Infineon Chipset May Be Cause of IPhone 3G Issues
JagsLive sends along a CNet blog piece about a plausible theory to explain the iPhone 3G connection problems many users have experienced. Apple has not acknowledged any such problems. "Richard Windsor of Nomura published a research note... Tuesday singling out the iPhone 3G's chipset, made by Infineon, as the probable culprit for the reception problems we reported on Monday. The dropped calls, service interruptions, and abrupt network switches experienced by iPhone 3G users reminded Windsor of similar complaints five years ago, when 3G phones were first launched in Europe. 'We believe that these issues are typical of an immature chipset and radio protocol stack where we are almost certain that Infineon is the 3G supplier,' Windsor wrote. 'This is not surprising as the Infineon 3G chipset solution has never really been tested in the hands of users. Some people will not experience these problems as it is only in areas where the radio signal weakens that the immaturity of the stack really shows.'"
Crap testing is the cause of iPhone 3G issues. There are always issues before a product is released. The testing is supposed to find them. Something as obvious as this issue indicates that Apple didn't give a shit about testing.
I have no idea what connection issues they are tal
I knew i shouldve waited.
Again bitten by Jobs's first-out-the-door gizmo.
I was also the proud owner of a tibook 400... yeah, the one that spontaneusly broke appart from heat due to the "TI" part (although it did look cool at first).
I guess some of us will never learn.
NO SIG
Can this be fixed by a firmware update? It said something about the stack which made me think firmware, or is it just shoddy hardware?
I guess some of us will never learn.
Not your fault, it's genetic.
Deleted
more like Inferior.
The dropped calls, service interruptions, and abrupt network switches experienced by iPhone 3G users reminded Windsor of similar complaints five years ago, when 3G phones were first launched in Europe.
It reminds me of ATT...... I have had the same issues no matter what ATT phone I've used
Apple might know a thing or two about industrial design, but they don't know anything about microwave engineering. The phone has a very badly designed antenna.
This is also one cause of the short battery life, since the phone has to broadcast at high power levels to make up for the poor gain. Talking on the iPhone is like sticking a microwave oven to your face.
...and what qualifications does he possess to comment on the possible cause of the alleged iPhone reception issues?
Seriously. This story is being widely distributed, but I have yet to see anyone ask about his credentials. Is he an electrical engineer with expertise in the design of cellular technology?
As far as I can tell, he's some financial analyst. So why would anyone consider him a credible source? Since when are the speculations of a financial analyst regarding the rather esoteric realm of RF engineering considered valid.
Am I missing something? Does someone know about his background?
can you iPhone people just ATH and drive?
Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
I have noticed a lot more dropped calls on the iPhone 3g. Between the poorer battery life, the dropped calls, and the inability to unlock the sim, the upgrade feels like a downgrade from my old iPhone.
--------- I have no signature
Good. I hope Infineon goes friking bankrupt and dies.
They are one of the manufacturers of Trusted Platform Modules.
That puts them right near the top of my shit-list.
-
- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
I've been getting better reception on my 3G iPhone than I had on my Razr (also 3g)
Battery life is pretty crappy, have to recharge it every night. But that's all I need. I think that has more to do with the big honking screen than any chipset issue.
I have noticed that the signal indicator likes to sit at around 1 bar, but it's a bit deceptive because it works fine for a while (feels like empty on a car... still goes for a while anyways)
I know an anecdote isn't true for everyone... maybe he's in a bad signal area? Maybe he has a defective phone? I haven't seen what he's talking about.
I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
AT&T has the best network around - More bars in more places. So this flaw should never be visible to the end user...unless AT&T has been lying to me.
Grump
Is it true that more people vote for the winner of American Idol, than vote for the president? -Ali G.
...my el-cheapo Nokia 1100 is looking better all the time. Works like a champ, and the battery seems to last forever!
I've had tons of connection/signal and dropped call problems ever since I upgraded my old non-3G iPhone to the 2.0 OS. I think this is a software problem.
I think you're overestimating the size of the Apple fanboy market. That crowd certainly exists, but you're going to have a hard time convincing me that everyone who's got an iPhone got it just because it has an Apple logo on the back. That crowd was tapped out in the first couple weeks or so. The iPhone must be offering something to people that's making so many of them spend money on it.
But I'm sorry to interrupt. Please continue telling us all the details of your phone contract so we can fully comprehend how much smarter you are than everyone else.
One time I threw a brick at a duck.
