off? fucken mac

    1. Re:ihpones by altoz · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      yet another reason not to get this hyped up gadget. you can bet that no business person is going to buy this after this gets publicized.

    2. Re:ihpones by evilgrug · · Score: 5, Informative

      Hopefully "after this gets publicised" more people will bother to read the manual which clearly states in Chapter 2 "The Basics" (page 14) how to turn the iPod completely off.

    3. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No, people just have to learn the difference between "sleep" and "power off".

    4. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that will sure help with the iPods even though the phones are still ringin up huge bills!

    5. Re:ihpones by phoenixwade · · Score: 1

      Wow, that will sure help with the iPods even though the phones are still ringin up huge bills! Even though he mis-typed "iPod" the link was to the iPhone manual PDF download.

      I think that there are some things that should never be allowed for AC's 'Funny' is top of the list.... Of course, I'd remove the ability to post AC altogether, so it's probably a good think I'm not in charge...
      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    6. Re:ihpones by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, so you can carry an iBrick with you on vacation? Maybe they want to use their iPhone for mobile web surfing while connected to WiFi, using the digital camera feature, or just listening to music? Why shouldn't they be able tell the phone-third of the iPhone to shut down while keeping the rest of their features up? Convergence shouldn't have to suck...

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    7. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Even though he mis-typed "iPod" the link was to the iPhone manual PDF download."

      Noticed that, did you Capitan Obvious?

      Ever heard of a joke?

    8. Re:ihpones by uglydog · · Score: 0, Troll

      People won't learn the difference. Manufacturers will make the products easier to use/understand. Especially when the product is made by a company that brags about how easy to use their products are.

    9. Re:ihpones by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, people just have to learn the difference between "sleep" and "a kind of sleep which isn't actually sleep because the phone is actively using the wireless connection without you realizing it".

      My phone, a treo, functions basically the same and like basically every phone with a "standby" mode -- when you hit the power button, it turns off, but as the anonying blinky light indicates the cell phone function is still active, meaning it's communicating with the base station. It will receive incoming calls, and receive other updates from the network. However what it doesn't do is automatically make phone calls, or activate GPRS and start downloading crap off the internet, or otherwise doing anything that will cost me money.

      That is what is broken about this. Not the difference between "off with wireless enabled" and "really off". It's the difference between "wireless enabled but not used" and "wireless enabled and being used with no consideration of where you are and how much it's going to cost you". It's the difference between merely being connected to the cell network, and using the cell network in ways that result in charges.

      It sounds like a matter of defaults. Setting up the phone to by default automatically download emails is a bad decision, because it causes the phone to work contrary to how most people expect -- which is that in standby mode, you aren't accruing data transfer charges.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    10. Re:ihpones by Bieeanda · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Fourteen pages into a 120-page manual, for a simple, vital command. Jesus, even my iPod Shuffle came with a quick reference sheet the size of a playing card.

    11. Re:ihpones by _ZenZagg_ · · Score: 1

      The T-Mobile Sidekick\Danger Hiptop has the ability to turn off data roaming, or even the entire radio. Surely this wouldn't be too hard to implement on the iPhone?

      --

      "Witty Phrase."

    12. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, what a concept. If only there were some kind of "airplane mode" that disabled all communications hardware on the iPhone, leaving the rest functional. I'll bring this up next time I catch Steve-O in the exec washroom.

    13. Re:ihpones by phoenixwade · · Score: 1

      "Even though he mis-typed "iPod" the link was to the iPhone manual PDF download."

      Noticed that, did you Capitan Obvious?

      Ever heard of a joke? Why yes, yes I have - I suppose you missed the part where I state in italics that I think AC's shouldn't be allowed 'Funny" type posts... stupid git

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    14. Re:ihpones by dk.r*nger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with the comments further down that this is a user-error. But I also think that there is a usability-issue on part of Apple here.

      In the home network, there's free data, as I understand, and the roaming charges are high. I have cheap data in my home network, and expensive when roaming abroad. So when I step out of a plane and turn on my phone, I get a nice warning: "You're not in your homenetwork. MMS reception is off". MMS reception is the only automatic data-service on the phone.

      Look in the configuration, surely enough: "MMS reception: Automatic (only home network) / Manual / Always".

      It would make pretty good sense to add a similar option for the automatic email checking.

    15. Re:ihpones by ThePiMan2003 · · Score: 5, Informative

      That would be a great idea. And the really neat thing is that you can.

    16. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It sounds like a matter of defaults. Setting up the phone to by default automatically download emails is a bad decision, because it causes the phone to work contrary to how most people expect -- which is that in standby mode, you aren't accruing data transfer charges.


      The default is in fact to check for mail manually - these people set it to automatically check mail. Of course the real problem here is the insane roaming charges for mobile data, which is no more costly than voice for the operators.

      I think they should have done the following though :

      1. The phone should not check email periodically on foreign networks without explicit permission (i.e. needs a checkbox 'even on foreign Networks' for the automatic setting).
      2. The phone should warn users when accessing the mobile network in other countries, ideally showing the call cost before they use it.
      3. The phone should go to a deeper sleep with all radio off when unused for more than 1 hour - saves battery.
      4. Have an option not to check email while the screen is asleep.
    17. Re:ihpones by James+McP · · Score: 1

      Actually, you're wrong about your Treo. Even after you put it into sleep mode it will still log itself onto the network and check email if it is configured to do so automatically. Don't believe me? Setup the included Versamail and enable the "autosynch" option.

      The big difference is that Palm doesn't configure the Treo to do that automatically. With an iPhone the setup process hooks you up to the email account attached to the phone number with no user action necessary. It's "magic."

      As anyone who flies on a plane with a Treo should know, to do a full power down all you need to do is hold the power-off button for ~5 seconds and it will shut down the radio completely. You can tell it is off-net by the fact there's no signal indicator anymore. Matter of fact, my Treo manual highlighted the need to shut down the radio completely when getting on a plane.

      I'm not sure what the iPhone process is to go into full radio-off mode but it is hopefully as easy. Whether the manual says so or not I'm not sure. But given "Lord Jobs" rah-rah messages of "it's so easy" then I'm sure many of the faithful declined to read the manual.

      --
      I've been on slashdot so long I'm starting to get out of touch with the cool stuff if it ain't on slashdot.
    18. Re:ihpones by James+McP · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I just read the iPhone manual. Most mail requires you to set the "manual check/autcheck every 15/30/60 minutes" flag. Not too sure about Yahoo, which it states "If you have a Yahoo! email account, email is instantly transferred to iPhone as it arrives at the Yahoo! server." If the guy had a yahoo! account, it could be quite difficult to disable the email check feature. Either way, the guy had to set up the email on the machines. I thought the magic Itunes registration process configured the email.

      I am a little surprised that you apparently can't disable the GSM/GPRS without also killing the WiFi. Were I on a foreign trip I might find it worthwhile to have my favorite WiFi enabled gizmo handy for websurfing in Starbucks and the like even when I didn't want to use plan minutes.

      --
      I've been on slashdot so long I'm starting to get out of touch with the cool stuff if it ain't on slashdot.
    19. Re:ihpones by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The default is in fact to check for mail manually - these people set it to automatically check mail. Of course the real problem here is the insane roaming charges for mobile data, which is no more costly than voice for the operators.

      Yeah, someone else said that it wasn't the default behavior, which makes a lot of my argument moot.

      And I agree completely that the ultimate blame lies with AT&T and the other cell providers and their crazy rate plans. Because even if the guy manually turned on automatic downloads, then forgot about it when he traveled abroad and left his phone in standby (which makes sense; if you want to use the phone you don't always want to have to wait to connect to the network first), I find it hard to believe that anyone would associate that behavior with a nearly $5k phone bill.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    20. Re:ihpones by ryanov · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't regular cellular phones have the same premise? One press for screen off, hold down for power off?

    21. Re:ihpones by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      It's called ejecting the SIM. It's got a simpler interface than even OSX; an eject button.

    22. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I'll bring this up next time I catch Steve-O in the exec washroom.

      Somehow, I suspect you'll have other matters on your mind, Senator Craig.

    23. Re:ihpones by Rycross · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that the phone should "know" that it is roaming and warn/deactivate stuff like email, or make an option for it to behave like that. I'd also like the ability to turn off the phone portion and leave the WiFi on. Now that theres been a public incident like this, I hope Apple adds these options.

      As far as AT&T goes, I'm betting that they cut a deal with the guy, and he upgrades his plan instead of paying the cash. At least when I hear of cases like this, thats what the mobile carrier has usually done. I think that being able to rack up a $5k charge in the first place is pretty absurd. I can't think of any situation where that kind of a bill is acceptable, and they should really put limits too how high your bill can go.

    24. Re:ihpones by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 4, Funny

      PC guy here, but.... don't you drag the Sim to the trashcan? ;)

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
    25. Re:ihpones by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      Well, usually you would, but if you're a hardcore UNIX hacker on a Mac you can bring up a Terminal, type "umount /Volumes/SIM_Card" and then try to extract it with a pair of needle-nose pliers. ;)

    26. Re:ihpones by Pixie_From_Hell · · Score: 1

      if you're a hardcore UNIX hacker on a Mac you can bring up a Terminal, type "umount /Volumes/SIM_Card" and then try to extract it with a pair of needle-nose pliers. ;)
      umount /Volumes/SIM_Card && eject /Volumes/SIM_Card
    27. Re:ihpones by Mr.+Mindless · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >I'd also like the ability to turn off the phone portion and leave the WiFi on.

      me too, or an option to "limit data to WiFi only" That would be ideal for roaming situations since the default (and really only) behavior is that if an 802.11 connection is dropped it falls back to EDGE. That's great in an unlimited data area, it sucks when you are roaming

      >

      --
      - MM
    28. Re:ihpones by Rexdude · · Score: 1

      I've seen similar behavior with Nokia phones. You can disable MMS when roaming, and they have a security model in place for 3rd party apps.
      When you install a new application(be it java or a native SIS application), an alert appears telling you all the device capabilites that this application will use. For Java (J2ME) apps, you can even set permissions on features-eg accessing the mobile network, sending SMS/MMS,accessing bluetooth, GPRS, your addressbook etc, and whether to prompt you each time it's used or deny usage.

      In fact, some 3rd party applications also take care to warn the user about data usage charges if running in the background. I had Yahoo! Go on my phone; it would periodically sync mail and contacts from Yahoo, but you had to enable the option to run in the background; upon which it would display a message warning you that you could incur heavy bandwidth usage charges by doing so.

      Such features will definitely help the user, at least they would have been warned of the consequences.

      --
      "..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
    29. Re:ihpones by hughk · · Score: 1

      On my little Nokia (E61), there is an excellent feature that says do not autocheck mail when roaming. I then pick up the email via free WiFi whenever possible with a manual connect. It saves a fortune!!!! Oh and the E61 dors allow you to enable WiFi without turning GSM/GPRS/3G on. The thing is that whilst Apple has the edgge on sexy interfaces, Nokia has the edge on making mobile phones.

      --
      See my journal, I write things there
    30. Re:ihpones by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      My Treo's mail client has an almost identical feature, automatically shuts down when roaming to avoid excessive charges. Not exactly a new concept in email, or MMS, or anything else for that matter.

      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    31. Re:ihpones by lgw · · Score: 1

      Mine doesn't, but then my cellphone is ... a phone. Strange idea, I know. I hope nothing ever happens to my T28, because apparantly phones that are just phones aren't made any more.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    32. Re:ihpones by xystren · · Score: 1

      So I wonder how the the FAA feels about this? After all such wireless and electronic devices affect the navigation and guidance systems in planes.

      Hmmm, so no sudden influx of plane crashes. Those lying B@s7@rds!!!!!

      Cheers
      Xyst

      ps: yes I do know it's all a load of hooey that electronic devices must be turned off.
    33. Re:ihpones by mhbtr · · Score: 1

      10 page "Important Product information Guide included with each iPhone. That and an 8 page illustrated manual. Page one of the "Important" guide tells you how to turn the phone off...

      The problem is no one reads manuals anymore, everyone wants to sue and complain, everytime someone effs up, it is someone else's fault. You just spent $600 on a new toy (now $400) - you would think you would read the 10 pages of "Important Information" before you start using it 24/7....

    34. Re:ihpones by instarx · · Score: 1

      Hopefully "after this gets publicised" more people will bother to read the manual which clearly states in Chapter 2 "The Basics" (page 14) how to turn the iPod completely off.

      Excuse me, but I thought Apple products were so well designed that people didn't need manuals and 54 page instruction booklets. So which is it Apple fanboys...intuitive, or complex and obscure? You really can't have it both ways.

      And let me just say that a phone that actively and invisibly racks up charges while it is turned OFF is fucking horrible design. It goes against accepted Human Interface Theory where Off is supposed to be off. No way are these excessive data charges the fault of the users.

      As for Apple's AT&T partner, leave it up to the phone company to figure out a way to charge their customers for free WiFi.

    35. Re:ihpones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. man diskutil.

      diskutil eject /Volume/SIM_Card

    36. Re:ihpones by scoot80 · · Score: 1

      Damn, so potentially if I leave my iPod ON, i could get a huge bill from AT&T even though I'm in Aus? Shit. Thats scary. I bet ya it does it through iTunes!

  2. Off means off by Alex777 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off. What if it interferes with hospital equipment like other cells, even if it's off?

    1. Re:Off means off by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off. What if it interferes with hospital equipment like other cells, even if it's off?

      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.

    2. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most equipment today doesn't

    3. Re:Off means off by Kazymyr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Better yet, how about airplanes? If it's not really off at any time, isn't it illegal to take an iphone on a flight?

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    4. Re:Off means off by cnettel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's easy for many things, but not so easy when you are doing non-invasive monitoring of electric signals from the body. A false alarm would still cause problems, and I can understand why you want that type of equipment to be sensitive to the limit that it can detect spurious signals.

    5. Re:Off means off by cforceleritas · · Score: 1

      Or what about "Flight Mode?" If there are no provisions for this situation on the iPhone then that is a serious design flaw. Maybe a third party coder could help save us!

    6. Re:Off means off by ThinkingInBinary · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.

      Yes, but... 1. Medical equipment manufacturers have a lot of things to worry about already. They have tons of hoops to jump through to make sure that it never endangers people under normal operating conditions. The equipment already costs a ton, because of the amount of time that manufacturers have to sink into things like FDA approval. (I'm not saying this is a bad thing, but just that it does drive up costs.) Cell phones are the last thing they want to have to worry about. 2. Even if it was well-shielded, you'd have the airline problem. Hospitals, afraid that older or badly-designed equipment would still be vulnerable, would still put up "Please turn off cell phones" signs, just to be safe.

      I'm sure in the next decade or so, this problem will be corrected. But don't expect it to happen quickly, because I don't remember hearing about any incidents where a patient was actually harmed because a machine malfunctioned in real life. (Feel free to point them out if they have happened -- I haven't looked for them at all; I just assumed it would be a big enough deal that it would receive media coverage that I'd notice.)

    7. Re:Off means off by Ichelo · · Score: 5, Insightful
      http://www.newsday.com/business/ny-bzappl0908,0,29 29341.story?coll=ny_home_rail_headlines

      Levy said he didn't expect data transfer charges internationally because he believed the data network in Europe wasn't compatible with the iPhone. The Levys brought their phones with them for voice calls

      I know the article says they were off, but it also says the took the phones for voice calls, so where they really off? or did they just not use the data part?
    8. Re:Off means off by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      You mean even spectrums that aren't widely used right now that are going to be in 10 or 20 years?

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    9. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is an airplane mode switch in the settings.

    10. Re:Off means off by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1, Troll

      And you can't even remove the batteries to make sure it stays off. Brilliant strategy Steve!

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    11. Re:Off means off by gardyloo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, hospital equipment already racks up astounding charges. Maybe hospitals should start buying iDefibs and iProctoscopes. Sounds like iPhone owners will probably need both of those soon.

    12. Re:Off means off by somersault · · Score: 1

      Where are you in our darkest hour, Geek-Chic-Man? Are you reading up on all the options you can configure on your Gentoo build? Are you low level formatting your iPod? Are you out getting your hair cut and hydrogen peroxide painted with a motif resembling a penguin eating an apple? Please help us!

      --
      which is totally what she said
    13. Re:Off means off by AgentPaper · · Score: 1, Offtopic
      You're right, it shouldn't, and the vast majority of modern healthcare equipment doesn't have such problems. However, there are still thousands of patients walking around with "legacy" implantable devices (pacers, ICDs, etc) that aren't RF-shielded, to say nothing of healthcare facilities still using older equipment that wasn't designed with today's RF environment in mind.

      Then too, a lot of the "no cellular phones" strictures are there for convenience, not necessarily patient safety. Hospitals are built like very, very few modern buildings. They use massive amounts of brick, block and structural steel compared to a standard office building, and most rooms incorporate some form of RF or radiation shielding. End result: the only place you'll get a signal will be outside the building. (This is also why it's a gold-plated PITA to deploy a wireless network in a hospital - you have to install repeaters every thirty feet instead of every seventy or so, and you still wind up with signal problems.)

      --
      First rule of trauma: Bleeding always stops.
    14. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wasn't off, he just had the screen locked.

      Completely off there is nothing broadcast.

      There is also airplane mode available to turn off radiating, and leave everything else working.

    15. Re:Off means off by skeeto · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.

      Remember that intensity decreases proportionally to the inverse square. This means that after a not-so-far distance (such as the parking lot at the hospital), the intensity of the cell phone radiation decreases dramatically but will be very strong at close distances, such as in a waiting room at the hospital.

      Ever hold a cell phone (not all do this) near a speaker and get blasted by loud buzzing noises? Notice that the speaker is fine when you move the cell phone away, say, 5 feet.

    16. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iPhone can be shutdown or put to "sleep". If I understand correctly, shutdown is a complete shutoff whereas sleep blacks out the screen but continues to check email... Anybody been able to confirm if this guy actually turned off the phone? Seems likely he just put them to sleep...

    17. Re:Off means off by aug24 · · Score: 2, Informative

      ...and that's why it should be done in a shielded room, not why every other device on the planet should be off/shielded. What happens if someone walks by outside the window with an unshielded device?

      (I had friends at uni who got interference from cars 200m away. They ran their experiment at 3am instead. My point being, there is always interference. You shouldn't try to legislate against it.)

      J.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    18. Re:Off means off by fredmosby · · Score: 5, Informative

      You can actually turn an iPhone off. These people left their iPhones on standby and thought they were turned off. Just because the screen is black doesn't mean the device is off.

      To turn it off all you have to do is hold down the standby button for a few seconds then then hit the off button when it asks you if you really want to turn the phone off.

    19. Re:Off means off by jrumney · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The user here is an idiot and deserves what he gets.

      Really? So you think that $4800 is perfectly reasonable for taking your phone abroad for a month with the default settings as supplied by the phone company, and not actually using it at all?

    20. Re:Off means off by magarity · · Score: 1

      but it also says the took the phones for voice calls, so where they really off?
       
      Dragging the thing along so it can be turned on in a crisis to make a call at the exorbitant international roaming rates is a perfectly reasonable emergency plan - I was in Europe on business with a coworker who brought a Blackberry along for just that. It was $1.80 per minute if he called anyone so he didn't - although his wife called the thing regularly for emergencies about the kids misbehaving or what color to get the kitchen repainted. The look on his face as he took those calls and thought about the charges was quite entertaining. The person in the article was much wiser to bring the family along with him.

    21. Re:Off means off by phoenixwade · · Score: 2, Insightful

      2. Even if it was well-shielded, you'd have the airline problem. Which airline problem would that be? You aren't suggesting that cell phones cause a problem with an Airplane, are you?

      My .02: There is no possible way that everyone will always remember to turn off a cell phone. The chances that a bit of equipment in a hospital will be exposed to cellphone signals approaches 100% unless the equipment in question is unusually isolated from the public (Surgery maybe?) This has been true for over ten years.
        So yes, I expect life-saving equipment to ignore and reject cellular signals, just like I expect the equipment to handle any other exposure to which it would commonly be subjected, Like electrical surge, static discharges (to the case, obviously), elevated Oxygen levels, and fluid splashes.
      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    22. Re:Off means off by QuantumRiff · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Yeah, and with phones that just "standby" instead of turning off, you have to remove the battery. Oh, wait, how do you do that on an iPhone?

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    23. Re:Off means off by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      For how much of every hospital do you want to require shielding? Each intensive care ward and operating room has one or more heart monitors. Shielding still doesn't solve the problem. If a whole floor is an intensive care unit, even if it's shielded everyone on that floor with a cell phone is potentially interfering.

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    24. Re:Off means off by slofstra · · Score: 1

      Buy a BlackBerry. Their servers hold the e-mails until you turn your device back on. The Apple 'ethos' will never work for phones. It's not the device, it's the network, stupid. This is too much for Apple to handle, clearly.

    25. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      apple fanboys unite - the only product where off does not mean off. Good thing apple does not make weapons, the iGun with the 'safety' that does not actually do anything.

    26. Re:Off means off by Rogerborg · · Score: 1
      >If it's not really off at any time, isn't it illegal to take an iphone on a flight?

      What law would that be?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    27. Re:Off means off by jonpublic · · Score: 2

      That requires you to actually turn off the phone. Apparently these people bought the phone and never bothered to read the instructions on how to power down the phone.

      Seriously? Did these people think that when the screen is off the phone is off? If that was the case then the phone must power on whenever they got a call, because the screen is always off.

    28. Re:Off means off by itsdapead · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off.

      Er, what if its a PHONE and if you turn it completely off people won't be able to, like, PHONE you...?

      If you read on, someone posts that the iPhone (just like Windows Mobile phones) has a power-down mode if you really want it.

      What other phones DON'T do is periodically phone home all by themselves - and unless AT&T/Apple have a large friendly warning* in TFM then they're probably in the wrong on that one.

      (* Do not eat iPhone. Do not operate iPhone while attempting to defuse atomic bomb. Do not drop iPhone onto the head of a pedestrian from the observation deck of the Empire State Building. Do not smash iPhone to pieces and stab yourself with the shards. Do not insert iPhone anally unless you are the goatse guy. If you are the goatse guy please do not return iPhone to Apple afterwards. Do not select The Lumberjack Song as ringtone while drinking in a bar in rural Canada. Turn iPhone off properly when traveling abroad. Do not take the name of Jobs in vain. Warning: this booklet may cause paper cuts if mishandled. See page 199 for more warnings)

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    29. Re:Off means off by phoenixwade · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For how much of every hospital do you want to require shielding? Each intensive care ward and operating room has one or more heart monitors. Shielding still doesn't solve the problem. If a whole floor is an intensive care unit, even if it's shielded everyone on that floor with a cell phone is potentially interfering. I agree, shielding the FLOOR or the Building won't, ever, fix this. It has to be fixed where the failure is, i.e. the equipment that will fail.
      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    30. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recently had the wonderful chance to visit my father who had a heart attack and was having open-heart surgery during his hospital stay. The hospital had free wifi in the rooms, so they're willing to accept 2.4Ghz radiation as a matter of fact, even locally emitting it and allowing patients and visitors to emit it. The challenge is that the iPhone doesn't have a 'Hospital' mode. The new touch gear seems more promising assuming Apple is smart enough to put Mail on it. If you'd find what i have dubbed 'Hospital' mode valuable, you should nag apple some more :). I understand this may offend iSteve, but sometimes more choices is a good thing. (I also wish the hospital was smart enough to not block secure imap, ssh and other valuable/secure transports, but you know those foolish IT guys "DENY ALL").

    31. Re:Off means off by ktappe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Medical equipment manufacturers have a lot of things to worry about already. They have tons of hoops to jump through to make sure that it never endangers people under normal operating conditions.
      Cell phone signals have become "normal operating conditions" in our society.
      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    32. Re:Off means off by Gordonjcp · · Score: 3, Informative

      You aren't suggesting that cell phones cause a problem with an Airplane, are you?

      No, a mobile phone being operated in an aircraft causes problems with the mobile phone network. From that distance you have a massive radio footprint, and your phone appears in many many cells all at once (normally you're not in more than half-a-dozen cells, all adjacent), and roaming at a couple of hundred miles per hour when you're close enough to the ground to only hit the "normal" number of cells. The computers controlling the network routing cack themselves, and the network locks up. A couple of weeks later you get a snotty letter from Orange telling you not to do it again. See if you can guess how I know.

    33. Re:Off means off by ktappe · · Score: 1

      There is an airplane mode switch in the settings.
      ...which should apparently be renamed "No Huge AT&T Bills" mode...
      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    34. Re:Off means off by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      I think the reason why they don't want mobile phones in hospitals is quite different. Hospitals are filled with two kinds of people: Patients who can do with as much peace and quiet as possible, and doctors who I would want to concentrate on their jobs and not be distracted by anything.

      The last time I was in a hospital, in the emergency department, with lots of signs to keep your mobile shut off, this one idiot gets a call, and when he answers, he SHOUTS into this phone like a complete idiot. Apparently he had never heard of the concept of radio waves transmitting your voice and thought that you have to shout when you talk to anyone out of eyesight. Idiots like that is why you don't want any mobile phones at a hospital.

    35. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? So you think that $4800 is perfectly reasonable for taking your phone abroad for a month with the default settings as supplied by the phone company, and not actually using it at all?

      I prefer to call it the Idiot Tax ;)

      If he actually SHUT THE PHONE OFF, he wouldn't have had that bill. He had them in Sleep. He did not think to set his e-mail to "Manual Check". He could have powered them off (plenty of true iPhone users have described how to do that here, no need to repeat it again). Obviously he can afford 3 iPhones and a nice long cruise in the Med. so maybe he isn't too concerned with money.

    36. Re:Off means off by RMH101 · · Score: 5, Informative
      ...and to hell with those pesky laws of physics!

      Say you have an ECG machine. It's hooked up via sticky contact pads to your chest and is measuring the delicate flickerings of life in your body. It's doing this because it's trying to spot the *tiny* irregularities that could indicate Bad Things.
      You can't magically design a machine that's picking up miniscule electrical currents like this and have it unaffected when some idiot brings in a portable radio transceiver and cranks it up nearby while they tell their wife what they want for dinner.
      As I type, I'm within 30 feet of a ward full of such machines, and maybe a couple of hundred yards from the EEG devices that measure the brain's electrical activity. As we're testing today, I can wave my phone around and I can watch the interference it causes on the data being captured. Even when I'm not talking on the phone, it's checking in with the nearest base station periodically, and I can see that screwing the traces too. It's not causing those machines to break: but it's fvcking up the data that they're capturing - and that data is being captured as it's for diagnostic purposes. Screwing this up could have really bad consequences for someone.

      This is not rocket science.

    37. Re:Off means off by dreamt · · Score: 1

      There is an airplane mode switch in the settings. So of course, its described in an obvious way in the documentation that you should use airplane mode when you are on a boat? To me, turning the iPhone to airplane mode is a mode to use on an airplane.
    38. Re:Off means off by apparently · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Just because the screen is black doesn't mean the device is off.

      and that's totally acceptable. A user shouldn't be able to just glance at their phone to determine if it's off, or if it's "sleeping", but not sleeping so soundly that it won't rack up a $4800 bill.
      Defective by design, my friend.

    39. Re:Off means off by neapolitan · · Score: 5, Informative

      > I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.

      I'm a cardiologist - we get this question a lot, and I've been in many, um, discussions, about this issue.

      In general, hospital equipment does not malfunction with any FCC approved wireless interference, especially from a consumer device. The trouble is, there are some anecdotes:

      http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0196064405007110

      that demonstrate equipment malfunction with close proximity of cellphones / radios, etc. This 2005 report was widely publicized, (sorry, system demands that you purchase the article if you want to read it) but it was a cellphone left on top an IV infusion pump that apparently malfunctioned, and was reproducible (move the phone near the pump -> malfunction, move it away and returns to normal.)

      I tell people that as long as they have a digital phone, they are ok to use it in the hospital. In truth, I think that if a nurse tells you to move to another area they are probably wanting you to stop yapping in common areas, which is a much bigger problem IMHO.

      As with anything that deals with life or death, physicians and health care staff are quite risk averse. If there is a very, very small chance of interference, then we err on the side of caution. Your cellphone is designed to not interfere with things, but I'm sure we have all heard our computer speakers chatter *before* a call comes in, or seen your old CRT monitor jump due to an incoming call on a nearby phone. This is interference -- making all medical equipment so that they are totally oblivious to all outside fields would make them inconceivably heavy. Don't bother with the "faraday cage" argument -- most cases are metal, but as anybody with engineering experience would tell you it is imperfect (as I've stated before, you can use your cellphone in a metal plane, also a "faraday cage.")

      So, no, hospital equipment is generally ok, but generally we tell people to not use cellphones in the intensive care unit or operating rooms, where things are most sensitive and potentially could have lethal consequences. We allow answering the phone and moving to an appropriate area, and allow cellphone use throughout the hospital otherwise (the doctors do this too). If it were a big risk, equipment would be malfunctioning left and right. However, it is prudent to minimize risks, especially for nonessential communication, hence the policies.

      --
      Slashdotter, ID #101. UIDs are in binary, right?
    40. Re:Off means off by NoobHunter · · Score: 1

      See...there is one flaw in the argument that the phone was off but still recieving e-mail. It was not off. After having RTFA and digging around and reading the Iphone's manual, it is clearly stated that what the user did was put the phone on Standby which effectively locks the screen but does not...(read: NOT) deactivate the phone's transmissions. Now...I'm gonna chalk up this article as a PEBKAC and plunk it down with the reports of 'Apple misleading on replacement of Battery' because all it amounts to is anti-appleism. The guy will still Sue Apple and AT&T because in the good ol' U S of A, no one assumes responsibility for their mistakes and eff-ups. (Hell, everyone is still trying to figure out how Dubbya Term 2 happened...) Next up, Man slips on bar of soap...sues soap maker for not posting warning label of soap's sliperiness (SP?).

      --
      So Jesus, Mohammed and Abraham walk into a Bar....
    41. Re:Off means off by avronius · · Score: 1

      I would think that you if you lack sufficient skill to operate high-tech device [including understanding how to turn it off], you would restrict yourself to lower-tech devices.

      As far as cellular telephone use in hospitals... this is a growing problem. I've had to take my son into "Emergency" at one of the hospitals in my city. There were no less than 10 people who answered calls in the waiting room. There are signs clearly posted - pictograms, written warnings in the 20 most widely used languages. At best, people are ambivalent about this rule. They know that they should turn off the phone, but the are worried that family members may be trying to contact them to know how someone is doing. At worst, they simply don't care.

      Here's an article published Thursday - http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070906-cell-phones-trigger-medical-equipment-failure.html. It's a good read, and suggests that the "rule" that we have been living by [in terms of cell phones in hospitals] is more strict than it needs to be, and that perhaps we should reevaluate these rules. Sadly, there will still be some people who's apathy will lead to major problems. We can only hope that nobody is seriously injured as a direct [or indirect] result of their selfish attitudes.

    42. Re:Off means off by NinjaTariq · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Digital phones don't interfere with hospital equipment, how do you think doctors pagers work, the force?

      The policy was introduced way back when they had analogue phones, because they may have done (not too sure, but thats what i heard), but they keep it because phones are just annoying. I have used my phone in an ICU with the permission of consultants and nurses without a problem, the operating theatre was next door.

      I am pretty sure the same applies for aircraft too, but you can't normally get signal at 30k feet anyway so why bother, and you might miss annoucements if you are on the phone during takeoff and landing.

    43. Re:Off means off by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      User interface design 101: a UI should be intuitive for users and not contain surprises.

      Strange, Apple's UI people are usually pretty good. But if you really can have a phone that looks like it's switched off but isn't, and it really does require a counter-intuitive and confusing alternative action by the user to switch it off fully, then they dropped the ball big time on this one and the user is quite right to feel aggrieved at the small fortune in costs he has personally incurred as a result.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    44. Re:Off means off by petermgreen · · Score: 3, Informative

      You really don't want to put each patient in a shielding box as doing so would interfere with treating them.

      The problem is not that electronic circuits need shielding. The problem is sensors, to use an analogy putting on earmuffs will not allow you to hear a whisper in a rock concert.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    45. Re:Off means off by timster · · Score: 1

      All you have to do to determine whether the device is off is press the wake button on the top. If it doesn't wake up, it's off.

      Just like any other brick phone.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    46. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He had it sleep with the display off...not actually off. The user here is an idiot and deserves what he gets. He probably also thinks that if he doesnt see any lights its off...its not...there is a specific turn off mode for the phone hold the sleep button for 3+seconds gets you an off screen.


      The natural assumption of most reasonable people is that if the screen is off and there is no other indication that it is on (such as a flashing LED), the unit should be off. You shouldn't have to stand on your head holding your breath while singing the national anthem of Portugal to get it to turn off. Besides, TFA states that even when off it is downloading email so the user doesn't have to wait when they turn it on. Given that, I would say that even if it was truly off, it would still rack up the charges.

      Apple and AT&T aren't going to tell you that part because it cuts into their obscene profits. If there was truth in advertising then I doubt people would have fallen for the hype.

      Idiot...and of course /. posting an idiots story as some sorta manifesto of why the iphone is evil.. Its not its jsut bad for idiotic people.


      Why is it when a company or companies as is the case here, takes advantage of user ignorance it is always the fault of the user? The documentation (both the contract and the user manual) is purposely obfuscated in legal or technical jargon. You shouldn't need an attorney to use a damned phone. Nowhere in the hype, adverts, or anywhere else does it say, "CAUTION: Use of this product means you agree to the myriad of hidden charges we will bill you with!" Use of a phone shouldn't send you into the poorhouse simply because you decided to take it on a trip outside the US especially if you never used the damned thing and are being billed for a convenience you never asked for.
    47. Re:Off means off by calebt3 · · Score: 1

      Just hope that part 15 of the FCC license does not apply to the equipment. ;)

    48. Re:Off means off by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      Ummm, pretty sure that's how email works in general. It stays on the server and you can retrieve/delete it at your leisure.

    49. Re:Off means off by NinjaTariq · · Score: 1

      You are obviously one of those people who reads a manual when you get a piece of electrical equipment? Its a phone you shouldn't need one to use it, and mac users are always bitching that their stuff doesn't need a manual either

      The first time you switch it off, a notice should come on the screen explaining that it does not stop transmitting and receiving data, would you like to ignore this message next time?

    50. Re:Off means off by Mana+Mana · · Score: 1

      Dude why do you bother responding. Just wish the sot a happy-merry and lots of off (not really) cellphones around the next time he is hospitalized or in intensive care. Same for his wife, or kids. Let him an iphone kill'em, that'll teach him - maybe. Trolls die hard.

    51. Re:Off means off by djh101010 · · Score: 0

      That's easy for many things, but not so easy when you are doing non-invasive monitoring of electric signals from the body. A false alarm would still cause problems, and I can understand why you want that type of equipment to be sensitive to the limit that it can detect spurious signals.

      Most signals that your body generates, monitored by biomedical equipment, has a frequency of 250 Hz or less. The Verizon/AT&T Edge network is at either 850 or 1900 MHz. So - give or take, they're 4 million times higher in frequency. Filters being what they are, they're pretty good at rejecting things that far out of band. Telemetry systems also have their own bands to transmit in.
    52. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 5, Informative

      The default setting is for the iPhone to not check mail automatically. You have to explicitly turn that on.

    53. Re:Off means off by arivanov · · Score: 1

      Screw the hospital equipment.

      This means that it should be FCC decertified right here, right now. This device cannot go through the door of an aeroplane per current regulations anywhere in the world.

      Are these regulations relevant, correct or not is not relevant. They are there and must be followed until changed.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    54. Re:Off means off by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 4, Informative

      My phone has a display that goes into "sleep" mode after about 15 seconds. As far as anyone is concerned, the phone looks like it's off. In order to actually turn the phone off, I have to hold the power button for 5 seconds. Every single cell phone I've ever used behaves like this. From the sounds of things, the iPhone has similar behavior.

      --
      This guy's the limit!
    55. Re:Off means off by avronius · · Score: 1

      These legacy devices would be affected by:
      - proximity to a radio transmission tower
      - proximity to a police officer's CB or walkie-talkie
      - proximity to a radar detector
      - proximity to a remote control airplane, car or boat
      - a myriad of other devices that cause radio interference...

      Cellular telephones are *relatively* new, but if you've had a pacemaker for 10 years, there's a good chance that you've been near one of these devices / locations.

    56. Re:Off means off by djasbestos · · Score: 1

      Only on Cingular in my experience. I have two Samsung phones (one personal and one work)

      "Bup badup, bup badup, bup badup, bdbdbdbdbdbbdbdup".

    57. Re:Off means off by UP_Minstrel · · Score: 1

      The didn't drop the ball on this. There's a big red slider you have to slide to turn it off after you push the power button for a couple of seconds. Its clearly documented, and something you don't forget if you've done it once. What apple failed to do was circumvent the ability of the users to make convenient assumptions - something no one can ever do.

      You can never make anything foolproof because fools are too ingenious.

    58. Re:Off means off by slofstra · · Score: 1

      Not at all. The BlackBerry network 'pushes' the email to your device when the device is active and on. That is it's key advantage - you don't have to explicitly retrieve your email. It would appear (I don't have one so I don't really know) that the 'iphone' has some kind of push system as well. This report is not a small problem - it would appear to be an egregious design error in Apple's push system.

    59. Re:Off means off by servognome · · Score: 2, Informative

      Non-compliance with the crew of an airplane is a criminal offense. Punishable by maximum of 2 years in prison and fine of 50,000HKD (at least that's what it said on my flight)

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    60. Re:Off means off by jrumney · · Score: 1

      That mitigates things slightly, but the carriers' (its not just AT&T, nor just US carriers) data roaming charges, and methods of rounding data usage up to their benefit, are still unjustified by the economic reality of providing the service, and overdue for a legal challenge from either consumers or a government body responsible for regulating the industry. Unfortunately the scope of the EU's action against carriers abuse of roaming charges has so far been limited to voice calls and within the EU only.

    61. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm dude, its not the default setting of the iPhone to check email. Under the email application it defaults to "never" you have to specifically state you want the iPhone to check for email ever 15 minutes, 30 minutes, etc. So the combination of people that a) don't know how to turn off their cell phone, and which likely left them in the same mode when they flew to the location to get on the ship in the first place, smart. and b) people not thinking about the fact that they set the phone to check email.

      And wow the iPhones have great battery life, or power management if they were all checking email say every 15 minutes and never once recharged their phones? My Treo 650 could only handle doing that for probably 48 hours before shutting down because of low battery...

    62. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I certainly think that. For example, it's perfectly reasonable to expect to be locked out of your computer entirely for installing Ubuntu on a secondary hard drive, right? Bad things happening to assholes is quite acceptable, in my book.
    63. Re:Off means off by Mana+Mana · · Score: 1

      > > The user here is an idiot and deserves what he gets. > Really? So you think that $4800 is perfectly reasonable for ... Only an idiot takes cellphones abroad without reading ALL of their plan. Really. This is not the first time nor the last we'll read about some sucker who misunderstood / did not quite understand / thought it was on or off or sideways his cell plan or cellphone. Read the archives. I am not going to go into wtf I would take an expensive piece of electronics, highly stealable, through various customs and ports, fragility issues, and my family and I ALL had to have one each in case eany or miny lost their iphone and miny came to the rescue. Look folks should prepare for the worst. In case I you she he they the dog the cat or the bellhop accidentally turned on the phone there is one true way to prevent this REMOVE THE FUCKING BATTERY. Now I am paranoid. I really would have done that. If the thing stilled worked some how and I was burned, hey, you would have a case.

    64. Re:Off means off by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1

      And where would someone get these low-tech devices? Try finding a cell phone anymore that doesn't have a camera. I don't want a bloody camera! The attraction of the iPHONE to many was a simple UI...and these folks got burned.

      --
      When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
    65. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Well, its obvious to me what it does, but since I'm a nerd, its a small leap to think "airplane mode must turn off the radio and wifi." But there is a manual included that they could have used. There are many ways they could have avoided this situation:

      1) Turn the phone off, instead of putting it in sleep. The guy had it in sleep, not off.
      2) Set the mail checking to manual.
      3) Airplane mode

      Now, I don't blame the guy entirely. The actual method for turning the phone off isn't exactly intuitive, and to your average joe, its not exactly obvious what airplane mode does. He could have read the manual to find out. What I'm wondering is how he didn't notice that automatic mail checking was on. The iPhone will signal you when you get email... I guess he just didn't get any mail? But if thats the case, how did he rack up hundreds of megabytes of traffic?

    66. Re:Off means off by slofstra · · Score: 1

      Your cell phone is not set up to have emails pushed to it. It looks like a major design snafu to me.

    67. Re:Off means off by Mattintosh · · Score: 1

      REMOVE THE FUCKING BATTERY. ... I really would have done that.

      Uhm... It's an iPhone. The battery is soldered in and there's no access door. Did you forget that, or have you just been living under a rock for the last 3 months?

    68. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I just thought it would be nice to use the WiFi in a foreign country... It would be great to have a way to turn off the phone portion but leave the WiFi on.

      I'm not counting on Apple adding the feature. I mean, look how long it took them to add actual real right-clicking on their mice (not command-click or whatever you use). And even then, they couldn't just put a button there... they just have to be "special."

    69. Re:Off means off by Deadstick · · Score: 1
      Don't bother with the "faraday cage" argument -- most cases are metal, but as anybody with engineering experience would tell you it is imperfect (as I've stated before, you can use your cellphone in a metal plane, also a "faraday cage.")

      Trouble is, an airplane is not a Faraday cage at cellphone frequencies, because in order to block RF signals, any holes in it have to be substantially smaller than the wavelength. At cell frequencies that's less than a foot -- which means that your cellphone can see through the same windows your eyes do.

      rj

    70. Re:Off means off by slofstra · · Score: 1

      The point is that when you turn the phone 'off' it should not go to standby. That is the design error. It's an error in the UI, not in the operational characteristics of the device. The BlackBerry device, by comparison, turns the radio off when you turn the device off.

    71. Re:Off means off by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      It's GSM, not Cingular. Cingular just happens to use GSM. I use that noise as a pre-warning that my phone is about to ring. :)

    72. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are they trying to claim that when the left for the cruise they turned the phones "off" and did not turn them back "on" until they got back? What's the point of having an iPhone if your not going to use the other features i.e. MP3 player? I'm sure they were using the phones and thought because they did not make calls that the phone was "off"

    73. Re:Off means off by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1
      You forgot "Do not taunt happy fun ball".

      But help me out folks, in the olden days, this would be PEBKAC- Problem Exists Between Keyboard and Chair. Now how do we do this?

      Problem Exists Between iPhone and Ground (PEBIG)?
      Problem Exists Between Device and Toenails (PEBDAT)?
      Maybe just RTFM?

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    74. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not trying to say that the users' are totally at fault. I sympathize with them that it's not necessarily intuitive. I have any easier time with it than non-techies. And Apple's strong point is supposed to be intuitive interfaces.

      I also note that some other posters have mentioned that email auto-check is on by default. Mine was not, but my phone is brand new. It could be that Apple changed the defaults, expecting something like this (or maybe they had other complaints, and they just weren't publicized).

    75. Re:Off means off by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 1

      This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off. What if it interferes with hospital equipment like other cells, even if it's off?

      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.

      I figure I'll start turning my cell phone off when the doctors do.
      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
    76. Re:Off means off by avronius · · Score: 1

      Well Analogy Man, I was thinking of a complete scale lower than cellular telephone. Something along the lines of paper, pencil, an envelope, and a couple of stamps. Think of it along the same lines as pay-per-use cellular telephone.

      Sure, the response time is a bit slow, but you don't have to worry about hidden charges if you neglect to turn off your pencil.

    77. Re:Off means off by Mana+Mana · · Score: 1

      Only an idiot takes cellphones abroad without reading ALL of their plan. Really. This is not the first time nor the last we'll read about some sucker who misunderstood / did not quite understand / thought it was on or off or sideways his cell plan or cellphone. Read the archives. I am not going to go into wtf I would take an expensive piece of electronics, highly stealable, through various customs and ports, fragility issues, and my family and I ALL had to have one each in case eany or miny lost their iphone and miny came to the rescue.

      Look folks should prepare for the worst. In case I you she he they the dog the cat or the bellhop accidentally turned on the phone there is one true way to prevent this REMOVE THE FUCKING BATTERY.

      Now I am paranoid. I really would have done that. If the thing stilled worked some how and I was burned, hey, you would have a case.

      Ooops this is Apple - no battery removal for you - remove the SIM. Hey man come on, you're a hipster, man, come on, drink your Pabst it's all good. Manuals are for the other guy. You do graphics, php, crafts chicks. K, I'll give you the craft chicks. ^.^
    78. Re:Off means off by kevinadi · · Score: 2, Funny

      Do not select The Lumberjack Song as ringtone while drinking in a bar in rural Canada.

      But... he's a lumberjack, so he must be OK.
    79. Re:Off means off by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      Yes, and WinCE based phones connecting to Exchange servers have a dirty hack that does something similar. If you provide an email address for your provider's SMS gateway, the exchange server will send a dummy message to that address, which gets SMS'd to your phone and tells it that you have new mail and it should connect and synchronize.

      In my experience, whatever system the blackberry uses is much faster and more efficient. We have a BES though, so I'm not sure how it compares to using RIM's servers.

      As for the iPhone, I was under the impression that it just used normal mail protocols (IMAP) and polled at regular intervals. I
      don't have one, so I could be mistaken though.

    80. Re:Off means off by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      Checked wikipedia, the iPhone does have "push", but only if you're using Yahoo mail.

    81. Re:Off means off by mediocubano · · Score: 1

      Well then, taking the battery out of it would guarantee that it was "OFF". Ahh but that isn't possible with the iphone, is it?

      Wrap it in tin foil so the RF doesn't get through, but then that will just drain the battery, at which point it will really be OFF.

    82. Re:Off means off by cez · · Score: 1

      hmmm I actually recommend in some situations people installing Linux to do so on a second hard drive...specially if they are already dual-booting the first. Or for security reasons. Easy enough to boot to with this great boot cd .

      --
      Walk with Music;
    83. Re:Off means off by corbettw · · Score: 0, Redundant

      You forgot the most important one: Do not taunt iPhone.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    84. Re:Off means off by fbjon · · Score: 1

      If operating a simple interface for simple operations requires reading a manual, the interface is a failure. Yes, most consumer devices come with instructions to read the manual before use, and no, it isn't reasonable to expect users to actually do so.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    85. Re:Off means off by CPE1704TKS · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Have you not seen how strong a cell phone's wireless signal is? I've had my cell phone near speakers that have been turned off and you can still hear a "click-click-click" sound on the speakers. Think about that for a second... how strong must the EM signal be to drive a current through speaker wires that have been turned off? I would say those are incredibly strong signals. It's not as easy as it seems to deal with something that emits such a strong signal at close proximity.