I was involved in a project that required an Infineon chipset. They had to support to *DSL variants: HDSL and G.SHDSL. After numerous delays, the HDSL had to be dropped because I kid you not: the powers that be at Infineon grossly underestimated the amount of work to support the additional protocol. The head of the design team seriously thought that it was just going to be a matter of changing some parameters...
They deserve every bit of bad news that they get...
Hahahahahahaha...
You fall into the common trap of seeing apple's products as technically inferior, assuming technical is all that matters.
I don't have an iphone (or a smartphone at all) but having surfed the web on both I know which one I plan on getting. My research is done, and Apple won.
But you go ahead calling me stupid. I'm not aggravated. I will continue to laugh at people like you though.
It's because Batman installed his tracking transmitters in every cell phone in the world. That's why reception is spotty.. duh!
I think the 3G chipset problems and all these 3G phones failing back to Edge has made my iPhone V1 drop more calls and suck more. I never got great Edge reception at my house but since the 3G came out my phone drops calls all the time.
hey, have some balls and don't post ac.
...
I experienced a similar issue for a few days in Canada with the Fido and others with the Rogers 3G networks shortly after the July 11th launch. Within a few days, the problems mostly went away where I live and now I get great reception even at work.
There may be a few faulty 3G iPhones but this is mostly caused by a combination of faulty AT&T sims and problems with their network stability and capacity.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
I work in the industry. I know AT&Ts' 3G network is new and really unproven. 2G service is way more reliable. I have a BlackJack and when I have it set to 2G I have awesome coverage with no problems. With my blackjack on 3G I get dropped calls. Jerky sounding calls. All with full signal all over town. I've tried other 3G phones with same results. I think this is common for any new network that hasn't worked out all its blemishes.
This is not an iPhone chip issue. It is a network issue.
Can't blame Apple.
But we can blame the stuff that Apple chooses.
The the winner (Apple) goes the spoils, but to the problems go the companies that deal with Apple (Infineon). Shame on Infineon for not making sure Apple succeeds.
Little known fact: Anyone who uses the phrase "Apple Fanboy" is in fact either a Microsoft Fanboy, Linux Fanboy, Nokia Fanboy, HTC Fanboy, or Sony Fanboy.
Living in same spot 10 years, always spotty reception on att ( also had for 10 years, first att, then cingular, then bellsouth, then att) and always spotty reception.
My last 3 Sony-Ericksons had the same bad reception, but at least I was ALWAYS able to make calls, staticy, but i cold make and receive them. Had maybe 5 -10 dropped calls ever. ALWAYS able to make calls whenever, wherever.
Now fast forward to the present iphone 3g and I go sometimes 5 minutes with that frackin Call Failed.... crap. Already had at least 20 dropped calls.
I want to throw the iphone through the iwall.
But I wont cuz the internet and stuff is like so cool on it, so I will put up with it. Just like every other person who is experiencing this drop call issue.
NO ONE will return the iphone to go back to their blackberry or whatever.
OVERALL the best personal tech experience I have EVER had and I know a lot of other peeps who feel the same way. ( and REAL peeps, not internet chat room forum, wow clan peeps. real flesh and blood peeps.)
In order of level of accuracy we have:
He may not be an expert in the field. Statistically, pulling a name at random out of the phonebook still has a greater chance of finding the right person than a company denying that there's even a phonebook.
The reality is that a large number of people are having problems with dropped calls, a very large number have significant problems with response time (particularly, it seems, if they've largely filled the device), and almost everyone are having problems with the device locking up and needing semi-regular hard reboots. Even first gen iPhone users who've upgraded to the 2.0 software are complaining about many more issues but at least they can revert - something not open to 3G users.
My guess, and I'm just a programmer/nerd and not a qualified phone engineer, is that it's a combination of newly sourced and poorly tested parts running in a major OS recode that also didn't get the level of testing any other wider ranging OS would get (they couldn't run a beta because Apple have a bitch of a time with leaks and cling on more tightly to avoiding them than most companies).
I may be right, I may be wrong. Statistically, whether the cat is dead or alive in the box, guessing about its state will sometimes be right. Apple's policy of keeping quiet and pretending there's no cat, no box and quantum states only happen to other companies ensures their answers are worse than other people's guesses.
I like how this got moderated to +5 Insightful then immediately moderated as 'Overrated' down to 0. Apparently the moderators know more about RF engineering than me. But hey, if you don't believe me put the iPhone antenna into SEMCAD or any friendly EM modelling software and find out for yourself.
Keep your faulty iPhones, I'll stick to my Nokia 6220 classic
Well, I've got an iPhone 3G. The only problem I have with it is I wear the batteries out. If, however, it had as few features as your Nokia 6220, or any of my previous phones, I am sure the batteries would last a very long time, as I wouldn't use it so fucking much!
Good day, chap.
Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
interesting...
------ no thanks... I've quit
No. He was laughing at him for going on an insecure rant wherein his intelligence and self worth are defined by his purchases and are threatened by anyone that deviates from his approved purchases.
I think you're overestimating the size of the Apple fanboy market.
Look at how I've been modded and how you've been modded. Every post I've ever authored here that has been even slightly critical of Apple even as an aside gets modded this way.
That crowd certainly exists, but you're going to have a hard time convincing me that everyone who's got an iPhone got it just because it has an Apple logo on the back. That crowd was tapped out in the first couple weeks or so. The iPhone must be offering something to people that's making so many of them spend money on it.
Do the research. Compare the features to Nokia, Soney Ericson and other large brands. I fail to see how anyone that does an unbiased feature comparison can take a new and unproven phone missing many features considered to be industry standard over something with a proven track record.
But I'm sorry to interrupt. Please continue telling us all the details of your phone contract so we can fully comprehend how much smarter you are than everyone else.
And _I'm_ considered the troll here? Please point to where I said I was smarter than others. I said I was frustrated that smarter people allow themselves to fall into the brand loyalty trap.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
You can't judge the relative worth of different products just by going down a feature checklist. A swiss army knife has many more features than an 8" chef knife, but which one would you rather use to cut up some onions?
And you weren't being critical of Apple, you were being critical of the millions of people who've bought an iPhone. You can't dismiss numbers like that with something as basic as "brand loyalty." All those people aren't going out and handing over hundreds of dollars because the iPhone was shiny enough that it shut their brain off (OK, some are, but not the majority). Their brains are just making decisions based on different priorities than yours.
One time I threw a brick at a duck.
Please do tell me what your magic iPhone does that my cheaper inferior phone can't do?
Let me give you a list of things that I can do that you can't
Here's are a couple of lists of features you're missing "chap"
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=1849
http://red66.com/2008/06/7-missing-features-from-the-iphone-3g/
Feel free to google for more.
I must admit that of that list my 6220 classic doesn't do wi-fi, and that was disappointing, but not a deal breaker for me especially given the price point.
But go ahead, pay through the nose for it, and enjoy your missing features. A touch screen would be a welcome addition but since I learnt to use a keypad as a child, you can keep your touch screen interface which is probably the only significant advantage (not even worthy of being called an innovation) that the iPhone sports.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
Perhaps you can't comprehend plain English but I certainly have no issue with others making an informed purchase, nor do I define my intelligence by my purchases. Go and re-read my post if you truly think otherwise and aren't just trolling.
What I have a problem with is people falling for this brand loyalty crap and therefore pushing up the price and down the quality of phones on the market through pure supply and demand dynamics. Oh and I have a real problem with twits like yourself who can dish out criticism but can't take it, to the point where they have to misrepresent the other person's argument in an attempt to look superior.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
Ironically enough the only feature that the iphone has over the Nokia 6300 and 6500's is a touch screen (if we're comparing the latest Iphone, we may as well use the latest Nokia's).
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
I should have been clearer I own a 6220 classic (not original version) which is a new phone. I've had it about a month and a half. Nokia has been re-using model numbers which does lead to confusion but the fault was mine for not being clear in the first place.
My phone has:
- Good loudspeaker function
- 5 MP camera (well timed to conincide with the arrival of my first born, though for anything but happy snaps I use a "real" camera)
- MP3 player etc. (again well timed to help soothe the child. I never use to use mp3 playback for much other than ringtones)
- Text to speech (Nifty but gimmicky)
- MMS is no problem (Very useful)
- Video is no problem (Haven't used it much yet)
- 2nd camera for conference (though I haven't switched on video calls with my provider).
- Runs symbian OS apps
- Decent calendar and alarm system (though the lack of ability to copy calendar entries from one date to anther is an irritation)
- Timed profiles. Very important to me as I have to set the phone to silent for meetings but often forget to switch it back if it's not an automatic thing.