    86. Re:Off means off by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't blame the guy at all. I had been thinking of getting an iphone but this episode makes it pretty clear that the iphone is best avoided. If I have to study a manual to avoid an unexpected bill for $4800, then no thanks. The device is not ready to sell. It shouldn't be on the market.

    87. Re:Off means off by jasen666 · · Score: 1

      That's pretty damn funny. I forgot to turn my phone off when flying to and from LA last month (3000 miles). Wonder if it caused any havoc with Tmobile?

    88. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see a market in there!

      Imagine an iPhone app, that modulates the RF interference it creates.

      What do you want to feel today?
      D- Cardiac Palpitations

      What strength would you want them to be?
      30%

    89. Re:Off means off by norton_I · · Score: 1

      My point being, there is always interference. You shouldn't try to legislate against it.


      Yes, you should.

      We do. It is called the FCC, and without them, the state of wireless communication would be worse that usenet.
    90. Re:Off means off by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      Well, just a "heads up" -- Ubuntu at the time (Jan '06) was so poorly designed that not even installing it to a secondary hard drive could keep it from locking you out entirely.

      I know I'm being unfair because it hadn't been out for very long but ...

    91. Re:Off means off by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Digital phones don't interfere with hospital equipment, how do you think doctors pagers work, the force?

      Pagers are recievers, cellular phones (analog or digital) are transmitters. There is a wee, wee bit of difference between them.
    92. Re:Off means off by B1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In fact, I'm even told that if your phone rings for an incoming call, that's enough for you to get roaming charges (even if you don't answer it). Supposedly you can avoid that by forwarding incoming calls directly to voicemail.

      BTW, you don't want to roam internationally, at least, not without an expense account.

      I remember one year I took a week's vacation in Ireland, and took my GSM phone with me. One day I was walking back to the hotel and the phone rang -- one of our customers was calling me directly, rather than use our central tech support line. It's bad enough to take direct customer calls on your personal cell phone (because the customer hasn't updated their contact info). It's even worse when that happens while you're roaming internationally.

      The upshot is that I answered reflexively, before I realized what the call was going to cost. I hung up immediately as soon as I made that realization--the call must have been less than a second or two. That was still good enough to bill for a complete call, rounded up to a minute of airtime.

      That second or two of airtime cost me $3.00 on my bill.

      No, they didn't buy me dinner first.

    93. Re:Off means off by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      Apple botched by not being able to shut off data transfer while leaving voice on. For international roaming, the charges are exorbinant at best for data, yet the iPhone constantly tries to connect without any user intervention. Simple things like voicemail are downloaded over the GPRS channel without consent.

      AT&T charges about a dime per kB. The data transfer associated with a 1kB text file is about 7kB by my estimates. If you throw in anything more complicated than text, it mushrooms tenfold. Visual Voicemail... about $0.50 per minute of messages, best case.

      The worst thing of it all is that you have no idea of the transfer magnitude until you get the bill.

      BTW, as much as I consider myself computer-savvy, it isn't exactly easy to shut off the iPhone completely. SIM locking makes it so much worse, since there is no option for a local pre-paid card when travelling.

    94. Re:Off means off by slofstra · · Score: 1

      Of course, if you poll automatically, and often enough, you effectively have 'push' anyway. Perhaps this is what the iphone does. I've never had direct experience of using email on an ordinary cell phone or on a Treo or similar device. I was under the impression that you had to explicitly retrieve your email. Is that correct, or does a Treo poll as well?

    95. Re:Off means off by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I have to admit that I find the AT&T GSM phones to be the scariest when it comes to interference. In our office full of computers you can tell when someones GSM phone is going to ring. They actually interfere with the speakers on the PCs!. CDMA phones don't seem to have that problem. I wonder if it has more to do with the frequencies or the communications method?

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    96. Re:Off means off by Minwee · · Score: 2, Funny

      It has to be fixed where the failure is, i.e. the equipment that will fail.

      That would be the human heart. When you come up with a workable redesign that addresses the problems you have discovered, please let the rest of us know.

    97. Re:Off means off by aug24 · · Score: 1

      So's everyone with a transitor radio. Or a kettle. Or the other heart monitors. Or the multitude of other hospital kit.

      Shield the machines, shield the cabling, and if that isn't enough, then shield the room (that's the expensive bit).

      The point is that one can't require that /everything else/ be shielded. There's too much 'everything else'. Plus (back to the aeroplanes argument here) I don't want to trust my life to all the other idiots remembering to follow instructions.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    98. Re:Off means off by aug24 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Example:

      Your plan involves getting on a plane, telling everyone to turn off their phones, then trusting your life to their obedience.

      My plan involves making sure that the plane won't fall out of the sky and kill everyone if someone forgets they have a phone in their bag.

      Still think my plan is bad?

      I say systems should be robust in themselves, not just trusting that all the other people have followed the spec.

      J.

      --
      You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
    99. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the furry version, on Day 1 the fetus claims that it has all its fur, but then on Day 4 the fetus claims the fur is "starting to grow" and that it "will have a lot of it."

      So which is it? It had ALL its fur on Day 1, or its fur started to grow on Day 4 and it WILL have a lot of it?

      I suggest you edit it before reposting, if you want to be taken seriously.

    100. Re:Off means off by slashdotjunker · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly. Of course you can filter out a radio transciever. The facility where I work has a secure room for doing classified government work. I assure you, no EM gets in or out of that room. Of course, that kind of shielding is expensive to install.

    101. Re:Off means off by Amouth · · Score: 1

      what i find intresting is that my 8525 has the default to not auto check when roaming..

      why is the iPhone set to auto check e-mail while roaming by default? is this a default or did the user set it??

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    102. Re:Off means off by totallygeek · · Score: 1

      This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off. What if it interferes with hospital equipment like other cells, even if it's off?

      What do you do when travelling the US by jet?

    103. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool because you are just as important is they are with your world of warcraft shaman and his epic raid eq or whatever it is you whackers do.

    104. Re:Off means off by NeoTerra · · Score: 1

      ***Now Available***

      iPay, a new service available for all of your iLife devices. iPay takes all of your iBills and puts them together one iTransaction. This new service only costs $19.95/month*!

      *Not including iPhone or iTunes charges. Each itemized item will receive an additional $9.95 charge. $299.95 activation required.

    105. Re:Off means off by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To what expense? Wouldn't it be easier and cheaper to just have the phone shut off completely then to retrofit every hospital and emergency center that might be using these machines with a EM mesh and maintain it?

      Your already spending more for a heart attack then your parents probably paid for their house. Should it end up costing more then your house too? Well, we could just get public health and have to deal with waiting lists and such, increase the taxes of everyone to pay for this. Yea, that sounds more likely instead of saying that electronic devices that report as being off should really be off and then waiting 4 or 5 years to have the new devices rotated in replacing the old ones.

      It is an interesting situation. In one hand, the doctors even need the stuff. In the other, well whatever.

    106. Re:Off means off by phoenixwade · · Score: 3, Interesting

      ...and to hell with those pesky laws of physics!


      Say you have an ECG machine. It's hooked up via sticky contact pads to your chest and is measuring the delicate flickerings of life in your body. It's doing this because it's trying to spot the *tiny* irregularities that could indicate Bad Things.
      You can't magically design a machine that's picking up miniscule electrical currents like this and have it unaffected when some idiot brings in a portable radio transceiver and cranks it up nearby while they tell their wife what they want for dinner.
      As I type, I'm within 30 feet of a ward full of such machines, and maybe a couple of hundred yards from the EEG devices that measure the brain's electrical activity. As we're testing today, I can wave my phone around and I can watch the interference it causes on the data being captured. Even when I'm not talking on the phone, it's checking in with the nearest base station periodically, and I can see that screwing the traces too. It's not causing those machines to break: but it's fvcking up the data that they're capturing - and that data is being captured as it's for diagnostic purposes. Screwing this up could have really bad consequences for someone.


      This is not rocket science.

      First, no it's not rocket science, and it's not magic. It's a problem in electrical engineering.

      Second, I have a different definition of "broken" than you do. By my definition a machine is "broken" when it does not accomplish the task it is designed for. In this case, a machine that is designed for data acquisition is broken when it reports null or spurious results when connected to the patient. So, if a cell phone causes null or spurious results, then the cell phone breaks the machine.

      Third, the reality is that the cell phone WILL be in the environment. Whether by intention or by accident, the phone will be there on a fairly regular basis. Ether someone will forget the ban, forget they have the phone, or both, or someone asserts their "Rights" to their cell phone (however bogus those rights might be) or simple is selfish enough to think their convenience supersedes any "rules" a hospital puts in place.

      And Finally, There are manufacturers who have already engineered around the problem with ECG's. Since it has been done, then it obviously can be done. I can point out a multiple examples of equipment that functions correctly around cellphones, some even require them to operate, like this machine that uses a cellphone to transmit ECG data, but it's one of those situations where someone is talking out of their butt without thinking it through, your limited experience does not translate into an impossibility. If you thought it through, you'd have realized that there are a number of data collecting medical devices out there that are used outside of the hospital, in particular I'm thinking of ECGS carried by EMT's or Paramedics, and the built in ECGs that are a part of the ADF equipment (some of which actually have a cell phone included in the cabinet designed to dial 911 when powered on.) They will, most assuredly, be in high-cell phone use environments (for example, at an accident scene with a number of onlookers using their phones to document and talk about the accident, as rubberneckers are wont to do)

      Basically, If your machines are broken, then you need to change manufacturers. You are, as you pointed out, unnecessarily risking lives. If your place of business is in the US, considering the current litigious environment in the US, as it applies to health care, in particular. You are begging for a huge wrongful death, malpractice type lawsuit.

      I don't agree that this is the way it should be, but it IS the way things are.

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    107. Re:Off means off by jamar0303 · · Score: 1

      That English-Japanese-English one was hilarious!

      --
      OSx86 FTW
    108. Re:Off means off by LeRandy · · Score: 1

      That's pretty damn funny. I forgot to turn my phone off when flying to and from LA last month (3000 miles). Wonder if it caused any havoc with Tmobile?

      Given that the US GSM carriers (and particularly T-mobile) have approximately zero coverage over pitchforkland Kansas, asswipe Colorado and buttfuck Nevada, probably not (along with the rest of the midwest and mountain states).
      Of course, Montana has the best coverage of the lot, I mean those elk need to be on-line 24/7 in them there hills.

    109. Re:Off means off by hal2814 · · Score: 1

      "I would think that you if you lack sufficient skill to operate high-tech device [including understanding how to turn it off], you would restrict yourself to lower-tech devices."

      And I think that if you lack sufficient skill to design the interface of a high-tech device [including being able to clearly indicate when the phone is off vs. when it is asleep], you should restrict yourself to designing lower-tech devices. An On/Off switch isn't exactly a high-tech concept. We have on/off switches on just about every piece of electronics made. If the designer can't make the on/off switch behave like every other such switch on the planet, I just can't feel blame the user for not wading through a technical document to figure that out.

    110. Re:Off means off by phoenixwade · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly. Of course you can filter out a radio transciever. The facility where I work has a secure room for doing classified government work. I assure you, no EM gets in or out of that room. Of course, that kind of shielding is expensive to install. Certainly so.

      However, take a piece of equipment that is interfered with by a cell phone, and a cell phone inside that room/building. The interference still occurs (even though the phone will no longer make or receive a call.) That was the point I was attempting to make. Whereas fixing the bit of equipment so the cell phone doesn't interfere with it fixes the problem no matter where the phone or the equipment is located.

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    111. Re:Off means off by cez · · Score: 1

      Hadn't used it then.. or much now except when installing it for some folks. Sounds like a bad implementation of grub or lilo... but eh, to each their own.

      --
      Walk with Music;
    112. Re:Off means off by Alioth · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Cell phones (at least GSM ones) *will* intefere with aircraft radios very readily. I've experienced it first hand - we were just intercepting the localiser (the horizontal component of an instrument landing system) when the pilot's cell phone started to ring as he'd forgotten to turn it off. It was his first ever night time instrument approach in the clouds for real.

      As soon as his phone went off, the audio was obliterated by a very loud "B B BIP B B BIP B B BIP B B BIP BRRRRRRRRR" (which you will be familiar with if you have a GSM phone as they intefere with a lot of things) - which meant we were unable to hear any ATC instructions. Fortunately, I could take the controls and continue the approach while my friend found his phone and turned it off. However, if he had been alone in the aircraft it would have been extremely distracting, and it would have been quite easy to miss an ATC instruction.

      It didn't intefere with the nav radios though.

    113. Re:Off means off by Satan+Dumpling · · Score: 1

      Easy: Eject the chip. No phone, and Wifi still works.

    114. Re:Off means off by nelsonal · · Score: 3, Funny

      Especially in the fall, elk like to talk, a ton. Txting Hi wnt 2 m8 is much easier than bugling all day and night (and you got shot at far less too).

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    115. Re:Off means off by Anonymous+Freak · · Score: 2, Informative
      I don't know about you, but I'd much rather have a low-power 'sleep' state on my cell phone that is the default "off-like" state. After all, normally I would still want to be able to receive phone calls. If pressing the "sleep/wake" button (that's Apple's name for it in every manual and video,) would turn the phone completely off, I would be annoyed.

      As mentioned, this is a problem that users didn't read the manual. "I'm going to travel overseas, so I think I'll just put my phone in 'sleep' mode because I didn't read the manual to find out that it isn't 'off'." Not to mention the fact that you can put it in "airplane" mode that turns off the radios, and still use it as a camera and iPod.

      --
      Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
      The purpose of that site was not known.
    116. Re:Off means off by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      For the plane issue, they do work on that. Remember this isn't something they discover until after the fact of a plane crash. And in this case, I don't think they ever pinned it down exactly; phone interference was only a theory.

      So, too, for medical equipment. Anyone remember when pacemakers couldn't handle the person walking through the thief detection poles at store exits? They didn't know that at first. Then they put up warning signs. Meanwhile the pacemaker guys hardened their products. Now you don't see those signs anymore.

      So the plane guys and medical equipment guys are working on it, I'm sure. Until then, "please turn off your stuff" is quite a reasonable request. Phones are less important than safe planes or safe medical heart monitors.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    117. Re:Off means off by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      I can't believe this got modded up.

      Frankly, this whole story is a troll. Do people really think their phone is off while it is playing music, accepting calls, and vibrating every time an email come in?

      But to your point, the iPhone has a (widely publicized) "airplane mode" feature, which turns off all the radios.

      Also, you can turn it off, by pressing both hard buttons and then sliding the slider that says "slide to power off". Apple calls the button that this user seems to have mistaken for the power button the "sleep/wake" button.

      Is it your position that there shouldn't ever be sleep/wake buttons because users are too fucking stupid to differentiate between "sleep" and "off"? And that it is reasonable for a user to believe that a phone that is ready to receive calls is off?

      -Peter

    118. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Defective by design? So you really believe that they decided to hide the state of the phone on purpose? I doubt the extra cash flow is worth the pissed off customers. This isn't DRM. You do know that the word "defective" can be used by itself, right?

    119. Re:Off means off by NinjaTariq · · Score: 1

      But in order to know that a message has been delivered to a pager, it must send something back, pagers receive messages when they are switched back on after a period of being switched off (or at least mine have in the past). I can't believe a pager system would be constantly sending out the same message hoping the pager receives it.

      Doctors also use cell phones in hospitals too... I know they don't own special non-interfering cell phones.

    120. Re:Off means off by Satan+Dumpling · · Score: 1

      But with a trusty paper clip, you can REMOVE THE FUCKING CHIP! :) And Wifi still functions, I tried it on my iphone.

    121. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 1

      I'd rather not have to take out the SIM and keep track of it when its feasible to put a software switch in there. Point taken, though.

    122. Re:Off means off by blhack · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but I don't think that one person would cause as much of a problem as you are suggesting. Every time I've flown private I have used my phone on the plane and i have never gotten a nastygram from the phone companies. I could see this being a problem if VERY VERY large numbers of people were making calls from high altitudes/speeds, but your post is a bit misleading. The cellphone networks do not crack themselves when you use a phone from the air.

      --
      NewslilySocial News. No lolcats allowed.
    123. Re:Off means off by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1

      and that's totally acceptable. A user shouldn't be able to just glance at their phone to determine if it's off, or if it's "sleeping", but not sleeping so soundly

      On my PowerBook, "sleeping" mode has a slowly blinking white light on the outside of the laptop case, which is off when the computer is actually "off". I'm kind of glad Apple didn't do that with the iPhone, because it's annoying, particularly in a dark room.

    124. Re:Off means off by norton_I · · Score: 1

      I agree that the system should be robust against unintended interference. But you just can't make navigation instruments that are not susceptible to jamming. Thus we limit the broadcast power of devices, and use anti-jamming devices such as metal poles applied to the heads of people trying to use illegal devices.

      Every time you get on an airplane, you *are* trusting your life that someone does not have a high-powered transmitter operating on a frequency near enough to the relevant bands to cause a problem.

      Also, you would be amazed at how far off in frequency you can be and still disrupt things. Those hand held two-way radios that operate in the 400 MHz region can easily disrupt FM radio at 100 MHz. The signal from the transmitter in the same room simply saturates the input amplifier stage, reducing its gain at 100 MHz below what is needed for detection.

      You can equally well argue that eyes should be hardened against being blinded by a laser pointer. It is just not going to happen. So we have laws that say "don't shine a laser in someone's eye"

    125. Re:Off means off by iocat · · Score: 1

      Hey! I know a way to solve this... have the cell phone's OFF button ACTUALLY TURN IT OFF. (Please begin circular debate).

      --

      Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

    126. Re:Off means off by ObiWanKenblowme · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that technically be interfering with the speakers, and not the radio? Unless you're transmitting on cell freqs with your instrumentation (which I hope to god isn't the case) then it's just the speakers...although I can see how that still wouldn't be a good thing on a cloudy night.

      --
      Obvious exits are NORTH, SOUTH, and DENNIS.
    127. Re:Off means off by surprise_audit · · Score: 1

      Wonder if it caused any havoc with Tmobile?

      Do you think anyone would notice the difference??

    128. Re:Off means off by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      The worst thing of it all is that you have no idea of the transfer magnitude until you get the bill.

      This is why phones should have a data transfer indicator that allows you to see how much data was transfered for a given period. If they charge you per KB, then you should know how many Kilobytes are going in and out of the phone.

      I think Apple really screwed up here and should probably compensate the guy for this. There should be an options to:

          - disable all data transfers
          - disable cellular data transfers
          - disable wi-fi data transfers
          - turn off the antenna

      It is for stuff like this that I generally avoid being an early adopter on hardware, unless I really have the need.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    129. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    130. Re:Off means off by Khaed · · Score: 1

      I can guarantee you it's changed since then. The June 06 version (Dapper Drake, 6.06) was the first version I ever installed, and it worked pretty much flawlessly. I went that direction after getting fed UP with configuring text files.

      I've seen you post about this before, and the way the install and then problems after went with you is not acceptable. I'm sorry it went the way it did. From what I gather, the community has grown a lot since then, as well -- there are still the occasional jackasses, but they tend to be a vocal minority. Just thought I'd throw that out there as I tend to agree with your other posts -- your user name is very easy to remember.

    131. Re:Off means off by dhasenan · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, people will invariably forget to turn their phones off. Even if all phones turned off easily and didn't access the network, you'd get that interference.

      EM shielding is a much more reliable solution.

    132. Re:Off means off by iocat · · Score: 1

      You can't eject the chip in an iPhone. It's a cute device, just not ready for prime time.

      --

      Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

    133. Re:Off means off by macshome · · Score: 1

      When I fly I put my iPhone in Airplane Mode.

    134. Re:Off means off by Mc1brew · · Score: 1

      It would make sense to employ the cheapest solution that **appears** to be **logical**.

      Shielding = $? (Oh wait what if IEEE decides on a new wireless standard, now all that shielding we bought is worthless...)

      Sign = $5? (You are probably in this hospital because you are injured or seeing someone you care about who is injured. If you don't turn off your technology, we might try and replace their heart.)

      The key words here is appears to be logical. The 13yr old who doesn't care about their step mother can't understand why she can't talk to her boyfriends because Cindy's heart complications are pretty boring in comparison to Brads eyes....

    135. Re:Off means off by tftp · · Score: 1

      A radio receiver has many paths over which the GSM signal can come in. For example, all modern radios have at least two intermediate frequencies, some have more. Each of those IF paths has gain. The antenna input is isolated from the first IF, but if the source is local it can bypass the filters and directly get to the gain stages, that's when the overload occurs, and nearby mixers will take care of generating so much garbage that the rest of the receiver will be overloaded with it.

    136. Re:Off means off by Rogerborg · · Score: 0

      Non-compliance with the crew of an airplane is a criminal offense

      That information is coming from the same people who tell you that your GBA will OMG KERASH TEH AIRPALAIN!!!!!!!

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    137. Re:Off means off by pla · · Score: 1

      You can't magically design a machine that's picking up miniscule electrical currents like this and have it unaffected when some idiot brings in a portable radio transceiver

      Actually, yes, you can. AEDs found outside hospital settings don't magically make all RF sources in the area stop before taking their readings - They work just like 99.9% of the electronic devices in our environment, and just deal with "harmful intereference" while doing their best not to make any.

      The bigger problem here involves insurance, not the devices themselves. Cell phones don't kill people in hospitals, or crash airplanes, or magically blow up at gas stations. But because we have a one-in-a-million chance of something happening, which under the worst of situations could hypothetically cause a death/crash/fire, we have insulting signs all over the place warning us to turn off the phone.

    138. Re:Off means off by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking or starting to think it would be easier to just scan for the devices at the door and mandate they be taken from the property or place in a lead or similar lined bag/box that could only be unlocked after entering a certain part of the area. IE, when going out the door, a signal unlocks it or there is a secure locker someone in a safe place.

      It would be just as easy to say turn the phones off, have them actually turn off and then rely on individual responsibility to do so with maybe penalties if they didn't in some circumstances. And if this was actually the case, you wouldn't be seeing a story about someone turning the phone off and getting a 4800 dollar phone bill because it stayed on without you knowing it.

    139. Re:Off means off by PhilTR · · Score: 1

      Welcome to 'trusted computing' and a tiered net. Imagine what Bill G and AT&T could do to you it they should ever get in bed together.

      Oh, btw. I got a hot stock tip fer ya...

    140. Re:Off means off by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      It's not pushed. The iPhones were set to check email every x minutes, which is not a default setting.

    141. Re:Off means off by Fex303 · · Score: 1

      The facility where I work has a secure room for doing classified government work. I assure you, no EM gets in or out of that room.
      This might be a silly comment, as I am no expert, but I imagine that this solution would not work for protecting sensors against interference from phones. The phone would be in the same room as the machine, since it's sitting the patient's pocket, and even though it cannot receive anything from the base stations, it would be searching for them, blasting EM throughout the room in the process.
    142. Re:Off means off by Damvan · · Score: 1

      As has been mentioned about a dozen times in the comments, auto checking email is OFF by default. This user had to turn it on.

    143. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why was this modded "informative" and not "laughably false"?

      The analogy is completely wrong. If you wanted to hear a whisper from the person next to you at a rock concert you certainly could do so if you were both in a sound-proof box. Just as if instruments and a patient were both in a shielded room the instruments would be able to detect smaller signals without the interference of surrounding (background) noise.

      Slashdot postings are generally composed of 20% thinking folks who converse/comment (and often disagree) and the rest comment without reading or thinking at all.

    144. Re:Off means off by Tarlus · · Score: 1

      Yeah, most phones have the airplane mode now. But unfortunately, the vast majority of people either don't know that it exists, they don't know what it's for, they don't know how to disable it, or they completely forget that they even have it. Most people also aren't aware that their phone might still be on even if it appears to be turned off. It's foolish for phone designers to put faith in the general public fully understanding that. Future models of the phone should at least tell you that it's not actually being turned off when you think you're turning it off. It should then tell you how to turn it completely off, should you decide to do so. That little feature by itself would have probably saved that huge ATT bill.

      --
      /* No Comment */
    145. Re:Off means off by neoform · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Does that option tell you that it's going to check even if the phone is "off"? (asking because i don't have an iphone)

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    146. Re:Off means off by avronius · · Score: 1
      From my perspective, the product functions as advertised. It syncs' your mail while for you - even when you are not using the device. How would you expect this to happen? Osmosis?

      Maybe they should add a decal to the box that says, "Warning: No magic happens in the normal operation of this device".

      I would agree that they should clearly indicate in large print early in the manual that, "Warning: While you believe this device to be off, it is actually on periodically - checking for any new messages that may be awaiting your attention. After all, that's what you bought this device for, isn't it? Refer to your section n in this manual for information on how to disable this feature."

      just can't feel blame the user for not wading through a technical document to figure that out This is a week argument. We're talking about the same people who would read an assembly diagram for shelving from IKEA - why wouldn't you expect them to offer the telephone manual a rudimentary perusal?
    147. Re:Off means off by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      It can be turned off completely, and it has an Airplane mode which turns off transmission. Just like my RAZR. Do you still think it should be decertified?

    148. Re:Off means off by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      The analogy is completely wrong. If you wanted to hear a whisper from the person next to you at a rock concert you certainly could do so if you were both in a sound-proof box. Just as if instruments and a patient were both in a shielded room the instruments would be able to detect smaller signals without the interference of surrounding (background) noise.
      right, the problem is that putting each patient in a seperately shielded room just so you can have them hooked up to some monitoring gear would put the costs of running hospitals through the roof and still wouldn't protect against people who were visiting that patient.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    149. Re:Off means off by Z00L00K · · Score: 1
      The true problem here is the outrageous roaming fees for data traffic. You can run data in you home network for under $1/MB, but when roaming there are starting fees for each operator and then it can cost you $20 or more per MB, but it's often priced by started 50kB or so, so if you run a few packets here and a few packets there with different roaming partners it may add up to more than that since the minimum cost is for started 50kB.

      And then the operators complains about that nobody wants to use their data services...

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    150. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, that would be ridiculous. When the phone is off, its *off*.

      Now if your phone is in sleep mode (screen isn't active, but the phone can still receive calls), then it will receive emails. My perspective is that its fairly obvious that when you set the phone to poll for emails, it will do so even if the phone is not actively being used. Thats pretty much the entire point of setting it to poll for emails.

      Plus, when you get an email, the phone will alert you that it has done so.

      And yes, I agree that being able to rack up a $4800 bill passively is unacceptable.

    151. Re:Off means off by ZorinLynx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not even that! The pricing structure shouldn't even ALLOW for a $4800 bill. What the heck?

      Come on. There should be a cap on the bill, say, $500. After that it can be considered flat rate. Why does AT&T need to charge $4800 for this? Do people actually use this much data service abroad on a routine basis?

      If anything, cut service when it gets to $500. Because at that point, something is obviously up. Especially if the customer has never had this high a bill before. Credit card companies do this sort of statistical scanning all the time to combat fraud.

      -Z

    152. Re:Off means off by T-Bone-T · · Score: 1

      That is completely wrong. The SIM card can be taken out. It should be a well-known fact by now unless it is something you refuse to believe.

    153. Re:Off means off by hador_nyc · · Score: 1

      I have to admit that I find the AT&T GSM phones to be the scariest when it comes to interference. In our office full of computers you can tell when someones GSM phone is going to ring. They actually interfere with the speakers on the PCs!. CDMA phones don't seem to have that problem. I wonder if it has more to do with the frequencies or the communications method?
      I have the same issue with our pc and IP phones. It's wierd, and I am a EE, but one too lazy to figure out exactly what's the trigger.
      --
      - Mike
      Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
    154. Re:Off means off by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Something as simple as a phone should make it very very difficult to end up with a $5k bill. There are many things these people could have done to avoid the bill, but what they did do shouldn't stick them with such a massive amount.

      And lets not forget, this is Apple, who are widely lauded for their user interfaces. Hopefully they will fix the problem on the iPhone, and AT&T will cut them some slack.

    155. Re:Off means off by Clockwurk · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Replying to this so I can see it forever,

    156. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That second or two of airtime cost me $3.00 on my bill.

      So did you take out a loan to cover the charges?

    157. Re:Off means off by SilentChris · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you use Yahoo Mail it checks automatically. I know this because mine did it from the moment I set it up without changing any settings. It actually seems to use a pseudo-push setup (when new mail shows up at Yahoo it automatically shows up on the phone).

    158. Re:Off means off by badasscat · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The bigger problem here involves insurance, not the devices themselves. Cell phones don't kill people in hospitals, or crash airplanes, or magically blow up at gas stations. But because we have a one-in-a-million chance of something happening, which under the worst of situations could hypothetically cause a death/crash/fire, we have insulting signs all over the place warning us to turn off the phone.

      Apparently you missed this.

      It's not nearly as rare as "one-in-a-million" - it's more like "one-in-one-point-two" (50 out of 61 cases tested), provided the network being used is GPRS-based. That's pretty damn significant. And these were life-threatening cases of interference, including ventilators being switched off and pacemakers running at the wrong rhythm.

      Even if you're not using GPRS, it's not a hospital's job to go around testing different cell phone networks to see if they interfere with their equipment. Their job is to save lives, not test cell phone equipment. And to that end, I would certainly hope that they would require that all devices potentially able to disrupt hospital equipment to be switched off, regardless of whether or not you're "insulted" by the signs. Your personal feelings are not worth a hill of beans next to somebody's life.

    159. Re:Off means off by drcagn · · Score: 1

      What, are you this guy's best friend? Come on, he was as rude as possible on the Ubuntu forums. He was the perfect example of what *not* to do when asking for help on a free support forum. This guy had 5 minutes of fame; people in communities I've been involved in were passing around the link to that thread and having a laugh at this guy because of how ridiculous he was being. This guy still posts about his experience because he's a troll (either that, or retarded).

      --
      Scorta futuere amo!
    160. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That mitigates things completely"

      Fixed that for you so you don't look like an idiot trying to pretend he's right about his rant after being told why his rant was wrong and idiotic.

    161. Re:Off means off by the_fat_kid · · Score: 1

      and does this mean that I can't bring my iPhone on an airplane?
      they are pretty clear about that whole turn off all electronic devices thing.
      I know that they will let you turn on somethings once you're in the air, but not your phone.

      I'm sure that the readers can come up with a hundred reasons why cell phones wont cause problems on an airplane, but that means nothing to the TSA agent who will escort me off my flight.

      nice.

      --
      -- Sig under construction...
    162. Re:Off means off by frdmfghtr · · Score: 1

      I guess that makes a lot of cellphones defective by design. My Blackberry looked "off" when not in use, my RAZR looked "off" when not in use...in fact, nearly every cellphone I've ever owned looked "off" when not in use.

      It's a simple matter of knowing how to operate the equipment.

      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
    163. Re:Off means off by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      Strange, Apple's UI people are usually pretty good. But if you really can have a phone that looks like it's switched off but isn't, and it really does require a counter-intuitive and confusing alternative action by the user to switch it off fully, then they dropped the ball big time

      Not really. The ipod has no "off" switch. My ipod dies in 3 days on a full charge whether im using it 24x7 or its sitting on the desk "off". Apple cant design off buttons. Anyone who has an ipod can easily see this. And when I mean not using it I mean not using it AT ALL. I can disconnect it from the PC and hold down the pause button (off), even set the hardswitch keylock and that ipod will be dead in 2-3 days. Im not sure, maybe apple just hates idle batteries.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    164. Re:Off means off by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      - disable all data transfers

      Turn off auto checking in the mail settings (he had to turn it on in the first place) and set push email accounts to away, or delete account from the phone.

      - disable cellular data transfers

      Remove SIM card, or enable SIM lock in phone settings. Cell connections can not be made without SIM password (emergency calls excluded)

      - disable wi-fi data transfers

      Turn Wi-Fi off in phone settings.

      - turn off the antenna

      Put phone in airplane mode (disables all antennas on the phone) or turn the phone OFF (not sleep).

      All of these methods were available and built into the phone. The person in question apparently was either unaware of them or ignored them.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    165. Re:Off means off by whatever0618 · · Score: 1
      (Minor quip: Unless you have a yahoo account and get pushed mail: push email is a sure killer)

      Yeah, surely there are some self-serving inconsistencies in the narrative. But this does not change the basic facts:

      The problem is that the rate for data is 2 cents per kilobyte, i.e. 20$ per mega. At that rate the front page of the new york times is 30$, and the 20 items of spam I receive daily that escape my mail's filters, at average 20kb each, is 8$ daily. Think about this cost: 2 cents per kilobyte, if you were transfering using a 64kbaud modem, would amount to 9.60$ per minute of communication. It would be 4 times cheaper to pay the roaming rate of 2.3$/minute and connect with a modem!

      Also note that voicemail is transferred through EDGE, not through voice...

      I went to argentina and got email for five days. 190$ bill for 9MB of data. There is no way to leave the SIM on to receive an urgent phone call, while disabling usage of the EDGE data transfer. Only thing to do, next time, yank out the SIM. Or better yet, unlock the iphone and change the SIM to a local provider. Whatever.

    166. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hats off for a true geek, whose UID is binary.

    167. Re:Off means off by Randseed · · Score: 1

      The reality is that hospital equipment and airplane navigation equipment don't malfunction when presented with a modern cellular telephone. Maybe they did back in the early days, but speaking as someone who deliberately (fuck the signs) uses one in the ICU all the time, it does NOT interfere. (ObSpecificity: Sprint PCS phone.)

    168. Re:Off means off by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      When you turn the phone off, it does turn off. The problem at hand here is pushing the "sleep/wake" button is not turning the phone off. There is a specific action that you must take to power the phone off (hold sleep wake, then confirm you want to turn the phone off).

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    169. Re:Off means off by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      What was ridiculous or retarded?

      -Describing the specific error statement I got and asking what to do about that?
      -Believing that doing the above is a better idea before finding a CD burner with a high-speed internet connection to get a CD I couldn't have known that I neeeded, now that my own is disabled?
      -Following the install instructions exactly?
      -Agreeing to do what was HIGHLY RECOMMENDED even though that disabled the precautions I took against critical failure?
      -Installing to a secondardy hard drive, thinking I wouldn't be HIGHLY RECOMMENDED to do something that defeats this hedge?
      -Not downloading the Live CD, which wasn't recommended, oops, I mean the install CD *is* the Live CD, so obivously I couldn't have had a problem, oops I mean they're separate and I should have downloaded it, oops I mean the install CD *is* the Live CD ... sorry, you guys haven't gotten your story straight on that one yet...
      -Believing people would read my initial post?
      -Believing people would follow up after I followed their instructions?

      Before you mod me off-topic, remember why I keep bringing this up. Everytime a failure because of poor design pops up, /.ers are virtually unanimous in how, duh, that violated such a basic design principle. Remembering my experience with Ubuntu, I always have to think, "Gee, a little selective with these principles?"

      So again, I say: it seems these principles don't apply to products I use.

    170. Re:Off means off by Sosarian · · Score: 1

      While the $4800 is nasty, my normal cel phone is no differnt, at a glance you can't tell if it's on, because it has a screensaver.

      However pushing any button on the phone quickly tells me that it is on or off.

    171. Re:Off means off by pla · · Score: 1

      And these were life-threatening cases of interference, including ventilators being switched off and pacemakers running at the wrong rhythm.

      First, one bit of nit-picking... From your link, "Critical care equipment is vulnerable to electromagnetic interference by new-generation wireless telecommunication technologies with median distances of about 3 centimeters."

      Three centimeters away. Not from the lobby, not from outside, not even from the same room... Basically all-but-physical contact with the "sensitive" equipment.

      Second, and you can call this an irrelevant hypothetical if you want, WHY would large, coarse machines such as ventilators, respond to such low levels of RF? The GP's example of an ECG, I can see (though as I pointed out, such devices already have rather impressive compensation for high levels of background noise). Something that deliberately uses RF (an MRI, for example, which provides its own shielding), sure. But even something as "big" as a pacemaker?


      Even if you're not using GPRS, it's not a hospital's job to go around testing different cell phone networks to see if they interfere with their equipment.

      Agreed - That responsibility generally falls on the equipment manufacturer, using standardized tests and defined by the FCC (or appropriate governmental regulatory body).

      I find it somewhat ironic (and indeed, scary) that medical devices go through so much more rigorous testing (and have a price to show it) than my clock/radio, yet don't even have the same resilience (in the FCC-Part-15 sense) as a $4.99 throwaway Walmart special.

    172. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point (at work, have to AC). Perhaps an elevator is a better example then -- signal often drops significantly in this steel cage, but one can continue to use the phone easily...

    173. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well my mate used one of them apple iPod thingies, and he says that apple's user interface interprets the "X" close button on iTunes as meaning "delete all files on my ipod without asking for confirmation". So he isn't keen on them.

    174. Re:Off means off by InvalidError · · Score: 1

      I read some really interesting facts about cell phones interference with medical equipment some months ago.

      Some researchers tested a variety of monitoring equipment against a number of cell phones from various vintages and common wireless communication gear used by hospital personnel. What was their conclusion? At a range of at least 10m, none of the cell phones had any effect on the medical equipment but regular "certified" gear actually caused a few irregularities. At a range of 1m, analog phones and some of digital ones did cause measurable interference but they were still only about a fifth as bad as the certified stuff. Kinda unexpected.

      The reality is that most medical instrumentation is mostly sensitive to sub-kHz-class signals. Worrying about sub-watt phones in the GHz+ range in a Hz-range application is a little pointless when there are 100kW+ FM radio and multi-MW TV broadcast antennas in the area.

    175. Re:Off means off by not_anne · · Score: 1

      Turning off the iPhone was not something I had to learn how to do. Every cell phone I have owned in the past 10 years (2 Nokias, a Motorola, an LG and now the iPhone) uses the same mechanism in regards to the device turning completely off.

      1. Hold down a button for a few seconds (the iPhone then has a confirmation that says "slide to power off" and has "cancel" if you pressed it accidentally, where the other phones turned off with no confirmation).
      2. The device turns completely off and cannot make nor receive calls/edge data/wifi/whatever.
      3. Turn the phone back on again by holding down the same button you used to turn it off for a few seconds.

      --
      My comments here are my own; I do not speak for my employer.
    176. Re:Off means off by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      To turn it off all you have to do is hold down the standby button for a few seconds then then hit the off button when it asks you if you really want to turn the phone off. Right, but completely wrong. Why would they bring 3 bricks with them? If it's off, you can't take pictures, can't use the calendar, and can't use the maps.

      The right answer is to put it in airplane mode, which turns off the radio. But this also disables legitimate local wifi (which doesn't roam) and bluetooth.

      The really right answer is software from apple which gives a different mode: Never Roam but doesn't require the radio to be disabled.
    177. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having lived in the region, Hewlett Harbor is a wealthy area. If this guy can afford to live there, buy several iPhones for his family, AND take them all on a Mediterranean cruise, $4800 is chump change to him.

    178. Re:Off means off by CharlieHedlin · · Score: 1

      Communications method. CDMA phones and GSM phones use the same bands in the US, although it can vary by region as there are two major bands in use and more carriers.

      GSM phones use TDMA as the air interface technology (not to be confused with IS-136 or D-AMPS, the technology referred to as TDMA by AT&T and others, although it is also a TDMA air interface). TDMA stands for time division multiple access, and many phones will be assigned to the same channel and given a time slot. The interference you hear in speakers is being caused by the transmitter tarting and stopping.

      A CDMA phone and TDMA phone are both going to generate interference as 850mhz or 1900mhz, but at a very low power and in a band that equipment isn't generally going to be sensitive.

      If I place my UTMS/GSM phone on my laptop when connected to a GSM tower it causes spurious key presses. If it is in a UMTS cell, which uses CDMA signaling, this doesn't happen.

    179. Re:Off means off by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      Problem Exists Between iPhone and Ground (PEBIG)?

      "HCICWF: Human-computer interface reports client wetware failure"

      "MUF: Mobility unit failure"

      "TMFSC: Transport module failed sanity check"

      Or maybe just:

      +++ CARRIER LOST

      Sums it up...

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    180. Re:Off means off by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're not joking about that shit being expensive. I'm stuck paying $800-1300 per screw, and $4400 for a TLSO brace that EVERY manufacturer is selling for $500.

      Think I should call the FTC on them?

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    181. Re:Off means off by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      We have some issues with our IP phones and headsets. We traced it to the fact that our network isn't grounded. It seems that a lot of Ethernet Networks that don't use POE are also not properly grounded.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    182. Re:Off means off by TClevenger · · Score: 1

      That means that your speakers are not truly 'off'. I've had Boston Acoustics speakers that were "off" (i.e. the knob was turned off and the LED was off), but were still drawing 40W at the power brick and still received interference from a nearby phone. Turns out they only turned off the inputs, but not the outputs.

    183. Re:Off means off by a_nonamiss · · Score: 1

      And once we've eliminated all interference from cell phones, we'll have to go after those pesky solar flares. And once we've quieted our own solar system, it's off to those damn black holes and quasars. Now THOSE things really piss me off!

      OK, taking my tongue out of my cheek for a moment, I agree that it's an admirable and reasonable goal to get rid of as much interference as you can. I think having a device (like a metal detector) at the entrance that scans for certain radio frequencies is a good idea. (And probably less expensive than the power switch of an MRI machine...) Once inside, I wouldn't have a problem with ejecting people who think their business is more important than the health of those around them. Anything beyond that, and I think you're getting into the realm of stupid. To some extent, cell phones are a reality that we're all going to just have to get used to. I'm not saying it's right, but I'm a realist.

      --
      -Arthur
      Cave ne ante ullas catapultas ambules
    184. Re:Off means off by TClevenger · · Score: 1

      And so are all Blackberries and Windows Mobile smartphones. Funny how there wasn't a big stink raised until the iPhone came out.

    185. Re:Off means off by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      This is not rocket science.
      Of course it's not. It's brain surgery.

    186. Re:Off means off by gardyloo · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm stuck paying $800-1300 per screw Hey, a girl's gotta make a living.
    187. Re:Off means off by arivanov · · Score: 1

      If the OFF button does not turn the radio off by default - to hell yes.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    188. Re:Off means off by Amouth · · Score: 1

      ok - i read through and didn't see that..

      so yea.. dumb user - pay the bill and learn a lesson

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    189. Re:Off means off by hador_nyc · · Score: 1

      thanks for the tip. i appreciate it.

      --
      - Mike
      Once you've lost your temper, you've lost the argument - Me
    190. Re:Off means off by Metaphorically · · Score: 1

      It's not rocket science... it's brain surgery. (Sorry, couldn't resist). fwiw, I second the notion that the laws of physics be obeyed. Hearts weren't designed to broadcast, they can't compete with other electrical devices.

      --
      more of the same on Twitter.
    191. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What other phones DON'T do is periodically phone home all by themselves

      The iPhone checks for mail manually, or (gasp!) automatically every so often. It's called "checking for mail", not "phoning home", and it's a (another big gasp!) user-selectable option.

      It's an advanced concept, for sure, but maybe even a slashtard like you can understand it...

    192. Re:Off means off by Rexdude · · Score: 1

      Why don't they just make a screensaver for the standby mode with an appropriate image? Maybe show a flock of dollar bills flapping their way out of a wallet or something.

      --
      "..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
    193. Re:Off means off by Rexdude · · Score: 1

      My Nokia N73 has a tiny blue LED that blinks every 5 seconds in standby mode-which is simply a powersaver mode whose timeout can be controlled. It's to conserve battery power and no more. But if you press the off button, it switches off-there's no separate standby involved hence no confusion.

      --
      "..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
    194. Re:Off means off by djh101010 · · Score: 1

      You can't eject the chip in an iPhone. It's a cute device, just not ready for prime time.

      Now, here we have a guy who doesn't bother to find out facts before pretending to speak authoratatively on subjects which he is clearly ignorant. Next you'll be telling us you can't install sshd, a terminal.app, apache, native apps, and an NES emulator on it, I suppose.

      When you're talking to a population of people who are likely to know you're wrong and to call you on your errors, why bother to pretend you know what you're talking about when you clearly don't?
    195. Re:Off means off by soren100 · · Score: 1

      Better yet, how about airplanes? If it's not really off at any time, isn't it illegal to take an iphone on a flight? I heard from the husband of a flight attendant that a phone (that was on) was left in the galley of a plane before takeoff. It got a call, and the radio waves of the thing turned on the coffeemaker.

      I hadn't realized how powerful cell phone electromagnetic fields were.
    196. Re:Off means off by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      Because the market for the iPhone is obviously people traveling aboard boat to foriegn lands all the time. Be serious. This is a flaw, but it certainly doesn't make the iphone "not ready to sell". There are always stupid functions (I think off should be off, not "sleep") that need tweaking but you can't say that one stupid user means the product isn't ready for market. Nothing would ever be sold.

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    197. Re:Off means off by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      Its also interesting that there are basically two studies cited in that article. One says cellphones cause lethal malfunctions in life support systems 75% of the time, out of 80 tests. The other says that out of 300 tests, no effect was observed at all, serious or otherwise. That's a pretty serious difference. It is interesting to note that my GPRS phone has not caused my vacuum cleaner, washing machine, or microwave to fail catastrophically like they appear to cause medical grade pumps to do with near certainty.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    198. Re:Off means off by (negative+video) · · Score: 1

      You can't magically design a machine that's picking up miniscule electrical currents like this and have it unaffected when some idiot brings in a portable radio transceiver and cranks it up nearby while they tell their wife what they want for dinner.

      Indeed. It takes a competent electrical engineer, not a sorcerer.

      Say you have an ECG machine. It's hooked up via sticky contact pads to your chest and is measuring the delicate flickerings of life in your body. It's doing this because it's trying to spot the *tiny* irregularities that could indicate Bad Things.

      An ECG typically gets a few millivolts to work with, which ain't that tiny.

      And sticky pads dripping with electrolyte? Such luxury. The last ECG design I helped on had dry metal pads, for the convenience of Joe Sixpack. The source impedance was ... high. I think they finally went with instructions to moisten the skin.

      As I type, I'm within 30 feet of a ward full of such machines, and maybe a couple of hundred yards from the EEG devices that measure the brain's electrical activity. As we're testing today, I can wave my phone around and I can watch the interference it causes on the data being captured.

      That's just sad. I bet they are prone to having static electricity blow out their input amplifiers too. Defects like this could have been prevented by decent engineering.

      P.S. I have seen medical equipment so badly designed that radio waves would blow away the digital circuits. The situation is just pathetic.

    199. Re:Off means off by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Third, the reality is that the cell phone WILL be in the environment. Whether by intention
      > or by accident, the phone will be there on a fairly regular basis. Ether someone will forget
      > the ban, forget they have the phone, or both, or someone asserts their "Rights" to their cell
      > phone (however bogus those rights might be) or simple is selfish enough to think their convenience
      > supersedes any "rules" a hospital puts in place.