For me a phone: First is a phone. No excuses for any missing features for placing and making simple calls and sending text/occasional MMS. Second it's an alarm/calendar for less important stuff like putting out the bins on a Monday night. Third it's a camera for snapshots or unexpected photo opportunities (or copying a whiteboard at work), but not for serious photography. Distant fourth its a music player if I'm bored.
That said I probably spoke a moment too soon. The thing just rebooted accepting a call. It's never done that before. I hope that's a one off glitch, but murphy's law's a bitch.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
Nvidia should have conducted more testing on their GPUs, especially their mobile chips.
I'd love to understand how the SIM causes dropped calls. Can you please explain?
Apple creates a good products -- some time. None the less most of their products are expensive -- way more expensive then they should be. I paid for my Mini-Mac over $1000 Canadian dollar, that just is not right. Why? Because values of Canadian dollar is higher therefore Mac - Mini should've cost me no more then $400. This has been pointed out many times by many people in media -- even by mac-heads freaks. No one can deny that OS-X is a wonderful operating system -- compare to Vista. And it's Unix core gives it a very strong security. Non-the-less we are paying very too much for the hardware. And TPM chip software consumes way too much resource. TPM is design to prevent OSX running on a typical x86 hardware. Their behavior is not only illegal but unethical.
Those of you who are not aware of TPM. Think of TPM like old South African government -- White didn't want non-white to have same right or live in a same community. The same way Mac doesn't want non-mac x86 to have OSX. So they created a software which will make sure osx only runs of x86 with TPM chip. TPM is an Apple version of apartheid.
Apple is an evil twin of Microsoft.
Even veals have more autonomy!
Look at how I've been modded and how you've been modded.
You got modded flamebait because your post was flamebait. You called the iphone technically inferior, said it is missing industry standard features, and implied that the only reason people buy it is because of brand loyalty (and that nothing can protect them from their stupidity).
Your main points weren't what got you modded flamebait. It was the fact that you didn't back any of them up. Is the iphone technically inferior? Is it missing 'industry standard' features? You didn't even bother to list the industry standard features it is missing. Are you lazy, or are you unable to back up your points? Back up your arguments with reality and you will do much better getting the mods to understand you.
Your final point is going to be hard to back up, because it goes against a lot of people's practical experience. I don't have an iPhone (because I prefer very small phones), but it does everything I need it to do well (make phone calls, check email), and it looks cool and is fun to use besides. Frankly I have no idea why you like the Nokia 6220 classic. I suppose it fits your needs, which is fine, but some people want something different. So, personally, since I like the iphone, and I am not caught up in brand loyalty, therefor it is going to be hard to convince me that everyone who has bought an iphone did it because of brand loyalty. In fact, you're going to have to come up with a really good argument. Which may be true, I am open to having my faults pointed out, but I didn't see it from your post. And that is why you were modded flamebait. Because you come across as a man who isn't confident in his facts.
Qxe4
Swears he has never had any dropped calls or crappy connections since he has been using his iPhone and he keeps telling me that these stories are just all lies (ok he's a bit of a zealous nut) but honestly, other than the news I know three people with iPhones and they haven't mentioned any significant issue.
Ave Molech Setting
I'd love to understand how the SIM causes dropped calls. Can you please explain?
Apparently some of the older sims handed out by AT&T were not properly registered to allow access to all 3G cell towers. This is what certain AT&T users were saying. As a Canadian on Fido, I can neither confirm or deny whether this was true or not as the Canadian problems were exclusively network based.
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
Firstly, go and take a historical look at the moderation of posts that make a criticism against Apple - you will find that just about all of them (including mine above) are negatively moderated. There can be only one reason for this - namely the Apple crowd feeling threatened by anyone who dares to criticise Apple. Secondly, if we were responsible Capitalists and all made informed decisions before buying anything, then this kind of issue would never happen because any company would be committing financial suicide releasing a product into the marketplace before testing it to the extent it should have been tested. If people are truly happy with their branded products then so be it. But blind brand loyalty turns such items into fashion accessories where display of the logo openly becomes more important than the functionaluty of the product itself. And quite frankly, it's the "brand sheep" who are doing more harm to the rest of us than anyone else - they part with their cash far too easily for nice looking products without considering that also those products may also support the "hidden" features of DRM and vendor lock-in as well. And if and when DRM gets locked into place, then we ALL suffer! So please now excuse me while I continue my fight against you Apple people selling MY rights down Swanee River...
Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
Undo moderation..