            Then's the perfect time for some guy to play "cranky old doctor", yank it away
      from the relevant schmuck and then smash it into so many pieces that it can't possibly
      be transmitting anything anymore.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    200. Re:Off means off by kimvette · · Score: 1

      Even "cheap" ambulatory EEGs are not affected in that manner, unless they're defective or the cables are worn out. Otherwise, ambulatory EEGs would not be possible. Also, what happens when you have a neurological clinic right next to a busy street where people are walking by the EEG just six feet away? Oh sure there's a wall and glass, but that is not going to stop RFI. I don't see any faraday cages at that client site, and I see folks going in and out wearing ambulatory EEG equipment, gabbing on cellphones, and the doctors don't say a thing about it. Also, the doctors there are often taking calls on their cellphones. If it were a problem they would not accept that liability.

      Also, what about ambulances which carry ECGs? EMTs are on radios all the time, whether long-range motorolas putting out way more power than a cellphone, or a typical 300mw t-mobile cellphone, gabbing on them all the time, and yet the equipment manages to function.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    201. Re:Off means off by mcrbids · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not even that! The pricing structure shouldn't even ALLOW for a $4800 bill. What the heck? ... Credit card companies do this sort of statistical scanning all the time to combat fraud.

      The difference is... who pays? If a credit card is fraudulently used, the credit card company pays. So they have every incentive to give a damn.

      But guess who's going to pay the $4,800? It sure as hell won't be AT&T. As I write this, my wife is on the phone to discuss a $900 Verizon bill my daughter rang up "saving money on the minutes" with text messaging. The only thing they seem willing to do is very politely tell us to screw off.

      They are used to it.

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    202. Re:Off means off by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      and besides Gregory House and Simon T are very close so i don't see a problem with grabbing a cell phone and puting it in a lead lined Ziplock(tm)

      Of course if hes really hacked off he might just use his cane to smash the phone (hope hes got plenty of Vicoden).

      In this case AT&T should have called the phone at about $500 and then said "sir i see you have an iPhone and you seem to be doing some traveling
      are you aware that some of your current settings seem to be incorrect and your current bill is getting a bit high..."

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    203. Re:Off means off by quigonn · · Score: 1

      I once worked together with people from Vodafone Europe. One of them told me that one of his colleagues went on a business trip from England to Germany, and along the way, he tried out how good UMTS video streaming works in Germany, and so he watched an entire football (soccer, for US Americans) game via video streaming. The phone bill (it was a company phone) was at about £ 5000 when he returned home...

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
    204. Re:Off means off by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      The button labelled as "Sleep/Wake" right? That if you hold down for a few seconds allows you to turn off the device?

      Again, this is nothing arcane. Most cellphones work in a similar fashion. (Hell, most don't have an OFF button, and instead make it a secondary function of the 'END CALL' button)

    205. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL!!!

    206. Re:Off means off by IWannaBeAnAC · · Score: 1

      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.
      I'd say you should learn something about reality.

      From BBC News, Hospital mobile bans 'must stay'

      A total of 61 different medical devices were tested, and the majority could be affected by the presence of a mobile. In particular, nine intensive care ventilators were checked, and seven of these could be "influenced" by mobiles. Of these, six were described by the researchers as "hazardous", involving a direct physical influence on the patient. Critical care monitors were also vulnerable, with seven out of 13 disrupted by mobile signals, while three out of seven syringe pumps were affected. Other devices which suffered problems were dialysis machines, external pacemaker machines, feeding pumps and even air humidifiers.
    207. Re:Off means off by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      All of these methods were available and built into the phone. The person in question apparently was either unaware of them or ignored them.


      yeah, why didn't he just follow these 14 easy steps to do something he had no idea he needed to do? darn luddites.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    208. Re:Off means off by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      That information is coming from the same people


      The same people who can put you in jail, yes. So it's a good idea to listen to them.
      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    209. Re:Off means off by ZorinLynx · · Score: 1

      That's just it; it's easy for someone to just tell them to fuck off, and switch to another provider. It's in AT&T's interest not to piss you off and cause you to run out and tell everyone how much AT&T wants to rip off its customers.

      AT&T can write off the $4800 without it costing them a thing; the cost to AT&T from the email checking was probably infinitesimal. Meanwhile, they retain good will from that customer and don't look like greedy assf**ks in the process.

      And as for your daughter, if you must give her a cel phone it's probably best to get a flat rate sms plan. Kids text a lot. :)

    210. Re:Off means off by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      I don't blame the guy at all. I had been thinking of getting an iphone but this episode makes it pretty clear that the iphone is best avoided. If I have to study a manual to avoid an unexpected bill for $4800, then no thanks. The device is not ready to sell. It shouldn't be on the market.
      I hate to break it to you, but this problem is not iPhone specific. It is a problem of all smart-phones. This guy could just have easily been screwed just as hard if he took a Palm Treo, Windows Mobile, or Blackberry phone with him overseas. All of these phones have the ability to send and receive data while they are not making phone calls.

      This should be a wake-up call to people that are too stupid to use technology properly. If you buy a smart phone that has the capability of sending and receiving data, don't be surprised when your phone company actually charges you for the data you sent and received.
      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    211. Re:Off means off by sketchydave · · Score: 1

      Oh come now, you can always disconnect the battery to make sure its not transmitting. Is it honestly that difficult to...oh...yes, apparently it is.

    212. Re:Off means off by itsdapead · · Score: 1

      The iPhone checks for mail manually, or (gasp!) automatically every so often. It's called "checking for mail", not "phoning home", and it's a (another big gasp!) user-selectable option. It's an advanced concept, for sure, but maybe even a slashtard like you can understand it...

      Well, my excuse for not RTFM (or iRTFM) is that I don't have an iPhone.

      HOWEVER - the point is not what I understand - its what the average mobile phone user can be expected to understand.

      Given that TFM for the typical consumer electronics device consists mainly of warnings aimed at the potential Darwin Award winner for whom taking a piss without drowning themselves must be a bit of a challenge, expecting a warning like "Remember to turn of automatic mail checking before travelling abroad, because contrary to all common sense its actually cheaper to hire Natalie Portman to personally carry a platinum-plated USB stick over in a private jet than to make a data call from Europe" seems eminently reasonable.

      In fact, since the iPhone is meant to be this amazingly easy-to-use, drool-proof device that can even work out where it is and direct you to the nearest LobotomyULike franchise, one might expect it to have the sense to say "Hello, you appear to be automatically checking your mail over an roaming connection. Unless the country you are calling from is a member of the G8 this amount of cashflow may collapse the local economy. Do you want to continue?".

      --
      In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    213. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      50,000 HKD? That's like, what, US$5?

    214. Re:Off means off by MattPat · · Score: 1

      The question is did he turn it off? You can turn the iPhone fully off just by holding the sleep button for three seconds, and sliding the little "turn off" slider. If he had it on sleep (a single touch of the sleep button), then it makes sense that something like this happened.

    215. Re:Off means off by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off. What if it interferes with hospital equipment like other cells, even if it's off? Yeah, heaven forbid you might want to receive a call while your phone's display isn't on.

      *sigh*
      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    216. Re:Off means off by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      He had to purposefuly enable international roaming, and purposefully tell his phone to check his mail even when he wasn't specificaly using the phone. If I were going over seas, I would certainly double check to ensure that doing both of those actions wouldn't lead me to having a multi thousadn dollar bill.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    217. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "every single cell phone" Maybe your smartphone/PDA/etc. Normal phones turn off when you tell them to.

    218. Re:Off means off by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Third, the reality is that the cell phone WILL be in the environment. Whether by intention or by accident, the phone will be there on a fairly regular basis. Ether someone will forget the ban, forget they have the phone, or both, ...

      Or, as happened in this story, someone has dutifully turned their phone off, but the damned phone knows better. More and more, we have "intelligent" gadgets like this that don't do what the user thinks they're doing.

      You'd think that the "off" setting would mean what almost everyone expects it to mean, but it's obvious that Apple doesn't think like this. And reading the comments here makes it clear that a lot of /. readers think it's quite proper for an "off" gadget to still broadcast a signal.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    219. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which usually requires you to hold down the off button for a few seconds

    220. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't you mean rocket surgery?

    221. Re:Off means off by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      I must add that my tinfoil little guy (which sits next to the angel little guy and the demon little guy) says that I should not assume that because my phone says so it is not spying on me. After all, what do I know about these closed-designed beasts ? How can I know that some government man-in-black didn't put some backdoor into the firmware to listen to me and my conversations even when I am not making a call ? I would surely put these things in if I were in the intelligence services of a police state that produced a lot of hardware going into phones.

      Someone told me that Russian businessmen remove their cellphones batteries before having a serious business conversation. In these countries they remember (and in some cases, still witness) what a government would do to spy on people.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    222. Re:Off means off by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Your plan involves getting on a plane, telling everyone to turn off their phones, then trusting your life to their obedience.

      My plan involves making sure that the plane won't fall out of the sky and kill everyone if someone forgets they have a phone in their bag.

      Still think my plan is bad?


      And the current story is even worse than that. It's more like: You get on a plane, the crew tells everyone to turn off their phones, everyone on the plane pulls out their phone and does whatever it takes to turn it off. You take to the air - and some of those "off" phones start broadcasting.

      This could be classified as a "UI" problem. It appears that the iPhone has a UI that lets the user turn it off, and it appears to be off. The screen goes blank, and poking around at the screen gets no response. Only the "on" button works. But the phone really isn't "off" in the usual sense. It's just sleeping, with an internal alarm set to go off and wake it up periodically.

      It appears that this wasn't made at all clear to the users. This is normal for current UIs. The developers know that most of their users are dummies who will be terrified by a UI that requires any learning or understanding. So they dumb it down to the point that it's totally misleading about such important things as whether the phone is on or off. "Users don't need to understand that."

      Maybe soon it'll turn into a real case where an oversimplified, misleading UI causes a bunch of deaths. So far it seems to have only produced some outrageous bills, but it's likely just a matter of time ...

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    223. Re:Off means off by monopole · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am a PhD in Physics and have designed closely related electromyographic (EMG) systems with bluetooth. I can tell you that yes it is a problem of basic physics. An EMG or ECG consists of a high impeadence amplifier which is built to pick up very small currents between electrodes. While the desired signal is the impulses within the muscles, the currents induced by an electromagnetic wave acting upon a conductor (including sweaty skin) will generate a stronger signal. Getting EMGs to work under any conditions is a flaming b**ch on wheels, even in the presence of simple things such as mains currents. When you toss in RFI things get much worse especially if some component of the system is acting as a rectifier. You can shield the circuit and filter the signal but RFI/EMI is going to play hell with the system in the best of circumstances.

      By my definition a machine is "broken" when it does not accomplish the task it is designed for. Very nice, but in the real world everything has limitations and tradeoffs and outside of the brains of PHBs you gotta stick to the cold equations, and not the fantasy of arbitrary semantic definitions.

    224. Re:Off means off by Shulai · · Score: 1

      The worst part is, if you even know about this, you can't disable the thing removing the battery, as it is internal.
      So, if you pick a journey and found you've got the iPhone with you, your best chance is crushing it with a hammer/rock/whatever. Seems cheaper than paying the 5K bill, anyway...

    225. Re:Off means off by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I've had Boston Acoustics speakers that were "off"... still drawing 40W... they only turned off the inputs, but not the outputs.

      In compliance with Slash-law the following car analogy must be made:
      Wow, that's like removing your keys from the ignition and finding your car locked in neutral with the engine idling.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    226. Re:Off means off by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you would, and I would too. We're nerds who read slashdot, not normal people.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    227. Re:Off means off by DAtkins · · Score: 1

      You are aware that an MRI machine is more complicated than that clock right? Cause my bicycle is less complicated than a Jaguar too... :-)

      Silliness aside, this really speaks of a failure of imagination on the part of equipment suppliers. How dare they not design a piece of equipment with shielding for a signal that wasn't in use 20 years ago when it was designed and rated? If you've got new equipment coming out with the same problem, then we have a failure of a FCC and FDA testing. Otherwise, yes you should work to fix it, but no it's not a problem to turn off my phone.

      But put some pay phones out so I can call family.

      Also, I agree with the actual point of the article. Standby is ok - and expected - but I really want an OFF button too. Assuming dude wasn't too stupid to turn it off properly himself.

    228. Re:Off means off by Hamilton+Lovecraft · · Score: 0

      And the call was coming from INSIDE THE AIRPLANE! *shriek*

      --
      step 3: god dammit, it doesn't work
    229. Re:Off means off by E8086 · · Score: 1

      Now if you really want to turn something off all you have to do is pull the plug and/or take out the battery...oh wait, it's an iPhone.

      --
      F7 doesn't work, ignore spelling and grammar
    230. Re:Off means off by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      The default setting is for the iPhone to not check mail automatically. You have to explicitly turn that on. And when you don, does it tell you that it will continue checking even when the phone is in Sleep Mode (or whatever they call the function that most people think is "off")? Because if it doesn't, there's still a serious problem in the design. My current phone (a dumb flip-phone with limited international abilities) has only one "Off" mode, and that is fscking OFF. If I signed into Instant Messenger on my phone and never signed out, it will communicate with the IM network if people IM me (which they will, after all it appears I'm signed in... the difference between that and checking email automatically is trivial). If I press the power button, it stops communicating with the IM network.

      Without the phone explicitly telling me otherwise, just because I enable automatic mail checking when I'm in the US (on an unlimited plan) and the phone is in active mode, I would NOT assume the phone is going to continue checking the mail when I turn it "off" in a foreign country. That's a pretty major violation of the "it just works" design philosophy.
      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    231. Re:Off means off by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      I don't have an iPhone (or any kind of smartphone, just a cheap flip-phone with minimal data capabilities). However, I can tell you with absolute certainty that every phone I've ever owned has a little light that blinks occasionally when the phone is on. If I push the power button, the phone turns off. If I don't, the screen will go black after a while, but it wakes up as soon as I press any button, wakes if I close or re-open the phone, and blinks every few seconds even if I do neither. Are you really telling me that the "it just works" iPhone behaves so very differently (I know it's not a flip-phone, but it's got a fscking toushscreen... I really doubt that just leaving it alone for a few seconds will put it into a deep enough sleep that it appears to be off entirely)!

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    232. Re:Off means off by gordgekko · · Score: 1

      The funniest thing I will likely read this week.

      --
      You want to know who isn't running Firefox 2.x? They spell it "definately" and "rediculous".
    233. Re:Off means off by Sancho · · Score: 1

      It's hardly AT&T's fault that this person didn't read the manual. Honestly, what ever happened to personal responsibility?

    234. Re:Off means off by Sancho · · Score: 1

      The iPhone isn't targetted at business people, while Blackberries and WM phones are. Also, Apple's schtick is making things that "just work."

      That said, I think this is a load of bull. I think the guy knew what he was doing, but didn't realize how much it would cost, and now he's trying to skip out on the bill.

    235. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, you don't want to roam internationally, at least, not without an expense account.

      No, you need to get a blackberry, instead of a piece of shit iphone.

      Cingular/AT&T offers an international data roaming plan for blackberries that covers most of the western world with unlimited data for $75 or so. I've used it when traveling to Canada & France. Very handy.

      Too bad mac fanboys can't get that plan! Should have got a blackberry.

    236. Re:Off means off by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      "Defective by design" would imply that Apple and/or AT&T intentionally designed the iPhone in this manner for some nefarious purpose, such as trapping their customers into massive fees for services they unwittingly used. The term normally refers to DRM, where the ability to use a product in a manner that one would otherwise be able to is intentionally restricted due to the whims of the distributor.

      In this case, I think it's probably just poor design, but not intentionally so.

    237. Re:Off means off by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Many other phones have a light that blinks to show that it's still active. I'm pretty sure that this would have come up sometime in the design, and Apple, in their quest for minimal interfaces decided to omit this light. I'd call it more form over function than defective by design, myself.

    238. Re:Off means off by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      Being a normal person doesn't excuse you from understanding how to operate equipment works before you use it. Just because I don't read the manual for my car to find out that when parking on an incline (or at all really) I should use the parking brake, despite the fact that my car stays stationary when in park doesn't mean I'm not liable for the damages that I cause to my own property and other peoples.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    239. Re:Off means off by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Even my primitive RAZR goes dark without actually being off. It saves battery life. When my phone is dark but not off, when I punch buttons on it, it lights up without going through the turning-on phase. When it actually is off, I have to push the "on" button and it turns on. iPhone works the exact same way.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    240. Re:Off means off by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

      Because the market for the iPhone is obviously people traveling aboard boat to foriegn lands all the time. Be serious.

      Restricting your market to people who never leave the country seems pretty shortsighted to me.

      This is a flaw, but it certainly doesn't make the iphone "not ready to sell". There are always stupid functions (I think off should be off, not "sleep") that need tweaking but you can't say that one stupid user means the product isn't ready for market.

      But not reading a manual doesn't make you "stupid". I can accept that I won't know about all the functions, but if I have to read a manual to avoid a $4800 charge then something is seriously wrong.

    241. Re:Off means off by NMerriam · · Score: 1

      Yes, but there's a directly intuitable relationship between gravity and your car rolling.

      To non-technical users, the idea that some common setting on a consumer device might work fine for months and then suddenly cause them to receive a $5,000 bill with no warning whatsoever is inconceivable. And rightly so.

      --
      Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    242. Re:Off means off by simontek2 · · Score: 1

      actually, its not entirely AT&T's fault. Other carriers around the world charge AT&T for use of the network.

      --
      SimonTek
    243. Re:Off means off by Doppler00 · · Score: 1

      Well, the $4,800 and $900 are kind of imaginary numbers. The cost for cellphone providers, even the international ones, is probably 1% of that charge if not less. This is how these providers make a large majority of their profit. It's from the 20% of the users that make up 80% of their bills or maybe the 1% of the users that make up 10% of their profit.

    244. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, Apple didn't invent the quite common "standby" mode. There are tons of devices, including cell phones, which have a similar standby mode and many of them are implemented (interface-wise) the same way Apple did it (holding down the button). So it may be unintuitive, but at least it's more or less a standard thing. A better idea, I think, is to have the phone warn people before roaming, especially if anything is occurring in the background. That would be a lot more helpful: "You are about to connect to a foreign network which may bring additional data-transfer costs. Do you really want to connect? [ ] Don't want me about this again."

    245. Re:Off means off by Trogre · · Score: 1

      It seems Illiad agrees.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    246. Re:Off means off by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Interesting. I have never seen a phone display that acts like this. I've seen plenty that turn off the /backlight/ after 15 seconds on inactivity, but never the entire display.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    247. Re:Off means off by Khaed · · Score: 1

      What, are you this guy's best friend?

      No, I just want him to know Linux has come a long way in the last year and nine months.

      Come on, he was as rude as possible on the Ubuntu forums.

      Was he? Perhaps it's my memory failing, but I was under the impression he was relatively calm until people started replying offering advice without even reading his post (something I've seen pretty often myself -- "I've tried *appX* but it didn't work, are there alternatives?" Idiot: "Have you tried *appX*?")

      Feel free to cite evidence to the contrary -- I just want people to know that things are improving rapidly with Linux because I care about it.

    248. Re:Off means off by ed.markovich · · Score: 1

      If anything, cut service when it gets to $500. Because at that point, something is obviously up. Especially if the customer has never had this high a bill before. Credit card companies do this sort of statistical scanning all the time to combat fraud.

      I agree.. someone in my family recently tried to e-mail all their pictures off their Sprint PCS phone, at 3 cents per KB. That actually racked up quite fast! Sprint capped the bill at something like $150 for the month, although the actual usage was much higher ( a few gigs were transfere, I think)

      It would have been nice for AT&T to do the same thing - although in this case, it sounds like the phone was roaming overseas so AT&T itself probably owes the roaming providers quite a bit of money too.

    249. Re:Off means off by B1 · · Score: 1

      This has nothing to do with the iPhone, and everything to do with me not having the international calling plan.

      For me as a fairly light user, it doesn't make sense to pay for a $75 / month international data roaming plan. Even the extra cost of an international plan would be a waste for me. I've been overseas one week in the past three years, and that was while on vacation. The only reason for having the phone was for emergency use (and occasionally texting my wife when she went off shopping). It would have cost us more to have the international plan than it ever would have saved us.

      If I need data access while overseas, it's for work, and therefore it's on the company's dime.

    250. Re:Off means off by Draek · · Score: 1

      and that's coming from a guy who refused to put buttons on the phone because they were "blemishes" on the design...

      seriously, three different "Off" modes, two of which aren't really "Off" are a much bigger problem for intuitiveness and simplicity than f'in buttons, and it's hard to see why Apple didn't think of that before.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    251. Re:Off means off by or-switch · · Score: 1

      Forwarding to voicemail with an iPhone is tricky cuz' the phone downloads voicemail and you can't turn that off unless you do airplane mode or shut it off. That'll cost you some roaming-data too.

    252. Re:Off means off by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      You're right, it's not rocket science. All you need is a low-pass filter on the EKG leads, and 99% of your RF interference is gone. Well I'll be damned.. someone already thought of it.

    253. Re:Off means off by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 1

      "...Warning: reading this warning in its entirety may cause eyestrain, fatigue, and temporary or permanent numbness of brain. For a detailed description of medical conditions resulting from extensive warnings, see Apple's full Warning Disclosure on Longwinded Warnings, page 207; as well as Apple's Statement Regarding Legal Culpability Due to Injury From Extended Exposure to Warnings, Warnings About Warnings, and Legal Statements About Exposure to Warnings Warnings, page 234."

      --
      He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
    254. Re:Off means off by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1

      When the iPhone is off, it is indeed off (zero power consumption, zero RF emmisions, etc.). They probably had it in standby mode and didn't know the difference.

      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    255. Re:Off means off by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1

      I think Apple really screwed up here and should probably compensate the guy for this. There should be an options to: - disable all data transfers - disable cellular data transfers
      I agree 100% on these two. However, there are things you can do to minimize the data connections: * Don't turn on automatic e-mail checking (it is off by default, so no problem there) * Don't open the web-browser, Google Maps, YouTube, etc. This still won't help with voicemail; as I understand it, the iPhone pre-downloads voicemail messages over EDGE, though I could be wrong.

      - disable wi-fi data transfers - turn off the antenna
      These two, however, are already there.
      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    256. Re:Off means off by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1
      The iPhone's behavior is identical, except that it asks for confirmation after you've held the button down. From Apple's instructions:

      iPhone can be locked by pressing the Sleep/Wake button. Once locked, iPhone will still receive calls and allow users to play music and adjust the volume. However, nothing will happen if the user accidently touches the screen.

      To completely power off iPhone, press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds. Then, drag the red on-screen slider to confirm.
      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    257. Re:Off means off by JoelKatz · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure there are only three reasons you are still asked to turn off phones on a plane (other than during take-off and landing, which is for real safety reasons):

      1) A rogue device that is broken or unusual (for example, a high-power transmitter) might actually cause problems for guidance or communications equipment.

      2) Operating cellphones from a plane can cause capacity problems for operators. The signals are line-of-sight and you might tie up a channel on hundreds of sites because all the sites can receive your signals.

      3) There is no incentive to work to lift the ban as the airlines would rather charge you for their phone service.

      DS

    258. Re:Off means off by memprime · · Score: 0

      wow.

    259. Re:Off means off by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      This is why things should actually be OFF when you turn them off. What if it interferes with hospital equipment like other cells, even if it's off?

      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.

      If you're building an entire new hospital from scratch tomorrow, then you can try to specify equipment like this. If it exists for all desired measurements, which is a big if - someone else brings up the difficult problem of measuring and recording electrical signals from the body like EEG and ECG tests. Now, you can live without that, as long as your hospital has a good shredder for treating people who come in with nerve or heart problems. But if you do want to treat such patients then you're going to have to find a way of doing this without using sensor leads of several metres long in free air and attached to a very sensitive amplifier. A physicist would probably be able to present seven reasons why this is impossible, I just have a strong suspicion that it's impossible on the basis of experience of debugging electrical sensor problems in the real world.

      Now, you've got your hospital full of equipment which is proof against today's RF-generating equipment. You're going to have to deal with three problems now - one is the car-repair shop that's just opened up across the street, whose welding equipment produces RF white-noise which still interferes with your brand-spanking new equipment. Then, once you've got them sorted out, you've got to shut down the central heating/ air conditioning plant because of the noisy brushes on one of the pumps which is also producing RF white-noise. Got that sorted? OK, because you've got another problem tomorrow, because there's a solar storm coming in.

      And next year there's a new piece of EM spectrum which is going to be licensed for on-the-move HD porn transmissions to the next generation of mobile phones. Which will mean that all your elaborate precautions are irrelevant.

      Signal processing problems are almost never easy. "designing the equipment right" is actually something that's already been done : the equipment has a certain level of tolerance for RF noise with certain characteristics which hopefully made sense at the time of design. But the amount (and type) of RF noise which is battering around the world is changing all the time.

      BTW, in your mythical EM-safe hospital, which types of WiFi networking will you mandate, and what are you going to do when someone comes in with the wrong type?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    260. Re:Off means off by Yer+Mom · · Score: 1

      OK, so this means that, as far as data transfer is concerned, airplane mode (which turns all wireless comms off) is actually more "off" than simply turning the device off. Mad.

      Presumably, to truly turn an iPhone off, you need to put it in airplane mode before you turn it off...

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    261. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every machine has a set of parameters it needs to operate within. For example, you can't say an MRI machine is broken because it does bad things to people with metal implanted in their bodies, or that racing slicks are poorly designed due to dismal performance in rain. Also, most of the interference in real ECG/EEG devices are picked up through the electrodes and leads, not by the device itself. In other words, a machine encased in an inch thick perfect sphere of lead (except for where the leads enter and exit) will still pick up noise. Leads tend to act as good antennas.

      You also forget that ECGs deal with signals that are easier to detect by several orders of magnitude. Brain matter tends to generate much smaller impulses than motor neurons, and the skull tends to attenuate and distort the impulses. Thus, EEGs tend to be extremely sensitive. At many of the EEG research labs at Hopkins, entire rooms are heavily shielded from EM interference. Even so, please don't bring your cell phones into lab. Of course there are also practical considerations. Measuring EEG is a tricky art. It's hard to be sure what you're seeing or not seeing at all. A test subject hearing your conversation could trigger all sorts of noise.

    262. Re:Off means off by makomk · · Score: 1

      Apparently, if it's set to automatically check e-mail and roaming is enabled, then it will automatically check e-mail while roaming. (That is, there's no option to only automatically check e-mail when not roaming.)

    263. Re:Off means off by Eivind · · Score: 1

      It's not about any particular single device. The reality is that the average household owns on the order of a dozen devices broadcasting in RF, and tend to carry perhaps half of them with them wherever they go.

      These devices are from literally dozens of different manufacturers and of thousands of different types.

      In addition, there's the stationary sources. Have you heard of radio, or television ? Or mobile-phones ? Well, the base-stations for these services broadcast around-the-clock at high power-levels, and there's no way to get rid of their interference other than living in a faraday-cage.

      So medical equipment has no choice: It has to work as reliably as possible in a noisy environment. Sure, they can *wish* that the environment would be less noisy, but wishing doesn't make it so. There's a few limited situations where you can control devices in the *immediate* surroundings, but those are the exceptions, not the rules.

      At my local hospital normal patient-rooms have wifi-coverage and patients are allowed to use mobile-phones to chat with family and friends. A low number of critical areas they try to limit rf, while still trying to have rf-safe equipment. For example, the room where prematurely born babies stay, you're encouraged not to bring a mobile phone. Still, even there they made tests and where unable to cause malfunction so it's really just a precaution.

      There's no saying you can't do both: Discourage rf-sources in the most critical areas, *and* shield the gear as well as practical.

      Also, forbidding everything everywhere is likely to be counterproductive. People will (rightly!) conclude that lots of the restrictions are arbitrary and unjustified, and proceed to ignore them. It's better to have a *few* restrictions that people respect instead of *many* restrictions that people ignore.

    264. Re:Off means off by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      from the sound of things, iphone doesn't act like that. rather it goes to sleep when you seemingly turn it off.

      all the phones i've had go to sleep on their own and if i turn them off they go OFF.

      (with the exception that most of them have a clock going on and can be configured to wake up even if they're off, but apart from the clock chip they're off, meaning radio is off, cpu is off...)

      and well, my phones don't look like they're off unless they're off, sure the backlight is off and the screen is in powersave mode but they still show the clock..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    265. Re:Off means off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait! You mean Off doesn't mean device is shut off, wrapped in tin foil?

    266. Re:Off means off by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Trolley Dollies can arrest, try, and incarcerate me now? You wouldn't think it, wearing those heels.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    267. Re:Off means off by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Er, what if its a PHONE and if you turn it completely off people won't be able to, like, PHONE you...?
      No, if I turn my phone off, it is precisely because I don't want to receive unnecessary calls, but do like to have the phone for important/emergency calls or whatever. It's probably a generational thing, but if I'm out having a drink or whatever I'd rather talk to my friends who are there than receive a stream of calls from people who aren't.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    268. Re:Off means off by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      It didn't suddenly cause him to recieve a $5,000 bill. He had to specifically request that international roaming be enabled on his account, and nothing in that process implies that doing so would be cheap. It specifies that both voice and data transmissions will be extremely costly. Certainly there is an intuitable relationship between having your phone request that data be sent to it every 30 minutes (or whatever he set his phone for) and paying for that data when you are in an area that you have specifically requested to have different service for. In fact, the article quotes the person as stating that they just assumed that the phone wouldn't work on the data network over seas, implying that he certainly knew his phone was requesting data be sent, and that he knew that he would pay for data he used over seas.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    269. Re:Off means off by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      I'd say hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum, but that's just me.



      Let me guess: You neither have degrees nor pratical experience in biomedical engineering.


      I have both. And let me tell you, it's enough of a pain in the arse to get different medical devices not interfering with each other. The last thing you want next to the patient when trying to measure signals in the mV range or mOhm-changes of a kOhm impedance is something blasting out pulsed HF noise.


      Yes, the devices may tolerate a cellphone in the same room. But there's a distance from the patient that is _too short_ to avoid interference, and you can bet that some clueless jokers are going to stick their cellphone _right there_.

    270. Re:Off means off by Ihlosi · · Score: 1
      Still think my plan is bad?

      Yes. It costs way more than the other guys plan. You're fired. (Welcome to capitalism)

    271. Re:Off means off by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      50,000 HKD? That's like, what, US$5?
      No, according to google it's more like 6 426.5 U.S. dollars. Thought I'm sure getting incarcerated in a Chinese prison for 2 years would be more than enough of a deterrent for most Americans.
    272. Re:Off means off by NoobHunter · · Score: 1

      Tell us the truth, you did not RTFA, did you. Had you done so, you would have noticed that the user did NOT turn off the phone, he put it on standby.

      --
      So Jesus, Mohammed and Abraham walk into a Bar....
  3. So by niceone · · Score: 5, Funny

    When you go out of the country, just yank the battery out.

    Oh, wait...

    1. Re:So by GeckoX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It was OFF.

      How the hell is an END USER supposed to jump to the conclusion that OFF doesn't mean OFF. Every other phone I have EVER seen is actually OFF when you turn it OFF.

      You're completely off base. This is a seriously major design flaw, of that there is no question.

      --
      No Comment.
    2. Re:So by Trub68 · · Score: 0

      That's called not knowing the operation of your phone. You can turn off the email account, which will stop it from syncing. No problem.

    3. Re:So by Carbonite · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He deserves a huge bill simply because he brought his iPhone(s) to another country? I don't think so. I'm all for personal responsibility, but it's not like he was intentionally using the phone. He had them turned off and could reasonably have assumed it wasn't going to be accessing the network.

      --
      ich muß mehr Kuhglocke haben
    4. Re:So by Dunbal · · Score: 2, Funny

      Every other phone I have EVER seen is actually OFF when you turn it OFF.

            I've got news for you...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    5. Re:So by DemoLiter3 · · Score: 1

      When you go out of the country, just yank the battery out. I just had a great business idea : stylish tin cans to store your iPhone in when traveling abroad

    6. Re:So by vtcodger · · Score: 1
      ***How the hell is an END USER supposed to jump to the conclusion that OFF doesn't mean OFF.***

      You, sir, have permission to design consumer devices. A lot of other people posting to this thread seem to have flunked this snap quiz in User Interface Desgin 1A.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    7. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Whoa here -- you are off base. The phone wasn't "off" any more than a closed clamshell is "off". You can turn an iPhone off, and then it is actually off.

    8. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, were you and gblues separated at birth?

      http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=29275 1&cid=20537685

      Exactly 9:46 am in both cases so, given the delay required in multiple posts, it's definitely not a sock puppet scenario.

    9. Re:So by pherthyl · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or blend it..

    10. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sure as hell was NOT OFF. It was in Sleep/Standby. If he had turned it OFF, he would not have racked up those charges. Off - hold sleep/wake button for 4 seconds, then slide screen to power off. Not that hard to save $4800 bucks is it?

    11. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is that you, mr jobs?

    12. Re:So by ak3ldama · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ***How the hell is an END USER supposed to jump to the conclusion that OFF doesn't mean OFF.*** You, sir, have permission to design consumer devices. A lot of other people posting to this thread seem to have flunked this snap quiz in User Interface Desgin 1A.

      Yea, but they're all mac users so they will never admit to it.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    13. Re:So by fredklein · · Score: 1

      My 'closed clamshell' phone doesn't connect automatially to ANYTHING*.

      *yes,it 'connects' to the nearest cell tower, to update it's location so as be able to receive incoming calls. But that doesn't cost me aything.

    14. Re:So by servognome · · Score: 1

      I'm travelling out of the country. I just decided to pull the SIM card and put it in my RAZR... the Phone still makes a nice iPod

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    15. Re:So by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Especially the mods.

      I realize I was a bit curt, but given the tone of the post I was responding to whom quite obviously took great joy out of condemning the user that got nailed by this feature...sheesh.

      Gotta love the mod system, thing of beauty. At least it doesn't send you bills when you're not using it ;)

      --
      No Comment.
    16. Re:So by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Article states off. Nowhere is 'standby' mentioned at all.

      Granted, that is a possibility, but even then, your phone should NOT be performing activities that cost money without explicitly ensuring that you KNOW what the phone is doing.

      How can anyone argue with a straight face that $4800 for a phone that wasn't being used is even remotely reasonably, and worse, the users fault?

      Think about that for half a second here. Something is most assuredly wrong here.

      --
      No Comment.
    17. Re:So by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Besides which, I don't expect that closing my phone's clamshell will turn it off. If, however, I hit the power button and it's still communicating with the cell tower (whether incurring charges or not, but especially if incurring charges) then something is seriously wrong with the phone's design.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    18. Re:So by penguinbrat · · Score: 1

      A few days ago Apple issues between $100~$200 in store credit for anyone purchasing the IPhone since they lowered the price - nothing anywhere says they had to do this

      Today, Apple partnered with AT&T, quotes the terms and conditions. "Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris points out in its terms and conditions that it will cost an arm an a leg to use an Iphone out of the US even if no services are intentionally used."

      This is why I paid $200 to leave AT&T. I'd be willing to bet AT&T won't budge on this, and Apple needs something to save face on - any face...

    19. Re:So by nine-times · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except that, evidently, he didn't turn it off. He just figured that "black screen" meant "off". Also, I kind of wonder about this on the grounds that the iPhone doesn't carry a very large charge. Assuming he left it in standby, didn't do anything, and it checked for e-mail, it would carry the charge for about 2 days. Now, the most the iPhone will check e-mail is every 15 minutes, which means 96 times a day, which means 192 times in 2 days. Assuming he started with a completely full charge, the most the phones would have connected is about 200 times each.

      So are 600 quick data connections to download e-mail $4800? An average of $24 per connection? 12 connections per page? Seems like a lot. I wonder if these people possibly might have been charging their cell-phones over the course of the trip and had them on for longer. If they really thought that their phones were off, why would they be charging them?

    20. Re:So by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      but it's not like he was intentionally using the phone. He had them turned off and could reasonably have assumed it wasn't going to be accessing the network. Pssst.
      Read the real article

      "Levy said he didn't expect data transfer charges internationally because he believed the data network in Europe wasn't compatible with the iPhone. The Levys brought their phones with them for voice calls."

      Oops.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    21. Re:So by nasor · · Score: 1

      No, contrary to what the article says, the iPhone will [i]not[/i] check your email when it is turned off. This must have simply put his phone in sleep mode (which maybe he mistook for "off"). It's all very clearly explained in phone's instruction booklet. I don't really have much sympathy for him.

    22. Re:So by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      Setting email to check every X minutes, (NOT default) and putting it in standby is what racked up the charges.

      There is definitely user error here. I wouldn't expect the $4,800 bill to stick, but I don't blame the iPhone for doing exactly what the user set it to do.

    23. Re:So by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      That's great and all, but where in the article is that stated? How do you know this? No, how do you KNOW this, not assume or guess or think...but KNOW this? Hmm?

      Sorry, but the number of posts on this thread that throw 'facts' out there that simply are NOT in the article...

      --
      No Comment.
    24. Re:So by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      I would blame both the phone networks for thier exorbitant charges and apple for allowing data connections while roamed without confirmation.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    25. Re:So by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      Because by default it doesn't check email every X minutes, you have to explicitly configure it to do so.

    26. Re:So by GeckoX · · Score: 0, Troll

      And you KNOW he did that?
      And you KNOW he didn't actually turn it off?

      Hmm, you know, you could really make a ton of cash if you turned that mind reading power towards something useful...

      Anyways, bottom line: For all you KNOW, as this is all the article STATES: The guy turned his phone OFF and got charged $4800 anyways. The facts may be disputable, but be that as it may, until proven otherwise, those are the only facts one has to use to draw a conclusion. (Despite many peoples desire to introduce anecdotal evidence as fact)

      --
      No Comment.
    27. Re:So by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      *yes,it 'connects' to the nearest cell tower, to update it's location so as be able to receive incoming calls. But that doesn't cost me aything. It well might, there are still places that charge roaming users for connecting to the tower at all, not just for calls actually connected.
      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    28. Re:So by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      Yes -- The problem is that the iPhone's design doesn't want to confuse the user with things like "Screen off" -- You hit the "off" button to turn the interface off, but you'd probably not have a successful product if it couldn't receive calls in that state.

      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    29. Re:So by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, very insightful. Why the fuck would you bring a phone that you're not going to turn on, much less three? You're a fucking idiot and so are the mods here. It doesn't matter if it's a design flaw. I never said anything about that and I'm completely on base. Take three $600 phones with you that you're not going to use is just plain stupid. Almost as stupid as buying three of them in the first place.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    30. Re:So by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      Because if he hadn't done that, or he had turned it off, he wouldn't have racked up charges from getting all that email, it seems pretty obvious.

      The guy didn't turn his phone OFF, or it'd not have been fetching email. The article is about useless, there's zero fact checking. It should be pretty obvious to anyone that if the phone had actually been turned off it'd not be receiving data.

    31. Re:So by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      That's what I'm digging at. Do you have an iPhone? Does it indeed turn off when you turn it off? Is it in fact impossible for this to happen if you turn it off? No one has shown any evidence either way, which is what I'm curious about...according to the article, the guy did turn his phone off.

      Granted, there is a good chance that he actually only put it to sleep. But how do we know?
      And either way, even if it was only sleeping...$4800 is a pretty massive bill to receive for your phone doing something he wasn't aware it was even doing.

      --
      No Comment.
  4. Simple solution by gblues · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I wonder why he didn't just take out the battery.

    Oh wait...

    1. Re:Simple solution by rlp · · Score: 1

      I wonder why he didn't just take out the battery.

      I wonder why he brought an IPhone on a trip to Europe. He's probably wondering why he bought an IPhone.

      --
      [Insert pithy quote here]
    2. Re:Simple solution by that+IT+girl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would say "because he shouldn't have to". I mean, you and I would think of that if we realized that it was accessing the network even when "off" but I wouldn't expect an average person to think that far into it. And since Apple is trying to create a product to be marketed to the average person, they should make some relatively simple option for saying "off means off".

      --
      10 FILL MUG WITH COFFEE
      20 DRINK COFFEE
      30 GOTO 10
    3. Re:Simple solution by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      More to the point, this is Apple we're talking about here. The company out to make computing useable for the masses, etc etc. So far as I'm concerned, this scenario should have been easily predictable ... at least, it should have warned the user that, hey, you're operating on a goddamned foreign network. Hell, my Sanyo does that much for me.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    4. Re:Simple solution by dintech · · Score: 1

      This isn't redundant. It's a fair point. This demonstrates some design failure that could have been used to mitigate another had it been done correctly. I know the iPhone is a great device but so much about it is not quite as perfect as it should be. I think I'm going to wait to purchase until v2.

    5. Re:Simple solution by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      Ever been to Europe (or done any travel at all)? Take your phone with you?

      Why wouldn't you bring your cellphone with you on a trip?

      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
  5. The law needs to clarify things like this by MikeRT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why should he be hit with a $4,800 bill when he thought that the device was off? If anything, why shouldn't AT&T and Apple be legally liable for deceiving him into thinking that the device was turned off when in fact it wasn't.

    1. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by CaptainPatent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This was exactly the first thing I thought. I doubt there is a way they are legally liable for such charges when they occurred without the user's knowledge or interaction. The only way they can be charged is if somewhere it was stated that this can/would happen if they took the phones out of country and network range.

      --
      Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
    2. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it's explained in the manual that he didn't read? I would agree that a device should be off when it's off, but if it's not, and there is a good reason for it, and it's explained in the manual, then that is simply a case of buyer beware.

    3. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The dude can't even pull the battery out of the iPhone because, you know, it's welded in. And who's really going to remember to put the iPhone into airplane mode when he's just going to another country?

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    4. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by kevinadi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The TFA said it all: Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris points out in its terms and conditions that it will cost an arm an a leg to use an Iphone out of the US even if no services are intentionally used.

      IANAL, but the customer is most likely out of luck if he tries to challenge this. After all, this is in the terms & conditions that he supposedly agreed upon.

      This is another major blow to iPhone, on top of the recent price cut. Now we have an Apple spokeswoman admitting freely that the simple act of bringing it out of the country without using it actually cost "and arm and a leg". I have to point the blame to ATT for greed and Apple for letting this happen. How much more can you rip off from your early adopters (which are presumably loyal Apple customers)?

    5. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by sholden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So I can charge Westinghouse for the electricity used by the TV they made, since when I press the "off" button on the remote is goes into a standby mode?

      I mean who would have thunk that the button the iphone manual labels "Sleep/Wake button" would actually put the device in "sleep" mode and not turn it off?

    6. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      So if it were buried on page 18 of the fine print contract no one actually reads anyway, *then* it's okay to have an "off" button that doesn't turn the phone off?

      I'm all for disclosure and personal responsibility, but some things you just shouldn't have to watch out for.

      (Incidentally, why didn't they leave it home if it were going to be off the whole time? Afraid it would be stolen in a home robbery?)

    7. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by _14k4 · · Score: 1

      This is what pisses me off about the blackberry the first time I used it (rotating on-call phone). I wasn't getting *calls* and emails. Asked about it and someone said, "Well the person before you turned wireless off." ...the "Wireless off" button is right next to the "Power off" button.

      My cell phone, when I'm not using wireless email and interwebs... still operates as a phone.

      Why turning wireless off also turn the phone off on the blackberry, I only know after turning it back on and watching the damn thing work.

    8. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Ornedan · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, why didn't they leave it home if it were going to be off the whole time? Afraid it would be stolen in a home robbery? A random guess, but in case they did end up needing the phones for some reason (say, an accident).
    9. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if it were buried on page 18 of the fine print contract no one actually reads anyway, *then* it's okay to have an "off" button that doesn't turn the phone off?

      I'm all for disclosure and personal responsibility, but some things you just shouldn't have to watch out for. From a strictly legal standpoint AT&T would technically be off the hook for illegality of charges, but note I said technically. This is where things would get into the legal shades of gray because to some degree you are correct in that it should be clearly outlined. While AT&T would legally be in the right by outlining that information in the fine print, the lawyer in the case against them would argue that given the normal and known operation of every cellphone up to the iphone, the user had no reason to think this would be any different and that automatic updates of email happen regardless of whether the phone is on or off.

      The law doesn't work how everyone thinks it should, but instead through a series of subjective observations and definitions that may or may not correctly or adequately cover what would be morally correct (mainly because morality in itself can be subjective)
    10. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Because turning the wireless off turns off the radio? You may be shocked to hear this, but cell phone calls are transmitted over wireless! Also, your Blackberry doesn't do 802.11 if that's what you think wireless means. For what it's worth, the wireless switch is the same thing apple calls "airline" mode on the iPhone, it leaves the phone running but shuts down any RF transmitters/receivers on the phone.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    11. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by PalmKiller · · Score: 1

      They probably drove to where the ship was docked, and felt it would be better to carry the overpriced phone with them than leave it in the 100 degree plus heat in a parked car...that would have been my thinking anyway.

    12. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      It's called a manual, it comes with the device, and you are allowed to read it.

      Fine print in the manual is no excuse for selling a shoddy and defective product.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    13. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by SolitaryMan · · Score: 4, Funny

      For the same reason that someone who signs a contract without reading it and/or insisting on changes, deserves to be screwed. It's called a manual, it comes with the device, and you are allowed to read it. There is no "deception", only ignorance on the part of the user.

      Yeah, exactly

      --
      May Peace Prevail On Earth
    14. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For the same reason that someone who signs a contract without reading it and/or insisting on changes, deserves to be screwed.

      Just out of interest, how long do you think it would take the average person to read in full, understand, and if necessary seek legal advice on every binding agreement they enter into during their lifetime?

      There is a reason that legal systems recognise concepts like unequal bargaining power, contracts of adhesion, and unconscionable terms: they do it because if the legal system took the same naive view that you propose, the world would grind to a halt.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    15. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by mbrod · · Score: 1

      My wife a few years back got a phone plan through Cingular (now they are part of AT&T). She wanted to be able to send images using her phone. They told her over the phone how to do this. She tried to do this and the sending still didn't work. She was about to go on vacation and didn't think anything of it and planned on figuring it out once she got back. After coming back from vacation her bill was 1800 dollars. She was getting billed for trying to connect to a network something like every 80 seconds for a certain amount. This billing was happening even when she was talking on the phone with someone else. I talked to Cingular and told them they didn't render us any services or provide any product for the 1800 dollars and hence we wouldn't be giving them free money. The image she wanted to send never sent. They disagreed and demanded we pay the bill. I said no way. I mean if she was able to be on the Internet and the bill was higher than expected fine, I could pay extra for not finding out the real charges for such a service but the emailing didn't even work.

      They sent it to collections and once there I sent collections a physical letter explaining the situation and they never put it on our credit, they thought it was unfair on Cingulars part as well. Sucked having to switch to a different carrier though. If they would have just knocked that ridiculous charge off the bill they would have kept my wife and I as customers (and we may have thought about getting an iPhone).

    16. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by nlmille1 · · Score: 0

      Please...

      A manual, more specifically a *reference* manual, is not intended to be read cover-to-cover before the product is used. And I don't care that the terms and conditions state that using the phone internationally incurrs roaming charges. There's a certain amount of reasonableness that is implicit in any sort of contract. A $4,800 monthly bill for a normal retail (i.e. non-business) user is not reasonable. AT&T should reverse the charges, and maybe even throw in a month of free service as a good-will gesture.