One thing I remember is missing from the iPhone is the ability to transfer files with bluetooth between the phone and more than 1 computer. I use my E51 often to transfer files between computers and physical locations. No wires thank you.
When my old, featureless cell phone from early 2005 broke late last year, I read more than ten in-depth reviews for whatever new cell phone I'd be buying. I purposefully avoided the iPhone because I thought it'd be all hype and no substance, but a friend recommended it, so I sought out several positive/negative reviews and finally ended up settling on it.
I never truly thought I'd use each and every feature, but I've found it to be helpful in many circumstances that I'd have been lost in (sometimes literally) had I only had my own phone, or an equally featureless phone.
I have one 80gb iPod video, but otherwise own no Apple products and am very, very distant from the Mac OS. There certainly is a non-Apple fan boy market out there for the iPhone, and I'm one person who falls squarely there.
I 100% agree with you about informed purchases & the fact that most people don't make informed purchases but blindly believe in advertising or just follow the crowd means that the rest of us are also affected because it makes it much easier to throw untested & overpriced products into the marketplace.
Apple products are marketed very carefully to appeal to certain types of people. These are people who want to go against the mainstream but cannot be bothered to put in the time and effort in the research that you and I would do to find the good value-for-money products for ourselves. Therefore they're prepared to part with lots of money to become members of an exclusive little club - at that level it's no different to Rolls Royce owners or people that flew on Concorde.
Whilst I don't own an iPod (I will not support DRM), it's undeniable that it's a neat gadget that appeals to a lot of people. Unfortunately, it's own popularity has meant that the "Apple club" is no longer that exclusive when it comes to owning an iPod.
Therefore, in order to maintain their exclusivity, that subset of Apple users are therefore forced to queue 24 hours outside Apple Stores to be the FIRST to own an Apple product because just owning it won't be good enough. This in turns means that products can be rushed to the stores before testing them properly & that if Apple did once have a reputation for quality products (I wouldn't know because I've never found the need to own one), then that quality is now dropping.
So please don't expect reasoned or rational argument from most of them because most of them don't know how to. For tha majority of them, it's the getting the logo first that's most important, not reading technical reviews and specifications that would allow them to gain some ability to argue at a reasoned level with you.
And the worst thing about it? If Apple had a reputation for quality (again, I wouldn't know), then it's the Apple users own zealousness that's destroying that by allowing Apple to become just another huge profiteering corporation that is just there to leech as much money as possible from its ardently loyal customers.
Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
Not just ATT. When I upgraded to the iPhone 3G I was still using a sim from a couple of years ago. Many problems ensued, partly because of the SIM and partly because of T-Mobiles innabillity to set up my account properly. Since my SIM upgrade, almost all of the issues have been resolved. Except for the crappy coverage that is. But that's been a problem with T-Mobile Austria for ages...
I would never buy MobileMe as it strikes me as an overpriced, undersupported waste of time - why not just use gmail and other free services, or better still pay for your own domain and keep your email for life? Certainly wouldn't trust Apple to provide cloud services after their bait-and-switch with .mac, there are better options.
I certainly wouldn't trust this article however, and looking at forums with say 50 participants on a thread is not a good way to judge whether there are widespread problems, or what the cause of those problems may be. This may be an issue with the network, with specific phones, or with overcrowding of the network in certain areas. It's unlikely to be all phones as most people just aren't experiencing it.
As to 'fanboys', I suggest next time you use that term you consider whether they actually exist, or whether they just make an easy rhetorical punch-bag and feed your own delusions of superiority?
number one google search result for "duck quack synthesizer" haha :)
---
You can't judge the relative worth of different products just by going down a feature checklist. A swiss army knife has many more features than an 8" chef knife, but which one would you rather use to cut up some onions?
Apples and oranges. Specialist tool vs generalist tool. If I could only have one I'd rather have the swiss army knife UNLESS all I was doing was cutting up food. The iPhone and other phones are both specialist tools made for making phone calls that have additional features. Your comparison doesn't fly.
And you weren't being critical of Apple, you were being critical of the millions of people who've bought an iPhone.
Actually I was doing both. Go re-read.
You can't dismiss numbers like that with something as basic as "brand loyalty." All those people aren't going out and handing over hundreds of dollars because the iPhone was shiny enough that it shut their brain off (OK, some are, but not the majority)
Oh really? Explain why companies are willing to pay so much for superbowl ads and the like then. Plenty of otherwise intelligent people have been conditioned into buying based on brand and following the trend.
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
You got modded flamebait because your post was flamebait.