    17. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If the "OFF" button doesn't turn it OFF, there is deception involved.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    18. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      user, consumer, use them interchangeably ......

      Unfortunately, with regard to technology, I'm in the camp that thinks a certain amount of responsibility needs to taken out of the hands of the consumer, and be forced onto the shoulders of the Corp's. Why you might ask? With as much obfuscation as there is with regard to term contracts, device incoherence and inconsistency, and overall learning curve of the general public, leaving it in their hands isn't necessarily a GOOD idea.

    19. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by ajs · · Score: 2, Informative

      For the same reason that someone who signs a contract without reading it and/or insisting on changes, deserves to be screwed. It's called a manual, it comes with the device, and you are allowed to read it. There is no "deception", only ignorance on the part of the user. This won't hold up in court, and for good reason. The customer had a reasonable expectation that turning the device "off" would prevent it from performing any transactions that would cost money. There was, at no point, a warning displayed (because the device was "off") that charges were being accumulated. There's simply no interaction here that would suggest to a typical user "read the manual before operating the off button, or get charged extra money."

      To make it clearer, re-cast your argument in terms of someone being charged nearly $5000 because the "enter" key on their new computer's keyboard was specially interpreted by the pre-installed operating system as a signal to accept a customer service fee for requesting email-based help on the current application. There's simply no way that would fly in court, no matter what the manual said.
    20. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by D4MO · · Score: 1

      Difference here is that Westinghouse don't benefit, unless they supply your electricity too?

      --

      Rocket science is easy. Neurosurgery, now *that's* difficult.
    21. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by _14k4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I am fully aware that wireless turns off the radio, and that the thing operates through radio waves. However, why call it a phone when wireless is off; it is, essentially, a brick wrapped in plastic when wireless is off. Yes, you can play brickbreaker (no pun intended) and write things to be sent later...

      But the person who had the device before me couldn't see how wireless and "phone" were so interconnected; thinking "wireless" meant Internet related functions and "phone" meant... well, ring ring related functions...

    22. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because the most commonly understood definition of the term "sleep" means "frenetically check for e-mails even when it means racking up massive roaming charges".

    23. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by CaptainPatent · · Score: 1

      Firstly I would like to say not a great example. TVs are known to try to detect IR when they are off simply because they need to in order to function properly which has been the case since the inception of the remote

      We'll go ahead and analyze what you meant to say by proposing that remote controls never required IR detection and until now the tv never used any power when it was off (let's say that remotes were always corded until 2007.) If Westinghouse introduced a brand-new IR remote control tv and someone noticed that their utility bill went up because of it, they would have a case. In order to prosecute this case they would have to show:

      1)that Westinghouse did not disclose the increased power consumption.
      2)that it was this exact device that caused the increase in power.
      3)how much additional power was used and at what rate that power was billed.

      In this case the lawsuit would be frivolous because you are arguing about a few milliwatt-hours (maybe even nanowatt-hours) over a month's time. I'm not sure about billing rates, but I'm sure it's in the range of pennies per month. Someone may think about litigating something like this, but in order to "win" not only would they have to make it a class action lawsuit against Westinghouse to be anywhere near worth the trouble and legal costs, the firm would also have to win legal costs in the trial itself, meaning the judge would have to agree the case was not a waste of time (which I doubt.)

      The iPhone case is in a completely different ballpark from what you proposed though, because we're talking a potential customer loss of (potentially) millions per year with roaming data charges because the phone does not operate how one would normally perceive it to.

      --
      Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
    24. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      How could you miss it? The settings:

      ON -- "OFF"

      Note the quotes for OFF. They require you to wave two fingers in the air, wherever you say the word OFF, even if you were a customer rep explaining the concept to someone on the telephone.

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
    25. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Zaatxe · · Score: 1

      So I can charge Westinghouse for the electricity used by the TV they made, since when I press the "off" button on the remote is goes into a standby mode?

      If it brings you a $4,800 electricity bill for that, then yes, I think you can.

      --
      So say we all
    26. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm currently battling AT&T for things just like this. Those heartless marketing bastards sit in a big room and come up with schemes exactly like this to generate income. They enter contracts with no intention of keeping their side of the agreement, and when someone sues them they walk away from the contract owing nothing, not delivering on their agreements causing immeasurable consequential damage to the other party. And even when you win the law suite, they ignore the judge's order with an attitude of 'what are you going to do? sue us? haha we are the phone company'.

      I pity the person who got the $4800 bill. Wait until you try to contact someone with a clue at AT&T. The only thing you will find is people who can help take your money. Need to get the bill corrected? Good luck, please hold while I transfer you to and endless black hole.

      Something needs to be done about these corporate cowards who hind behind the bureaucracies to steal every penny they can from customers who won't or cannot find a way to stand up to them.

    27. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Especially if that $4,800 went to Westinghouse!

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    28. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by nofx911 · · Score: 1

      I have a CDMA phone, and my phone always travels with me. Often times I need my phone while getting to/from my port of departure. Additionally, my phone also contains all of my contacts, to do lists, notes, and other downloaded texts that I may need; so I don't have to carry my laptop at all times.

    29. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Damvan · · Score: 1

      Read the damn article. Half the arguments on this board are moot if everyone would just read the damn article.

      He didn't think it was turned off. He just thought the data plan wouldn't work so he figured he wouldn't be charged.

      "Levy said he didn't expect data transfer charges internationally because he believed the data network in Europe wasn't compatible with the iPhone. The Levys brought their phones with them for voice calls."

    30. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the sleep/wake button, right? The one that puts the device to sleep, and wakes it up?

    31. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      waaaaaaaaaaaa.

    32. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Your+Pal+Dave · · Score: 1

      It's called a manual, it comes with the device, and you are allowed to read it. Really?

      Apple couldn't fit the 124-page manual into the compact iPhone box, but you can download it as a PDF.

      It's probably on the part of Apple's website that has a sign that says "Beware of the Leopard".
    33. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      A random guess, but in case they did end up needing the phones for some reason (say, an accident).

      So they EACH had to bring their phone?

      If they'd only brought one, they'd only have a $2400 bill :P

    34. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      If the "OFF" button doesn't turn it OFF, there is deception involved.

      Well, there would be if it was labelled "OFF" and not "STANDBY"

    35. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      And who's really going to remember to put the iPhone into airplane mode when he's just going to another country?

      Shouldn't he have put it into airplane mode when he got on the plane?

    36. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by portnoy · · Score: 1

      Now we have an Apple spokeswoman admitting freely that the simple act of bringing it out of the country without using it actually cost "and arm and a leg".

      No, that's not what she said. That's the Inquirer's interpretation of what she said. If you click through TFA to the actual NewsDay source, you find something more akin to what Apple actually said:

      "Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris said the company adequately discloses the potential charges on the Web site and when the phone is activated."

      The NewsDay article then goes on to look up the information on the AT&T web site to find the phrase, "Substantial charges may be incurred if phone is taken out of the U.S. even if no services are intentionally used."

      I'm not sure that comes even close to an Apple spokeswoman saying what TFA says she said.
    37. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by Herby+Sagues · · Score: 1

      Even more, why would anyone consider that $4800 is an acceptable bill for a data connection done from any country? Any cellphone is restricted in the bandwidth it can actually use. It will never use as much bandwidth as the lamest broadband connection. Buy a broadband connection in the UK, stard downloading from the US as much data as you can and at the end of the month you have paid probably one hundredth of $4800. At this day and age all traffic is data, and most is international. International data traffic is a cheap commodity, and at current rates $4800 will buy you about 1TB of international traffic. It is not as if the telephone is using an international wireless transmittion. It is just connecting to the nearest useable antenna and from there it's all land transmission. International roaming data and call rates are outrageously abusive. The same call done in one direction or the other have 100x differences, when the data transit and cost are the same. Yes, the providers have the legal right to charge whatever they want, but nowadays it can be considered deceptive advertising that their international roam rates are not advertised up front with their standard rates. And since their cost differential is almost nul, charging what their charge for voluntary or accidental communications is abusive, only surpassed by most hotel phone charges.

    38. Re:The law needs to clarify things like this by kevinadi · · Score: 1

      Ah yes I managed to find the phrase you mentioned. It was way buried in the 7700 word terms & conditions. However the wording "substantial" is not actually clear. It's sad when buying a phone requires you to be a lawyer.

  6. Waiting to take the battery out? by biocute · · Score: 1

    I wonder why there are so many posts saying to wait to take the battery out?

    1. Re:Waiting to take the battery out? by another_neophyte · · Score: 0

      I think it's because the iPhone shares the iPod's battery issue, which is that neither is user replacable.

    2. Re:Waiting to take the battery out? by MagicM · · Score: 1

      The iPhone features a built-in rechargeable battery that is not intended to be user-replaceable, similar to existing iPods. Once the battery reaches the end of its life time the phone will need to be returned to Apple and replaced for a fee.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iphone#Miscellaneous

    3. Re:Waiting to take the battery out? by JayAndSilentBob · · Score: 1

      iPod batteries are easy to replace. Pop open iPod, unplug battery, plug new battery, snap iPod back together. It seriously only takes a minute to do.

      --


      Love,
      Jay and Silent Bob
    4. Re:Waiting to take the battery out? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      That works for the large iPods. Others are soldered into place.

  7. Requisite tag for this article: iphOWNED by jimstapleton · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think that covers the situation nicely.

    --
    34486853790
    Connection too slow for X forwarding? Try "ssh -CX user@host"
  8. There is no "Off" ? by Gopal.V · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The iPhone updates email even when it's off?

    Then how is it legal to carry it on airplane or somewhere where it requires to operate in complete radio-off mode?

    1. Re:There is no "Off" ? by gad_zuki! · · Score: 4, Informative

      >Then how is it legal to carry it on airplane or somewhere where it requires to operate in complete radio-off mode?

      It has an airplaine wireless off mode. The problem is that the users who buy these things are too hip and smart and cool to spend 45 seconds with the manual. User error, nothing to see here.

    2. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Richthofen80 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The iPhone has a radio-off mode, where it disables its cellphone antennae and wifi antennae. Its called 'airplane mode' and accessible through the settings.

      It also has a power-off, where it essentially turns off everything except the sensor to turn it back on again. Not too many people even know this exists, even if they own an iPhone. If you press and hold the lock button at the top right, a screen will appear that says 'slide to turn off'... this is the only way to reboot the iPhone, I think.

      Most people press the 'sleep' hold button once, thinking that 'turns it off', but all it does is disable the screen. its still running, and using its antennae.

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    3. Re:There is no "Off" ? by struppi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      User error, nothing to see here.

      You are kidding, right? This is absolutely no user error. It should be safe to assume that turning the thing off implies radio off.

    4. Re:There is no "Off" ? by CommanderData · · Score: 1

      The guy is an idiot and deserves what he got. "OFF" is not just when the screen is dark. You have to press and hold the button on the top of the iPhone for about 5 seconds, and it will bring up a screen that says "Slide to power OFF". You then slide your finger across the screen and it is turned off. For real. I have 2 iPhones (one for me, one for the wife), we travel out of the country (she's in Scotland right now) and don't have these kind of problems...

      --
      Urge to post... fading... fading... RISING!... fading... fading... gone.
    5. Re:There is no "Off" ? by sholden · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It should be safe to assume that pressing the "sleep" doesn't turn it off, but puts it in whatever sleep mode is.

    6. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      FYI, if you ever need to do a hard reset (if it freezes or something) you hold down the lock button and the menu button together until the apple logo appears.

    7. Re:There is no "Off" ? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The problem is that the users who buy these things are too hip and smart and cool to spend 45 seconds with the manual. User error, nothing to see here.

      "User didn't realize 'Off' doesn't actually mean 'Off'" is an example of awful interface design, not user error.

      Apple's design philosophy has generally been to make everything intuitive enough that a user doesn't NEED to memorize a series of arcane printed instructions in order to perform basic tasks. And what task is more basic than powering the device on or off?

    8. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      It's a shame the damn things talk in their sleep...

    9. Re:There is no "Off" ? by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? This is 100% USER ERROR. The guy put the thing into sleep mode instead of actually turning it OFF.

      --
      This guy's the limit!
    10. Re:There is no "Off" ? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      I can't think of a single smartphone that doesn't work this way. Problem here is dumb-asses getting ahold of smart-phones. If you are going to buy a $600 gadget that does almost everything under the sun, you need to at least go through the getting started/tutorial (which I'm sure this device has and explains this -- my Treo did).

    11. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      Oh, dear God, that's simply awful. Horrible, horrible. Is there anything that we can do for your poor wife?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    12. Re:There is no "Off" ? by kevinadi · · Score: 0

      It shouldn't be this arcane just to turn off a device. It seems that Apple designed the iPhone in iPod fashion, where it never really turns off unless you leave it untouched for a long period of time. The problem is, an iPod doesn't incur a hefty bill. I don't think Apple made this bad design consciously, it's more likely that ATT just keep quiet about this fact and reap the benefit from the unknowing user later on (as most phone companies do). Apple is not totally blameless though. If they really want to compete in the global cell phone market, this mistake is inexcusable.

    13. Re:There is no "Off" ? by CommanderData · · Score: 2, Funny

      I don't know if there's anything we can do for her. I supplied her with earplugs to fight off the incessant sound of bagpipes, and a can of sheep-b-gone. I did my part... Anyway I'm enjoying the quiet time ;)

      --
      Urge to post... fading... fading... RISING!... fading... fading... gone.
    14. Re:There is no "Off" ? by kevinadi · · Score: 1

      Problem is, if you expect every customer of yours to read the manual, there goes 95% of your market. You have to accept that some people just don't want to read manuals, but that doesn't necessarily make them stupid. I accepted this fact a long time ago and stop bugging my friends about reading the manual of everything they buy. Me, I'm a compulsive manual reader. I have to read the manual first before touching anything. I even read the manual on my new guitar first before I use it. Most people in the world is not like us.

    15. Re:There is no "Off" ? by dintech · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Either way, it does seem to be contradictory to Apple's policy of being user friendly where possible.

    16. Re:There is no "Off" ? by bnenning · · Score: 1

      User error that was enabled by terrible design decisions by Apple. When Windows had stupid default settings that made it easy to get infected by just visiting a web page or viewing an email, Microsoft appropriately got blamed even though users theoretically could have become network security experts and disabled the dangerous features. Same thing here.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    17. Re:There is no "Off" ? by fredklein · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Do you automatically communicate with others when you are 'sleeping'?

      Then why should an iPhone?

    18. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Airplane mode is unsatisfactory because emergency calls would take longer to make, then at least configure e-mail to check for new messages Manually.

    19. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the RF realm there are only antennas. Bugs and critters have antennae.

    20. Re:There is no "Off" ? by king-manic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The iPhone has a radio-off mode, where it disables its cellphone antennae and wifi antennae. Its called 'airplane mode' and accessible through the settings.

      It also has a power-off, where it essentially turns off everything except the sensor to turn it back on again. Not too many people even know this exists, even if they own an iPhone. If you press and hold the lock button at the top right, a screen will appear that says 'slide to turn off'... this is the only way to reboot the iPhone, I think.

      Most people press the 'sleep' hold button once, thinking that 'turns it off', but all it does is disable the screen. its still running, and using its antennae.


      I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of interface designers suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    21. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Altus · · Score: 1


      If there is a mistake made by apple here, its is not the difference between sleep and off.

      Apple made one big mistake here. My phone knows when it is on network and when it is off network. The default behavior should be to not auto retrieve mail when you are roaming. On, off, asleep, whatever. This is the way it should work.

      That said, this is a strange use case and not the sort of thing someone would have thought of before hand.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    22. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Angostura · · Score: 1

      Name any other device which checks e-mail while in Sleep mode. Not intuitive.

    23. Re:There is no "Off" ? by MrPerfekt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm sorry but this is pure bs. Why would someone think because the screen is off and the device is sleeping that the device is off? My tiny brain would bring up the following points to alert me that the device is still actually on:

      1) Device returns instantaneously when pressing the WAKE button
      2) Carrier already attached at full when pressing the WAKE button
      3) The ability to recieve phone calls while the device is sleeping.

      Those might be some hints that "hey, just because the screen is off, it's still on." And I suppose you could also add to the list that standby eats up battery because the transmitters are on. I don't buy the ignorance excuse. To rack up charges that large, you'd have to on one mighty long cruise and if that were the case, the fact that you have to charge your iPhone that's been "off" every couple days might be a clue.

      Further bunk in this article:

      1) Calls the device "off", actually sleeping. Most other Smartphones have the same way of sleeping, only they have LEDs. Maybe that will be in rev B.
      2) Says automatically checks email. It can be configured to do so, but it doesn't otherwise. I've heard of people complaining that the iPhone grabs other data while sleeping, I've never experienced this. Only mail when configured to do so.

      --
      I just wasted your mod points! HA!
    24. Re:There is no "Off" ? by rkcallaghan · · Score: 1
      fredklein wrote:

      Do you automatically communicate with others when you are 'sleeping'? Then why should an iPhone? QFT/QED. You just won the thread.

      I hope this man goes to court, and says exactly that when AT&T/Apple tries to trot out the sleep mode excuse. Neither myself nor my home computer do this communication thing when in 'sleep mode'.

      ~Rebecca
    25. Re:There is no "Off" ? by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Do you automatically communicate with others when you are 'sleeping'?

      Then why should an iPhone? I receive dreams of strange hieroglyphics, of cyclopean underwater cities and slumbering gods. Perhaps my iPhone does, too! Great Old Ones use push technology, Cthulhu, who knew?
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    26. Re:There is no "Off" ? by juuri · · Score: 1

      Because the iPhone is marketed as an always "online" device?

      Congrats on finding enough retarded people, besides yourself, to get to plus 5 by posting complete and utter tripe.

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    27. Re:There is no "Off" ? by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 4, Informative

      my goodness what's with all of the strangely low amounts of intelligence here today? All of these posts seem to be implying that if a phone is not held against ones ear then it shouldnt recieve calls. OF COURSE sleep mode isnt off, otherwise THE PHONE WOULD NOT ANSWER CALLS!

      Admittidly in this case it is easy to see the people were just ignorant of the phone's basic operation and, perhaps, international data should be opt-in. but to say this is due to bad UI design from apple is INSANE. If the iPhone sat in your pocket in sleep mode and DIDNT have a function to auto get emails, that would be bad design.

      I just checked; auto fetching of email is OFF OFF OFF by default. These people are just the unlucky people who will remind the rest of you "non savvies" to think for a second. AND, if they used voice only for a week, you think they didnt see new email messages magically show up on their home screen of the unit? Yeah, RIGHT.

      Typed from an iPhone.

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    28. Re:There is no "Off" ? by onecheapgeek · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that Apple gets a percentage of the charges from AT&T, unless they allowed AT&T to screw them on that end of the contract....

    29. Re:There is no "Off" ? by sholden · · Score: 1

      My wii does.

    30. Re:There is no "Off" ? by flyingfsck · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So when you put your desk phone on the cradle it is off and no-one can call you?

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    31. Re:There is no "Off" ? by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      The fact that the phone has the "airplane mode" option is NOT a fair answer to this issue!

      Just last week, I had to explain what the "airplane mode" was all about to a co-worker, who came to me with questions about that option on their cellphone. Other people overheard our conversation and chimed in, with more than a couple "Oh! So THAT'S what that thing is on MY phone!" type comments.

      None of these people were iPhone owners either. We're talking basic Motorola/Nextel phones here.

      It's not that this guy was some "wanna-be hipster who thought he was too good to read the instructions, since his new iPhone was so easy to use". This could happen to practically anyone. MOST people don't read the instruction books for their cellphones. They assume that being telephones, basically, they're devices they can manage to figure out by playing around with them a little bit.

      I don't think it's even remotely reasonable to expect that everyone understands that airline mode would disable *data* transmission on their phone, in any case!

    32. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Nazmun · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yeah, but your phone receives calls and the iphone like many cellphones have a way to actually turn off by holding a button for a few seconds which these people when their 3 iphones didn't do.

      --
      Hmmm... Pie...
    33. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Nazmun · · Score: 1

      They never turned it off, they left it on for voice calls. He just assumed that when the screen was blank (standbye) it wasn't doing anything even though he manually turned on the automatic email updates at some point (it's off by default).

      --
      Hmmm... Pie...
    34. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Rockin'+Az · · Score: 1
      Do you automatically communicate with others when you are 'sleeping'?

      Yes. Natalie Portman.

      But you don't want to go there

      And even if you do... I don't want you to go there.

      I would like an iPhone to go there though...

      --

      I come from a LAN down under

      Where the packets flow and routers chunder

    35. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1

      You are kidding, right? This is absolutely no user error. It should be safe to assume that turning the thing off implies radio off.

      It should be safe to assume that turning your computer's monitor off, or hitting "Lock Computer" implies ethernet and WiFi are off, so any BitTorrent activity afterwards can't be blamed on you, right?

      The user has to know that just locking the screen does not imply radio off. How would you receive incoming calls if that were the case? Why would the user have explicitly changed their iPhone from manual email checking to automatic email checking if not for the fact that it checks their email for them at the interval they set it to, and notifies them of new mail even with the screen locked?

    36. Re:There is no "Off" ? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      No, but everyone who's owned a cell phone before knows that they are not instant-on/instant-off and anyone who's never owned a cell phone before will need SOME instruction to use it. Where does that leave us in this case?

    37. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Kyont · · Score: 1

      > It has an airplaine wireless off mode.

      Clearly, in the next version, Apple's designers need to add a "Foreign Cruise Ship Off" mode. Busy people don't have time generalize.

      --
      You shall see a cow on the roof of a cotton house.
    38. Re:There is no "Off" ? by FreakinSyco · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you've never used any of the current PDA/Phone offerings available today. With my 8125 (functionally identical to the new 8525, and very very similar to almost everything else in that area like the iPhone) pressing the power button puts the phone to sleep. While "asleep" it will "wakeup" whenever it receives a text message, phone call, or downloads an email (if I have it set to check for e-mail like this fella did).

      If I really want to put my phone off I have to hold the power button down for ~3-5 seconds and then press yes on a confirmation prompt... which happens to be the exact same method the iPhone uses.

      Sleep != Off && Sleep != Not communicating

    39. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Damvan · · Score: 1

      No, it updates email when it is in sleep mode.

      If you actually turn it off, it stops updating.

      Either way, auto update of email is turned OFF by default.

    40. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Damvan · · Score: 1

      Nintendo Wii

    41. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May be they cannot distinguish betwen "Off is OFF" and "Sleep is SLEEP"... jeez. RTFM.

    42. Re:There is no "Off" ? by C0rinthian · · Score: 1

      And this is the real issue. Not "Off vs. sleep" not if it pulls email automatically or not. The problem is that it was using data while roaming. However, I don't know what settings are available, and what is default. So it still may be user error.

    43. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am wondering, what are the functional differencs for the iPhone's sleep vs off?

    44. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Altus · · Score: 1


      Neither do I, but if it turns out this clown actually changed his phone from a default setting to one that would download emails while roaming, and then bitched about the cost... well, there is a special place in hell for people like that.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    45. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Neflyte_Zero · · Score: 1

      Do you automatically communicate with others when you are 'sleeping'? If by "communicate with others" you mean "offgas incessantly" and by "sleeping" you mean "in a reclined position on the sofa" then yes, I would say my brother does communicate while sleeping. And effectively at that.
      --
      Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.
    46. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Angostura · · Score: 1

      You have a point. Although mine doesn't since I have WiiConnect24 turned off thanks to the 11 Watts or whatever it eats up.

    47. Re:There is no "Off" ? by sholden · · Score: 1

      The battery sucking full colour LCD display being turned off, maybe?

    48. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      Look at the fscking SYMBOL on the BUTTON. See that line and circle? That's an international symbol for POWER.

      I press it, I expect it to turn the fuck off, and NOT "hibernate/sleep" or whatever the fuck it does.

      I press said button with same symbol on my desktop computer, Windows shuts down and the computer turns off totally, requiring me to hit the power switch again to turn it back on. Same with my old Nokia Cell phone. Same with my PSX. Same with my new LED flashlight.

      Anything else, plain and simple, is deceptive practice.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    49. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "QFT/QED. You just won the thread."

      Unless the winner was the one with the dumbest attempt at justifying user stupidity, then no.

      "I hope this man goes to court, and says exactly that when AT&T/Apple tries to trot out the sleep mode excuse."

      Me too, then they'll dismiss this idiot's case and punt his ass out.

      "Neither myself nor my home computer do this communication thing when in 'sleep mode'."

      Are you or your computer an iPhone? Are either of you a cell phone and need to operate as such?

      Why are you people so fucking stupid, especially you with your slobbering over a moronic point like "I don
      t do that when I sleep".

      You should be ashamed of yourself for succumbing to such 2nd grade logic, it makes you look pretty retarded.

    50. Re:There is no "Off" ? by mr_matticus · · Score: 1, Troll

      User didn't realize that "Sleep/Wake" doesn't mean "On/Off"

      You don't need arcane instructions. You need one active brain cell. It's not a power button; it doesn't say it's a power button; when you push the button, the screen turns off but the phone still rings. How stupid do you have to be?

      I personally would like a small status LED of some kind, since there's no way of knowing if the battery died while asleep and suddenly you're wondering why no one's calling and it turns out it's not on at all. Of course, my Windows smartphone did the same thing.

    51. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Goldarn · · Score: 1

      I despair that, on a site boasting "News for Nerds," there are so very many stupid and deliberately ignorant people.

      How is it possible, in this modern world, that people don't understand the basics of how a cell phone works?

    52. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Hamilton+Lovecraft · · Score: 0

      There is no line-and-circle icon anywhere on an iPhone. But hey, don't let the facts get in the way of your righteous anger!

      --
      step 3: god dammit, it doesn't work
    53. Re:There is no "Off" ? by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Or, since the iPhone is basically a computer with a built in cellular radio, consider the equivalent to, for example, a MacBook. Lets assume you live in the US (where you don't pay for data by the kilobyte) but are traveling to Australia (where you do, as a general rule).

      MB: In sleep mode, a light glows periodically on the front of the computer
      iP: So far, nobody has commented on a single way to tell, without explicitly checking, whether the phone is off or sleeping

      MB: Clear option is available to turn off, as well as to put to sleep
      iP: There's a button that *looks* like it turns the phone off, but to actually turn it off you have to hold it for a while instead

      MB: While sleeping, turns off radio (WiFi, Bluetooth) and I'm pretty sure if it had an internal modem it would turn that off too so it's not running up data charges just because you didn't explicitly turn off your email program before going abroad
      iP: Runs up $4800 in charges while on vacation just because it was set up to get email (and didn't turn it off before leaving a country where you have free data access)

      MB: Battery only lasts a few days (week or two at best) in sleep mode, so people turn it off or put it in hibernate mode (well, they do with PC laptops, presumably there's a Mac equivalent) when going unplugged for a while
      iP: TFA doesn't say how long the cruise lasted, but unless the phone ran out of battery after racking up the $4800 charge, it would presumably have gone right on charging

      Somebody screwed up big-time here.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    54. Re:There is no "Off" ? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      my goodness what's with all of the strangely low amounts of intelligence here today? All of these posts seem to be implying that if a phone is not held against ones ear then it shouldnt recieve calls. OF COURSE sleep mode isnt off, otherwise THE PHONE WOULD NOT ANSWER CALLS!

      Admittidly in this case it is easy to see the people were just ignorant of the phone's basic operation and, perhaps, international data should be opt-in. but to say this is due to bad UI design from apple is INSANE. If the iPhone sat in your pocket in sleep mode and DIDNT have a function to auto get emails, that would be bad design.


      Then what's the point of even having that sleep/wake button in the first place? How is it any different from just leaving the phone on and waiting for the powersave mode to turn the screen off, like what you would do with any other phone if you wanted to still recieve calls and check your email? Pressing a button to go into sleep implies that the device is going to go into a different state - a sleep mode and not do those things. When my computer is in a sleep mode, it doesn't recieve IM or VOIP calls, and it stops checking my email. Why should the iPhone be any different? Face it, the interface is non-intuitive, stop doing the Apple fanboy thing and blaming the user.

    55. Re:There is no "Off" ? by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      you know what the #1 battery drain on a PDA like the iPhone is? The screen. That AND the fact that you don't want spurious input in your pocket PLUS the fact this is how ALL windows smartphones work too leaves your argument rather flat.

      I'm not kidding. If you are not aware that turning off the screen save major power you are certainly as in need of help as the subject of this article is. Apple is good at what they do, but they can't drool for you as well. Screen light = power and Screen light = accidental input in your pocket. Case closed. /But try the veal!

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    56. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      my goodness what's with all of the strangely low amounts of intelligence here today? All of these posts seem to be implying that if a phone is not held against ones ear then it shouldnt recieve calls. OF COURSE sleep mode isnt off, otherwise THE PHONE WOULD NOT ANSWER CALLS!

      Admittidly in this case it is easy to see the people were just ignorant of the phone's basic operation and, perhaps, international data should be opt-in. but to say this is due to bad UI design from apple is INSANE. If the iPhone sat in your pocket in sleep mode and DIDNT have a function to auto get emails, that would be bad design.

      I just checked; auto fetching of email is OFF OFF OFF by default. These people are just the unlucky people who will remind the rest of you "non savvies" to think for a second. AND, if they used voice only for a week, you think they didnt see new email messages magically show up on their home screen of the unit?

      With all those spelling and grammar errors in your comment, how can you complain about "low intelligence" in this forum?

      Typed from an iPhone. Oh, I get it.
    57. Re:There is no "Off" ? by fredklein · · Score: 1

      How is it possible, in this modern world, that people don't understand the basics of how a cell phone works?


      That's the point- a normal cell phone does not download email (or, indeed, do much of anything) when 'off' (okay, "in sleep mode"). Yes, it receives calls. Yes, it notifies the closest cell tower it is within range, so as to be able to receive calls. The iPhone goes WAY beyond that and decides to connect (while roaming, no less!) and download email.

    58. Re:There is no "Off" ? by fredklein · · Score: 1

      OF COURSE sleep mode isnt off, otherwise THE PHONE WOULD NOT ANSWER CALLS!

      There is a difference between 'sleeping, but able to receive calls' and 'sleeping, and connecting automatically while roaming to download email and run up your bill'.

      Pity you can't see the difference.

    59. Re:There is no "Off" ? by Kabuthunk · · Score: 1

      Yes, but if I'm not mistaken, that can be easily disabled.

      --
      Planet Zebeth - Metroid with a twist
    60. Re:There is no "Off" ? by sholden · · Score: 1

      As can downloading email while not using the mail application on an iphone - according to the manual that's the default state even.

  9. They should have known: "Think Different"? by dbolger · · Score: 1

    Your phone stays on, running programs and checking services even after you have switched it off. You can't get much more different than that!

    1. Re:They should have known: "Think Different"? by somersault · · Score: 1

      It's pretty impressive that they can do all that while drawing no power at all from the battery though :P Why don't they just leave the phone off, even when it's on?

      --
      which is totally what she said
  10. Soo.. by Kazymyr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the international data plan charges $24 per 20MB, and they got a bill for $4800, that means the 3 phones, while turned off, downloaded a total of around 4GB. WTF?

    --
    I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    1. Re:Soo.. by fastest+fascist · · Score: 1

      I was just thinking the same, and also wondering how likely that is to even be possible over EDGE or GPRS or whatever that thing uses...

    2. Re:Soo.. by MaestroRC · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's the *in-plan* rate. And, that probably only covers the first 20MB anyhow. Read the linked article (not the inquirer, the original), and it mentions that data rates can be as high as $20/MB in some countries, and that one data session was over $200 (10MBish? Seems reasonable for some attachments).

      --
      I hate sigs...
    3. Re:Soo.. by devnullkac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He probably didn't have the international data plan; that's why he left the phones turned off.

      --
      What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
    4. Re:Soo.. by Gabest · · Score: 1

      That's roughly 5 MB/hour, for one month.

    5. Re:Soo.. by thegnu · · Score: 1

      If the international data plan charges $24 per 20MB, and they got a bill for $4800, that means the 3 phones, while turned off, downloaded a total of around 4GB. WTF?

      I am not an expert on this, but it's conceivable that if they were traipsing about the countryside (with 3 iphones--sheesh), that the iPhone just FAILED to transfer 4GB. It would depend on how the network metered the service, of course, but it sounds like a possibility to me.

      Can anyone with any background in this either back me up or refute me all to hell?
      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    6. Re:Soo.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually if you have no plan for international data AT&T charges .0195 per KB. So $4800 is around 246 meg.

    7. Re:Soo.. by Renraku · · Score: 1

      Its a well-known fact that all cell phone companies, unless you have the unlimited plan and are squarely within their range, will rape you on data charges.

      Sprint is ten cents per kilobyte. I made the mistake of checking google maps (I downloaded onto my phone practically as soon as I got it) without the data plan. Instant $20-30 charge. Thankfully they took it off, and I purchased the data plan..since I use that and other options.

      But as for the amount of bandwidth, maybe they were seeding a torrent from their phone..it'd be the trendy thing to do at least.

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    8. Re:Soo.. by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      More likely $24 for the first 20MB and a much higher per-KB cost after that (just like the non-unlimited domestic plans), not $24 per 20MB for each 20 MB chunk.

      That's even if he had the $24 plan in the first place, if he didn't the first 20MB was probably VERY expensive.

      I think AT&T's international data roaming is something like either 1.9 cents or 19 cents per kilobyte.

      While I'm happy with AT&T as a new customer (about 2 weeks so far and I'm so happy I've ditched Verizon Wirele$$), I'm glad I don't have an iPhone. Unlike the iPhone, my 8525 (HTC TyTn) can be unlocked and if I want to use it out of the country I can throw in a prepaid SIM at my destination country. Yes, the iPhone can also be unlocked but many of its features will break on a non-AT&T network. I also have full control over when my 8525 fetches email or uses data...

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    9. Re:Soo.. by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      That would be even worse. So you're charged even for failed transfers? Vade retro, iPhone!

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    10. Re:Soo.. by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      If the international data plan charges $24 per 20MB
      If is the important word, there.

      Something tells me they charge per session for each 20MB or portion thereof, just as they charge you the full three minutes for a 10-second long-distance phone call (though I'm not sure they do this anymore).

      One plan * $24 * 200 sessions. Seems easy to me for them to come up with that number, though that doesn't make it any more fair.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    11. Re:Soo.. by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      Check your math, I get 800 MB.

    12. Re:Soo.. by jimicus · · Score: 2, Funny

      Actually if you have no plan for international data AT&T charges .0195 per KB

      But is that $0.0195 or 0.0195 cents?

    13. Re:Soo.. by thegnu · · Score: 1

      it WOULD be worse. However, it could be a compatibility glitch with the iPhone and a foreign network. Incompatibilities with untested networks don't seem that far-fetched to me.

      But really, it'll be interesting to see how this is PR'd, since Apple's stuff is supposed to Just Work. How can you argue with someone who is upset that your stuff in fact didn't Just Work? Not that it's an unreasonable mistake to be made by a product developer (it's hard to test for EVERYTHING), but Apple's reputation is a little on the liberal side (so sayeth Machiavelli), and therefore they've got to maintain, maintain.

      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    14. Re:Soo.. by Technician · · Score: 1

      If the international data plan charges $24 per 20MB, and they got a bill for $4800, that means the 3 phones, while turned off, downloaded a total of around 4GB. WTF?

      Storm Botnet e-mail.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    15. Re:Soo.. by jrumney · · Score: 1

      If you look at most mobile phone contracts, they specify that you incur data charges per "session" (without specifying what that is), and in fixed increments. In my case, the increments are 10k in country at £2.50/Mb, and 100k roaming at £9.99/Mb. So if you're doing something like polling an email account, then even at 1k, each poll is costing something like £1 per poll. His best bet is to issue a legal challenge on the basis that his mail usage represents a single session, and AT&T should be charging based on the total aggregate of data used, not the number of polls. Also, he may have a case that the charges are unreasonable for merely taking a phone with him overseas, especially if he bought the phone from AT&T themselves, as they should have configured the phones to not use data without explicit user confirmation while roaming.

    16. Re:Soo.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is $.0195 per KB.

    17. Re:Soo.. by pokerdad · · Score: 1

      If the international data plan charges $24 per 20MB

      In addition to the points others have made, notice that he was on a cruise. Though I have never been on one myself, I have heard that they charge sky high prices for any data/cell usage.

    18. Re:Soo.. by Splab · · Score: 1

      So you are saying the networks we got here in EU are untested running on non standard stuff?

    19. Re:Soo.. by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      $4800/$24=200; 200*20=4000.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    20. Re:Soo.. by camusflage · · Score: 1

      I was just on a cruise, on Celebrity, to Alaska. When not in port, they had a cell satellite gateway activated. For $2.49 per minute voice, $.02 per kilobyte data, and $.75 per SMS message they would relay from satellite to your cell. We turned ours off, as we use chatty Blackberries that would have racked up massive data charges.

      That being said.. If this guy can't be bothered to confirm that his equipment isn't using wireless, be it GPRS or WiFi, too fscking bad. My wife left her BB on accidentally overnight, so I'm sure we're going to be seeing some charges for data filter through. Me, I just put my blackberry in "wireless off" (aka airplane mode) whenever we weren't in port. Since our cruise was Alaska, we were on our home network in port. I still used it to keep track of my schedule, but didn't use the wireless features when we were at sea.

      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    21. Re:Soo.. by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      What math are you using? Roman numerals?

      4800$/24$ = 200

      200 chunks * 20 MB = 4000 MB = 4 GB

      4 GB / 3 phones = 4/3 GB per phone.

      --
    22. Re:Soo.. by InternetVoting · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you don't register for the international data plan (which is optional with a mandatory 1 year contract) the rate is $0.02/KB which translates to about 235MB for $4800. This is not unheard of for three phones with a few big attachments.

      Now all this talk about is it really "off," what the Apple iPhone user manual (which they obviously didn't read) calls "sleep" is nothing more than a screen lock. For this story to be true we would have to see a number of things. 1)As previously noted 235MB of email was downloaded. 2)The user was truly unaware of the difference between screen lock and off. 3)The user had all notifications turned off (audio or vibrate) for each of the 235MB worth of emails

      At a minimum the story is disingenuous. The iPhone does not perform as described with off. The user would have found himself in a similar predicament with any other PDA he didn't turn off (AT&T offers the same international data plan for all phones)

    23. Re:Soo.. by thegnu · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So you are saying the networks we got here in EU are untested running on non standard stuff?

      No, I'm saying the Apple didn't test it on EU networks, possibly. Plus, billing is done differently by different companies. And if the way Apple and AT&T handled dropped connections (oh, data's free, it's not a problem) doesn't apply to EU networks, then they would possibly conflict. Also, if Apple and AT&T worked on a non-ubiquitous way of handling errors, then it would make sense (judging from its non-ubiquitousness) that not everyone would implement the same methodology.

      Looky:

      1. Newcomer to cell phone market makes a cell phone
      2. Tons of people say it's hard making cell phones, that they have no faith in the newcomer
      3. The newcomer does very well, and there are no problems
      4. Woops, the newcomer just charged someone $4800 for no good reason

      Also, didn't Apple say that one of the reasons to stick with network lockdown is to not have to support various networks?
      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    24. Re:Soo.. by clickety6 · · Score: 1


      Wow - it's lucky they had the 8Gb models and not the 4Gb models - they might have missed some emails...!

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
    25. Re:Soo.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4GB...Each one probably downloaded each installment of "Pirates of The Caribbean" on the Mediterranean...those Pirates!

    26. Re:Soo.. by Random832 · · Score: 1

      $.0195 cents per kb, you say?

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    27. Re:Soo.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whichever screws the customer more.

    28. Re:Soo.. by Damvan · · Score: 1

      He didn't leave the phones turned off. Read the damn article. He left them on.

      "Levy said he didn't expect data transfer charges internationally because he believed the data network in Europe wasn't compatible with the iPhone. The Levys brought their phones with them for voice calls."

    29. Re:Soo.. by BiggerBoat · · Score: 1

      At what point would it go from "too fscking bad" to "too fscking wrong"? If the charges were $48,000? $480,000? How about $4.8 million?

      This is not a challenge, but an honest question: Where do you draw that line?

    30. Re:Soo.. by camusflage · · Score: 1

      This is not a challenge, but an honest question: Where do you draw that line?

      I don't. That's the libertarian in me though. I chalk it up to personal responsibility.

      Looking around at others who have been bitten by this, a gentleman who was in Mexico was offered $1500 of his $2000 back. My guess is that this is dead cost for AT&T, and possibly even less than they had to pay to the Mexican carrier on whose network he was roaming. If you can afford three iphones for your family, as well as the cost of a Mediterranean cruise, including airfare from NY, I think that $5k is a lesson in responsibility. Especially considering the town he's from has a median income of $160k. If he complains enough to AT&T, they'll knock it way down. This is especially likely if the charges were largely incurred through Cellular At Sea, which is a joint venture of AT&T's.

      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    31. Re:Soo.. by Alsee · · Score: 1

      is that $0.0195 or 0.0195 cents?

      Yes.

          -- Verizon

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    32. Re:Soo.. by Double+Entendre · · Score: 1

      USD 20 per MB can be low by some standards. If you look here at one of Spain's biggest mobile telecoms, you'll see that when you roam internationally, certain types of data transfer can cost up to EUR 46.20 per MB. That's about USD 63.87 per MB, converted at today's mid-rate.

  11. Magazine subscription by biocute · · Score: 0

    This is similar to some magazines, which keep sending you the mags AND invoices, even if you have already cancelled the 10th fricking time.

  12. How to make BIG BUCKS with your iPhone by word+munger · · Score: 4, Funny

    1. Travel overseas and rack up huge iPhone bill
    2. Submit your story to blogs, forums, and /.
    3. ????
    4. Profit
    5. Pay your iPhone bill

    1. Re:How to make BIG BUCKS with your iPhone by xouumalperxe · · Score: 1

      No, no, no.

      Profit is always the BOTTOM line. So your table should look like this:

      1. Travel overseas and rack up huge iPhone bill
      2. Submit your story to blogs, forums, and /.
      3. ????
      4. Revenue
      5. Pay your iPhone bill
      6. If {item 4 - item 5 > 0} then Profit! else Loss!
    2. Re:How to make BIG BUCKS with your iPhone by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Being a former business major, I can tell you that's not quite the case. See, "profit" is assessed when costs and revenues are accrued, not when they're actually paid out. If I owe you $10, but I have $15 coming to me, I have already made a profit, even before cashflow happens. So you don't have to actually pay your iPhone bill before you profit, as long as your revenues are greater than your costs (and both are known).

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  13. Try turning it off instead of sleeping the display by wal9001 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sleep: Press sleep/wake button briefly. Off: Hold button for several seconds, slide red slider control that shows up. Of course it downloads new messages when the display is sleeping. There'd be no point to sleep if it didn't.

  14. Gap in the market! by adycarter · · Score: 5, Funny

    So when the phones "off" it communicates, and you can't kill it all together by removing the battery?........

    Coming soon to the iStore, the iCoffin, a lead lined box designed for when you need to take your phone out of the country, or near medical equipment.

    Be the envy of the Intensive Care ward with your small and portable iCoffin weighing only 1 tonne, marvel at its lead casing, lick its tasty exterior and be a role model for Chinese toy makers everywhere!

    --
    Witty Comment Here
    1. Re:Gap in the market! by Kazymyr · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's actually a neat idea, but you don't need the lead (the thing's not radioactive to my knowledge). Let's see which gadget company will be the first one to sell Faraday's cages for iphones. Can you just imagine the ads? "Be absolutely protected from unwanted phone bills! Only with the iCase(TM)"

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    2. Re:Gap in the market! by NetCow · · Score: 1

      No, you can turn it off alright. And I'm not trying to defend the vampi^H^H^H^H^Htelecommunications carriers here, but the way I see it this guy was simply an idiot. He didn't bother to find out how to turn off the phone (which is a bit more complicated than it'd need to be, but still not rocket science), and, worst of all, the article quotes him saying that (I paraphrase) they took their phones with them even though they were expecting them not to work. Why take them in the first place then?
      No sympathy here. Stupidity and pride are costly.

    3. Re:Gap in the market! by iphayd · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You can't take the battery out, but you can take the SIM card out. This way, you can use it for Wi-Fi and calendar, without the fear of being billed.

    4. Re:Gap in the market! by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 1

      Some time ago, I saw a false ad for an anti-theth device for iPod which basically was a fake brown Zune casing, now you only have to cover the inner part with metal for full protection.

    5. Re:Gap in the market! by ShiNoKaze · · Score: 1

      I vote for iCage(TM)

    6. Re:Gap in the market! by camusflage · · Score: 1

      I have a pocket for my phone in my Aluminum Foil Deflector Beanie. This protects me from unwanted charges, plus it keeps the black helicopters from being able to track my phone.

      --
      The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
    7. Re:Gap in the market! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An optional addon for the iCase is a slot to keep your RFID enabled US passport!

    8. Re:Gap in the market! by gzerphey · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one that thinks you shouldn't have to go to these lengths just to make sure your not going to be screwed in the end?

      Maybe I am, but I doubt it.

      --
      I don't have a microwave. I do, however, have a clock that occasionally cooks shit.
    9. Re:Gap in the market! by tftp · · Score: 1

      They could have taken the phones with them to be able to listen to music, maybe? My phone supports roaming but shows a warning when connecting and a symbol on the LCD, so it's very much obvious when you are going to incur charges, and you don't want to pay then you can cancel the connection before it starts.

    10. Re:Gap in the market! by steveo777 · · Score: 1

      If there isn't a SIM card in it, then what's the point? I suppose now you could easily consider the iPod Touch an iPhone without a SIM card. Same price, too!

      --
      This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
    11. Re:Gap in the market! by Sancho · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I do, but I don't think that Apple did anything wrong in this case. Really, it's the price gouging that I have a problem with.

      The only thing Apple really could have done was become more intrusive when the phone uses data. A Vista-like "Are you sure you want to check your mail?" every time would have prevented this. Doing so while roaming might even be a sane default.

      But realistically, the default settings of the iPhone do not cause this behavior. This guy turned on background e-mail checking, then forgot or didn't know how to turn off his iPhone (which means that he didn't read the manual that came with it.) He holds the most culpabililty by far.

    12. Re:Gap in the market! by Trogre · · Score: 1

      Wait, wait what do you mean you can't take the battery out? This is a cellphone we're talking about, right?

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  15. This had better get fixed by phayes · · Score: 2, Insightful
    If Apple wants to sell more than a token number of iPhones to people outside the USA as it is planning to. Given that countries elsewhere are smaller, the likelihood that a user is not in their home country is much larger. If the iPhone cannot be taken outside your home country - even when off - what use is it?

    The only correct resolution is for Apple & ATT to eat these charges until the iPhone's GSM radio can be set to OFF when not inside the coverage of the selected carrier.

    --
    Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    1. Re:This had better get fixed by MistaE · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The whole article is FUD. The iPhone wasn't "OFF" -- it was just asleep. If users want to be stupid and pretend that sleep is off, then they pay the consequences.

      Besides, there's three legitimate ways they could have avoided the charges, you can just turn it off, but that wouldn't make much sense since you couldn't use it as an iPod. You can also go into the email settings and turn off auto-check, but since you obviously don't want any roaming charges, it wouldn't make much sense to keep the radio on. That's why there's the airplane mode which will shut off the radio and everything that has to do with it.

      Seriously, what else does Apple need to do. Does Airplane mode need to be in big bold letters on the main menu with a note that says, "Hey! USE THIS IF YOU GO OVERSEAS." I would hope that if you buy an iPhone you're knowledgeable enough to look up the airplane mode.

      Sheesh.

    2. Re:This had better get fixed by csnydermvpsoft · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My guess is that phone plans in those other countries (especially small, non-island ones) have much better roaming terms than US plans.

    3. Re:This had better get fixed by CronoCloud · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well perhaps they should call Airplane Mode, "radio off/disable radio" mode. Because normal people might not realize what Airplane mode does and only think of using it on an airplane.

    4. Re:This had better get fixed by MistaE · · Score: 1

      I do agree with your suggestion, although the only thing I'd say is that every other phone seems to call their radio disable mode "Airplane Mode," and I'm sure Apple (for once) was just trying to abide by the norms in the industry.

      Of course this would all have been avoided with a quick look at a manual, but I digress.

    5. Re:This had better get fixed by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      Good point. It should have a combo selection box that also includes text explaining what it does

      Radio Off/Disable Radio :This mode is good for when you are in locations that require you not to use electronic devices (like air planes). This mode is also good for when you do not want iPhone to check mail and use network resources when in another country.

      --
    6. Re:This had better get fixed by Zelos · · Score: 1

      You'd think so, but never underestimate the desire of the networks to rip off the customers.

      The EU stepped in and regulated the maximum mobile roaming charges recently, I think the max is about $1/minute for calls now.

    7. Re:This had better get fixed by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      "I would hope that if you buy an iPhone you're knowledgeable enough to look up the airplane mode."

      Translates into, I hope that if you would be stupid enough to buy a product that nothing but hype then your going to be intelligent enough to actually understand the manual/

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    8. Re:This had better get fixed by CaptainZapp · · Score: 1
      The fanbois will probably mod me into oblivion for that. But what the hell; I have the kharma to blow.

      In my opinion the current incarnation of the iPhone is unsellable in theEuropean market, save for a few superfans. One major reason is the lack of UMTS support, but that's fixable. For some business users an unchangeable battery is a no-go, but that's not it. But the death-knell (again in my opinion) is that you're not able to change the SIM. A GSM phone in Europe is not crippled (Bluetooth, et al) and, except for SIM locked phones is never bound to a specific network operator and it is very common to change the SIM to something local and pre-payed, or to a roaming-free call back SIM when travelling and if you can't do that the phone is DOA; period!

      --
      ich bin der musikant

      mit taschenrechner in der hand

      kraftwerk

    9. Re:This had better get fixed by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      If users want to be stupid and pretend that sleep is off, then they pay the consequences.

      No, if Apple designs a shoddy and defective product that does not clearly distinguish between "sleep" and "off", then they need to pay the consequences - recall the thing, fix it, and pay any and all charges incurred by users.

      I would hope that if you buy an iPhone you're knowledgeable enough to look up the airplane mode.

      Great, so if an iPhone owner doesn't read some fine print in the back of the manual to understand which of several different "off" modes is really "off", the phone is a threat to the safety of the plane. Great design.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    10. Re:This had better get fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the record the Verizon LG enV (9900) has a Radio On, Radio Off radio button. It's not called "Airplane mode" or anything of the sort. And that's a fairly new, fairly high-end non-PDA phone. There is precedent for sanity.

    11. Re:This had better get fixed by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      I do agree with your suggestion, although the only thing I'd say is that every other phone seems to call their radio disable mode "Airplane Mode," and I'm sure Apple (for once) was just trying to abide by the norms in the industry. I dunno, on my blackberry the option is on the main screen and is simply labeled "Turn wireless off". The default settings also blink the status LED green every once in a while to let you know that it has cellular coverage, but I turned that off because I found it annoying.
    12. Re:This had better get fixed by chdig · · Score: 1

      The iPhone wasn't "ON" either -- it was supposed to be asleep.
      Let's ask Google's "define:" for what "sleep" should mean in a computer sense:

      # An application tells the operating system it doesn't want to be considered ready to be dispatched for a period of time.
      www.ssec.wisc.edu/mcidas/doc/prog_man/2003/glossary.html

      # The name usually given to the lowest-power state of a device or system
      www.candc.co.uk/se/glossary.htm

      # A unit's state, in which it does nothing at all.
      sources.redhat.com/xconq/manual/xcdesign_60.html


      I've always known sleep to mean write-to-ram instead of write-to-disk, but regardless I know of no device other than the iPhone that does processing and networking when "asleep".

      This is bad UI design, plain and simple.

    13. Re:This had better get fixed by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      If Apple wants to sell more than a token number of iPhones to people outside the USA as it is planning to. Given that countries elsewhere are smaller, the likelihood that a user is not in their home country is much larger. If the iPhone cannot be taken outside your home country - even when off - what use is it?

      The only correct resolution is for Apple & ATT to eat these charges until the iPhone's GSM radio can be set to OFF when not inside the coverage of the selected carrier.


      There's another - European carriers coming up with reasonable roaming plans. We have that in the US - I can go anywhere and not worry about long distance, roaming, SMS, or data charges beyond my flat rate - in an area the rough size of the EU.

      We may not have all the neat phones and bells and whistles but our market evolved to a decent model for usage fees. We used to have the "small calling area" and "large roaming area" setup as well but as our market matured and coverage expanded (and companies merged) it moved to a call anywhere anytime without roaming model. I suspect the desire to spur cell phone adoption drove that as well - once companies had enough cell antenna coverage to cover most of their callers and limit their roaming costs it made sense to make it as desirable as possible for a customer to sign up since the marginal cost for one more customer is small compared to the marginal revenue.

      I suspect it will take some serious telco mergers in the EU for this to happen there.

      While neither model is "better" it is interesting to see the differences and how they evolved.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    14. Re:This had better get fixed by phayes · · Score: 1
      Intra EU only however. You'll probably end up paying even more if your home operator is from outside the EU because the carriers are looking for a way to make up their "lost" profits.

      As a footnote, I wish TFA had been explicit enough to say that the iPhone has a airplane mode & that the dumbass only put his iPhones in sleep/screen off mode. My initial reaction pushing Apple & ATT to eat the charges was because TFA intimated that there was no way to stop iPhones from transmitting.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    15. Re:This had better get fixed by funaho · · Score: 1

      I agree there is definitely user error here, although I think we on slashdot are a bit biased because most of us understand the technology enough to know that "sleep" is not "off." However, Apple could help here by simply adding an option that says something like "when roaming, do not perform data transfers without asking first." Lots of people no doubt turn on the automated email check and forget about it, because within the US it doesn't matter due to the availability of unlimited data usage plans and the fact that many users will probably never roam off AT&T's network. Disabling these automated data transfers while roaming will save a lot of future headaches.

    16. Re:This had better get fixed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Given that countries elsewhere are smaller

      Oh. That's a 'given', is it?

      Russia? Canada? China?

    17. Re:This had better get fixed by Harik · · Score: 2, Informative

      "the dumbass" probably wanted people to be able to reach him in an emergency, which is why he took a cellular phone with him. Turning it off/leaving it at home rather defeats the purpose, doesn't it?

      I mean, call me crazy, but that's what I do with my phone while I'm out of the country, I just refrain from making calls on it unless they're important. Then again, I guess I'm "the dumbass" for expecting slashdot readers to have crawled out of their mother's basement and actually gotten out of the country themselves.

    18. Re:This had better get fixed by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      "the dumbass" probably wanted people to be able to reach him in an emergency, which is why he took a cellular phone with him.

      But he thought the phone was off. That makes him a double dumbass.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    19. Re:This had better get fixed by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1

      "Ford flipped the switch which he saw was now marked 'Mode Execute Ready' instead of the now old-fashioned 'Access Standby' which had so long ago replaced the appallingly stone-aged 'Off'."

      --
      "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
  16. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 1

    Wow, a knowledgeable and informative post. Too bad it's the only one so far...

    --
    This guy's the limit!
  17. Normally, it doesn't. by DrYak · · Score: 1

    hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum


    Normally it doesn't. Most critical equipement is designed to be solid.

    *BUT* on the other hand, the designer didn't have the opportunity to run tests between their product and every fucking crazy stuff emitting radio-noise that a patient may try to subject it to.
    Phone are forbidden to be on the safe side of things, not because all medical equipement is so sensitive that the whole hospital will crash if a GSM phone comes by.

    (And sometimes, there are suprising interactions, like the iPods' touchwheel interfering with pacemakers)

    On the other hand, that doesn't prevent the iPhone from having a mode where it is actually off.
    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Normally, it doesn't. by djh101010 · · Score: 2, Informative

      hospital equipment shouldn't malfunction when presented with interference on a widely used spectrum


      Normally it doesn't. Most critical equipement is designed to be solid.


      I work in the medical devices field and have done so most of the time since 1990. Systems are tested rigorously for both RF Emissions and RF Susceptibility.

      *BUT* on the other hand, the designer didn't have the opportunity to run tests between their product and every fucking crazy stuff emitting radio-noise that a patient may try to subject it to.
      Nothing unique about the iPhone in this regard - edge network has been around for many years.

      Phone are forbidden to be on the safe side of things, not because all medical equipement is so sensitive that the whole hospital will crash if a GSM phone comes by.

      Actually, the local hospitals around here (Wisconsin) have increasingly been taking down the signs about cellphones. Science can, sometimes, overcome folklore.

      (And sometimes, there are suprising interactions, like the iPods' touchwheel interfering with pacemakers)
      I haven't read about that, can you get me a link where I can see this? Knowing what I do both about pacemakers and iPod touchwheels, I find this quite surprising.


      On the other hand, that doesn't prevent the iPhone from having a mode where it is actually off.
      Of course it doesn't. There's "airplane mode" where all the RF sections of the iPhone are off, and there's also "off" which is of course different than the "I'm not using it right now and the screen is dark" mode. The only way their phones could have been fetching email while they were on vacation is this:

      1. They configured the mail client for automatic updates (I think manual is the default)
      2. They took 3 iPhones with them on vacation so they wouldn't use them (plausible?)
      3. They put the iPhones into screen lock mode, rather than off or airplane mode.

      It seems to me that being surprised that the device would do what you have configured it to do when you leave it turned on, is on par with being annoyed that your cellphone rings when you've already hung it up. If I could embed an image at this point, I'd pick one of the "You're doing it wrong" series.
    2. Re:Normally, it doesn't. by DrYak · · Score: 1

      Actually, the local hospitals around here (Wisconsin) have increasingly been taking down the signs about cellphones. Science can, sometimes, overcome folklore.

      Specially since every single doctor has his phone with him (need to be easily reached).

      (And sometimes, there are suprising interactions, like the iPods' touchwheel interfering with pacemakers)

      I haven't read about that, can you get me a link where I can see this? Knowing what I do both about pacemakers and iPod touchwheels, I find this quite surprising.


      Was even featured recently here on slashdot.
      The original Reuters.

      But the (very small scale) study doesn't give any hypothesis why this happens.

      But the capacitance technology of the scrollwheel might be at origin of the observed misreadings (as speculated by some of the /.ers).
      As I have neither a pacemaker (I'm young and healthy) nor some capacitance touch-sensitive device (my palm use a different technology), I can't confirm it.
      --
      "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    3. Re:Normally, it doesn't. by Xtravar · · Score: 1

      My company works with hospitals a lot, and most either have or are implementing wireless networks. Also, most doctors I see have cell phones and want fancy software on their smartphones.

      I think this /. thread about interference in hospitals is a bit overblown with too many people talking about stuff they don't know.

      Phones are probably disallowed because the hospital environment is stressful enough without random ringing and loud yapping.

      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    4. Re:Normally, it doesn't. by whatme · · Score: 1

      Of course it doesn't. There's "airplane mode" where all the RF sections of the iPhone are off, and there's also "off" which is of course different than the "I'm not using it right now and the screen is dark" mode. The only way their phones could have been fetching email while they were on vacation is this:

      1. They configured the mail client for automatic updates (I think manual is the default)
      2. They took 3 iPhones with them on vacation so they wouldn't use them (plausible?)
      3. They put the iPhones into screen lock mode, rather than off or airplane mode.

      It seems to me that being surprised that the device would do what you have configured it to do when you leave it turned on, is on par with being annoyed that your cellphone rings when you've already hung it up. If I could embed an image at this point, I'd pick one of the "You're doing it wrong" series.

      I use a PocketPC phone. I take it with me even to other countries where I know it won't work because I use the other features on the phone (calendar, calculator, camera, mp3s, video, etc, etc). So item #2 is incredibly easy to believe as the iPhone is designed to be an all-in-one device.

      It's not much of a stretch for people to believe that if they don't make calls or surf the web, that they can assume they're not making roaming data connections. Most people are oblivious to the background communications the phone is making. That doesn't make it correct, but I can easily see where less techno-savvy (a big part of the iPhone market IMHO) would fall for this false understanding.

      Now, about leaving it in RF vs active mode, I'll say that 90% (probably more) people who use "smartphones" don't realize that "off" isn't off. I've pointed that out to many people, usually on airplanes (I point it out to laptop users too with their built-in wireless light flashing as it searches for signals). Do I point this out becuase I'm afraid the plane will crash? No. I point it out to them telling them their battery will drain much faster since their device is usually in active search mode sucking down power. Most are appreciative of the tip, and most are also unaware on how to actually turn the RF device on-off without powering the entire unit down.

    5. Re:Normally, it doesn't. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Actually, the local hospitals around here (Wisconsin) have increasingly been taking down the signs about cellphones. Science can, sometimes, overcome folklore. Around here (Washington) the signs won't be coming down anytime soon. I did ask one of the nurses at the doctors office I was at why the ban on cell phones, and it actually had nothing to do with safety. The reason why the phones are banned at that clinic is that an increasing number of phones have cameras, and they are somewhat concerned about the possibility of photography going on in the areas that are supposed to be more private.

      I don't know how large a problem that would be, but with HIPAA the way it is presently, I wouldn't be surprised if a ban like that made a bit easier to conform to. Or it could just be a replacement bit of folklore to replace the more outdated bit.
    6. Re:Normally, it doesn't. by djh101010 · · Score: 1

      Actually, the local hospitals around here (Wisconsin) have increasingly been taking down the signs about cellphones. Science can, sometimes, overcome folklore. Around here (Washington) the signs won't be coming down anytime soon. I did ask one of the nurses at the doctors office I was at why the ban on cell phones, and it actually had nothing to do with safety. The reason why the phones are banned at that clinic is that an increasing number of phones have cameras, and they are somewhat concerned about the possibility of photography going on in the areas that are supposed to be more private.
      I can kind of see that but, if it's a privacy issue, you'd probably also not be there in person in the first place to take a picture. But, OK, ...


      I don't know how large a problem that would be, but with HIPAA the way it is presently, I wouldn't be surprised if a ban like that made a bit easier to conform to. Or it could just be a replacement bit of folklore to replace the more outdated bit.
      HIPAA is about health care providers not giving information out about patients (to an extreme - EMT's are forbidden from finding out the outcomes of their patients). Doesn't address someone peeping between the curtains and seeing or hearing something they shouldn't.
  18. Thats called standby or sleep, not off. by shidarin'ou · · Score: 4, Informative

    When you push the button at the top once, it puts the phone to sleep. When you hold the "sleep" button down for 3 seconds, it actually turns off- totally off.

    Maybe they should have done that- instead of wondering why their "off" phones were still "turning on" to ring.

    1. Re:Thats called standby or sleep, not off. by filterban · · Score: 1

      Thank you for pointing out the obvious. Their iPhone was never off - it was in Standby mode. I'm sure Blackberry and Windows Mobile phones do the same thing.

      What good is a phone that doesn't regularly check your email?

      --
      rm -rf /
    2. Re:Thats called standby or sleep, not off. by grolschie · · Score: 1

      When you push the button at the top once, it puts the phone to sleep. When you hold the "sleep" button down for 3 seconds, it actually turns off- totally off.
      The power button on my Windows Mobile device is the opposite of how the iPhone power button works:
      When you push the button at the top once, it actually turns off- totally off. When you hold the "sleep" button down for 3 seconds, it puts the phone to sleep.
  19. BS by jaysones · · Score: 1

    I call BS on this. I've never noticed my iPhone updating email when it's off. Can anyone else confirm this?

    1. Re:BS by jonpublic · · Score: 1

      Its total BS. The people didn't shut off the phone, they just clicked the button to shut off the screen. They didn't put it on airplane mode. They didn't even notice that they were getting mail for two weeks? What were they doing? Charging their iphone for the whole time they were on the cruise and never touching their phones?

      1.) Publish story about something untrue about the iphone to get people's emotions up
      2.) ????
      3.) Profit from being on slashdot.

    2. Re:BS by pemerson · · Score: 1

      Settings -> Mail -> Messages -> Auto-Check

      I think the default is "Manual", but you can set it for as fast as every 15 minutes.

    3. Re:BS by saddino · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's BS. The iPhone by default sets check mail to "Manually" (e.g. every time you open the Mail application). One has to override the default to set it to auto-check email.

    4. Re:BS by SCHecklerX · · Score: 1

      Wish I had mod points. This is the most informative post in this thread. I mean, if you are going to have a phone with you, you would likely want it to receive calls (emergencies at home?), but definitely don't want it randomly incurring charges on a data network without your knowledge. The biggest question I had was "Isn't there a way to stop that particular behavior?" Thanks!

    5. Re:BS by MDMurphy · · Score: 1

      Yep, BS
      No other comments seemed to mention it, but the INQ article was referencing a Newsday article: http://www.newsday.com/business/ny-bzappl0908,0,2929341.story?coll=ny_home_rail_headlines Most of the way down the original article says : The Levys brought their phones with them for voice calls. It also says they thought the data networks in Europe were incompatible with the iPhone. Oops. Too bad they didn't know that the whole reason for using GSM is that it works more places than any other mobile phone type.

      This sure implies that they planned to make calls, did they? If so, the phone was sure as hell not "off".

      - If the phones were really off not asleep, there would have been no calls, no data.
      - If the phones were in standy and getting email, it makes a sound ( though an insanely short wimpy sound )
      - They must have turned on international roaming before leaving, otherwise their phones couldn't have been used for voice calls.

      It would be handy if the phones had a "voice, no data" mode, but since it doesn't, claiming stupidity shouldn't get you out of the bill. I'm not going to get too sympathetic over a family who ran out to buy matching iPhones just before their Mediterranean cruise.

  20. Yikes by y86 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Apple spokeswoman Natalie Kerris points out in its terms and conditions that it will cost an arm an a leg to use an Iphone out of the US even if no services are intentionally used.


    I didn't realize organ trading was allowed in the US.
    1. Re:Yikes by Kredal · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's not. That's why it costs an arm and a leg OUTSIDE the US.

      --
      Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
    2. Re:Yikes by y86 · · Score: 0

      It's billed in the US though. You would think they would have to convert that into an internationally approved currency like WoW gold!

  21. No surprise here - its At&t by unity100 · · Score: 1

    We all know their methods equate with concept of crooky practices passing as 'business'. But this time, apple is caught in the mess too.

    1. Re:No surprise here - its At&t by Charliems · · Score: 1

      This isn't true at all, I was in British Columbia for 2 weeks, my cell phone bill went up a few bucks because I did make some calls. The thing that uses data is checking for email which I set to manual and only used while at the hotel on wifi. If the phone is off, it does not do anything, it is off, locked or asleep is a different matter though. I think this idiot set his mail to check every 15 minutes and just went on about his business. The default settings on mail is manual, you need to chenge it to check automatically.

    2. Re:No surprise here - its At&t by unity100 · · Score: 1

      well, thats a dirty trick isnt it ? 'sufficiently advanced malice is indistinguishable from incompetence' on part of at&t people.

      they probably noticed this setting worked despite when device was closed, and fixed this. i wonder how many million $ they made.

  22. Roaming Charges? by tkrotchko · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Could be the ridiculous rates you get charged by operators in Europe.

    Last year, a colleague and I were staying in London and he called our local travel office to make some changes to the flight. He was on the phone for 30 minutes (mostly on hold) and he was presented with a bill for $600 (300 pounds). Now, you tell me what the rate was...

    Anyway, he just refused to pay it, and the manager eventually took it off. But still... seems like a lot of places are set up to cheat the unwary traveler.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Roaming Charges? by jimicus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Was that a hotel or a mobile phone bill? Roaming charges were recently the subject of an EU court case which has placed a cap on them:

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4851730.stm

      http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities /roaming/roaming_regulation/index_en.htm

      Though I can't see it helping much if you're using a US cell phone in the EU.

    2. Re:Roaming Charges? by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

      It was the hotel, and everybody knows you get ripped off at hotels, but, with long distance either non-existent on cell phones, or cheap (3 cents per minute), you assume "getting ripped off" is $1/minute, not $20/minute.

      --
      You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    3. Re:Roaming Charges? by vvpt · · Score: 2, Informative

      The new EU roaming tariff only applies when using a sim from a operator located in the EU. The aim is to harmonize roaming costs within the EU. So it doesn't apply to an AT&T sim. http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/roaming/ Secondly, the tariff only applies to voice calls and NOT to SMS, MMS or GPRS/UMTS. Thirdly, I have noticed that people seem to get charged for absurd amounts of data. It is quite impossible to verify that those amounts have actually been used. I have a theory that the calculation method used by the operators is responsible for charging people for amounts that are bigger then the actual use. It would be interesting to measure the actual use (possibly through a tcpdump) and compare this with the bill. I haven't seen any operator that explains in detail which calculation method (using increments) is used.

  23. Nice in theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    But if phones were actually off when you turn them off then the government couldn't use them as a bug to listen in on your offline conversations.

    If the government didn't watch you at all times like that, they wouldn't be able to stop you from doing something stupid before things got REALLY out of hand.

    So thats why they should be on all the time....it is necessary to ensure that the government can be effective in its ongoing efforts to protect you from yourself.

  24. Updates While "Off" by AtomicSnarl · · Score: 1

    That's it -- I'm simply going to have to not use my PrOn-A-Day screen saver during my month-long Child Labor Personal Services research trip to Thailand. Maybe Penny Arcade instead!

    --
    Pacifist paratroopers yell, "Ghandi!" when they jump.
  25. Turned Off IPhone by Snives · · Score: 1

    This does tend to happen on smart phones, not just the iphone. My Treo acted the same way and racked up $300 when I tried to cancel my unlimited data plan to see if I could get by on per minutes charges. It was making connections on its own even when I thought the phone was off. This is also the reason why the battery lasts so much longer when you manually turn off the phone via the Wireless Manager instead of trying to just use the "off" button.

  26. boycott by Skapare · · Score: 5, Funny

    "boycottcingular.com" is now the new "boycottatt.com".

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    1. Re:boycott by quantum+bit · · Score: 2, Funny

      AT&T: Your world, delivered. To the NSA.

  27. Re:Uhhhh by mir · · Score: 2, Funny

    But the guy was on a cruise BOAT.

    --
    Look, that's why there's rules, understand? So that you think before you break 'em. (Terry Pratchett)
  28. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by arose · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's so intuitive!

    --
    Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
  29. Surfing the Med by Somegeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the grandfather article:

    "In countries outside the plan, charges can run from $5 to $20 per megabyte, said Ben Wilson, editor of iPhone Atlas, a Web site owned by the online news company CNet."

    I'm guessing that the middle of the Mediterranean is outside of the covered countries. It also says they were checking a total of seven different email accounts. 7 accounts * 20$/MB could add up pretty quickly, 35MB per email account would do it.

    --
    And as you tread the halls of sanity, You feel so glad to be, Unable to go beyond. I have a message, From another time..
    1. Re:Surfing the Med by SCHecklerX · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So the question is (I don't have an iphone), is there an easy way to enable/disable the automatic email checking? This is the real problem.

    2. Re:Surfing the Med by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      So the answer is YES. And, it's off by default, so clearly he knew how to turn it on and off.

      That said, this dude got screwed. By a cellco; go figure.

      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
  30. It's Tinfoil Hat Time! by OmniGeek · · Score: 2, Funny

    1. Take large sheet of tinfoil
    2. Wrap that sucker up like a ham-and-Limburger sandwich
    3. Explain to the nice folks at the X-ray machine why that suspicious package is your iPhone
    4. Be unable to get emergency calls from your family at home while on your Mediterranean cruise

    Of course, there's always the simple, brute-force power-down solution: the iHammer. (Can you tell how unimpressed I am with this overpriced, overhyped gewgaw?)

    --

    "My strength is as the strength of ten men, for I am wired to the eyeballs on espresso."
    1. Re:It's Tinfoil Hat Time! by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      Better summed as: "iPhone:iDontcare"

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
  31. precaution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    better wrap your iphone in tinfoil next time you go on a trip, just to be sure ...

  32. This is just idiotic, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is it reasonable to believe that closing a flip phone turns it "off"? This is simply user error.

    However, is it possible to have the phone on but data services off? I can't think of it. You could set the mail to "manual" but how do you disable the updating of whether and stocks? Maybe all those other data services only get updated when you access them manually? Actually, I think that is the case.

    User error.

  33. Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've used Cingular for three years now, with no surprises and no unpleasantness. I alsays got an itemized bill showing calls placed and minutes used in those calls, and never went over my minutes.

    Then AT&T bought them out, and I got a nasty surprise in the mail - instead of my normal <$50 bill, it was doubled. And the bill was no longer itemized; there was no way to do the math myself.

    Then the next bill came - GULP! Four hundred God damned dollars! And still not itemized.

    AT&T is run by thieves. I'm using a cheap Trac phone now until I can find another carrier. AT&T are now in my "Die, damn you" list of evil corporations. Sony replaced Microsoft as first place in my list of Pure Evil (TM) corporations when they trojaned my PC with their BMG XCP rootkit, now MS has slid to #3. AT&T is now a very close second to Sony. May their President, CEO, board of directors, and stockholders all catch cancer and aids and die horribly, and may that God damned company go bankrupt and be liquidated.

    Mods, this isn't flamebait it's an informative FLAME. As I'm posting AC you know I'm not karma-whoring.

    As I'm too busy unsucsessfully chasing women to blog about evil corporations lately, this is probably all I'll have to say about these bastards.

    -mcgrew (sm62704)

    1. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by Relic+of+the+Future · · Score: 1
      Nice FUD piece you've got there. But you know that Cingular was the one who bought AT&T Wireless (and later started using the AT&T name), not the other way around; partially because of all the bad PR that was built up around the Cingular name?

      Sort of punches a hole in the tall-tale.

      --
      Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
    2. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by NeoTerra · · Score: 1

      And this is the reason why Microsoft is getting rid of their anti-trust image. More and more corporations are dealing in evil, so there's competition on how evil a corporation can get.

    3. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      That's not what happened. Cingular bought AT&T Wireless from the old AT&T, the one that was created by divestiture in 1984. All the AT&T Wireless operations were folded into Cingular.

      Meanwhile AT&T itself got bought by SBC (formerly Southwestern Bell) which has since bought most of the other spun-off RBOCs including Ameritech, Pacific Telesis, and BellSouth. This is "not your father's AT&T" except insofar as it constitutes a reconstruction, with regulatory approval, of the original monopoly AT&T we thought was broken up by divestiture. The other two remaining RBOCs, NYNEX and Bell Atlantic, joined forces to produce Verizon (which also bought the largest independent telco, GTE).

      This article at Wikipedia provides more detail: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AT&T, or take a look at this graphic.

      I also don't think any of this had much to do with "bad PR" for Cingular. The new AT&T needed a wireless carrier and negotiated the purchase of Cingular.

    4. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Strange, I never had a problem with the old AT&T Wireless, Cingular, or the new AT&T.

      Sure, the logo on my bills have changed, but it's still the same price and still has fully itemized details.

      I'm not saying that they aren't just as sucky as Verizon (which has its own major reliability, performance, and usability problems - I'm a former Verizon customer - and I switched not due to the iPhone, but because I had a lousy time with Vierzon).

      But I am saying that I never ever heard of a condition like yours, and therefore I can only imagine that you're a rare exception, and therefore your post should likely be ignored.

    5. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by BiggerBoat · · Score: 1

      Hmmm. As I type this, I'm looking at my current, fully itemized, [Cingular->]AT&T Wireless bill. Maybe enough people like you complained/dropped their service that they changed their billing approach?

    6. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile AT&T itself got bought by SBC (formerly Southwestern Bell) which has since bought most of the other spun-off RBOCs including Ameritech, Pacific Telesis, and BellSouth. This is "not your father's AT&T" except insofar as it constitutes a reconstruction, with regulatory approval, of the original monopoly AT&T we thought was broken up by divestiture. The other two remaining RBOCs, NYNEX and Bell Atlantic, joined forces to produce Verizon (which also bought the largest independent telco, GTE). You forgot US West, which was acquired by Qwest. See this diagram
    7. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by Doctor+Faustus · · Score: 1

      The new AT&T needed a wireless carrier and negotiated the purchase of Cingular.
      Not as a separate decision. Cingular was a joint venture between SBC and BellSouth, which are now both AT&T.

    8. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AT & T sucks. They tried to charge me over $1000 for calls worth $60 sometime around 2000 and I have sworn not to use them again. Needless to say I fought back and got that resolved. They tried to lure me back offering $200 to switch back, but have been free from AT & T since. I am using a T-Mobile cell phone, Cable internet and a VOIP phone from Packet8 (www.packet8.net) for unlimited nation wide calling and even some foreign countries for or $25 a month.

    9. Re:Not the iPhone, but AT&T! by yuna49 · · Score: 1

      You're right, I'd forgotten that. Thanks!

  34. ipwned by inflamez · · Score: 1

    ... whoever tagged this story ipwned. Thank you. :-)
    Best. Tag. Ever.

  35. Airplane mode? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Many here have commented that there is an 'airplane mode' for the thing, and that's what he should have used. Maybe so, but that is counterintuitive to the average user. He's not on the plane anymore!

    If there were a selection called "Hotel Mode" that did the same thing, would you expect him to choose that when boarding an aircraft? No.

    How about a simple "Off". Trying to be too cute with the operations makes people like this frustrated. And gives the company bad press.

    1. Re:Airplane mode? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How about he reads the manual. It's not that hard. If you have time to file a lawsuit and read your 54 page bill, then you should have had time to read your manual.

    2. Re:Airplane mode? by Damvan · · Score: 1

      Read the damn article. This guy did not have it OFF.

      "Levy said he didn't expect data transfer charges internationally because he believed the data network in Europe wasn't compatible with the iPhone. The Levys brought their phones with them for voice calls."

      He had it on, but assumed that he wouldn't be charged because he thought the systems were not compatible. Nothing to do with having it on or off.

    3. Re:Airplane mode? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      He didn't want it off. He didn't turn it off. He never attempted to turn it off. He carried it with him, put it in standby, used it for non-hone functions and kept the phone fucntions active for emergency. All phones know when they are roaming. For something so data intensive, there should be a setting for "don't do dbackground data sync while roaming." Put that on the phones, set it as default, give instructions to everyone on how to enable data roaming (there are plenty of execs that woudn't blink at a $5000 cell bill, as long as the one email they wanted came through). There are lots of things that could be done to keep the functionality and improve the user experience.

    4. Re:Airplane mode? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      You do realize that I never said anything about it being on or off, just the potential confusion in labeling the pseudo "Off" setting as "Airplane Mode", instead of just a simple "Off".

    5. Re:Airplane mode? by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      Hey Coward, the manual is from Apple. It's a 4 page pamphlet the size of a credit card, and does not discuss any of this.

      Apple's philosophy is to make intuitive interfaces. And it is very intuitive. But there is simply no mode available which disables roaming without crippling the device. Such as turning it completely off, or turning the radio completely off (even for non-roaming, such as wifi).

    6. Re:Airplane mode? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To me, airplane mode (radio off) is a bad description for what is/is not allowed on a flight in the US. Every flight I've been on for several years indicates that not only do the radios need to be disabled for take-off/landing, but the whole device should be powered down. That is why they often instruct to turn off Walkman, iPods, DVD players, laptops, etc. The law doesn't cover just devices with transmitters, but any device that may emit RF interference. Airplane mode does not do this.

    7. Re:Airplane mode? by mr_matticus · · Score: 1

      Hey genius, the "Finger tips" pamphlet isn't the manual, and in fact it DOES discuss this, along with containing 20 panels, not 4.

      The manual ("User's Guide") goes into quite a bit of detail beyond that.

    8. Re:Airplane mode? by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      Way to pounce on a semantic argument and completely miss the point. Hint: read the Subject line.

      Airplane mode doesn't solve the issue. If you take a hammer to the device, that'll also disable roaming. But like airplane mode, it disables a lot more than just roaming.

      Again, there is no way to disable roaming without crippling the device more or less. Airplane mode is not a solution anymore than turning the device completely off anymore than hitting it with a hammer. You lose functionality unrelated to roaming in all of those cases. And no amount of documentation will solve this whether it's the fingertips pamphlet or my missing user's manual. Only software upgrades that enable wifi and bluetooth, but warn before enabling roaming data can solve this.

      Also, you can't watch youtube with a wifi connection either. The youtube button forces connection through the Edge network for some bizarre reason, which also would force roaming.

    9. Re:Airplane mode? by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      Once you are over 10,000 feet, many devices can be used. That is the case here.

      From everything I've seen, devices in standby mode (but not using any RF) can be left in the standby mode on takeoff, such as PDAs. Most people who have iphones don't even know how to turn it completely off anyway, but airplane mode and standby are acceptable for takeoff/landing.

      But after 10,000 feet, another class of devices can be used, such as active sound-cancelling headphones and ipods and certain electronic games. At this point, you can turn on the iphone and use the other functions, as long as it's kept in airplane mode.

    10. Re:Airplane mode? by Hamilton+Lovecraft · · Score: 0

      Guess what? Automatic email check defaults to off, roaming or not, on the iPhone.

      --
      step 3: god dammit, it doesn't work
    11. Re:Airplane mode? by mr_matticus · · Score: 1

      Way to pounce on a semantic argument and completely miss the point. It's not a semantic argument. You're claiming the "credit card 4-page pamphlet" (which is neither credit-card sized nor 4 pages) doesn't say anything about the issue (in fact it does on two separate panels) that the button on the top isn't a power button.

      Airplane mode doesn't solve the issue. Sure it does. So would actually turning the phone off like the article claims (but the moron failed to do--it wasn't off, and he knew it wasn't off). So, as it happens, would turning the email settings back to defaults and forgetting about airplane mode altogether. You're talking about a separate issue of disabling the cellular radio independent of the wifi/Bluetooth.

      my missing user's manual One more indication that you didn't read the "4 page pamphlet." Your manual is not missing.

      Also, you can't watch youtube with a wifi connection either. Nonsense. I'm doing it right now.

      This is the case of the idiot user not managing his own data connections. The iPhone doesn't transmit or receive when off, and the iPhone wasn't turned off. Period. Even the idiot user knew it wasn't off and would have consciously recognized it if he'd spent half a second thinking about it. Absolutely a connection management option that lets you turn off services independently would be a good feature to add. That doesn't mean $4800 bill guy isn't just plan stupid.
  36. Theoretically, Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But it's so very little, you'd probably get nowhere.

    If the iPhone raised a bill of $30 there may be some arguments, but it becomes too much of a hassle. If it was $5 the court would see it as a waste of time and fine both parties.

  37. Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Oh, dude's not alone. I'd much rather have hospital equipment designed such that it doesn't malfunction in the presence of a cell phone, than I would rely on the adroit and vigilant shepherding of electronic gadgets by worried family and friends who come to visit me in hospital. In this situation you fix the problem in the place where it's relatively easy to fix in a reliable way (i.e. by shielding the electronic gear from other signals at manufacturing time) rather in than in a zillion places (random heads of random unpredictable people) which are, every single one of them, prone to human error.

    Since you seem so inclined, I suggest you instead thank the gods that these decisions are not up to you. The fact that other people make them might save your life one day.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by dattaway · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem with hospital equipment is that the sensors often use very low voltages and act like antennas. Cell phones put out almost a watt of power. Just 1,000,000/th of that can overwhelm a machine that's supposed to be reading your heart.

      How many people has the iPhone killed when it was supposed to be off?

    2. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1, Interesting

      None, I'd say. No more than any other cellular device. That one watt of output is in the gigahertz range, and is easily filtered considering that most biometric inputs are a few hertz tops. The truth is that hospital equipment is well-protected against such interference, because the legal liabilities in the event of failure are so high. That's the reason hospitals get so bent out of shape: the actual risk of using a cell phone in a hospital is very low but they figure it's just safer (from a legal perspective) to ban the things. That way if it turns out there was a problem with a particular piece of biomedical equipment they've got their asses covered.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    3. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by clickety6 · · Score: 5, Informative

      You might find this article interesting then

      http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1659417,00.html

      The relatively informal test found 43% of the medical equipment was affected to some degree by mobile phone signals...

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
    4. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by dircha · · Score: 1

      "adroit and vigilant shepherding"

      New words this month?

    5. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 2, Funny

      "How many people has the iPhone killed when it was supposed to be off?"
      Why do you hate America?
      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    6. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by king-manic · · Score: 1

      They are shielded and cross tested but the signs are "theater of safety" type of policies which make people feel better and reduce the risk of some odd combination of devices or situations that may cause a problem. Someone else pointed out that monitoring equipment can't be shielded as detecting minute electro-magnetic changes are it's function. For those machines there is not a practical way to shield them.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    7. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, I think lots of devices in hospitals go through very long design cycles. There undoubtedly many devices in hospitals today which suffer from design assumptions that are no longer true (e.g. people now carry transmitting radios with them everywhere). I'm aware that it's a problem, I simply suggest that the right place to fix the problem is in the device design with proper shielding. Relying on the millions of worried people to remember when they can and can't use their device, and relying on them to know how to turn it off when they have other things weighing heavily on their minds is a poor strategy which can only fail, over and over and over.

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    8. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by ChadAmberg · · Score: 0

      Hehh... I wonder if you're one of those guys who always complain about how expensive medical treatment is, since you're suggesting older, inner city hospitals completely refit all their electronic medical sensors.

    9. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by zlogic · · Score: 1

      Have you ever tried putting a mobile phone close to a sound amplifier (e.g. stereo system or mp3 player) while a call is in progress? It will produce something like a 200-500 Hz noise, and the amplifier obviously doesn't operate in the Ghz range.

    10. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by houghi · · Score: 1

      I know of surgeans who use their cellphones during oepration.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    11. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

      Heh... I wonder if you're one of those guys who thinks they understand why medical treatment is so expensive.

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    12. Re:Sleep/Wake Doesn't mean "Off" by AaronLawrence · · Score: 1

      I agrew we can't rely on people to remember, but I think there's an easy solution: have a cellphone-band scanner at the front door of the hospital, which sounds a nasty alarm if you walk in with your phone on. Some planes have them already (minus the loud alarm).

      --
      For every expert, there is an equal and opposite expert. - Arthur C. Clarke
  38. RTA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't anyone curious as to how you can rack up those charges at $25 per 20 MB? Even if they normally pay $500 a month in charges, that leaves them using well over 3 GB of data use. How can your phone possibly use that much without your knowledge?

  39. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 1

    >> Sleep: Press sleep/wake button briefly. Off: Hold button for several seconds, slide red slider control that shows up.

    Or press up, up, down, left, down, up, left, right, right, down.

  40. Wow... by Brian+Lewis · · Score: 1

    This is one of the many reasons I have not used AT&T in years. I actually just quit a job with a contractor for AT&T's U-Verse service, and the way they look at customer service is horrible. I think it's time congress takes a look at 'Ma Bell and gets rid of the re-formed monopoly. In so many areas the customers have no other choice for service. Also, if any of you have that AT&T U-Verse service, call in and tell them that you are going to cancel unless they give you a $90 credit. All of their tech support reps are required to give out up to $90 if you threaten to cancel.... too bad AT&T wireless doesn't work the same way :(

  41. User Error by Oink · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm not sure I feel a lot of sympathy here. I mean, that is a *huge* bill, but the situation seems completely obvious. The iphone frigging buzzes to alert you that you have new mail. Did this guy think it was magic leprechauns that were delivering that information?

    Also..

    1) User is an idiot and doesn't know the difference between 'off' and 'standby.'
    2) There is an 'update email manually' setting, which actually I *thought* was the default behavior, though I could be wrong on that count.

    --
    ----------------- Oink. Moo. rarr! -----------------
  42. The customs should have taken away their phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The customs should have taken away their phones anyway, since you are not allowed to use devieces in Europe that have no CE sign, as the devices could use reserved frequencies.

    They can be lucky that they got no other fines to pay :)

  43. I have played with an iPhone in a store by Junta · · Score: 2, Informative

    It has a 'airplane mode' setting. Of course, it certainly isn't obvious to a normal person that an 'off' device could be expected to transmit.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    1. Re:I have played with an iPhone in a store by haystor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      An unlimited open credit line is the other major problem here. I refuse to open an unlimited credit line just for a phone.

      --
      t
    2. Re:I have played with an iPhone in a store by knightf0x · · Score: 1

      So the "Airplane Mode" must be the Windows Mobile version of "Flight Mode"
      That is only way to make my PPC-6700 turn "off" as far as wireless services are concerned.

    3. Re:I have played with an iPhone in a store by Sancho · · Score: 1

      You can pull the battery.

      This is one issue with this phone that I think is really crappy, though.

  44. It's really funny to see Americans suffering ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    because they, and their corporations, treat foreign countries as somewhere alien. Europeans are quite used to the idea that they can go to another country, but, because of reciprocal treaties, all their gadgets work.

    The US hates the rest of the world, and always breaks its treaties. The OP is paying the price of American isolationism.

    It couldn't happen to a nicer country.

  45. No surprise to me ... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 0

    I was turned off to the iPhone when I first read about it.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    1. Re:No surprise to me ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But were you really turned off, or just in standby mode?

    2. Re:No surprise to me ... by beef+curtains · · Score: 1

      But were you really turned off, or just in standby mode?

      Awesome.

      --
      Just once I'd like someone to call me 'Sir' without adding 'You're making a scene.'
    3. Re:No surprise to me ... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      Soon as my girlfriend heard the price she removed my batteries.

      I was definitely off.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  46. and he brought it with him, because... by toQDuj · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And he brought it with him, because... why, exactly? You're on a mediterranean cruise and alledgedly your phone just happened to be there too. Switched off all the time.

    Yea right. MY guess is that he did indeed switch it on occasionally. If only to show it off to his fellow iPassengers.

    B.

    --
    Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
    1. Re:and he brought it with him, because... by uglydog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe they brought the iPhones with them because the iPhone isn't just a phone. Maybe they wanted to listen to music, or look at pictures.

      Now, the "switched off all the time" part... I got nothing on that.

    2. Re:and he brought it with him, because... by pjviitas · · Score: 1

      Some of us keep quite comprehensive contact lists on our phone.

      Hedghog

    3. Re:and he brought it with him, because... by MMC+Monster · · Score: 1

      Maybe so that he could use it as soon as he gets back to the U.S. (ie: to call family at the airport to say he arrived and where exactly they can pick him up.) (This is why I always take my phone with me on overseas trips.)

      Or maybe so that he could listen to his music.

      Or maybe so he could keep track of information in his iCalender.

      --
      Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    4. Re:and he brought it with him, because... by Raul+Acevedo · · Score: 1

      So? I have a Treo that I sometimes bring on vacations where I don't have cell phone coverage because I use the other PDA functions. If I had an iPhone I would've done the same thing, and would have been equally outraged.

      --
      In a real emergency, we would have all fled in terror, and you would not have been notified.
    5. Re:and he brought it with him, because... by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      "MY guess is that he did indeed switch it on occasionally."

      I dunno about you, but when my phone wants to go on the internet it very clearly asks me. Id be very upset if my phone just randomly connected to whatever network at whatever rate without so much as a warning.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    6. Re:and he brought it with him, because... by toQDuj · · Score: 1

      and for the last two he would have had to turn it on. i.e. not unpowered for the duration of the cruise. Not to mention the batery probably doesn't last _that_ long.

      I wonder, when he'd switched it on, would he have seen the new e-mails in his inbox? perhaps raised an eyebrow?

      B.

      --
      Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
  47. "9 different kinds of OFF" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am reminded of Joel Spolsky's rant about Windows Vista having 9 different kinds of Off:

    http://www.joelonsoftware.com/items/2006/11/21.html

    I would have expected Apple to get it less wrong....

  48. Need "budget mode" for devices by whyde · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unless you have a simple pay-as-you-go phone or device, it's too easy to overspend in a situation like this where you just have NO IDEA how much your device is costing you on a moment-by-moment basis.

    What I'd appreciate is a device that lets you enter an EXPECTED monetary budget for its use, and safeguards to make sure you don't use the device in a manner that exceeds your expectations for how expensive its use should be.

    The instant it began international data roaming, sirens should have sounded alerting the user that the device is now operating in a mode contrary to the user's financial expectations.

    I'm sure it has an alert when it's battery needs recharging. No such luck when it starts draining your bank account.

    1. Re:Need "budget mode" for devices by Zelos · · Score: 1

      Whenever I've taken my mobile abroad I've got a text message from the network indicating that it's now operating in international mode.

    2. Re:Need "budget mode" for devices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How dare you suggest taking hard scammed cash out of the pockets of corporate america! You sir are unpatriotic.

    3. Re:Need "budget mode" for devices by MikeyVB · · Score: 1

      Doesn't AT&T have any features that tell you what your current balance is?

      Here in the Netherlands, I had a contract with Orange. You can send an SMS to a number and it will then reply to you with either: a) How many minutes you have left on your plan for that month, or b) what your next bill will be if you never use your phone again for the month if you are over your minutes.

      And to add to that.

      A friend of mine went to Spain for a vacation and brought his laptop with a UMTS (3G) card in it. After two days in spain, his mobile carrier called him him, and told him that his data usage was already at 200 euros while only roaming for two days so far, and were just making sure he *knew* that he was using it like crazy, before he racked it up any further. He was extreamly thankful they called to tell him that, as he had no idea the roaming charges were up until then (he never bothered to look it up) How is that for customer service?

      Doesn't any carrier in the US have things like this??? Letting people get to $4800 without them knowing it, when the carrier *knows* 99% of their customers can't afford something like that is completely retarded IMHO.

    4. Re:Need "budget mode" for devices by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Did they charge international rates for the warning message?

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    5. Re:Need "budget mode" for devices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Norway my operator sends me an SMS when my balance exceeds predefined amount. It is rather convenient.

    6. Re:Need "budget mode" for devices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In civilized countries, you're not charged for incoming SMSes.
      -disgruntled american

  49. Is the difference obvious? by Junta · · Score: 1

    Is the difference between sleep and off obvious to a non-technical person? Is there a way to turn it off really? Does the iPhone explicitly show that it is in sleep vs. off? While in sleep, how is a typical user supposed to know it's still transmitting? Can you point to any other cell phone that behaves this way?

    My laptop wireless interfaces are not active during sleep. The closest analogy I can think of is the Wii, and that isn't a mobile device attempting to use a quite likely charge-per-usage network constantly.

    Apple's standard is simple and straightforward. There is a balance here to be struck between convenience and, well, this. At the least, the standby/sleep mode should have a fee-less way of determining if the transaction would be built into the plan before executing it. If it would cost extra, and you are in sleep mode, don't do it. Even then that won't be convenient for the common user to comply with airline requests, with most people thinking it would be the one button that makes it go dark.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    1. Re:Is the difference obvious? by timster · · Score: 1

      Every brick-style cell phone I have ever seen has a "locked" mode, where the screen is not on and there is no indication that the device is operating. The iPhone can be easily turned off (actually off) whenever it is necessary to do so.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    2. Re:Is the difference obvious? by Guysmiley777 · · Score: 1

      Is the difference between sleep and off obvious to a non-technical person?

      It is to these people now, to the tune of five grand. Besides, Apple users can't be bothered with manuals, everything about their products is so simple and elegant that they don't need them.
      --
      Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
    3. Re:Is the difference obvious? by quantum+bit · · Score: 1

      The closest analogy I can think of is the Wii, and that isn't a mobile device attempting to use a quite likely charge-per-usage network constantly. Plus the Wii has an LED that stays lit to let you know that it's in standby mode, and the LED's color is different depending on whether or not the wireless is enabled. Not to mention that the whole CD tray starts pulsing blue whenever it downloads something.
    4. Re:Is the difference obvious? by julesh · · Score: 1

      Every brick-style cell phone I have ever seen has a "locked" mode, where the screen is not on and there is no indication that the device is operating.

      Every phone I've ever seen has a visible indication that the device is active when in locked mode. Which phones have you seen that don't, other than of course the iPhone?

    5. Re:Is the difference obvious? by timster · · Score: 1

      Some phones have a flashing LED sticking out the side, but this is far from the norm. Even those don't usually flash the LED more than once every five seconds or so, which means you have to stare at it for a bit to notice. Which (in my opinion) is more trouble than simply tapping the wake button.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    6. Re:Is the difference obvious? by Kazymyr · · Score: 1

      My phone (a Sanyo 4920) when in locked mode displays clearly on the screen a "lock" symbol. Also, when it goes in sleep mode, the screen is on but the backlight is off - still fairly easily readable in reflected light, and it says "sleep mode". The screen on the phone is never completely black unless the phone is completely turned off. There is absolutely no mistaking the phone in the off state vs sleep/locked state, by a simple glance at the screen.

      --
      I hadn't known there were so many idiots in the world until I started using the Internet -Stanislaw Lem
    7. Re:Is the difference obvious? by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      most that i've seen just turn off the backlight. On modern phones with color screens it is much harder to see the display in this state but if you give it more than a glancing look it's pretty obvious that something is being displayed even though I can't see exactly what.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    8. Re:Is the difference obvious? by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      My sony ericsson W300i, when closed, has no visible indication of whether the phone is in sleep mode (recieves calls and text messages, essentialy on, but no display) or off. Before that I had a motorola phone which exhibited the same behavior, before that, a cheap LG, same behavior. The only phone I ever had that indicated on or off without having to push a button, was an old samsung from the late 90's.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  50. Gotta remove the sim chip I guess by PalmKiller · · Score: 1

    I suppose when your in a foreign country, you should remove your sim card from the iphone (normally I would say remove the battery but in this case...the sim card).

    1. Re:Gotta remove the sim chip I guess by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Usually I remove the sim and get a local pay-as-you-go sim so I can use the phone wherever I am.

    2. Re:Gotta remove the sim chip I guess by argmanah · · Score: 1

      You can't use a non-AT&T SIM card with an iPhone. You'd have to open up your iPhone and solder/upload the hack to unlock it. So, swapping to a pay-as-you-go SIM card is not a realistic solution for most iPhone owners.

      --
      Overrated Moderation: This posts sucks... because.
    3. Re:Gotta remove the sim chip I guess by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      To be quite honest I didn't know that - so it looks like if you have an iPhone then you're stuck in America or else paying huge prices?

  51. Oversized bills by Mister+Jimm · · Score: 1

    I guess I'm just searching for some ulterior motive, but... Do any red flags go off when the customer suddenly starts to rack up unusually large fees, like credit cards do? Or are bills like these actually paid off often enough that they just send the bill in hopes that the customer actually means to spend a few grand?

    1. Re:Oversized bills by Larry+Lightbulb · · Score: 1

      They tried to phone him about it...

  52. Clippy to the rescue. by LarsG · · Score: 1

    "It looks like you're attempting to avoid roaming charges. Would you like help?"

    Apple has once again made the paperclip a critical part of every Machead's toolbox. Pop the SIM out.

    --
    If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
  53. Not the full story. by Dzimas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why on earth would three "businessmen" bother to take their iPhones abroad but switched off? These are expensive gadgets, and if I wasn't planning to use my iPhone on my trip to Tangiers I would simply leave it and its charger at home.

    1. Re:Not the full story. by eck011219 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As has been pointed out elsewhere, the iPhone isn't just a phone. It's a PDA, mp3 player, and so on.

      Moreover, when I travel I very often need to have a phone immediately upon arrival at home (whoever is picking me up usually has to wait at a staging area a few minutes away from baggage claim, so I have to call them and tell them to come on ahead).

      "Airplane Mode" isn't a proper name for having all external signals turned off. On my Treo, you can turn off the phone portion very easily and still use the rest of the PDA. Sounds like the iPhone is far less intuitive.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    2. Re:Not the full story. by pjviitas · · Score: 1

      How about contact lists, music, pictures...alot of people, myself included, have quite extensive lists of contact information on their phones.

      Hedghog

    3. Re:Not the full story. by ls+-la · · Score: 1

      Why on earth would three "businessmen" bother to take their iPhones abroad but switched off? These are expensive gadgets, and if I wasn't planning to use my iPhone on my trip to Tangiers I would simply leave it and its charger at home. So you can call people from the airport when you get back. I've taken a cell to Europe and Canada for the same reason.
    4. Re:Not the full story. by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      "Airplane Mode" isn't a proper name for having all external signals turned off. On my Treo, you can turn off the phone portion very easily and still use the rest of the PDA. Sounds like the iPhone is far less intuitive.
      It's just as intuitive. I used to have a Treo 650, and holding down the power button for a few seconds to turn the radio off is about as intuitive as clicking "Preferences, Airplane Mode" on the iPhone.
      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    5. Re:Not the full story. by eck011219 · · Score: 1

      I hear ya, but "airplane mode" is a very different description than "off." When I turn off the phone on my Treo, it says "Phone off." That's really all I'm saying -- the message should state the, well, state of the phone. And has been pointed out elsewhere, this guy really should have spent a moment with his manual when he got the phones. Still, it's a good reminder for interface designers that simple phrasing is always better.

      For example, if someone has never been on a plane and doesn't know the drill, traveling out of range (say, by ship as seems to be the case here) will still run up the bill and at no time have anything to do with an airplane.

      I know it sounds like splitting hairs, but it's phrasing that relied fairly heavily on users interpreting what "airplane mode" must mean. I'll grant you that most iPhone users could probably figure it out (or at the very least have their curiosity piqued to the point that they'd read the manual), but it's kind of muddy language. Particularly given Apple's claims to very clean, intuitive interfaces.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  54. Sense? by TBerben · · Score: 1

    I don't own an iPhone (how could I, I live in Europe) so correct me if I'm wrong. I agree that users of anything (be it a phone, pda or a piece of software) should RTFM... But I also think that this is somewhat of a counter-intuitive design which defies the principle of least surprise. When I hit some device's power button I expect it to power down, not sleep. I think it would be more reasonable to make "off" the default option and offer the sleep mode as an alternative than the way it is now. But that's just my silly view of things..

  55. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by ryanov · · Score: 1

    If by intuitive you mean "identical to every other smartphone on the market", and in fact, probably identical to most REGULAR cell phones on the market (name one phone that you can press the power button one time and it's off -- all require you to hold it), then yes, you're correct, extremely intuitive.

  56. Still no real solution by jschloer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've seen a lot of people talking about airplane mode or how to turn the phone off, but how about if you just want to leave the phone on to receive emergency phone calls, but not rack up huge data charges? What's the accepted method of doing that?

    1. Re:Still no real solution by Rycross · · Score: 1

      Set the mail check to manual and don't use the browser/email/etc. It would be nice if they had better granularity on the controls, so you could turn off data, but leave on WiFi, or turn off the phone part but leave the WiFi part on.

    2. Re:Still no real solution by timster · · Score: 1

      Auto-checking of email is only enabled if you specifically turn it on. If you have that turned off, the phone won't check email unless you go into the mail application.

      Simple as that... this guy turned out automatic mail checking and was shocked, SHOCKED that the phone automatically checked mail.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    3. Re:Still no real solution by p0tat03 · · Score: 1

      The average consumer cannot be expected to keep such tabs on their hardware devices. As the suite of iPhone apps grow (both 1st and 3rd party) IMHO there should be a control panel setting to turn off EDGE data. In the end you need a few settings:

      - Voice on/off
      - Data on/off
      -SMS on/off (also uses EDGE)
      WiFi on/off

      If those controls are in place a user can easily avoid data charges while roaming, without having to hunt down and turn off the settings in EVERY app on the phone.

    4. Re:Still no real solution by obizgnodnahs · · Score: 1

      Apple can create a feature on iPhone to limit/warning the user that the fee already overflow the user pre-set value. They can work with telecoms to get the realtime billing information periodically. However there is no phone that i know has this feature and must be unwanted by telecos

  57. Re:It's really funny to see Americans suffering .. by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

    So do European roaming plans work in the US, or just in the nicely contiguous countries next door? I don't (on most plans) get roaming charges if I go from Ohio to Indiana, which is basically the same distance - cell phones in Europe would be completely impractical if you couldn't roam to other European countries with them.

    American phone companies suck, but chalking this up to isolationism is just flamebaiting.

  58. Typical Apple - no really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like Apple removed one too many buttons (again).

    Why would Apple not have tested this if they went to the trouble of adding a "airplane" mode? Surely people are going places with these devices which usually involves some form of roaming charges, especially overseas. As others have commented - once you're off the airplane in another location you may actually want to use your device as a simple phone. In their haste to make the device a black box they have made it less usable.

  59. A reading from TFM... by Americano · · Score: 4, Informative
    I just came back from 2 weeks in Ireland. I used the phone in a pinch to try and find directions when I was semi-lost in Dublin. The rest of the time, I used the ipod features, and only checked my email when wifi was available in the hotel. Total international data rates for my iphone for the entire trip: Just under US $8.

    I suspect Mr. Levy never bothered to RTFM on his device, and then left his phone(s) in the "sleep" mode (display off, radios on), for the duration of his cruise. From Page 14 of the iPhone User Guide:

    To Lock iPhone -- Press the Sleep/Wake button.
    To Unlock iPhone -- Press the Home button or the Sleep/Wake button, then drag the slider.
    To Turn iPhone completely off -- Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds until the red slider appears, then drag the slider. When iPhone is off, incoming calls go straight to voicemail.
    To Turn iPhone on -- Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.
    Note that they call it a "Sleep/Wake button", not an "on/off" button, or a "power" button.

    Other than that, he could have enabled "Airplane Mode", which does the following (User Guide, page 22):

    When you turn on airplane mode, [a small airplane icon] appears in the status bar at the top of the screen. No cell phone, radio, Wi-Fi, or Bluetooth signals are emitted from iPhone. You cannot:
    • Make phone calls
    • Send or receive email
    • Browse the Internet
    • Send or receive text messages
    • Stream YouTube videos
    • Get stock quotes
    • Get maps locations
    • Get weather reports

    If allowed by the aircraft operator and applicable laws and regulations, you can continue to use iPhone to:
    • Listen to music and watch video
    • Listen to visual voicemail
    • Check your calendar
    • Take or view pictures
    • Hear alarms
    • Use the stopwatch or timer
    • Use the calculator
    • Take notes
    • Read text messages and email messages stored on iPhone
    Oh, and you can also disable automatic checking of email in the iPhone settings. The default behavior is to check every so often, but you can set it to "Manual", which means you have to tell the iPhone to check email, it won't go out automatically and try downloading messages.

    There's warnings about "Additional fees may apply" plastered all over the iPhone manual when discussing international roaming, as well. So to all the people crying that this just shows the iPhone is an overhyped piece of crap, or that this is evidence of some sort of collusion between Apple and AT&T to suck their customers dry, get over it. The guy didn't read his manual, and now he's learning that that was a costly mistake. If you go to Ireland with your brand new Nokia E70 or Treo 650, and leave it on, charging, and set to automatically check email periodically, you're going to have the same fucking problem.
    1. Re:A reading from TFM... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually that's not true, and that's partially what I don't understand about what happened. I did take my AT&T 8525 out of the country only a few months ago for a week because I planned to check in periodically, however while the phone did recognize that carriers were in range the phone was unable to jump onto those networks. Why? Because in order to use the phone outside of the US I would have had to call up AT&T ahead of time and ask them to enable International roaming. Maybe AT&T doesn't always leave this capability off by default, or maybe these people did enable it at some point prior to this vacation.

      That said, even if the phone was data roaming and checking email periodically, $4800 is absolutely ridiculous. Even with a bunch of different companies taking their piece of the pie it shouldn't come anywhere close to such a high number.

    2. Re:A reading from TFM... by BiggerBoat · · Score: 1

      On the topic of naming conventions, *I* would have thought, intuitively, that "sleep" would mean "don't do anything except be ready to awaken quickly when I ask you to." So then what would I expect a mode that turns off the screen but still allows background stuff like checking for incoming calls or emails be called? "Standby," I suppose, or something along those lines. But not "sleep."

      I'm not trying to defend not reading the manual and finding out what "sleep" actually means on the iPhone, just speaking to what it intuitively meant to me, since Apple seems to care a lot about intuitive interfaces. Of course, *I* might just be an idiot.

    3. Re:A reading from TFM... by CodeBuster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you go to Ireland with your brand new Nokia E70 or Treo 650, and leave it on, charging, and set to automatically check email periodically, you're going to have the same fucking problem.

      True, but there should be a setting for "only enable this feature while on AT&T network" so that the user would have to explicitly go into the options and enable certain features for roaming (knowing full well that it may incur extra charges...the menu should have a footnote or warning dialog to confirm when this setting is set). The iPhone could even come on with a dialog box when it is on roaming saying something to the effect of:

      "The phone is scheduled to check e-mail but it cannot because the phone is currently roaming. What would you like to do?"

      Then there could be a number of options ranging from "No, and don't ask me again (i.e. always no until I go into the options to turn it back on" to "Sure, go ahead and don't ask me again (i.e. I am a billionaire and I don't care how much they charge per megabyte here in Ireland...turn on everything for roaming)". It needs to be like firewall software, guiding the user through the options as situations come up and offering advice in a context relevant way. The problem with RTFM is that you are reading everything out of context and then trying to remember what to do when certain situations come up. Most people, engineers excluded, do not work or think that way.

    4. Re:A reading from TFM... by Paul+Slocum · · Score: 1

      You can see the problem clearly just by looking at the manual: the button that they call the "Sleep/Wake" button is actually the "Lock/Unlock" button. On most devices "sleep" means processor and radios off, and on most devices "lock" means display and keypad off, but radios and processor on. The button is mis-named, and that is kinda confusing.

  60. Bullshit by Mikey-San · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem was that their three Iphones were racking up a bill for data charges using foreign phone charges. The Iphone regularly updates e-mail, even while it's off, so that all the messages will be available when the user turns it on.

    This is bullshit.

    It doesn't sound like the unit was powered off. It sounds like the screen was off, and like my old RAZR, the unit will continue to operate in the background while the screen is off. Stupid, lazy consumer didn't bother reading the manual, which clearly discusses how to POWER THE PHONE OFF COMPLETELY and WHAT AIRPLANE MODE IS, which accomplishes the same task this guy required.

    Seriously, who the fuck thinks a phone is "off" just because the screen isn't lit up? This is 2007, right? The age of the cell phone cowboy.

    There's no flaw here. The vast, vast majority of iPhone users are satisfied that it will happily do its thing while the screen is off, in your pocket. Otherwise, I couldn't be notified of mail whenever I got it.

    Next time, if you spend $600 on something, read the motherfucking manual. Apple goes out of their way to write clear, simple manuals for the very reason that people don't want to have to be computer scientists to understand them. Sucks to be you, dude.

    --
    Mikey-San
    Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
    1. Re:Bullshit by Poorcku · · Score: 2, Informative

      european carriers warn u when welcoming you on their network through an sms. this is 2007, europe, consumer friendly. cut the venom :) - if the guy did not get a welcoming sms, the phone was off - no standby, and if it was in standby and did not announced the sms, then Iphone has a serious issue. basta.

      --
      I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
    2. Re:Bullshit by Mikey-San · · Score: 1

      european carriers warn u when welcoming you on their network through an sms. this is 2007, europe, consumer friendly. cut the venom :) - if the guy did not get a welcoming sms, the phone was off - no standby, and if it was in standby and did not announced the sms, then Iphone has a serious issue. basta.

      You don't know that he didn't get one and simply ignored it, thinking "screen off, cell phone off". (Which is retarded in 2007 for anyone who's ever owned a cell phone. Sorry.) He's pissed off about a huge bill that could likely be attributed to his own stupidity, and you make the leap that he's disclosed every piece of relevant information.

      It is a ridiculous assumption that "since he didn't report an SMS warning, the phone was off". Hell, he could've gotten the SMS and not ignored it, but not known he got one, because he got the message while his phone was in a bag or in a place that just wasn't conducive to hearing the tone or feeling the vibration. After his screen dim time setting passed, it went back to a dim screen, and he didn't touch it until he got home.

      In the end, this man spent $600 on a cell phone, in 2007, and didn't read the manual or understand that "screen not lit up" does not mean "the thing is off".

      --
      Mikey-San
      Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
  61. I would mod you up by sweatyboatman · · Score: 1

    if I had the points. It's strange to see people defending the phone company on this. Maybe they're knee-jerk IPhone enthusiasts. I keep seeing this same "responsibility" post over and over again. And there's inevitably the same bunch of replies over and over again pointing out the obvious.

    Perhaps this graphic representation will help them understand why these charges are so outrageous. Or maybe the "responsibility" people are just trolling.

    --
    It breaks my pluginses, my precious!
    1. Re:I would mod you up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Perhaps this graphic representation will help them understand why these charges are so outrageous."

      I don't find them outrageous at all, the price of willful stupidity is high, which is something I was sure you'd have learned already based on your posts.

      He thought his data plan wouldn't work, not that he turned the phone off. He failed to do his due diligence.

      Read the fucking article before you defend someone else's stupidity and look stupid yourself as a consequence.

  62. iCase in case! by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

    "Be absolutely protected from unwanted phone bills! Only with the iCase(TM)"

    Now they might want to stray somewhat from the "i[Whatever]" branding style and simply call it the "inCase(TM)".

    Ba dum, tish...

    --
    "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
    "A four-foot prune."
    1. Re:iCase in case! by penguinboy · · Score: 1

      Although that's already taken by a line of 3rd-party laptop sleeves.

    2. Re:iCase in case! by zooblethorpe · · Score: 1

      Although that's [the "inCase" brand name] already taken by a line of 3rd-party laptop sleeves.

      Doh! Oh well. Maybe they should be the ones to make these Faraday cages then? :)

      "Faraday, for when you're going far away...and don't want to pay!"

      Cheers,

      --
      "What in the name of Fats Waller is that?"
      "A four-foot prune."
  63. Practically, Yes, also... by Veetox · · Score: 1

    This hits an important subject though: comprehensive use actually amounts to a lot of energy, which could ultimately lead to a large greenhouse gas footprint. Therefore, a lawsuit ruling that forces companies to produce products that have explicit means for being completely turned off could have more than one beneficial result.

  64. Missing the point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Isn't this whole "off" vs "sleep mode" thing missing the point. From the POV of the average user, if he isn't making calls, receiving calls, reading email, sending email, etc... if *he* isn't using the phone, should he really expect a bill of $4,800?! Most people don't know about whether their phone is connected via WiFi or via the tower. From their perspective, if they aren't using it, they shouldn't be charged for it.

    This is the sort of thing an average user would notice a $3-$4 charge for on their bill and call the company and then get the explanation. But to suddenly get hit with a $4,800 bill is simply ridiculous...

  65. AT&T Growing Pains by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I suspect this problem is related in a curious way to the 300 page phone bill issue, in that it reveals billing-process (or, arguably, "user training") issues which are unintended consequences of the success of some of the design goals of the device. This may sound a bit odd, but let me explain.
    1. Sleep/Wake vs. Power Off for iPhone
      People have been using their iPhone for weeks without realizing that there is a difference between sleep/wake and power-off. That's really pretty interesting. iPhone is not different from other devices in maintaining this distinction, PalmOS devices have it, for example. However, with a Palm OS device one learns pretty quickly about the difference because they lock up and you gotta reboot 'em. Even people who have owned an iPhone since June 29 may never have had to power cycle their iPhone, and may not realize that the little Sleep/Wake button is not a "Power Off" button. It would be pretty hard to own a PalmOS device for eight or nine weeks without learning that distinction. Probably nobody at Apple thought of that, because they are all geeks and they are intimately familiar with the intended behavior of the device (e.g. how to turn it off when roaming) so they never saw this happen.

      The really interesting part is that nobody at AT&T realized this would happen to people, because it probably doesn't happen to other people using other devices. Why not? Well, it certainly isn't because they don't have devices that automatically fetch IMAP or POP email. It's because they were trained by other quirks of the device to learn the difference between OFF and Sleep right away. This "trained" the users to overcome deficiencies in the AT&T billing process (and policies, really). It shouldn't cost that much to use your iPhone anywhere in the world at this point. Those rates are "rape and pillage" rates and phone companies will need to fix that by coming up with more reasonable roaming policies and prices.

    2. 300 page phone bill
      It's interesting that none of the trade press analysts like that keen John C. Dvorak dude haven't stopped to ponder why nobody else in the history of AT&T customer smart phone users ever got a 300 page phone bill. The billing system was the same, iPhone users were just a type of customer with a type of device in the system.

      As with the sleep/wake issue, again here nobody at AT&T realized this would happen because users of other smart phone devices are clearly not using them the way iPhone users use the iPhone. iPhone users caught AT&T by surprise because they are clearly surfing the web more often than users of other smart phones, as evidenced by the scale of the paper bill problem. This difference will probably start showing up in the web browser usage statistics within a few months once there are a couple million iPhone users, enough to compare to other platforms. The stats will reveal undeniably different usage patterns, as though it were not a pain in the ass and they could actually read the web pages they fetched.
    These issues are really more interesting than they seem on the surface, not merely as iPhone/AT&T/Apple screw-ups (which they admittedly are) but as a really curious class of screw-ups: growing pains. iPhone is causing AT&T some pain because it's bringing a whole bunch of new users to their expensive cell network services who actually use the service, not merely pay for having the service available for rare occasions where the need is so high it overcomes the pain in the ass factor. Sure, there were a handful of geek Treo users who checked email and surfed web pages every day, but they probably turned their paper-bills off after the first big one and moved on, problem "solved" for them because they really were gadget geeks.

    Suddenly AT&T has a million ordinary non-geek users surfing the web on their phone every day (including google maps). That's what broke their billing system. The sleep/wake issue is just like that. A million smartphone users who haven't had to power cycle their device in two months so they don't even realize that sleep mode isn't "off". It hasn't happened before, apparently.
    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by JCSoRocks · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It shouldn't cost that much to use your iPhone anywhere in the world at this point. Those rates are "rape and pillage" rates and phone companies will need to fix that by coming up with more reasonable roaming policies and prices.
      What? Why would they change their pricing? They just figured out a way to bilk people for more money when they aren't even using their phone! brilliant!

      Sure, there were a handful of geek Treo users who checked email and surfed web pages every day, but they probably turned their paper-bills off after the first big one and moved on, problem "solved" for them because they really were gadget geeks.
      Well, I don't know how different AT&T's billing is from Verizon's but we have about 10-15 users on Treos that have their e-mail pushed down from Exchange to them and that surf the Internet. I've seen our bills and they're only a few pages. Every e-mail that comes to them (some get 50+ a day easily) goes to their phone, yet we still don't have endless bills. The bill for our entire company's set of cell phones, wireless data cards for laptops and regular phone lines combined adds up to the same number of pages that some of these people have been getting for ONE phone. I'd be interested to know why iPhone / AT&T chose to go the route they did. It's obviously related either to the way iPhone does data transfers, the way AT&T tracks them, or both.
      --
      You are using English. Please learn the difference between loose and lose; they're, there, and their; your and you're.
    2. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by nofx911 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Thats because Verizon is smart, and only sends the billing summary for each of the phones (the summary contains the breakout for each major category of charge, voice, data, sms, etc). You can then get access to log of every charge by going on-line, and selecting the phone.

    3. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by tha_mink · · Score: 2, Informative

      I suspect this problem is related in a curious way to the 300 page phone bill issue, in that it reveals billing-process (or, arguably, "user training") issues which are unintended consequences of the success of some of the design goals of the device. This may sound a bit odd, but let me explain.
      1. Sleep/Wake vs. Power Off for iPhone So, it's a feature? I leave my Blackberry on 24/7 and my phone bill is 3 pages long.

      I can only imagine the bad press that would be in the air if this was a Microsoft phone instead of an Apple phone. But, since it's an Apple product, it's the user's fault for not knowing that turning their phones off isn't really turning their phones off.
      As far as this bit...

      The really interesting part is that nobody at AT&T realized this would happen to people, because it probably doesn't happen to other people using other devices. Why not? Well, it certainly isn't because they don't have devices that automatically fetch IMAP or POP email. It's because they were trained by other quirks of the device to learn the difference between OFF and Sleep right away.
      I've taken my Blackberry (From the good ole US of A) into Mexico and the BVI's, left it on and running, and had no extra charges for data. So...like...go Verizon.
      --
      You'll have that sometimes...
    4. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by mveloso · · Score: 1

      Thus the decision not to include 3G in the initial iPhone. Imagine what would happen if added 1m 3g customers who actually used the service. Meltdown...

    5. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is no reason to believe that the Verizon billing system ever had this particular issue. However, if it did, its very likely that Verizon would have solved these problems a couple years ago when they started rolling our their EVDO network. At that time the early adopter EVDO customers were laptop users who did use the service to surf the web and send/receive email extensively. Of course, there is also no reason to suspect that the AT&T billing system had this issue.

      Regarding bad press, I'd say there has been plenty of bad press about both of these iPhone issues. I was merely pondering why these issues only showed up with the iPhone, when in point of fact, AT&T have sold several million WIndows Mobile and other devices that, in theory, offer their users the same services. If those users had been, oh, routinely using the data access features to surf the web and so forth they would have seen 300 page bills and the problem would have been fixed ages ago. Clearly it wasn't. I find that interesting. I think we'll see a few more of these types of issues crop up as the iPhone population grows, but also as other new phones come on the market which make it easier for people to actually use these network services.

      --
      If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    6. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by shoemilk · · Score: 1

      As I was reading your post I got a text from AT&T saying that they are "simplifying [my] paper bill, removing itemized detail".

    7. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by FreelanceWizard · · Score: 1

      The Giant Phone Bills of Doom seem to be iPhone specific. I have an unlimited data plan from AT&T, I use it with my HTC Hermes, and my phone bill has never exceeded 25 pages. And that's with three different phone lines on the bill. :)

      And yes, before you ask, the AT&T billing system does do detailed data billing for me. Perhaps it's something different in the way the iPhone interfaces with the GSM network, or perhaps iPhone data plan users get different billing procedures.

      I can definitively say, however, that any smartphone should have its data connection turned off overseas, or especially on a cruise. Roaming rates on cruise ships are well and truly insane. Roaming data rates in general are disturbingly high.

      --
      The Freelance Wizard
    8. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by greenbird · · Score: 1

      People have been using their iPhone for weeks without realizing that there is a difference between sleep/wake and power-off.

      So I guess what you're saying is that iPhone users either never get on airplanes or are complete idiots. You see whenever I get a new phone figuring out how to turn the radio off is a pretty high priority because in the modern world you're often in situations where that's useful. Amazingly my palm phones all have had a little button that allows you to just turn off the radio so you can actually use all the other rather useful functionality without the radio being on. This comes in real handy when flying or when I don't want to talk to anyone.

      --
      Who is John Galt?
    9. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by kcarlin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Of course, those of us using phones that get snarky about shutting down, like my Blackberry, usually can solve the problem by popping the battery. The "off" button on my 7130e is a sleep button that leaves the antenna powered and wakes automatically when there is a call. To save power overnight one has to turn off the antenna and then put the phone to sleep, or just pull the battery. On occasion, the antenna power down stalls and never completes. Failure to turn off the antenna results in a serious overnight drain on the battery many nights, so the battery being removable is an important feature to me.

      Steve's insistence on non-removable batteries in the smaller electronics has kept me from considering those products. A multi-day denial of service to change batteries while Apple does the job for me and the inability to take spare batteries on the road or extend the life of an older battery as a spare is simply unacceptable.

      As for the "new" AT&T, this is business as usual for them. I had a pager with Cellular One, which they transparently provisioned through SBC. Then, a couple of years later they stopped providing the pager service but didn't tell me until I brought the pager in to get it fixed because I wasn't getting my pages. They said that had to buy a new phone and sign a new, pricier contract if I wanted the features they'd dropped. So I passed and kept an eye out for a better deal. About two years after that, SBC started billing me for pager services that Cellular One, now Cingular, hadn't been providing me for quite awhile. When I called Cingular to get it straightened out, the supervisor I spoke to told me I was an idiot, in those words, for calling him and not SBC. I pointed out that it was Cingular that had lied to SBC while selling them closed accounts and he hung up. I had a new phone with a new provider 12 hours later, and will not be doing business with the "new" AT&T aka Cingular & SBC & the old AT&T & some others that I misplaced somewhere.

      The phone was also useless outside the country because of roaming charges resembling college tuition bills, but I remembered 1990 when these same telcos sold 800 numbers for use as pay calling instead of free calling and the usual suspects circulated free prize announcements and other lures at the other end of 800 numbers that consumers expected would be toll free, and instead got stuck for the message fee "$1-10" per minute depending on the scam, as I recall. This continued long after the 900 series numbers for pay calls began.

      So, Steve, to summarize, I need a removable battery and a phone company that knows its whatsits from a hole in the ground and hasn't made my list of pillage artists. Best of luck on that last one. Oh, and I'm watching whose security oddities verrrry closely as well and I don't care if a removeable battery costs me a little in thickness.

      --
      Free Adam Smith! (Or best offer.)
    10. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      Odds are that the iPhone drops the dataconnection when it's not in use, other devices only do that on demand. That would cause hundreds or thousands of sessions, where my Treo would only establish a single connection and transfer a lot more data.

      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    11. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Of course, those of us using phones that get snarky about shutting down, like my Blackberry, usually can solve the problem by popping the battery. The "off" button on my 7130e is a sleep button that leaves the antenna powered and wakes automatically when there is a call. To save power overnight one has to turn off the antenna and then put the phone to sleep, or just pull the battery. On occasion, the antenna power down stalls and never completes. Failure to turn off the antenna results in a serious overnight drain on the battery many nights, so the battery being removable is an important feature to me. Please don't tell me that is why people want a user replaceable battery on the iPhone?
      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

    12. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by silverkniveshotmail. · · Score: 1

      I have AT&T and I use about 50MB a month with my treo (which I'm using right now on a bus downtown) my bill is about 6 sheets of double sided paper.

    13. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by 75th+Trombone · · Score: 1

      People have been using their iPhone for weeks without realizing that there is a difference between sleep/wake and power-off. That's really pretty interesting. iPhone is not different from other devices in maintaining this distinction, PalmOS devices have it, for example.

      True, if by "have it" you mean "omit power-off entirely". I've had three Palm OS devices, and the only way to achieve true power off is to let the battery die or take it out.

      --
      The United States of America: We do what we must because we can.
    14. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by antek9 · · Score: 1

      What battery drain? My Blackberry (8800, mind you, so our respective mileages might vary) almost never gets powered down, as it's going one or two weeks without any need for recharging anyway. The only times I have to pull the battery is when it has to reboot after I installed a new theme that otherwise won't be found.

      --
      A World in a Grain of Sand / Heaven in a Wild Flower,
      Infinity in the Palm of your Hand / And Eternity in an Hour.
    15. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by marsonist · · Score: 1

      Um, every phone that I've owned in the last 5 years has had an airplane mode, to include the iphone. The problem with the iPhone is that a lot of iPhone users are coming from "normal" cells. They are used to hitting a button on the top edge of a phone, watching the screen turn off and being comfortable in the phone being off as well. People who have used smartphones before understand the difference between screen off and cellphone off.

    16. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by kcarlin · · Score: 1

      The 7130e is a completely different design. Battery consumption varies for me wildly based on reception and Internet use. Heavy use will bring it down to a few hours. Worst case: I lost my car charger for awhile and on an hour commute it would lose 50% of battery. Used just as a phone in a good reception area with very few calls (e.g., vacation) and battery life is as long as a week.

      I like the phone, and consider the "on/off" issue a minor quirk not a serious complaint.

      --
      Free Adam Smith! (Or best offer.)
    17. Re:AT&T Growing Pains by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      the "new" AT&T aka Cingular & SBC & the old AT&T & some others that I misplaced somewhere. BellSouth.
      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  66. Re:iphones by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well that's not easy when "sleep" is deliberately designed to appear as "off". Is it clear when you "sleep" it that it might be accruing charges? Having to read a fucking manual to find that out is UNACCEPTABLE. What crappy product design.

  67. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by clickety6 · · Score: 1


    To most people, sleep will be similar to standby - and I know that my TV doesn't keep showing picture sin standby, my VCR doesn't record TV shows in stand-by.

    Similarly, if my PC is connected to the web and I put it in hibernate, it doesn't still download pictures.

    Standby vs sleep vs hibernate vs off... is it any wonder people get confused?

    And I thought the whole marvel of ipods and iphones was that they were supposed to be so intuitive to use that you didn't need to read the manual!

    --
    ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
  68. Learn from Microsoft by wiredlogic · · Score: 1

    Apple should learn a thing or two from XP and offer users a variety of power down options when engaging sleep mode.

    --
    I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
  69. Let me call bull on this one by lelitsch · · Score: 3, Informative

    I just came back from 2 weeks in Australia with my iPhone, and even having it on a couple of hours a day to surf or check email over wifi, I didn't rack up a single cent of roaming charges. The TFA leaves out two bits of information. For one, you have to specifically activate international roaming at AT&T's web site or an AT&T store for any AT&T phone to hook up to any network overseas. Secondly, unlike a Blackberry, the iPhone does not check email periodically, this was much criticized by many, even here on Slashdot. It's actually a bit of a pain even in the US, you have to turn on the phone AND go to mail to get updates. The only email that can be pushed is Yahoo email

    1. Re:Let me call bull on this one by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      Uh, I call BS on everything you wrote. A similar thing happened to me, and I did not specifically activate international roaming. Secondly, there are settings to check email periodically, up to every 15 minutes. And this happens automatically, while the phone is sleeping. Go to settings -> mail -> autocheck, and look at the timer.

    2. Re:Let me call bull on this one by stmfreak · · Score: 1

      Not true, my iPhone has a setting (under Settings) for Mail that allows me to check periodic checking of email to Manual, 15m, 30m and 1h. I found it annoying that it defaulted to manual so the other day I switched it to every 30 minutes. Then it chirped at me at 1am so I switched it back to manual.

      --
      These opinions guaranteed or your money back.
    3. Re:Let me call bull on this one by not_anne · · Score: 1
      iPhone User Guide Chapter 4, Page 50

      You can also set Mail to regularly check for email and download your messages even
      when you don't have Mail open.


      Set whether iPhone checks for new messages automatically
      > From the Home screen choose Settings > Mail > Auto-Check, then tap Manual, "Every
      15 minutes," "Every 30 minutes," or "Every hour."
      > If you have a Yahoo! email account, email is instantly transferred to iPhone as it arrives
      at the Yahoo! server.

      Set whether iPhone plays an alert sound when you have new email
      > From the Home screen choose Settings > Sound, then turn New Mail on or off.
      --
      My comments here are my own; I do not speak for my employer.
  70. Nominative vs Accusative by dsanfte · · Score: 1, Redundant

    In your feeble attempt to preserve the Latin plural of 'antenna' you neglected to note that it has two forms, nominative and accusative plural. Accusative is proper when the word is the object of the sentence, as in your post. But, you used the nominative.

    I kicked the antennas.
    The antennae kicked me.

    Note the difference. In the future, please do not hyper-correct for Latin properness unless you're willing to do it properly. Thanks.

    --
    occultae nullus est respectus musicae - originally a Greek proverb
    1. Re:Nominative vs Accusative by Random832 · · Score: 1

      The nominative and accusative cases are not* part of English. The form "antennae" is. Latin has nothing to do with it, except that it's one of the many languages that English has stolen vocabulary from.

      *except for pronouns.

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    2. Re:Nominative vs Accusative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The irony lies in his attempting to be hyper-correct and true to the latin forms, yet, if strict latin rules were applied, the 'normal' english plural of -s would be the correct one to use.

      It's a shame that irony is not easily recognized around here anymore.

    3. Re:Nominative vs Accusative by Random832 · · Score: 1

      Except it's _not_ latin-based hypercorrection. it's just yet another idiosyncracy of the English language. "Antennae" is the correct _english_ plural of "antenna", regardless of whether it's the subject or object. There are no rules for these things, just a giant list. English is funny that way.

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
    4. Re:Nominative vs Accusative by orcrist · · Score: 1

      The nominative and accusative cases are not* marked morphologically in English.
      *except for pronouns.

      Fixed that for you. English still has those cases, otherwise you couldn't differentiate between "dog bites man" and "man bites dog".
      --
      San Francisco values: compassion, tolerance, respect, intelligence
    5. Re:Nominative vs Accusative by dsanfte · · Score: 1

      Who do you think you're lecturing, bud? Do you think I know the grammar of Latin but not English? Were you high when you wrote that?

      --
      occultae nullus est respectus musicae - originally a Greek proverb
    6. Re:Nominative vs Accusative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It absolutely is hypercorrection. It is an attempt at haughtiness, and you should damned well be able to recognize it.

      And here you are again, giving grammar advice to someone with more knowledge than yourself. Quit while you're ahead. Nobody thinks you're intelligent.

  71. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by julesh · · Score: 1

    Of course it downloads new messages when the display is sleeping. There'd be no point to sleep if it didn't.

    Really? How about the ability to receive incoming calls? Wake on timer functions? Ability to use the device without waiting for the OS to restart?

    There are _plenty_ of applications for sleep mode. I don't see the benefit, in fact, of being able to switch off the display without also disabling other potentially unwanted functions of the device. Wouldn't a "lock buttons/display screensaver" mode be more useful?

  72. Almost Happened to Me by akpoff · · Score: 1
    I took my iPhone with me to Guatemala last week. I didn't read anything in particular that made me think it would roam on the data networks but since I didn't immediately find a switch to tell it not to roam for data I put the iPhone in Airplane mode, turned if off (the full off) and then forgot about it? Why didn't I just leave it? I wanted to call my wife when I arrived back in the US. Leaving it in the car would have defeated the purpose of having a cell phone, at least in the US.


    I would have really liked to put a Guatemalan pay-as-you-go SIM card in the iPhone but we all know that's not possible right now. I probably would have let it roam for emergency use in Guatemala but since I wasn't sure I could totally stop data access I went for being sure. :(

  73. Re:It's really funny to see Americans suffering .. by kevinadi · · Score: 1

    Actually roaming capability totally depends on your mobile carrier. I'm in Australia, and big companies like Telstra (Aussie equivalent of your ATT), Vodafone and Optus have roaming agreement with practically the whole planet. I brought my cell phone on roaming to the US, Canada and China and can use it albeit with neck-strangling roaming charges.

    For the American, this is not a problem of isolationism or anything. It's just simply corporate greed, nothing more. Anywhere in the world is the same. You should take a look at the prices here in Australia before the mobile operator called "3" came into the market and forces everyone to lower their prices. Right then, everyone realized how crazily overpriced mobile service really was.

  74. adroit and vigilant by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Nah, old words. Just took them out for a walk to amuse myself. The phrase "adroit and vigilant" will be recognized by students of political theory or the cold war. It was used in 1947 by George F. Kennan, the architect of the "containment" strategy. Here's the original paper: The Sources of Soviet Conduct.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:adroit and vigilant by KGIII · · Score: 1

      Nah, old words. Just took them out for a walk to amuse myself.
      Hmm... If you engage in mental masterbation do you still go blind?
      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  75. Standby means no data transfer charges by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You can actually turn an iPhone off. These people left their iPhones on standby and thought they were turned off. Just because the screen is black doesn't mean the device is off.

    That's not the problem. Standby vs truly off should not matter other than 1) battery life and 2) receiving network updates and the delay to reconnect to the network when you decide you need to use the phone function. Standby should not result in $4,800 worth of charges, and I say that knowing full well the difference between standby and off. I'd be pissed as hell if I found out my phone was racking up data charges "on my behalf".

    THIS is the problem:

    "The iPhone regularly updates e-mail, even while it's off, so that all the messages will be available when the user turns it on."

    Making that the default behavior is a stupid decision, and it's one that is even as we speak costing customers money when they may not be realizing it. Automatically using the data connection without regard to the cell phone plan is completely stupid. Does it know the difference between peak and off-peak hours? Does it know what the customer's monthly data quota is? It apparently doesn't know when the customer is in international roaming!

    Having that default behavior may have been sensible if Apple knew that the only plans that would work with an iPhone were 100% global unlimited plans. Then they could assume it's okay to download things whenever it feels like. But with the reality of cell phone plans? No way. That's retarded. And it is not these peoples' fault that they didn't expect their phone to work that way.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
    1. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by Angostura · · Score: 1

      I have to agree. I'm a Mac user. When my Mac is asleep it doesn't check e-mail. Why would I expect my phone to?

      On the other hand, I presume that this behaviour is a configurable behaviour in the phone. Anyone?

    2. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Someone else said that this was not in fact the default behavior, and you have to enable automatic email downloads. As long as it's clear that it does this while the phone is in standby, this wouldn't really be Apple's fault. On the other hand I still couldn't fault the user for not realizing that this would happen. If they turned this on the day they got their iPhone, would they really remember that their phone is using the data connection while "off"?

      I think the ultimate blame lies with AT&T and all the other cell phone providers and their insane extortionist plans for making this a consideration in the first place. :P

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    3. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by IndieKid · · Score: 3, Interesting

      As stated elsewhere in the comments, it is configurable and the automatic e-mail check is off by default. These guys turned it on, went on holiday and forgot to turn it off, resulting in a big bill.

      Seems like the real option that's needed is a 'don't make data calls on a foreign network' option.

    4. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most cell phones I've seen have a "No Roaming" setting in the menu (if you turn it to "No Roaming", it won't connect to a roaming tower, period. I don't have an iPhone, so I don't know if it has this or not. If it doesn't, it would be a good thing to add to a future revision.

    5. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      or at least "don't make automatic data connections on a foriegn network", preferablly enabled by default.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    6. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by PygmySurfer · · Score: 1

      IMHO, Standby is a misnomer here. What they're referring to Standby is really just the phone operating as normal, with the display powered off. It'll ring immediately if an incoming call is received, or a text message is received, or any such thing. It's not the same as putting your laptop into Standby.

    7. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, it's weird that Apple didn't do this. Even Windows Mobile supports the option to avoid syncing while roaming.

    8. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by wbean · · Score: 1

      "Seems like the real option that's needed is a 'don't make data calls on a foreign network' option."

      Or how about reasonable roaming charges? If you have a European account the roaming fees are way down now. There is no real reason for them to be so high other than the opportunity to gouge the customer.

    9. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1

      THIS is the problem: "The iPhone regularly updates e-mail, even while it's off, so that all the messages will be available when the user turns it on." Making that the default behavior is a stupid decision
      Stop right there; it is not the default behavior. The iPhone's default behavior WRT checking e-mail is to only do it when the user taps the "Mail" icon. In order to have the iPhone automatically check e-mail, the user would have had to explicitly change that setting. Since that isn't the default behavior, the rest of your post is meaningless:

      and it's one that is even as we speak costing customers money when they may not be realizing it. Automatically using the data connection without regard to the cell phone plan is completely stupid. Does it know the difference between peak and off-peak hours? Does it know what the customer's monthly data quota is? It apparently doesn't know when the customer is in international roaming! Having that default behavior may have been sensible if Apple knew that the only plans that would work with an iPhone were 100% global unlimited plans. Then they could assume it's okay to download things whenever it feels like. But with the reality of cell phone plans? No way. That's retarded. And it is not these peoples' fault that they didn't expect their phone to work that way.
      But it is their fault; they told the iPhone to automatically check and download their e-mail.
      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    10. Re:Standby means no data transfer charges by mhbtr · · Score: 1

      Problem in a setting like that is all of the AT&T US plans allow for free roaming when AT&T is not available in the 48 contiguous states. Why would you want the phone to NOT work when you are roaming WITHIN the US?
      There really is no cure for stupidity/laziness. People buy an expensive piece of hardware with a large monthly bill. They need to educate themselves to charges and features. Why must we continuously abdicate intelligence and responsibility to the theory that "the big bad corporation *ucked me over"?

  76. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by quantum+bit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You could have had a +5 funny if only you had said "up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A, start"

  77. FUD, FUD, FUD by alcmaeon · · Score: 3, Informative

    1) My iPhone in standby mode does not DL my email until I hit the email button at which point it connects and begins the transfer of the email. This is a setting in the email settngs preferences. By default it is set to manual. This is where I left mine.

    2) My iPhone, when it is actually turned off, as opposed to in standby mode (i.e. hold the top button down for 3 seconds rather than just pressing it) it doesn't even receive calls, much less email or anything else.

    3) Does anyone on slashdot even own an iPhone? Most of the comments are completely clueless as to the actual operation of the device.

  78. You can not ... aehmmm ... remove the battery. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can NOT ... aehmmm ... remove the battery from the iPhone. ;-)

  79. I dunno about that... by NeuroManson · · Score: 1

    For example, if you manage (somehow) to have an unsecured wireless router setup, and someone downloads questionable material while wardriving, does that make YOU responsible because you didn't memorize the manual or keep up to date on /.?

    Most people buy cel phones predominately for the purpose of placing phone calls, then the stoopid ring tones, then the stoopid wallpaper, then the stoopid camera, then the stoopid games, and then the stoopid e-mail and stoooooooopid web browsing capacity. Oh, and the ePenis overcompensation factor.

    The above features reign far and above cracking the 100+ page instruction manual included with today's cellular phones.

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  80. I got $960 bill whill in Mexico by cadience · · Score: 1

    This guy got off with CHEAP data rates. I have $960 of additional data charge while I was in Mexico for the week. I did use the "ipod" functions but not safari nor mail applications. For the $960 the phone transfered about 6MB of data.

    1. Re:I got $960 bill whill in Mexico by tftp · · Score: 1

      You probably could buy a small ISP in Mexico for that much money :-)

  81. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by xigxag · · Score: 1

    Of course it downloads new messages when the display is sleeping. There'd be no point to sleep if it didn't.

    Generally speaking, the purpose of sleep mode in phones is to allow them to still receive phone calls while they're "off." Not to allow them to MAKE phone calls secretly. As a matter of fact, I just took an email capable phone on an international cruise and there were no unexpected charges. Actually, even when I have the phone "on" it doesn't download email or otherwise actively call the network without my request.

    It seems to me that since the iPhone is currently a domestic-only device, that it should have a setting to allow international data roaming and that that setting should default to OFF.

    In any event, the larger issue is not that the phone downloads email, but that there doesn't seem to be a warning that you WILL be charged an exorbitant rate for email if you leave the country, period The disclaimer that "substantial charges may be incurred if phone is taken out of the U.S. even if no services are intentionally used" could be interpreted to mean that the phone will rack up charges in the event that someone calls you or texts you. Not merely for being hooked up to the network.

    --
    There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
  82. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by mrjatsun · · Score: 1

    Does the phone still ring if it's sleeping? If not, it's not intuitive that it would be checking e-mail. I would expect that if sleep shuts off the phone, it shuts off the phone from accessing the internet too.

  83. It is obvious - it works like every other phone. by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When you shut your phone, does it turn off? Or when you stop using a candybar, doesn't the screen go off? Yet the phone is not off. People know they have to press something to really turn "off" a phone, as per every other phone ever made.

    After all, how is a phone supposed to receive calls if it's really off? There needs to be a difference between a sleep mode and off, and this is obvious on the iPhone.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  84. Does your phone receive calls? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, don't Blackberrys automatically receive email while they are asleep?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  85. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  86. Re:It's really funny to see Americans suffering .. by GiMP · · Score: 1

    I'm not too much into voice, but I can attest for data. I had a "mobile broadband" plan in Poland with Era, but roaming to Germany or Italy was impossible. The data charges were outrageous and as such, roaming was disabled by default.

    The good thing is that there are now data-plan prepaid/pay-as-you-go simcards available.

    When I was in Italy, I paid 50 euros to Vodaphone for a 30-day pay-as-you-go data plan. That was a steal compared to what my roaming charges would've been.

  87. Customer will receive a new manual by Provocateur · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Samuel L Jackson version of the iPhone manual:

    Chapter 2 "The Basics" (page 14) how to turn the iPod motherf***** off.

    --
    WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  88. Fairness .... NOT by dindi · · Score: 1

    Even my old GSM provider in eastern Europe (I used to live in Hungary) warned its customers with detailed information on how to turn their voice mail box off in case they leave the country, explaining in detail, that the call would go abriad, and then come back, thus causing a double charge.

    AT&T should have a similar warning. On the other hand the iPhone should not do ANYTHING while off. Not beep, not wake up, not chek mail. NOTHING.
    The only thing I expect from a phone when it is off, to serve as an alarm clock as normal phones do.

    I would advise iPhone users to pull the battery, but then you say..... the battery cannot be pulled. It sucks, and unless the documentation in the Apple manual clearly states that the iPhone does update mail when off, I would be on my way to a lawyer and have apple pay my bill to their one and only partner.

  89. Turn off mail update by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Updating mail is off my default... but if you've turned that on, you can set the update period to "manual" so you don't accidentally have it fire up.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  90. I think it should blend. by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    Send the pieces to AT&T along with that bill.

    No way I would ever pay that.

    Anyone else notice how AT&T ended up back in the phone business, after helping with the wiretapping. AT&T, formerly Singular, wiretapping, now AT&T again?

  91. A mandated feature ? by seriesrover · · Score: 1
    This clearly looks like user error - from what I can tell he purposely turned on the "email check" feature (not the default setting) and didn't actually turn it to "airplane\aeroplane mode".


    Having said that its become pretty tricky to remember all the functions\features\keys etc of all these devices. The old staple "rtfm" means to wade through a manual lined with key strokes for every situation and of course the UI is all somewhat different to each other be it phones, blackberrys, cameras, let alone the computer. My point is this, its user error, but its easily done.


    What I'm concerned about here is why did he get a $5000 bill without authorizing it? A feature I suggest we see on these cellphones\iphones or even better, the carriers, is a $ amount (not minutes used) that just cuts off and if one hits it they have to opt in via some method to turn it back on - a simple pin would do. Alas I'm sure the carriers won't do this and I doubt the iPhone knows...so a law, much like the one to allow users to carry cellphone numbers across carriers, is in order.

  92. Service fees by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 1

    Of the $4800, only $10 was data charges, the rest was service and regulatory fees and taxes.

  93. Was it off? by BMonger · · Score: 1

    Everything seems to say the phone was "off" but as far as I can tell it was on standby and not off. I haven't read my manual but even I know that when the phone is on standby it checks my e-mail every hour. If it was on standby then it's their fault as far as should be concerned. If it was actually off, as in they held down the on/off switch and slide the bar to off, then that'd be news to me.

  94. Count 'em by mblakeley · · Score: 1

    They had three iphones? Which they took with them on a Caribbean vacation cruise? Fuck 'Em. If they're content to waste an average man's yearly earnings on two weeks of R&R, let them ride that bill all the way. Hopefully they'll learn a lesson about rampant consumerism and choose to live a simpler lifestyle.

    1. Re:Count 'em by Harik · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing your dayjob consists of "Would you like fries with that?"

  95. The sure way to turn it off by Solandri · · Score: 1
    Whenever I'm faced with a situation where I need to be absolutely sure that a piece of portable electronics is off, I just take the battery out. That's what these guys should've done, taken the battery out of their... iPhone...

    Oh yeah. Oops. I guess it is bad UI design after all.

  96. Terms in a contract aren't always upheld ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Informative

    For the same reason that someone who signs a contract without reading it and/or insisting on changes, deserves to be screwed. It's called a manual, it comes with the device, and you are allowed to read it. There is no "deception", only ignorance on the part of the user.

    Terms in a contract are not always upheld. If they are too one sided, or absurd, a judge may rule something unconscionable. This is especially true for adhesion contracts, "take it or leave it", and even more so when there is a power imbalance between the parties such as large corp v a consumer.

  97. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    When you shut your phone, does it turn off?

    Er... Yes, actually. And so it has been with every mobile I've ever owned.

    People know they have to press something to really turn "off" a phone, as per every other phone ever made.

    Apparently you are mistaken on both counts.

    After all, how is a phone supposed to receive calls if it's really off?

    It's not! If I wanted to receive calls, I wouldn't have turned my phone off, would I?

    There needs to be a difference between a sleep mode and off, and this is obvious on the iPhone.

    Apparently you are mistaken on that one, too.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  98. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by newgalactic · · Score: 1

    That's not true. Every phone I've ever owned has had an obvious indicator when it is in sleep mode vs. Off. Either they have a blinking LED, or the screen's backlight goes out. However, the screen doesn't turn totally off. It's darkened, but not Off. If there's not indicator that an iPhone is in sleep mode, then that is a problem. I've never owned a phone that turns totally blank when it is in sleep mode. FYI - I'm buying two iPhones for my wife and I for Christmas. I think that the above issue is a legitimate problem, but not big enough for me to reconsider buying it.

  99. Battery Life? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is the iPhone able to stay charged for an entire month while sending/receiving data? Surely the owners would have had to recharge their phones... a sure sign that it is using it's battery for something...

  100. T-Mobile by kurt555gs · · Score: 1

    I now have the evil AT&T, and I actually think T-Mobile is less evil than the others, but....

    They only have service in large cities, so if you were flying from Chicago, to LA, you prolly only hit a few cell towers along the way.

    God , I hate AT&T ...........

    --
    * Carthago Delenda Est *
  101. AT&T + Europe + BlackBerry by michael.j.jarvis · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just traveled to Germany and France several weeks ago for family reasons. Needless to say I called ahead of time to AT&T and had an international plan placed on my account, and they advised me of several things which they do to all customers traveling abroad. 1) You will accrue charges if someone leaves a voicemail while your phone is on. 2) You will accrue charges for using the data (email, sms, etc) 3) If you want to avoid charges, keep your phone OFF, or turn off TD/RD. Standby will not stop charges from accruing. 4) I have a BlackBerry 8100, and sad to say my service in Europe was amazing. I got back to Boston, and standing in Logan Airport to see 1 bar of service almost made me cry. So the lesson to learn is to follow the old adage: Proper Prior Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance.

  102. I would mod you down, but used my last mod point. by WilliamTS99 · · Score: 2

    Not only is it more then just a phone, but I have taken phones with me on trips back to the states that only work in Europe. Why? I used them on the way to and from the airport and wasn't prepared to throw it out just because it wouldn't work in the US.

  103. I is for Idiots. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple that is.

  104. You sure as shit *can* take the battery out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You just may not be able to get it back in again.

  105. dang! by pimpbott · · Score: 1

    I guess they can't argue with this saying 'well you should have removed the battery' because they soldered that fucker in! Funny, I have a co-worker who just went to the Dominican Republic on vacation with his iPhone. I should tell him to check his bill.

  106. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by igb · · Score: 2

    When you shut your phone, does it turn off? Er... Yes, actually. And so it has been with every mobile I've ever owned.
    Name one phone for which that's true. How does anyone with such a phone ever receive their calls?
  107. Are some of you serious, or being facetious? by beef+curtains · · Score: 1, Troll

    I just wanted to recap some of the more prevalent comments I've read here in this thread:

    1) The fact that the iPhone has a sleep/wake button is unacceptable, because it "should" be an on/off button (ignoring the fact that every other smartphone, hell, and every TV & A/V component made in the last 15 years, operates EXACTLY the same way).

    2) Users should NOT have to read the manual to fully understand how the iPhone works (despite the fact that "RTFM" would be tossed around with alarming regularity in almost all other situations).

    3) The iPhone continues to check e-mail while asleep (does any smartphone NOT check e-mail while asleep, when it is still receptive to incoming calls/text messages?).

    4) The fact that the iPhone has a sleep mode that is different than "fully off" is a major design flaw, and its existence is simply unconscionable (as mentioned earlier in this list, sleep mode is pretty standard on electronic devices these days).

    5) Calling the setting that turns off all radio transmission/reception "Airplane Mode" is counterintuitive & deceptive because users won't know to use it when they're on a boat (even though "Airplane Mode" has been the standard name for this setting at least for the last 5 years, and using even the smallest amount of common sense would cause one to use this setting in all situations where radio use is to be avoided).

    6) Apple & AT&T are basically mugging people, because the iPhone is not laden with warnings to inform users how their wireless service works (I've had phones purchased from Cingular/AT&T & unlocked phones purchased from 3rd parties in the past, when I took them abroad none of them ever told me I was entering an international roaming area...again, with a smidge of common sense one would notice that it no longer says "AT&T" next to the signal strength indicator and would assume that that's financially bad news).

    Are you people serious? How can you type this stuff without feeling the least bit silly? Has the anti-Apple, anti-iPhone stance so blinded you to the fact that, behind the big, flashy screen, gee-whiz functionality and prominent Apple logo (and, until last week, the absurd price tag), the iPhone is basically IDENTICAL to just about every other smartphone (and majority of cellphones) out there? I mean, I expect a certain amount of schadenfreude and Jobs-bashing in a thread like this, but some of these comments have crossed right through the Laughable Town and have landed firmly in the Land of Pathetically Grasping At Straws.

    Now many of you have called bullshit on those that have used these arguments, and it's admirable that, regardless of how you feel about the iPhone, Apple, Steve Jobs, the city of Cupertino, or anything else that could color your judgement, you've been able to put all that aside and objectively state that, in this case, the user was an idiot and deserved to get hit with the giant phone bill. Sadly, your voices of reason were drowned out by repetitive/redundant crazy talk.

    --
    Just once I'd like someone to call me 'Sir' without adding 'You're making a scene.'
    1. Re:Are some of you serious, or being facetious? by tkinnun0 · · Score: 1

      1) The fact that the iPhone has a sleep/wake button is unacceptable, because it "should" be an on/off button (ignoring the fact that every other smartphone, hell, and every TV & A/V component made in the last 15 years, operates EXACTLY the same way). Yes, when I press the power switch on my remote my TV keeps checking my email every 15 minutes.

      2) Users should NOT have to read the manual to fully understand how the iPhone works (despite the fact that "RTFM" would be tossed around with alarming regularity in almost all other situations). Don't feel bad, users shouldn't have to RTFM to use Linux, either.

      3) The iPhone continues to check e-mail while asleep (does any smartphone NOT check e-mail while asleep, when it is still receptive to incoming calls/text messages?). Sleep == fully-on-but-screen-off is a good start, but we can improve usability further: snoring == fully-on-but-screen-off-with-single-flashing-light, deep sleep == fully-on-but-screen-off-doesn't-wake-even-if-called. I'm sure more can be invented. Get cracking, Apple!

      4) The fact that the iPhone has a sleep mode that is different than "fully off" is a major design flaw, and its existence is simply unconscionable (as mentioned earlier in this list, sleep mode is pretty standard on electronic devices these days). What you call your TV sleeping other people call the TV being off, as in not operating until turned on again. Replacing an industry standard labeled power switch with an unlabeled "Sleep/Wake" button is of course innovation when Apple is doing it.
  108. Not surprisng from AT&T / Cingular by JimboFBX · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This doesn't surprise me. AT&T / Cingular will do whatever they can to make sure you accidentally get charged for things. For example, on my Razr phone, they hide the URL function in their phones under settings / web access (at the very bottom) Go To URL (3rd from the bottom) and try to trick you into thinking you have to go into their mediaNet (which is like 100 kB of data usage on it's own), which you dont. MediaNet is by default just an accidental double click on the main scroll pad. The phone freezes and wont allow you to cancel mid-way through transferring. Then they send you text messages which are just from wierd numbers which you get charged for if you open them. Then they try to trick people into downloading things and hide the true costs of doing so (which varies based on your data usage plan). Phones with the push to talk button cannot disable that function and yes, if you have the service you can be accidentally charged for that too.

    I guess the only surprising thing is the phone bill was that much, tack off two zeros and I really wouldn't be surprised at all.

    Honestly this should be a crime on AT&T / Cingular's part if they do not fully reimburse that. All of this "accidental" crap should be a crime. Every time they spam a text message to their users it's like they are stealing from every person who does not have free text messaging. How much money does a million nickels add up to?

    1. Re:Not surprisng from AT&T / Cingular by rizzo320 · · Score: 1

      For example, on my Razr phone


      1. The RAZR is a crappy phone. That's why you're having problems.

      Phones with the push to talk button cannot disable that function


      2. Almost all PTT phones have a PTT "lock" on them to prevent the feature from being used by just hitting one button. If this isn't the case on the RAZR, please see point number 1.

      Every time they spam a text message to their users


      3. FYI, you are not charged for any "system" messages that come from Cingular/A&TT. I have had them for over four years, and this has always been the case. If you are being charged, then most likely, its something you signed up for (maybe by accident), or, not coming from Cingular/AT&T at all. If neither is the case, call customer service (which isn't the greatest, I know) and figure out what's going on.

      Not defending AT&T, since I'm not thrilled with my service, but, just wanted to state some facts here.
    2. Re:Not surprisng from AT&T / Cingular by DustyDervish · · Score: 1

      This is a scam that cellular companies use because they CAN and CONTINUE to get away with it. How many customers realize that the unlimited data plan that they signed up for means nothing when they step outside the US border? If they won't drop the charges, file a class action lawsuit. It would be funny to see AT&T try to justify to the courts how no intentional use of a device can add up to $4800 in charges. People need to stop being so apathetic and resist the idiocracy.

    3. Re:Not surprisng from AT&T / Cingular by JimboFBX · · Score: 1

      You get charged for the advertisements they send you. The advertisements that say they are directly from Cingular telling you to go upgrade your plan for only a few dozen bucks more. You don't get charged for "system" messages that tell you, for example, how many minutes you have remaining. I'm sure an official (and experienced) AT&T / Cingualar representative who taught me how to get around that advertisement issue is correct, and my girlfriend's bill also clearly agrees with that. My girlfriend also has a PTT phone that, if it has a lock, we dont know where it is. You press the easy to push button and it asks you if you want to enable it. Whether or not it actually enables it when you chose not to have it in your plan is unknown to us because we're not going to try it.

      And the Razr is one of the most popular phones, and having mediaNet being just a double-push away and having a URL function always more difficult to find has been a standard for every cingular phone I've come across. Now, of course I'm aware there are a lot of phones and I haven't seen them all, but I've come across like 7 different phones and they've all been that way. Have yet to see the iphone.

    4. Re:Not surprisng from AT&T / Cingular by rizzo320 · · Score: 1

      FYI, if you're looking for an AT&T/Cingular phone that doesn't have PTT, I just purchased a Sony Ericsson Z310. Nice phone so far. Looks like you can get it relatively cheap too. I got it for free, but had to up my plan for another 2 years. There is still a MediaNET button, but, its not easily confused or accidentally touched like some other phone models.

  109. This was completely avoidable by DeepZenPill · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just remove the battery.

    Oh wait.

  110. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    My trusty Samsung A series has only two modes: off (which means "off"), and on (in which calls can be made or received and messages can be received and sent).

    Frankly, I don't see why you need a sleep mode on a mobile phone. Of course, you guys who have to upgrade your phone every five minutes, and now use something running a vastly overpowered operating system that supports myriad other features, crashes on occasion, and does stupid things like incurring $4,800 of charges because you pressed the wrong button or didn't press the right one, may find your mileage varies.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  111. Finally a potential return of the commodore amiga by mazanoid · · Score: 1

    brilliant. Just strip the guts of a few obsolete commodores for all that shiny aluminum shielding and start wrapping up patients. Hey, everyone looks like a baked potato. I likes it.

  112. Buyer Beware... by realsilly · · Score: 1

    There is an old addage in the world of wisdom, Buyer Beware. When you buy a phone, it's not as simple as picking up a phone, and turning it on, you have to sign a contract and things need be set up. So you're in front of a Customer Service Rep for at least 30 minutes, but probably more like 60 - 90 minutes. In all of that time while waiting for the setup, you could be skimming directions. You know what those are, those things that are include even with a box of sillyputty?

    Now please don't tell me you spent ~$600+ on the new top of the line - must have it first - gadget and you didn't read the manual. Puh Lease!

    These are supposed to be business men right? Business men are usually pretty intelligent and are savy enough to read and bone up on their business tools. Business men run businesses, they are in the business to make money. If their customers didn't read the find print, or whatever crap their selling, they'd say, "You've signed the contract.". Guess what.... they signed the contract.

    Unless there was a Billing error, they have no room to bitch.

    --
    Life takes interesting turns, but the most interest is when you're off the beaten path.
  113. I'm getting tired of us 'Geeks' always criticizing by cpt.hugenstein · · Score: 1

    I recently got a new 8830 which came with no paper manual. There was no notice that informed me that there was a manual included on the CD but I new there would be because of my geek knowledge. The average layman user may get one of these advanced toys because of the style factor or MP3 player or whatever would not have the same knowledge base as one of the average /. readers.

    These devices are more than a fancy cell phone with email, it has mp3 and other pda functions. I could understand that the user tryed to turn it off using the off button and not knowing that it is still on. If my phone goes in sleep mode there is still an led indicator which probably is not the case with the iphone. This user may brought his phone with him to store information about his day trip or airplane tickets or may just have brought it to use for mp3s, it really is not up to us to call him an idiot based on this.

    As our devices get more complex and the UIs are trying to get more simple but the average user often gets forgotten. As more of these advanced devices become available more average users are buying them. I would guess that more than 75% of phones have cameras built in.

    A recent example would be when my father purchased a home theatre system and he could not figure out how to connect it. Years ago one would connect all the coax cables yellow to yellow, red to red, etc to their prospective inputs but now there is hdmi, dvi a&d, component, etc. If its hdmi is it 1.0 or 2.0 both of which may or may not pass audio on the hdmi cable, which is fully capable of it. It took me, which I would call myself an edjucated user, 8 hours to get the system installed including 2 second trips to the store beacuse the manual, sony's, did not state some limitations of its device.

    I would say that the average user would have a basic to intermediate understanding of how most of there computer programs operate. Most users probably could not backup their computers and re install windows because they got a rootkit from a cd they wanted to listen to. The average user probably does not have a huge collection of mp3s or know much about drm. As we age the younger generations are growing with this knowledge but I know several people my age (25) that would not have known that the device when off may actually be still on but in an alternate state.

    As our devices get more complex and mainstream more than just the savvy business people and the hardcore geeks are purchasing these devices and we should be building to tailor to these new users just as much as to the tech savvy. I do not promote adding something like an any key to a keyboard but give complete manuals with details but also something simple. Dont call (radio)OFF the airplane mode having a icon of an airplane.

    Someone mentioned pull the sim card, what if this phone had a cdma mode which often do not have a card.

    ---The users are not always ignorant, technology is getting more complex leaving the average user behind. The VCR clock was a perfect example of this years ago.

  114. Easy Fix by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 0

    The iPhone regularly updates e-mail, even while it's off, so that all the messages will be available when the user turns it on.

    Easy fix, just remove the battery.

    Oh!

    I guess no more iPhones on airliners.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  115. Make sure its really off.... by PPH · · Score: 1
    ... take the battery out!

    Doh!

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  116. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Nazmun · · Score: 2, Informative

    Your too emotionally charged to understand what he's saying. Most phones even free ones released in the last 3-4 years go into a sleeplike mode called "standby" when not in active use or when you shut it closed (physically like if it's a flip phone). I'll bet your current phone is the same, it uses minimal power and can still receive calls unless you have a brick from 6 years ago.

    My samsung A is the same and it takes 2-3 seconds of holding the end button to turn off.

    --
    Hmmm... Pie...
  117. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by Tim+C · · Score: 1

    While I broadly agree with your real point...

    my VCR doesn't record TV shows in stand-by ...my Sky+ box (essentially a PVR tied to the UK's Sky satellite service) does record shows in stand-by mode. However that makes sense - I don't want to have to leave it on full power all the time to record stuff I've set it to record while I'm out. The iPhone email thing is only in the same category if the automatic email download is normally a zero-cost thing. Otherwise, it's just wrong as a default.

  118. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by Phisbut · · Score: 1

    Sleep: Press sleep/wake button briefly. Off: Hold button for several seconds, slide red slider control that shows up. Of course it downloads new messages when the display is sleeping. There'd be no point to sleep if it didn't.

    Although I wonder, I have no iPhone so I can't check, but is the button labeled "Sleep" or "Power"?

    --
    After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
    - The Tao of Programming
  119. off? by scolbert · · Score: 1

    I wonder what he means by "off". If you use the Airplane switch on your iPhone that kills all wireless signals, phone and wi-fi. But if your actually power it off, well its OFF. does he means he just clicked the top button that turns off the screen. any fools know that the phone isn't off then! (I wish there was a way to turn off AT&T and just use wi-fi, you can go the other way around, turn off wi-fi and just use AT&T).

  120. It's all about customer service by joe_n_bloe · · Score: 1

    Service *unf* the customer *unf* service *unf* the customer *unf*

    (George Carlin)

  121. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    I do have a "brick from 6 years ago", near enough. What's your point? It makes and receives calls, sends and receives texts, stores a phone list, and does all of this simply and with good reliability. Why would I spend a fortune or commit to a year or more of dubious price plans on a new network, just to get a different phone?

    In any case, the phone I use is irrelevant to this discussion. The fact remains that if a phone has two modes that behave very differently (and getting or not getting a $4,800 bill is "very differently" in my book) then it is poor UI design not to distinguish them clearly. This is not an emotional statement — after all, I'm not the guy out several grand for a simple mistake — it's simply acknowledging a basic usability error rather than joining the collective Apple worship that a scary number of people in this discussion are exhibiting.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  122. Ph.Dickhead by joe_n_bloe · · Score: 1

    it's admirable that, regardless of how you feel about the iPhone, Apple, Steve Jobs, the city of Cupertino, or anything else that could color your judgement, you've been able to put all that aside and objectively state that, in this case, the user was an idiot and deserved to get hit with the giant phone bill. Sadly, your voices of reason were drowned out by repetitive/redundant crazy talk.

    You got this attitude from your mom while she was a clerk at the DMV, right?

    1. Re:Ph.Dickhead by beef+curtains · · Score: 1

      You got this attitude from your mom while she was a clerk at the DMV, right?

      I don't get it. Were you trying to insult me? Weak. You fail.

      --
      Just once I'd like someone to call me 'Sir' without adding 'You're making a scene.'
    2. Re:Ph.Dickhead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your mom gave me attitude when I jizzed in her hair behind the dmv last night

  123. Why doesn't the phone detect this and handle it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The phone knows when it's roaming, it's talking to the towers which tell it when it is and isn't roaming. Why doesn't the phone bring up a pretty little box that says "you're roaming which may incur additional roaming data charges, would you like to enable email synchronization while roaming?" Windows mobile does this already...

  124. Blame the User! by BooRolla · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Yes, Blame the user! Why didn't everyone think of that? What an amazing point of view.

    The iPhone is a phone. How complicated should one expect phones to be? How expensive should a simple mistake cost? Is it really unimaginable for someone to look at the black screen of the iPhone and think it's "off"?

    Here is where you outlined how a user should handle the phones power management (emphasis mine):

    I suspect Mr. Levy never bothered to RTFM on his device, and then left his phone(s) in the "sleep" mode (display off, radios on), for the duration of his cruise. From Page 14 of the iPhone User Guide:

            To Lock iPhone -- Press the Sleep/Wake button.
            To Unlock iPhone -- Press the Home button or the Sleep/Wake button, then drag the slider.
            To Turn iPhone completely off -- Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds until the red slider appears, then drag the slider. When iPhone is off, incoming calls go straight to voicemail.
            To Turn iPhone on -- Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.

    Note that they call it a "Sleep/Wake button", not an "on/off" button, or a "power" button.

    You don't see problems with any of this?

    First off, you have people reading manuals for phones. Yes I know, RTFM, etc. Really, you need to get over that. People don't read manuals for common items. Moreover, who has the time? You would not want to live in the world where you were forced to read the manual for every device, tool, or piece of software for every new function you envisioned using. That would be a major pain in the ass. I am 100% certain that you have used some piece of technology without reading 100% of the documentation. Not to mention you listed it as page 14 of the manual. 14 pages doesn't sound like much, but it is when I just want to turn off a phone.

    Then you go on to list 4 power management functions, which does not appear exhaustive. So we have 4+ ways of "almost but probably not" turning a phone off. That seems clear as day.

    Finally, you point out that it is called a "sleep/wake" button and neither an "on/off" nor "power" button. With that sentence you are implying the users are dumb for thinking that button should turn off the phone. However, 2 statements above it you are telling people how to turn off the phone with that same button. So are the users dumb for thinking a power-esque button should manage the power settings including on/off? Or are you dumb for thinking users are dumb for having assumptions that map back to what you just explained?

    One final thought. You mentioned this pearl as well:

    Other than that, he could have enabled "Airplane Mode", which does the following (User Guide, page 22):

    Yes, maybe he should have enabled "Airplane Mode" despite the obvious fact he was no where near a plane. I often think of applying modal techniques specifically labeled outside of those specifications. Brilliant!


    What bothers me more is not that you blame this guy for a very makable mistake, but that somehow you think the costs associated with this "mistake" is justifiable. I'd better hear you say "It was my fault. I should have RTFM. I will wire the funds instantly!" when your next bill comes close to 50x your normal rate.

    1. Re:Blame the User! by Americano · · Score: 1

      Yes, Blame the user! Why didn't everyone think of that? What an amazing point of view.

      And whose fault would you consider it? The user bought an electronic device, and disregarded the instructions for the proper usage of that device. Default iPhone settings are:

      1. "Auto-check" email is not enabled. This must be enabled in the Settings.
      2. No predefined email accounts. You must select accounts to sync to (or specifically create accounts on) the device.

      But, despite the fact that he had to specifically perform operations 1 & 2 above, you think he gets a free pass because he says, "Ooops, my bad, I didn't realize! LOL!"?

      How expensive should a simple mistake cost?

      In this case, a "simple mistake" costs just US $4800. In relation to how much many other "simple mistakes" can cost, that's not so bad. Plus, nobody's dead, nobody's severely injured, and nobody's going to prison.

      Is it really unimaginable for someone to look at the black screen of the iPhone and think it's "off"?

      When the documentation for the iPhone clearly states that turning the pretty screen black does not constitute turning it off, I think it's pretty unimaginable, yes.

      Here is where you outlined how a user should handle the phones power management (emphasis mine)

      Correction: Here is how the Apple documentation outlines how a user should handle the phone's power management. This isn't my documentation, it's Apple's. If only the included it with every iPhone! Oh wait...

      First off, you have people reading manuals for phones. Yes I know, RTFM, etc. Really, you need to get over that. People don't read manuals for common items.

      And whose fault is that? It's a complex device. If you're not certain how it works, what magic formula should you use to learn how it works? Could it be that the user's guide is included with the device for a reason?

      I am 100% certain that you have used some piece of technology without reading 100% of the documentation.

      And you are 100% correct that I don't read every page of every manual of every device I buy. However, I also am 100% certain that if I don't understand how the device works, and I'm afraid I'm going to break it or cost myself a lot of money by setting it up improperly, I *do* read the manual.

      Not to mention you listed it as page 14 of the manual. 14 pages doesn't sound like much, but it is when I just want to turn off a phone.

      Yes, because skimming through the first 14 pages of a graphics-and-white-space-heavy document is completely unreasonable. As is using the Index or Table of Contents to find what you're looking for quickly. Heaven forbid any piece of technology be complex enough to warrant a few pages of documentation, and an hour of time to understand its major functions!

      Then you go on to list 4 power management functions, which does not appear exhaustive. So we have 4+ ways of "almost but probably not" turning a phone off.

      And which part of "To turn the iPhone completely off" is unclear, pray tell?

      Finally, you point out that it is called a "sleep/wake" button and neither an "on/off" nor "power" button. With that sentence you are implying the users are dumb for thinking that button should turn off the phone.

      Yes, they are. Because the documentation for the device clearly states that pressing that simply pressing that button does NOT "turn off the phone." To "turn off the phone," you should follow the procedure labeled "to turn iPhone completely off".

      Yes, maybe he should have enabled "Airplane Mode" despite the obvious fact he was no where near a plane.

      If he had bothered, once again, to RTFM, then he would have s

    2. Re:Blame the User! by laffer1 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps airplane mode should have the following aliases:

      1. Boat mode
      2. Don't charge me mode
      3. I'm out of the country mode
      4. I can't RTFM mode
      5. I had $600 for a phone and now I bitch about roaming, please help me mode

      I think the iPhone needs a standby light like almost every other consumer device I've ever seen. My monitor, wii, vcr, tv, laptop, dvd player, and cd player have one. In my view Apple, AT&T and the customer are all at fault for the bill. Most people should realize that cell phone providers are going to screw them by now. There is something wrong with every company. T-mobile has poor coverage and bad security. (how many times can paris hilton get her phone data stolen) Sprint renews your contract without consent and charges high rates. Verizon lies to customers about coverage, how to cancel and various other things. I don't think I have to mention AT&T's issues.

    3. Re:Blame the User! by Alomex · · Score: 1

      And whose fault would you consider it?

      The designer's for sure. It is their job that one doesn't have to read a 50 page manual in order to avoid a $4200 bill on a phone that was never used and seemingly asleep.

      Think about it.

    4. Re:Blame the User! by Americano · · Score: 1

      The designer's for sure. It is their job that one doesn't have to read a 50 page manual in order to avoid a $4200 bill on a phone that was never used and seemingly asleep. Think about it.
      Thanks for the recommendation. I've thought about it, and I find that the idea of laying the blame at the feet of the designer is ill-conceived, and poorly executed... I hope you don't mind?

      Why is it that nobody even bats an eyelash when a one-trick device like a Whirlpool Clothes Dryer has a 21 page use & care manual? Improper setup & maintenance of that device could cause a lot more than $4800 worth of property damage, and even loss of life...

      And yet, it's completely unacceptable for the iPhone -- a computer, loaded with a significant payload of complex software, despite it's simple touchscreen interface -- to have a manual that's about 100 pages long, and for the user to be expected to at least peruse a couple sections of it in order to learn how to operate the device properly? Given the complex feature set, I think the designers have done a remarkable job of making those features easy to use. That does not, unfortunately, mean the device is foolproof, as Mr. Levy has so ably demonstrated.

      Think about it.
    5. Re:Blame the User! by Alomex · · Score: 1

      Why is it that nobody even bats an eyelash when a one-trick device like a Whirlpool Clothes Dryer has a 21 page use & care manual?

      Could it be that say, I've owned three different models and I've never had to look anything up?

      Giving a free pass to designers kept Linux a lot less usable than Windows for about a decade. Fortunately Ubuntuans eventually saw the light stopped blaming the user and finally provided a desktop that is consistent and easy to use. Apple has made a living out of it, though they seem to have goofed with this feature in the iPhone.

      Lastly, consumers get to choose how a product ought to behave. If designers do not meet the requirements then consumers will spend their money elsewhere. That is what made the iPhone so popular and the Zune a dud.

    6. Re:Blame the User! by Americano · · Score: 1

      Could it be that say, I've owned three different models and I've never had to look anything up?
      Clearly, Mr. Levy didn't feel he had to look anything up, either. And he owned three of the same model of iphone!

      Snarkiness aside, I understand the point you're making, but I just don't think it holds much water in this case. He went in and defined email accounts. He went in and turned on automatic mail checking. And now he's complaining that the device doesn't prevent him from using it *the way he's explicitly configured it to behave*? If you're not sure whether or not you'll incur international roaming charges, call AT&T support, or Apple Support, and ask. If you're really nervous about it, leave the damn phone at home, and get a pay-as-you-go package at your destination (Did he *really* need THREE "emergency call" iPhones on his cruise?). He had plenty of options, and plenty of information at his disposal, if only he had chosen to use it... I have trouble feeling much sympathy for him.

      And anyway, despite my lack of sympathy, you can bet that he'll be given a huge discount by AT&T on the amount he owes (perhaps the free pass he surely wants), simply due to the fact that this is making so much noise here on slashdot, and I'm sure in other online forums.
    7. Re:Blame the User! by Alomex · · Score: 1

      He went in and turned on automatic mail checking.

      But he also set the phone to "sleep mode". Now what do we have to guide us as to what "sleep" mode is? Laptops! Do they do *anything* while on sleep mode? no. So it was reasonable for him to expect that pressing sleep would deactivate the thing.

      I concur as well with the poster who said cell phones in general ought to have a "max X dollars" spending mode, but this is more of a request for a new feature than a design bug.

    8. Re:Blame the User! by Americano · · Score: 1

      But he also set the phone to "sleep mode".
      Technically, what he did was "lock the screen", using the "sleep/wake" button.

      Now what do we have to guide us as to what "sleep" mode is? Laptops! Do they do *anything* while on sleep mode? no. So it was reasonable for him to expect that pressing sleep would deactivate the thing.
      And if the iPhone *were* a Laptop, I would agree with you wholeheartedly! But, since the iPhone is not a laptop, perhaps it's reasonable to crack open the manual and understand just what happens when you press the sleep button? Again, from page 14 of the iPhone manual:

      When iPhone is locked, nothing happens if you touch the screen. You can still listen to music and adjust the volume, and use the button on the included stereo headset to play or pause a song, or answer or end a call. By default, if you don't touch the screen for a minute, iPhone locks automatically.
      Given that it's possible to press that sleep/wake button while you're using the ipod function, and the music keeps playing, is it *really* reasonable to expect that you've somehow powered off the device? Apple's design & engineering teams are good, no doubt, but even *their* electrical devices require a current.

      I concur as well with the poster who said cell phones in general ought to have a "max X dollars" spending mode, but this is more of a request for a new feature than a design bug.
      And if that's a feature you want, AT&T is willing to enable spending limits on your account. It costs $4.99 a month, and is offered to prevent an "unexpected" bill because your two teenagers didn't realize that text messaging all their friends constantly and downloading 500 ringtones apiece actually had a price associated with it. It can be put in place for sms, content access, downloads, talk time, and some other limits as well, I believe. Once the phone hits that monthly limit, the feature is disabled, insofar as it does not affect emergency (911) calls, or calls to/from an "allowed" list of numbers (e.g., "You can call & be called by mom & dad, but not all your friends.") Is the $4.99 fee a bit over the top? Absolutely. Is the feature available? You bet.
  125. many smartphones do exactly that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    and avoiding the inevitably annoying conversation with an insufficiently knowledgable customer when the first month's bill arrives with huge data charges is the main reason cell companies like verizon won't let you activate a smartphone unless you also subscribe to some sort of data plan that doesn't charge you for every data transmission.

  126. PEBKAC by fatlaces · · Score: 1

    I mean I'm sure you nerdlings are too smart to let this happen, right? This guy was just too lazy to look at the manual, and the moron is complaining. He's probably one of those guys that wonders why is car windows fog up, when the heat is on on a rainy day and the unit is turned to recirculate.

  127. How about a roaming warning? by jcouvret · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't it be easy for the phone to tell you that you are roaming and that data functionality will be disabled until you are no longer roaming? I drive to Canada on occasion and still make and receive calls. I wouldn't want to have to worry about my phone racking up roaming charges just because I want to leave it on to potentially receive calls.

  128. "Airplane Mode" == radio off by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    To turn the radio off one goes to the settings panel and toggles the Airplane Mode. It's the very first setting on that screen.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  129. RTFM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many of you crying that the user should RTFM actually even RTFA?

  130. RTFM! by rizzo320 · · Score: 1

    RTFM! (See page 14).

  131. Disable Data Roaming??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't the iPhone allow you to turn off the data when roaming? My Sidekick 2/3 both had options to turn off data while roaming, to avoid charges like these. When roaming is turned off, email/web surfing is only available on T-Mobile's network.

  132. stay off everything that starts with a letter "i". by soccer_Dude88888 · · Score: 0

    iphone, ipod, ibook, iraq, iran .....

  133. Windows Mobile 6 warns in this situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use a T-mobile dash (a windows mobile 'smartphone' edition phone). When I recently travelled to Canada, a dialog popped up warning me that I was now roaming, and that I had set my email to download automatically in the background, and did I *really* want to do this? Apple should just make this same check (for background data tasks) when it detects the user is going roaming.

    In general, WMobile is the bane of my existence (phantom wake-up alarms, frequent lockups,...) but in this case it seems they did the right thing.

  134. I had a similar situation in the Bahamas by Actual+Reality · · Score: 1

    We went to the Bahamas a few years back. Being a Consultant, I wanted to know who all had called so I left my phone on, even though I never answered it. I got hi with a huge bill the next month because every call that came in got an international charge, then it got forwarded to my voicemail which incurred another international charge. To top this off, free roaming was only in the continental US so I got hit for this too. The phone company (Cingular at the time) did actually reduce the amount, but it was an eye opener.

    ~AR

  135. iPhone off with touchscreen? by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1
    Someone please correct / enlighten me, but how can the phone *ever* truely be OFF when it requires interaction on its touchsceen to turn it on again?

    In addition, it's unclear from TFA whether the phones were "off" or in standby. Has any checked if auto email checking continues when the phone is actually "off" and/or in standby?

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:iPhone off with touchscreen? by frdmfghtr · · Score: 2, Informative

      Someone please correct / enlighten me, but how can the phone *ever* truely be OFF when it requires interaction on its touchsceen to turn it on again?
      When the iPhone is off, you don't interact with the touch screen to turn it on. You have to press the sleep/wake button for several seconds (not just a quick tap and release) to turn it on again.
      --
      Government's idea of a balanced budget: take money from the right pocket to balance...oh who am I kidding?
  136. zune phone by dontspitconfetti · · Score: 1

    I bet the Zune phone (or "Zone" as I would imagine it'd be called) won't do this.

  137. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by reidconti · · Score: 3, Informative

    You still don't get it. I am happy for you that you seem to love bashing the iPhone and other overly complicated pieces of phone technology, but the "sleep mode" people speak of here is a red herring. The iPhone is like any other phone -- either on, or off. When I stop using my iphone, the display goes black to save battery. That's what people here are calling "standby." I don't know a single phone that doesn't power down its display to save battery.

    These people were idiots, but hopefully AT&T makes things right-- that overcharge is just absurd.

    The *only* difference is that the iPhone has no visible indicator of being on when the screen is black.

    However, these people didn't even try to turn their phones off. They simply set them down and assumed that a darkened screen meant it was off.

  138. AT&T bills by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm getting bills from AT&T, and I do not have their services! I have never contracted with them, verbally nor in writing. I have called them repeatedly (get Indian reps.) and told them I don't have their services, and please look and see there are no calls logged, just a bunch (and I mean a BUNCH) of fees, and they apologize, then next month, another bill!

    I'm in the US, and I have friends from other countries who for years have complained that the dollar rules the US society, and I'm beginning to see how true that is. It is a horrible runaway mess, and because dollars get people elected, how can it ever be corrected?

    When will individuals ever have more clout, power, importance in our so called "society"???

    (the image word for this post is "thwarted"- how appropriate!)

  139. Hrmm by lluBdeR · · Score: 1

    Where's the story here?
    Someone turns on the "always check my email feature" (which defaults to off, as with every other data using cellular appliance), didn't actually turn the phone off, then complained when their standing by phone did exactly what they'd set it to do. You are the weakest link, good bye.

    On a side note, does anybody else think Slashdot's going downhill? More and more I'm finding TFAs are nothing more than a half page write up with as much concrete information as a modern election campaign. Even worse when they're a blog entry and you have to follow a link there to actually get somewhere. What gives??!?

  140. I think E.T. said it best.. by StringBlade · · Score: 1

    AT&T, phone home.

    Yes, that was uncalled for.

    --
    ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
  141. Westinghouse TVs have low-power standby option by raygundan · · Score: 1

    This slightly tangent to your point, but unlike most companies, Westinghouse televisions have a user-configurable standby mode. You can choose the default instant-on mode, or a lower power standby that takes about 12 seconds to start up, since it's actually booting instead of constantly using extra power to maintain the state of the RAM. The instant-on mode uses 11W when it's "off," and the low-power mode uses 2W when it's "off". It was an easy setting to change via onscreen menus, and it's nice to have the choice.

  142. Three Solutions: by Upaut · · Score: 1

    A.) Remove the SIM card and place it in a safe place.

    B.) Switch the iPhone to "Airplane mode", and if you don't wish to read the pamphlet telling you how to do this, simple go to "Settings" (which looks like three gray gears), And by the picture of an airplane done in orange with a black/gray transitioning background with "AIRPLANE MODE" written to the right. It will be in the "off" position. Click on it, and the word "ON" will apear, written in white on an orange/yellow transitioning background. And a little picture of an orange airplane will apear in the upper lefthand corner of the iphone, to the left of the time box. Your iPhone is now not broadcasting or accepting any wireless signals. When you are back in the states, switch it back into the "Off" postion to use it as a phone again.

    C.) Throw iPhone over the side of the boat and use your savings to buy a new iPhone.

    --
    3 degrees of separation from Vladimir Putin
  143. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by ryanov · · Score: 1

    How do you turn off your phone? Run us through the steps. I suspect it is nearly identical, and requires you to press a button for a couple of seconds -- would that be correct? Walk us through it.

  144. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by reidconti · · Score: 1

    There is no label. I think it is considered the sleep/wake button (per the manual), but that is deceiving. Nobody really "sleeps" their phone. All it does is turn the screen off/lock the phone, just like the feature on many other phones. I don't know how the hell they thought it was a power button. I tap it before i drop my phone in my pocket so I know nothing weird will happen (inadvertant calls, etc.. though it is probably impossible since the proximity sensor near the earpiece would disable the controls when its in my pocket..)

  145. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The *only* difference is that the iPhone has no visible indicator of being on when the screen is black.

    Well, that and the fact that with the iPhone you can apparently be racking up thousands of dollars of charges while your phone is visually indistinguishable from being switched off. According to the source material cited, the only way you'd know that is if you read small print that runs to nearly 7,000 words, since the summary of the plan features doesn't indicate it.

    However, these people didn't even try to turn their phones off. They simply set them down and assumed that a darkened screen meant it was off.

    Where does it say that in TFA or any of the stories from other sources linked from it?

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  146. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, it does require a button to be held. But on my phone, if it's on, you can clearly see this from the time display on the LCD and the "on" light flashing every couple of seconds, and when you turn it off, you get a clear indication both audibly and from the screens and lights going off.

    The usability problem here isn't requiring the user to switch a phone off, it's the fact that there is apparently no way to distinguish whether the phone is currently off or just in stand-by mode, unless you do something that would bring it out of stand-by or someone happens to call you. That and the fact that this phone's "stand-by" mode isn't really standing by at all, because it's doing very significant, very expensive things in the background.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  147. It's the difference between Push and Pull by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The other mobile devices use a style of email called Push. The Internet protocols, including IMAP and POP3, are a different style called Pull.

    Pull is not necessarily a bad thing, provided that it is used as intended. Pull has some definite advantages. The problem comes in when Pull is (ab)used to act like Push, by having the mobile device continuously poll. Even worse is to download content that the user never wanted downloaded. The whole point of IMAP is selective download with the user being part of the selection process.

    Blackberry is a Push based process, and (unlike Internet) email it does not do huge content.

    iPhone imitates the user experience of Blackberry's Push with Internet email, without any adjustment for the realities of mobile devices. That works only when you have lots of free bandwidth.

    The IETF LEMONADE working group, mobile device manufacturers, and mobile phone service companies, have spent considerable effort at defining procedures for using IETF protocols with mobile devices. Critical to this is a mechanism called notification, which in effect is a Push that tells the mobile device to Pull. Done right, it combines the benefit of both strategies.

    iPhone doesn't use any of that. Apple thinks that it knows better than anyone else.

    1. Re:It's the difference between Push and Pull by johkir · · Score: 1

      I have to think that some of the restrictions imposed by DRM and security concerns forced Apple to create a new protocol. By including iTunes, they also need to protect all that media from unwanted 'eavesdropping' and the like.

      --
      These are some of the things molecules do...... given 4 billion years -Carl Sagan
    2. Re:It's the difference between Push and Pull by devilspgd · · Score: 1

      IMAP supports push, via the "IDLE" command.

      --
      Give a man a fish, he'll eat for a day, but teach a man to phish...
    3. Re:It's the difference between Push and Pull by EdelFactor19 · · Score: 1

      Its sad when the best comment I've read all year is by AC so i can't become a fan :-(
      what if we allowed comments on modded discussions if we flagged the person as someone who moderated, and they dont moderate their post or one that is a first or 2nd degree response to it? sorta like how posters at motley fool and the like have to post their holdings when they make a reccomendation.

      because this guy nailed it...

      on a side note its probably also because blackberry is actual designed for business use, where as the iphone is designed as a CONSUMER product not a BUSINESS product. its not meant to be drudged around to other companies on business trips its a luxury phone for the mainland. thats why they dont have business plans set up for it like they do with blackberrys

      --
      "Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny" ~Frank Zappa
      EdelFactor
    4. Re:It's the difference between Push and Pull by fredmosby · · Score: 1

      The iPhone supports push e-mail, you just have to use an e-mail account that supports push email.

  148. Oh? You want to replace EVERYTHING? by DoctorNathaniel · · Score: 1

    I'm no medic, or medical technician, but I'm willing to bet that most EEG machines in the US were not purchased in the last five years, and at least a quarter of them are more than 10 years old.

    Even assuming that the cell-phone-hardened variety were no more expensive than the more straightforward type, and assuming that the hardened variety had no drawbacks or problems, it would STILL be prohibitively expensive to replace all the existing machines with the hardened variety.

    I'm sorry, but you're being unrealistic. Good engineering can give a solution to many problems, but not all.

  149. Don't believe it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I highly doubt they took their iPhones and had them off the entire time. Why the hell would you bring them if you were going to have them off the entire trip? Doesn't sound believable to me. I am sure they had used the phones regardless of what they claim.

    Not to say that the bill was unreal though.

  150. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by T-Bone-T · · Score: 1

    Actually, my phone currently looks like it is off even though it isn't. The only way to tell is by pushing buttons. The type of screen it has goes completely black when it isn't on and there aren't any flashing lights.

  151. Tipical of american design... by afd8856 · · Score: 1

    ... never to think of what happens outside their country. Example: most apps only get to support unicode or i18n only after a long time

    --
    I'll do the stupid thing first and then you shy people follow...
  152. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by stewbacca · · Score: 1, Insightful
    You just don't get it, do you? 99% of the people that have a phone don't want it to be off, otherwise, they'd not have the phone in the first place. 1% of the people have to turn their phone off for various job and security related purposes. These people have to go through a specific series of steps to turn their phones off, which is MORE than enough of an indication whether the phone is OFF or in standby mode. I don't need to know if my iPhone is off or in standby, because I know it isn't off, because I didn't go through the steps required to turn it off. I guess if I had a 5 second memory this would be an issue.



    The person in this article is guilty of not understanding how cell phones in general work and there is nothing to the story that the iPhone's allegedly poor UI is the culprit here. This is just more iFud spin that seems to be so popular with the insecure masses that can't stand the fact that Apple makes a lot of great products.

  153. Tag "idkmybffjill"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blame it on Jill

  154. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by RollingThunder · · Score: 1

    Er... Yes, actually. And so it has been with every mobile I've ever owned.
    Shut. Not shut off. As in "close your RAZR". It would be rather stupid if my clamshell-style phone turned off whenever I closed it.

  155. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by ryanov · · Score: 1

    First off, you don't have one -- neither do I -- I just know that the description of what people are apparently required to do to turn off that phone is the same as every other phone.

    As for indication of whether it's been turned off or not... even if there were no indication, the phone is off if I turned it off. If I didn't, logic dictates it's still on. If I did something and the phone never mentioned it was going off (pretty much every phone I've ever seen does some sort of goodbye dance, often playing an obnoxious tune), I'd have to assume it wasn't off.

  156. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by pdc · · Score: 1

    Well as a counterexample, I just pulled my Sony Ericson K700 out of my pocket and it has a blank screen and no blinking lights. It looks as though it were switch off. If I press any of the keys, the display lights up and thus I can tell it is switched on.

    I remember seeing phones that blinked to show they were still switched on but that was years ago. It was more important in the olden days when batteries would run out if you did not use your phone sparingly.

    I think a solution to the iPhone problem would be for the setting that controls how often to check for email to be split in to two: one for the home network and one for when roaming. The latter would be set to 'manual' by default. Switching this on would be a good time for it to display a warning about data charges.

  157. A mature response to the problem: by bondjamesbond · · Score: 0

    HA ha haaaaa. HHAAA ha hhhaaaa ha ha ha ha. WOO haaaa! Ha ha h a h a h a.... And furthermore: HHHHHAAAAAA.

  158. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Zcar · · Score: 1

    The *only* difference is that the iPhone has no visible indicator of being on when the screen is black. How is that different than any other cell phone out there? At the very least, with my current phone (a RIZR) standby is indistinguishable from off. And the RAZRs as well (ok, the LCD display is still on when in standby, but the backlight is off so one needs to really look to see it's in standby). One of those two cases also applies to every other cell phone I can think of.
  159. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by newgalactic · · Score: 1

    That doesn't surprise me, I haven't owned every phone ever made. I was just commenting on my personal experiences. And based upon my personal experience, I can understand how this design flaw (I will call it a flaw) could have caught the two people unaware. Off may be really "Off", but if there's no way to tell if an iPhone is "Off" or "Sleeping" at first glance, then it's a UI design flaw. Especially if that flaw results in a $4800 dollar bill. Now, whether or not Apple/AT&T should have to pay, or if these two people are liars/stupid, that's a separate discussion that I am not concerned with.

  160. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    Where does it say that in TFA or any of the stories from other sources linked from it?

    It's the only possible scenario since when you actually power the phone off, it's completely off.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  161. This is why I'll never have an acc with AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to be with AT&T but the roaming out of state was insane. They'd charge for roaming AND charge for long distance from your home state when you made a local call. It was bullshit. You could be standing next to someone with an AT&T phone making the exact same call on the same network but if your home address was different they'd screw you on charges.

  162. Re:International Roaming Charges by TedTodorov · · Score: 1

    That second or two of airtime cost me $3.00 on my bill.
    Who is your carrier?!?

    T-Mobile (with whose phones I have travelled quite a bit), charges $1 per minute in most of Europe. AT&T says they charge $1.29 per minute.

    The problem with the iPhone is there has to be a way to turn off EDGE without turning off voice and WiFi. Apple, please fix this!

  163. Phones don't cause dangerous interference... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or Doctors wouldn't be allowed to have their cellphones, pagers and blackberries, and hospital security wouldn't be able to use their two way radios.

  164. In Corporate America... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you say off, you turn me on;-)

  165. Just like my journal article by bugnuts · · Score: 1

    I submitted a journal article for the same thing, and will be contesting the bill. Fortunately, that one was only $500, not 10x that. I was hoping to prevent this from happening to someone else, and considered submitting an "Ask Slashdot" about it.

    The biggest issue is the fact that, although you can disable the radio completely, you cannot use wifi or bluetooth (both local, non-roaming) if you do so. There is no setting for "Never Roam" without losing functionality unrelated to roaming.

    Very annoying indeed!

  166. Push vs. Pull ignores web browsing by pohl · · Score: 1

    Your observation has some validity, but it completely ignores the effect of an actual useable web browser on this class of device. I'm one of the customers who got a huge bill (in terms of pages) from AT&T, and it wasn't because of pull email -- it was because I actually spent a lot of time using the web browser. My email wasn't even configured for the first couple of weeks, and thereafter it was only set to fetch manually. Moreover, I rarely checked it. the "DATA" entries on my bill, I can assure you, were all Safari hits. If other devices in this class had been offering as good a web experience, AT&T would have discovered the issue in their billing system long before the release of the iPhone.

    --

    The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

    1. Re:Push vs. Pull ignores web browsing by tha_mink · · Score: 1

      Your observation has some validity, but it completely ignores the effect of an actual useable web browser on this class of device. I'm one of the customers who got a huge bill (in terms of pages) from AT&T, and it wasn't because of pull email -- it was because I actually spent a lot of time using the web browser. My email wasn't even configured for the first couple of weeks, and thereafter it was only set to fetch manually. Moreover, I rarely checked it. the "DATA" entries on my bill, I can assure you, were all Safari hits. If other devices in this class had been offering as good a web experience, AT&T would have discovered the issue in their billing system long before the release of the iPhone. Perhaps, but the article is about what the phone is doing while you're not paying attention or while you think it's off. Your safari hits are completely not relevant in the discussion. So...you used Safari and got a large (pages) bill. Good for you, what's the point?
      --
      You'll have that sometimes...
    2. Re:Push vs. Pull ignores web browsing by pohl · · Score: 1

      You must be reading my post out of context. Climb up the parent references for context. The post I was replying to was attempting to invalidate an observation made by the grandparent (that AT&T's billing blunders may indicate unexpected successes of iPhone design.) The context is here for you if you're willing to read and focus.

      --

      The "cue the foo posts in 3, 2, 1..." posts will commence with no subsequent foo posts in 3, 2, 1...

  167. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A, select, start...for those of us with friends.

  168. push email probably won't solve this problem by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1
    You've omitted a few important considerations.
    1. iPhone isn't the only phone to support traditional IMAP and POP3 using a polling or "pull" protocols to fetch the email. This is a useful feature. Some people want support for these because their email server (which they may not control) doesn't support a more modern mobile-friendly protocol like Push IMAP or Lemonade, yet. These people shouldn't be punished by a $4800 dollar phone bill. The rates are insane. The billing policies are screwed up. The phone software should warn you somehow. There are several contributing factors to this problem, but really, push vs. pull email isn't the biggest one.

    2. Also, iPhone supports a push email service, although it is only offered through Yahoo email at present, and is believed to be a proprietary protocol rather than the somewhat open P-IMAP or fully open Lemonade. (iPhone users should all start bugging Apple to expand their support for Lemonade and P-IMAP, both. It's curious that Apple's own .Mac service doesn't even offer push email.)

    3. For users who get $4800 worth of email while roaming, push email won't solve this problem anyway. They'll just get billed for lots of emails pushed to their gadget when they come in, rather than pulled from the server by the gadget at regular polling intervals. Maybe the bill would be slightly reduced, but maybe not. Email trickles in all day long. Would he really have been that much happier with a $3000 phone bill? Or even a $1000 phone phone bill? I doubt it.
    The really sad part is that a lot of that expensive email bill is probably for spam. I wonder if phone companies (who also happen to be major ISPs) are not very aggressive about stopping spam spewing botnets because they generate a revenue stream for the telco when we all have to pay to download spam (at least that remainder spam that leaks through several layers of filtering) to our mobile devices.
    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:push email probably won't solve this problem by antek9 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nobody said they got 4800$ worth of emails. The bill would likely be within the same range if the users only received three emails all in all during that time. The traffic that caused the excessive billing was the iPhones' polling the mail servers 24/7. The roaming services likely charged something like 50 cents per connection, plus some per kilobyte rate. Let's say the iPhone polls once every 5 minutes. That adds up to (for 3 iPhones) 1.50$ twelve times an hour, or 18$/h. Which already puts it at >3000$ a week, so I overestimated my numbers. On the other hand, 25 cents per data exchange doesn't sound awfully expensive if it's from overseas, I figure.

      Conclusion: The numbers do even more suggest that AT&T and Apple are at fault for not taking roaming costs into account. Considering the mobility people enjoy nowadays, even Apple users, this is just pure ignorance, plain and simple. You don't need more than a small IF or CASE statement that goes something like: IF (network.id="AT$T") THEN poll() ELSE idle(); to prevent this mess from happening.

      --
      A World in a Grain of Sand / Heaven in a Wild Flower,
      Infinity in the Palm of your Hand / And Eternity in an Hour.
    2. Re:push email probably won't solve this problem by mhbtr · · Score: 1

      The most frequently the iPhone can poll is every 15 minutes. I believe the default was set at 30 minutes. You can set it to manual which means it will not check until you go into the email - other than Yahoo, which is push.
      A way to get around the Connections to Edge but still use the Wifi is to pull out the Sim Card.

      I'm sorry, but anyone going abroad with a phone ON and not checking their plan BEFORE they do it is pretty damn stupid. This is not the 1st phone this kind of stuff happened with, and will certainly not be the last - the thing is, Apple is on top of their game these days so they tend to get all the silly press. 300 page bills are over (AT&T texted all their customers that the bills are now not going to disclose detail like that) and the going abroad thing is no different than ANY other smart phone, as long as you don't replace the sim or take it out when you go abroad.

    3. Re:push email probably won't solve this problem by Bastard+of+Subhumani · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but anyone going abroad with a phone ON and not checking their plan BEFORE they do it is pretty damn stupid.
      Not as stupid as someone who designs something that pretends to be off and isn't - probably because it wouldn't look nice if you had two buttons.
      --
      Only three things are certain; death, taxes, and apocryphal quotations - Ben Franklin.
    4. Re:push email probably won't solve this problem by mhbtr · · Score: 1

      But that, again, presupposes that it is "pretending" to be off....
      When in sleep mode, pressing any of the TWO button (and there are 2 - home, sleep) will wake the phone and allow you to unlock it - JUST like any other phone where hitting a key wakes it from a black screen (well, that is exactly how my last 3 phones worked anyway - just they had more buttons). Turning on a phone that has been turned off requires you to hold the sleep/wake/ON button for a few seconds.... and then you get an Apple logo as the phone boots. Those are OBVIOUS differences.

      Again, there is no "pretending," and as I said elsewhere, you buy a $600 phone, at least read the 10 pages of "important information" included. People need to stop abdicating responsibility for their own actions so much...

  169. not so easily filtered by Crispy+Critters · · Score: 2, Informative
    "That one watt of output is in the gigahertz range, and is easily filtered"

    It is not as easily filtered as you might think. Semiconductors have a tendency to rectify very high frequency signals, converting them into low frequency signals. Even discrete components can have problems, because you only need a tiny stray capacitance to get significant coupling at those frequencies. (Look at some numbers - a low stray capacitance is in the pF range, so what is 1/(2pi f C) for f of a few GHz?) It is easy to be stung by resonances unless you have a careful cascade of filters optimized for different frequency ranges.

  170. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's the only possible scenario since when you actually power the phone off, it's completely off.

    Unfortunately, that isn't true. Another possible scenario is that the users (if you follow the article links, quite a few people have now been had by this one) did something they thought would switch off their phones, but in fact didn't, and then they couldn't tell the difference. And as I've said throughout this discussion, the latter is a serious usability flaw, given the potential consequences of the mistake.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  171. Update's email when it's off by Cafe+Alpha · · Score: 1

    ...the result of the blackberry patent. I'll bet the iphone polls for email because pushing email would violate the blackberry patent.

  172. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by PygmySurfer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Off may be really "Off", but if there's no way to tell if an iPhone is "Off" or "Sleeping" at first glance, then it's a UI design flaw.

    There is, it's called pushing the Sleep/Wake button. Just like on my Sony Ericsson W810i, I have to push a key (any key) to see if it's on - when the display sleeps, its indistinguishable from being off. Of course, I know it's on, because I didn't turn it off! If this is a design flaw, practically every cell phone out there is flawed.

  173. The iPhone-omatic by SevenHands · · Score: 1

    WOW! That's great iPhone!

  174. Huge bill is design flaw..batts are solderd in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those folks were horse fukked from the git go. iPhrones batteries are soldered in and not removable. The cases are not even openable from what one person said. This is the way apple wants it so that the 'customers'(suckers) can be tracked like long range RFID's. Buy some more
    of this suckerware, fools!!!

  175. What does "off" mean anymore, anyway? by jonadab · · Score: 1

    I guess I'm an old coot, because I still remember fondly the days when saying that a device was "off" meant that it was not on.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  176. apple blows. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ha, ha. apple sucks!

  177. Lots of talk on this one.. by Rexdude · · Score: 1

    The whole issue seems to be about the phone 'appearing' to be switched off while not actually being so. I think the simplest solution would be (for the next version of the iPhone of course) to have some kind of standby LED on the side (if it may not be possible to put it on the top surface) that blinks periodically to show that the phone is still active.(I've already mentioned this in another post here) It's already established that in standby mode it will connect to the network to sync mail or whatever, so atleast people will know that that's what's happening.

    --
    "..One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them, and in the darkness BIND them."
  178. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by penguinboy · · Score: 1

    Automatic email checking isn't the default on the iPhone. The user has to specifically enable it.

  179. More Apple Junk- by barbam · · Score: 0

    Anyone who knows anything knows that the iPhone is junk -- This type of crappy behavior should be expected. Come on, it is an Apple product --- did you expect it to be useful?

  180. Re:I would mod you down, but used my last mod poin by toQDuj · · Score: 1

    My poorly worded comment was centralized around the concept that you would not bring a phone and always leave it off. An iPhone is nothing without power.

    --
    Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
  181. Using an iPhone abroad as an iPod? by OgGreeb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since the iPhone is a converged phone, media player, picture viewer, etc... I can easily
    see many people wanting to use the gadget out of the US for the other purposes without
    expecting to run up a huge data bill. Otherwise, why would the poster have taken their iPhones with them, but not using them...

    This is a serious hole in the procedures that needs to be highlighted far and wide before AT&T and Apple unreasonably extract megabucks.

    --
    -- Gary Goldberg KA3ZYW 301/249-6501 AIM:OgGreeb Digital Marketing Inc., Bowie, MD //www.digimark.net/
  182. Why all this debate? by Hitchcock_Blonde · · Score: 1

    The answer is simple: Read the freakin' manual!

    --
    Karma Schmarma
  183. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by newgalactic · · Score: 1

    Going from your Sony Ericsson to "practically every cell phone out there" is a pretty big leap. I've probably owned 5 or 6 cell phones in my life, not a large sample by anyone's comparison. But every one I've ever owned did have a visible indicator to differentiate between "Off" and "Sleep". As I've said before, I do believe that this is a MINOR UI flaw, one that won't keep me from buying an iPhones for my wife and I this Christmas. However, it is a flaw just the same, and it resulted in a $4500 dollar phone bill. That fact alone dictates that this flaw be taken seriously. I know that in my profession, if we cause a customer to spend $4500 dollars unnecessarily, we expect to hear from them rather quickly. And a bug fix will be assigned with the highest importance, and that is no exaggeration. In our bug reporting system, customer complaints are assigned the Highest Priority. This is standard operation in most companies I've worked for, and Apple and AT&T better damn well acknowledge it.

  184. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by eric76 · · Score: 1

    I don't know a single phone that doesn't power down its display to save battery.

    Mine doesn't.

    I just leave it on a charger nearly all the time. I only take it with me when travelling.

    I hate telephones, anyway. If the battery runs down, that's a plus as far as I'm concerned.

  185. why did'nt they take the battery out by drewsup · · Score: 0

    Hmmm..., why did'nt they just take the battery out, oh wait, DOH!

  186. Re:It's really funny to see Americans suffering .. by bitserf · · Score: 1

    Charging insane rates for roaming is hardly something unique to American phone companies.
    My phone company happily does the same (Vodafone).

    I think its in the "How to be a Telecoms Carrier" manual, under "Profit, Sweet Profit".

  187. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    People know they have to press something to really turn "off" a phone, as per every other phone ever made

    I see the mac fanboyz are in overdrive trying to justify a deficiency in the iPhone. Hopefully I can give these poor ignorant souls some much-needed clue:

    • Clue #1: Not all phones have a sleep mode indistinguishable from being turned off. Case in point: My two-year-old Nokia 6010. When it is on, the screen shows something. When the screen is in "sleep" mode, the display shows the time in large digits.
    • Clue #2: There is a difference between the user interface of a flip phone where, when you flip the phone closed, it's obvious that the phone is still turned on, and the iPhone, where, if you hit the power button, a user expects the thing to turn, well off.
  188. but it wasn't off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there's one small problem with this whole thing: the phone wasn't off. standby != off.

    and yes, off means off, when you hold the power button and perform the "slide to power off" action.

    not to mention: they had to turn *on* autochecking of mail (off by default).

    fucking dumbass, he deserves it.

  189. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know a single phone that doesn't power down its display to save battery.

    Get yourself a decent phone. I mean, really.

    See if you can find an old Nokia 6385. When it's on standby, it shows a screen saver. And the battery is good for at least a week in this mode.

    And it doesn't close. Whatever fashion guru decided that cellphones need to flip open, 'cuz that's the way Kirk's communicator worked, needs shooting.
  190. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by petermgreen · · Score: 1

    yes they require you to hold it but at least the ones I have used light up when you press the power button and don't go dark until you have held it long enough to really turn them off. If the iphone goes dark on a quick press of the power button and I hadn't read the manual I would probablly assume it was off.

    --
    note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  191. CDMA FTW? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like a problem with the antiquated GSM. CDMA is designed to let the phone talk to many cells at once without a problem; you'll just appear as a faint blip of background noise moving at 300 MPH.

    1. Re:CDMA FTW? by Soruk · · Score: 1

      If the iPhone were a CDMA device, it would be fair to say that there would be no story here, the user would not have run up any roaming bill at all from Europe.

      --
      -- Soruk
    2. Re:CDMA FTW? by Guy+Harris · · Score: 1

      If the iPhone were a CDMA device, it would be fair to say that there would be no story here, the user would not have run up any roaming bill at all from Europe.

      Unless it were a WCDMA device. (Whose bright idea was it to use "TDMA" to mean both "Time Division Multiple Access" and "IS-54 and IS-136", and to use "CDMA" to mean both "Code Division Multiple Access" and "IS-95 and CDMA2000"?)

  192. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    There is only one way to switch off the phone, that method confirms that you have switched off the phone. The only other action they could have taken would have put the phone to sleep, and it would be the same method that they use every day to put the phone to sleep. Ask yourself if you would assume that the action you normaly take to do one thing, would do something completely different just because you were leaving the country?

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  193. $15 per MB by grouchyman · · Score: 1

    Just received my bill and I have a $93.42 charge for using 6,228 KB of ROAM GPRS for being in Toronto for a night.

  194. not a troll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...just because you don't agree.

  195. !News by mux2000 · · Score: 1

    The iPhone is cute and all, but isn't it about time we let the thing go? I mean, if it were any other phone (and this can happen with any smart phone), this wouldn't have even been reported anywhere. These days slashdot looks like somebody did 'grep iphone' on the entire internet.

  196. Re:Uhhhh by CRC'99 · · Score: 1

    But the guy was on a cruise BOAT.

    I think it was more likely the failboat.

    --
    Sendmail is like emacs: A nice operating system, but missing an editor and a MTA.
  197. Auto mail check does not download entire messages by Azureflare · · Score: 1

    I've had an iPhone from the day after release. This story sounds like the customers are lying through their teeth. For one, automatic email check is off by default. The main point that I would like to make is that the automatic email check does NOT DOWNLOAD THE ENTIRE MAIL MESSAGE!

    The iPhone simply checks the mail server and determines if there is new mail. I think it also downloads the email headers. But it does NOT download email attachments unless you actually open it! This goes for IMAP as well as POP (I have .mac and gmail on my iphone). There is NO WAY these guys could have racked up that amount of usage without actually going into the mail app and reading their mail. This smells like a fishy story to me. Sounds like they are trying to make excuses for actually reading their email overseas.

    If I'm wrong about this, please let me know... But that's what I have observed with my phone. Unless I actually open the Mail app on the bar, it does not attempt to download entire new messages.

    However, I do think it is false advertising that "unlimited" internet access isn't really unlimited if you're not in an approved region. One thing that would be nice is if the iPhone gave a warning if you were roaming, or some kind of indicator to that effect.

  198. How did he get there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    surely to arrive in Europe from the US one probably goes by air, at which point one should power down one's phone........... the dark screen issue betraying the device's status would have been mitigated if he had followed safety protocol....

  199. impossible. by Poorcku · · Score: 1

    European Carriers warn you when changing networks through an SMS: "Welcome to A1 Austria,...blah blah"; Welcome to 02 network Germany....". So if he was warned, though the Iphone was on, and he didn't get the sms - it is Apples design fault; simple as that.

    --
    I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
  200. Amazing battery life by MillenneumMan · · Score: 1

    I find it hard to believe that they didn't plug their phones into a charger during that week. Cruise ships generally are not that far from shore, and they spend a lot of their daylight hours in port, but still...I would have expected the batteries to run down during the course of the week since the phones were on.

  201. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Poorcku · · Score: 1

    again, i am saying again!: carriers warn you (in europe) when entering their network. if the guy did not receive a sms, the phone was off. if he received it and the phone was on standby and still not announced it, apple has an issue to resolve.

    --
    I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
  202. Apple & AT&T: Fleecing Our Customers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Talk about Apple and AT&T Fleecing its customers ... I smell another class action lawsuit against AT&T and Apple.

  203. Name them by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I would love for you to be able to name five or six phones that had indicator lights. My RAZR, my Ericsson, and whatever Motorola flip-phone I had before that, along with a few different ultra-cheap Virgin Mobile handsets, AND a cheap Nokia I bought abroad a few years ago to use in the UK - none of them have had an indicator.

    I'm sure perhaps you may have had a phone once that had such an indicator but I have a hard time believing it's been five or six.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Name them by newgalactic · · Score: 1

      Your absolutely lying. The RAZR by default is set to have the external displays BACKLIGHT turn off after periods of inactivity. But, the display is still visible in direct light. It is an option to then configure the external display to go completely out after a period of inactivity, for optimal battery life. If you don't call the external display with date and time an indicator, I'm not sure what else your looking for. + I don't have every cell phone I've ever owned logged down, nor do I have their model numbers memorized. To expect me to recite them back to you is ridiculous. But seeing that you yourself are a liar, I can see how you would have trouble with this. ...and I can tell you that none of the phones that I owned, of which you can't believe any of them had a power indicator, ever cost me a $4800 dollar phone bill. Here's a copy of the RAZR v3 users manual if your uncertain of its features: http://www.motorola.com/mdirect/manuals/v3_manual9491A47O.pdf

    2. Re:Name them by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Ok, now that you mention it there is an LCD on the back that is on that I had forgotten all about. I forgot about it because I hardly ever used the rear LCD - since it is not lit it's hard to read anyway, and also since it's not lit it makes for a pretty terrible indicator that the phone is on or not. In every case that I ran out of battery power, the way I found out was by opening up the case and seeing no screen - not from the LCD.

      My point still stands though that when I shut the RAZR, the phone does not turn off. At no point did I ever think the phone was off, and that to turn the phone off I had to press a button down for a while - just like the iPhone, there simply is no chance for confusion about your phone being off or not.

      I have proven I am not a liar, but since you have an unreliable memory and cannot come up with a good example I guess we can conclude you simply have no idea what you are talking about.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    3. Re:Name them by tkinnun0 · · Score: 1

      Here's several phones and their indicators in stand-by mode:

      Motorola V220: has a small screen on the cover which stays on.
      Samsung SGH E730: has a small screen on the cover which stays on.
      Siemens S65: shows a clock on the screen.
      Nokia E50, E61, 7650, 3100, etc: shows date and/or time on screen.

  204. Re:iphones by detect · · Score: 1

    You really have to question the usability of the device if a user needs to read the manual to learn how to turn the phone off.

    --
    // The fastest Alt-Tab in the West
  205. The mistake you made by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    "When you shut your phone, does it turn off?"

    Er... Yes, actually. And so it has been with every mobile I've ever owned.


    Name one. For you see, I've owned a number of different cheap Virgin Mobile handsets, including a flip phone. And a RAZR, and an Ericsson, and some Motorola flip phone, and a Nokia. None of them operate as you describe, they require fairly long button presses to turn off and the simple act of ceasing to use them or shutting a clamshell has not ever turned them off (well, eventually loss of power will turn them off).

    What I suspect here is you made the same mistake the guy in the article did, you thought your phone was off when it wasn't. Didn't you wonder why your batteries kept running down with the phone "off'?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:The mistake you made by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      You've completely lost the plot.

      As I wrote several posts ago, the usability problem is not that you need to turn the phone off by holding the button down. The problem is firstly that the phone in stand-by is visually indistinguishable from the phone actually switched off, and secondly that "stand-by" on this phone does way more than stand-by on most phones.

      If you can't understand the difference between that and what you're describing (which the rest of us all acknowledged several hours ago) then please go read all the relevant posts by me and others before responding. They're even modded up for you to make them easy to see.

      And no, I've never made that mistake, nor would I since my phone clearly distinguishes between its on and off states. Why does a certain type of person always assume an ulterior motive or inherent bias on the part of anyone with a different perspective to their own?

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    2. Re:The mistake you made by SuperKendall · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You've completely lost the plot.

      You should try reading the parent again.

      And you are also mistaken about usablity. The iPhone is just as easy to check by holding down home - easier in fact to check than the RAZR was, even with the front LCD, because you see the whole screen light up. But again, the point is that usability wise inidcators as to the phone being active are irrelevant since you know if you've turned it on or off, very concious choices.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  206. Aha by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Yes, it does require a button to be held.

    In other words, just like the iPhone. Case closed.

    As I said, the iPhone works like every other phone. Standby is not off. Everyone knows this, at least anyone who has used a cell phone - even one like yours.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  207. AT&T has a number you can call by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    AT&T has a number you can call to disable EDGE use (for any phone). That way you can still use it for calls, or browse on WiFi and not have to worry about incurring EDGE fees.

    Sorry, don't know it offhand.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  208. Nope! No caps and you're still responsible. by IonOtter · · Score: 1

    See, this is why you NEVER call those phone numbers in the Caribbean.

    Your local exchange carrier (LEC) can cap your bill once it reaches a certain amount, at which point they'll try to contact you. If they can't contact you, they'll shut off your service, except for 911 and operator calls. This is how things work within the continental US and MOST of it's territories.

    But once you leave the US and enter the the territory of another country's LEC, you're now subject to THEIR pricing structure. By making the call to that area, you are voluntarily connecting to and agreeing to their rules and regulations, and your LEC no longer has any say in the matter.

    If those R&R's say that connections to a certain number cost $95.00 a minute, then you are S.O.L. That company is going to submit your bill to your LEC, and you will have to pay it.

    It's even worse for cellphones. Connecting to the local network means you agree to their R&R's, and that includes their pricing. A regular phone call might not cost you too much? Maybe $2.99 a minute. But data calls are going to rape you sideways with a spiked 2x4, depending on your carrier and connection method.

    Bottom line? This person is S.O.L.

    --
    [End Of Line]
  209. Re:Try turning it off instead of sleeping the disp by Hamilton+Lovecraft · · Score: 0

    Yes, the phone still rings if it's sleeping. If you're expecting something else, then you're thinking about four power modes: Off, Standby (non-functional but able to instantly wake up), Sleep (black screen, not accepting touch screen input, but receiving phone calls), and On. This would be even more confusing than the apparently-too-confusing three modes the iPhone has.

    --
    step 3: god dammit, it doesn't work
  210. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Len · · Score: 1

    I don't know a single phone that doesn't power down its display to save battery.

    Nokia 5300. There, now you know one.

    When my phone is in standby mode, it displays the date, time and a status icon, with no backlight. And it's got an "Off" button. When I press that, it turns the phone off.

  211. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by ucla74 · · Score: 1

    Maybe the iPhone needs a flashing message on the screen that says "YOUR iPHONE IS OFF. PRESS # TO TURN ON YOUR iPHONE."

  212. Airplane Mode = Story not accurate by DECS · · Score: 1

    If they flew overseas, they would have needed to turn on "Airplane mode," which turns off the cell radio, Bluetooth, and WiFi. When they were on their cruise, they would have had to manually turn Airplane Mode off--purposely re enabling their radios--in order to rack up a phone bill. If they thought their phones were off, why would they do this? Were they browsing the web while on WiFi?

    They would also have to purposely charge the iPhone every day or two or their batteries would die.

    They would also have to manually click on email attachments to download them. The iPhone does not poll for emails and download the entire content if there is a large message, nor does it automatically download attachments.

    So they turned the radios on, constantly charging up their phones, and somehow remained oblivious that they were manually downloading huge emails for a week long period, and then surprised that they had an international phone bill?

    -

    How Microsoft Got Its Office Monopoly
    Microsoft's Office monopoly gives the company more revenues and delivers nearly as much profit as its Windows software. How did it gain such a powerful position in productivity applications? The history of Office is rooted in decisions Apple made in the 80s with the Lisa and Macintosh, and also has an interesting correlation to Apple's iPhone strategy today.

  213. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by johnkzin · · Score: 1

    I have a motorola (i60 or t60, can't remember). Off means "no power". It has an actual power button to accomplish this. Just like every other mobile/cell phone I've ever owned. Off means "off/no-power", and "on" means able to make or receive calls. Note: the power button is NOT the same as the "end call" button.

    How does it receive calls? If I turn it on, but don't make an outgoing call, then it can receive calls. Just like every other cell phone on the planet. If I want to receive calls, it has to be turned on.

    You seem to be confused between "on but able to receive a call" and "off". It's like you don't know the difference between "closing a clamshell phone" and "hitting the power button". That or you don't understand the difference between the "end call" operation and the "turn off the power" operation. Any phone which doesn't make a clear distinction between the two modes needs to be recalled.

  214. It's the button name ... by shellbeach · · Score: 1

    Sleep/Wake vs. Power Off for iPhone I think the big problem is calling a button "sleep/wake" when it does nothing of the sort. "Sleep" on a laptop means the device is dead, but keeping the memory powered so as to be able to restore instantly. That sounds like "Off" to me, and if I hadn't scanned the manual in depth and just saw a button entitled "sleep/wake", which turned the screen off when I pressed it, I'd figure that the device was off. The fact that to actually turn the device off requires pressing not another button, but holding down the "sleep/wake" button for several seconds, before sliding a finger, makes it even less obvious that you're not powering the device off.

    Stories like this come about because the mode you get if you press "sleep/wake" isn't a sleep mode at all, but a lock mode. The iPhone manual actually states that you use the sleep/wake button to lock the phone, which shows you how badly that button was named - at no point in the manual does it actually talk about putting the device to sleep. Here's what the manual says about this feature, p.14:

    Sleep/Wake button
    Lock iPhone: Press the Sleep/Wake button.
    Unlock iPhone: Press the Home button or the Sleep/Wake button, then drag the slider.
    Turn iPhone completely off: Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds until the red slider appears, then drag the slider. When iPhone is off, incoming calls go straight to voicemail.
    Turn iPhone on: Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the Apple logo appears.

    Talk about counter-intuitive!
    1. Re:It's the button name ... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Sleep" on a laptop means the device is dead, but keeping the memory powered so as to be able to restore instantly. That sounds like "Off" to me Sleep keeps the input devices and often the network interfaces active to some extent so that the device can be told to wake if it is needed.

      Hmm, that sounds a lot like what the iPhone does...it goes in to a low power state but leaves its input partially active (two buttons) and keeps its network interface (GSM/EDGE) up in order to respond as it becomes needed.
      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    2. Re:It's the button name ... by mhbtr · · Score: 1

      I've had various cell phones for 10 years now. Cell phones have a VERY clear distinction between OFF (phone goes to voice mail, no calls or texts come in, texts show up when you turn it on and they get retrieved, no missed calls are tracked but voicemail is registered) and SLEEP (phone is in low power mode, the buttons don't work, the screen is off, phonecalls/texts/vms come in). I really don't understand why this is something new and complicated for everyone to understand. It is not like this is a "new" feature... You don't want "activity" you need to turn off the phone. It has ALWAYS been like that

    3. Re:It's the button name ... by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      Sleep keeps the input devices and often the network interfaces active to some extent so that the device can be told to wake if it is needed. Oh, so your laptop wakes up every five minutes to check your email when you've put it to sleep with your mail client running?? Bullshit.

      The issue here was that the phone regularly *downloaded* information using foreign carriers. And it was doing that because the phone wasn't *asleep*, it was merely *locked*. In other words, the device was still active, even though the button name suggested otherwise.

      But I guess you can't suggest that an Apple product is defective by design on /. ...
    4. Re:It's the button name ... by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      I've had various cell phones for 10 years now. Cell phones have a VERY clear distinction between OFF (phone goes to voice mail, no calls or texts come in, texts show up when you turn it on and they get retrieved, no missed calls are tracked but voicemail is registered) and SLEEP (phone is in low power mode, the buttons don't work, the screen is off, phonecalls/texts/vms come in). I really don't understand why this is something new and complicated for everyone to understand. It is not like this is a "new" feature... You don't want "activity" you need to turn off the phone. It has ALWAYS been like that I've had various mobile phones for eight years now, and I've never seen a single one that had a "Sleep/wake" button that implied a sleep mode. For that matter, I've never had one that blanked the screen and refused to respond to key presses when locked. And I've never heard of anyone calling locking their phone, "putting it to sleep". As I pointed out, even the Apple iPhone manual doesn't use that terminology - so why give a button that name?

      Remember, we're dealing with technologically illiterate people here ...

    5. Re:It's the button name ... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      In fact it can. It doesn't because I haven't told it to, but nor does an iPhone until explicitly told to by the user.

      Yes, the data rates are absolutely rape. Yes, it would be nice to have some kind of warning or automatic disabling of any scheduled OTA activities when roaming. Neither of those things change the fact that the user enabled a feature and then neglected to understand how it works.

      Unless he had just purchased the phone he must have noticed that when he thought he turned it off, it would still have his new e-mail when he turned it back on. Obviously its not magic, so it has to be getting online somehow, therefore is not completely off. With that in mind, he should have then looked up how to turn it off since he apparently couldn't just figure it out (I support 9 iPhones in my office here and only one person has had trouble figuring out how to turn it off, only two of us are in any way technically skilled).

      Also, defective by design? For fuck's sake, when you tell it to check your e-mail every {15,30,60} minutes and it does so, that seems to me to be working exactly as it's supposed to.

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
  215. The iPhone - If you have to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how much of a bill it's going to run up, you can't afford it.

  216. -1 FUD by adpowers · · Score: 1

    It has been known that the iPhone has a removable SIM since 12 minutes after it was announced. Don't believe me? Go watch the keynote and stop spreading FUD.

  217. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Sancho · · Score: 1

    I may be confused, but I think the poster was referring to closing a flip phone when he said "shut your phone." This does not normally turn the phone off--normally it puts it into some sort of sleep/suspend mode from which it can still make data transactions and receive calls.

  218. FOOLS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you people retarded? RTFM for the iPhone and it tells you difference between the standby/sleep mode and actually turning the phone OFF. If your that fucking stupid to rack up a bill like that you deserve it. It's like if you have a flip phone and you think it's powered down when close the flip, morons.

    Or you can hit the Flight Mode and turn off all the edge network/phone functions and avoid this problem.

    Jackasses. Your kidding me.

  219. What no warning? by grangerfx · · Score: 1

    Don't you think that the iPhone with it's unlimited data plan should at least WARN the user that they will incur data charges if they are roaming and offer to turn off the data transmission feature? Why would any reasonable person expect to receive bills for thousands of dollars for simply posessing an iPhone in the wrong place? What other electronic devices incur huge fees for simply being moved from one place to another? Are iPhone users warned to leave their iPhones at home if they trave abroad? Both Apple and AT&T are equally negligent here. They need to do an emergency software update to avoid this issue in the future via sensible defaults (not transmitting data when it costs extra fees) and warnings (Data transmission in this location costs $25 are you sure you want to continue?) There is no question that subscribers being hit by unexpected data fees should refuse to pay and take AT&T and/or Apple to small claims court.

  220. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by johnkzin · · Score: 1


    "Standby" is not the same as "Off", and clearly the person in question who is claiming that "off isn't off" doesn't know the difference. His ignorance is a failing on his part, not on the part of the people trying to talk to him.

    Further, any phone which makes it difficult to distinguish between "standby" and "off" (or, worse, makes it difficult to select between them) has a defective user interface design.

  221. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Ask yourself if you would assume that the action you normaly take to do one thing, would do something completely different just because you were leaving the country?

    I assume that's what the poor fellow we're talking about here has been asking himself, since he got landed with a bill for $4,800 for something that would have been free at home.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  222. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by MoneyT · · Score: 1

    He knew he was going to a different country, and knew he was going to be roaming (he had to turn on international roaming with ATT for his phone to work in the first place). He also should have known that his phone uses the cell connection when it doesn't have a wi-fi connection to check email (which he set his phone to do). The question is, at any point during this, would a reasonable person expect that cell use overseas using an international roaming feature be free? I'm thinking no.

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  223. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by johnkzin · · Score: 1


    Yes, I think that's the point that is being made in this side-thread: The person who said it's like every other phone doesn't know the difference between "standby" and "off". This ignorance on their part undermines the assertion that they were trying to make.

  224. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    Frankly, I don't see why you need a sleep mode on a mobile phone.

    To limit power consumption. Phones are supposed to last at least 24 hours if not days when you're not talking on them.

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  225. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    I don't know a single phone that doesn't power down its display to save battery.

    I used to have a Samsung A-series flip phone like Anonymous Brave Guy, and it actually doesn't. Of course, it has a one-line monochrome LCD front display that probably doesn't consume much power (the main display, of course, powers down when the phone is closed and powers up when you open it again). I can't remember what the old LED-display phones did, but they were still in use well into the 90's.

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  226. sucks to be them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another reason NOT to get the iPhone.

    If the owner did not read the manual, then that is entirely their fault. I have no pity for anyone that does not read the manual. I also do not pity anyone for breaking their high priced devices and blame it on bad manufacturing. "I believe you, the LCD screen magically cracked while it was in your pants pocket." /sarcasm off

    If they plan to sue Apple of AT&T over this, that's just rediculous. Might as well sue them for causing eye strain for looking at the iPhone and physical discomfort like finger fatigue/cramps for scrolling on the iPhone. We're a sue happy nation. Go for it.

    I loath frivolous lawsuits and even more so the people who does the suing.

  227. Re:International Roaming Charges by B1 · · Score: 1

    This was AT&T wireless.

    From what I understand though, it has everything to do with the European carriers charging outrageous roaming rates.

    The other thing I read is that if you don't answer a call and let it ring through to voicemail, you actually get nailed for double the airtime charge, as it becomes two calls. The first call is from the caller to whichever switch you're roaming on. The second call is set up from the serving switch, all the way back to your home voicemail platform. Can somebody confirm if this is true? It sounds like quite a ripoff! And quite a neat way to run up somebody else's cell phone bill...

  228. Visual voicemail uses data too by or-switch · · Score: 1

    What i haven't seen a comment on, though I didn't look super closely, is that the visual voice mail feature downloads your voice messages as audio files to the phone. Over the weeks these three were gone it could have downloaded a lot of messages. As near as I can tell you can't turn this off unless you goto airplane mode or completely switch off the device. I guess you would need a dataplan anywhere for the iPhone even if you just wanted to use it for voice.

  229. Tip of the Hat, Wag of the Finger by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Moderator Dude. Like, this was so totally funny. Haven't you ever watched The Colbert Report? Who hates America more, you or the asshat who trolls about the iPhone killing people because it's a cell phone? Cell phones don't kill people. Morons kill people.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  230. Does the Inquirer actually INQUIRE about anything? by yroJJory · · Score: 1

    First off, I don't really have a whole lot of sympathy for someone who buys an advanced gadget like the iPhone and cannot tell the difference between "off" and "sleep", nor can I feel bad for someone who apparently travels internationally, but does ZERO advanced inquiry into international phone/data costs.

    But, worst of all is The Inquirer's terrible story and complete lack of investigation.

    I am taking a trip to Norway next month and did some preliminary research already into my options for iPhone coverage while I'm abroad. I heard about AT&T's $24.95/mo plan that allows for 20 MB of D/L in a month, so I called AT&T to find out more. It turns out that AT&T does not include Norway in this plan, but even worse, the plan REQUIRES a 1-year contract, so it is useless to the occasional traveler (or vacationer). Did The Inquirer discover this? Hell no. They were just looking to publish something incendiary. They could have been even more effective had they done minimal research into their story.

    All that aside, the person who got the ridiculous phone bill had several options:

    * Put the iPhone into Airplane Mode, to prevent it from being on any network. (The drawback is that WiFi doesn't work then.)

    * Call AT&T and block data access while abroad. Then call again upon return, to get it re-enabled. (I learned about this option when I called for info on the $24.95/mo plan.)

    * Turn off automatic email checking. (But the iPhone could accidentally still utilize roaming data networks and rack up a several-hundred-dollar bill.)

    * Pull the SIM card and be done with it. If you pull the SIM card, the phone cannot communicate with any cell phone network, but will still work just fine on WiFi. And you can put the SIM back in to make calls, if you so choose to pay the bills.

    There are many ways to avoid being shocked. But one has to actually consider the fact that they are *leaving* their native area. Be aware of your world, people.

    --
    Jory
  231. Health Insurance by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Ooops... I meant to be a smart alec, but also to be informative... then I hit "submit" instead of "preview" before I was finished. Here's are two interesting articles, submitted for serious consideration on the (off topic) question that you raised.

    Paul Krugman: Death by Insurance
    Million-Dollar Murray

    Mr. Krugman is an economist and writes regularly and eloquently about health care issues. You may or may not agree with his policy recommendations, but his analysis of the issues with our current system is always interesting. Health care is more expensive than it probably should be for a few reasons. One is that our system in the United States is based on the concept of health insurance. This drives up costs in several ways, some of which are explored by the two articles above.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  232. Re:It is obvious - it works like every other phone by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Phones are supposed to last at least 24 hours if not days when you're not talking on them.

    And mine does, despite having only on and off modes.

    Now, I appreciate that in trendy hi-tech land, my phone is prehistoric. Newer phones have larger, full-colour displays, and may require the whole screen to be off to conserve power. But if this is the case, was it really so difficult to have some other indicator (such as the little LEDs everyone used to use) to show that the device was still on and just in stand-by mode when the screen is off? This is, after all, what pretty much every other piece of consumer electronics does when in stand-by.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  233. Not true by kc0re · · Score: 1

    This fucktard had automatic email checking on. If he actually learned how to use his phone, he would have turned on Airplane mode. What a retard.

  234. Sleep Mode should not a Screen Saver. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I put my PC or Mac into Sleep Mode/Standby Mode, it will not communicate with the network. I understand the RTFM, but Apple as always tooted their horn that their products are so easy to use that you don't need to read the manual. It was in their ads in the 90's. With convergence, the concepts of personal computer (PC or Mac) are directly translating to mobile devices.

    Again, why is sleep on iPhone different than sleep on iMac?

  235. Excuse me for a moment... by iolaus · · Score: 1

    Muahahahahaha!

    --
    I find laziness to be an excellent motivator.
  236. Something I've never understood... by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

    Why does the cost of using a phone seem to increase exponentially with distance?

  237. I don't think they bothered to put the phones off. by Domini · · Score: 1

    This is a non-article, and should not even be here.

    If the phones were truly off or in flight mode, both which are asy to do, they would not have had a problem.

    But these people were just lazy and too used to the practically free internet in the US.

    I say, burn them! lol.

  238. That's my story! by rholland356 · · Score: 1

    That's my story and I'm sticking to it...