Check the moderation.
40% Flamebait
30% Informative
30% Overrated
In other words at least 3 people (and likely more) found what I said informative. It's just that jackass Apple fanboys like yourself can't fucking stand it when someone criticizes their pet company. It's pathetic. Truly pathetic. Happens every time I criticize Apple. It gets modded up then the zealots shoot it down. Grow the fuck up. Not every opinion that is contrary to yours is flamebait jackass.
You called the iphone technically inferior, said it is missing industry standard features, and implied that the only reason people buy it is because of brand loyalty (and that nothing can protect them from their stupidity).
Correct on technically inferior. Correct on missing DEFACTO standard features. Correction it's only this popular due to brand loyalty. If the same phone were sold by another company it wouldn't take off. I stand by what I said.
our main points weren't what got you modded flamebait. It was the fact that you didn't back any of them up. Is the iphone technically inferior? Is it missing 'industry standard' features? You didn't even bother to list the industry standard features it is missing. Are you lazy, or are you unable to back up your points? Back up your arguments with reality and you will do much better getting the mods to understand you.
Oh I'm sorry fuck for brains. I forgot that I was writing a thesis. Oh wait it's just an internet discussion. The irony of you calling me lazy (not even bothering to ask me for proof) is just sweet. Go google iPhone missing features. Too lazy? Look at my other followup posts. Too lazy? Pot. Kettle Black. Typical fanboy! Here then:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=1849 [zdnet.com]
http://red66.com/2008/06/7-missing-features-from-the-iphone-3g/ [red66.com]
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Apple/?p=390
http://www.google.com.au/search?hl=en&q=iphone+missing+features&btnG=Google+Search&meta=
Would you like a rag to wipe that egg off your face? Or are you going to spout some weak defensive garbage about those not being industry standard features, or not being important to most people. (Catch cry of the Apple fanboy, if Apple don't have it, it's not important)
Your final point is going to be hard to back up, because it goes against a lot of people's practical experience. I don't have an iPhone (because I prefer very small phones), but it does everything I need it to do well (make phone calls, check email), and it looks cool and is fun to use besides. Frankly I have no idea why you like the Nokia 6220 classic. I suppose it fits your needs, which is fine, but some people want something different.
I already have backed it up. My phone has features the iPhone doesn't. I didn't need to hook it into a computer to make outgoing calls (fucking lame!!! a phone that doesn't make calls out of the box, but needs to be hooked up to a computer!). I can send MMS. I can take pictures at 5 megapixel which will make the iPhones 2 megapixel pictures look like ASS. I can record video without "jailbreaking" the thing. I can send a fucking MMS. THAT is why I like it.
So, personally, since I like the iphone, and I am not caught up in brand loyalty, therefor it is going to be hard to convince me that everyone who has bought an iphone did it because of brand loyalty.
Not enough to buy it. You don't even own an iPhone and you're defending it! Looks like fun my left nut. Why don't you just buy a turtleneck, tattoo the Apple logo on your forehead and be done with it.
Because you come across as a man who isn't con
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
The original poster's opinion coincide with my own.
I don't automatically assume Apple's products are inferior. I find out they are. Additionally, that is not all that matters to me. It actually has to do what it says, decently. Looking at the subject of this article, it seems the iPhone isn't being a very good mobile phone.
Why do you think I care about what you are buying? I don't.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
Quite a few regular Joe user I meet actually believe that "Apple products are supposed to be good", because they don't even do any research or such before they go out and get a phone, I see them buying iPhones - if they can afford it.
While they may not be "fanboys", they certainly are sheep.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
That will cost you the princely sum of $6.99
This is not surprising as the Infineon 3G chipset solution has never really been tested in the hands of users
It would seem that early adopters are becoming the new testers for consumer hardware. And since I am not an early adopter.....
I thank all of you for making my experience so much better a year from now when I buy v2.5 of the hardware.
I'd say almost without a doubt, it's the 3G network itself. I work for a handset manufacturer and we have a fairly good 3G network in our metro, but coverage is still spotty at best. One of the reasons Apple went GPRS/EDGE was not just for battery, it was the network coverage. Ugly fact AT&T doesnt mention is 3G is not quite prime time yet. It's getting better, but it's not going to happen overnight that it will reach GSM coverage levels.
Deep breaths, man. You're going to burst a blood vessel.
"Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
Do the research. Compare the features to Nokia, Soney Ericson and other large brands.
That's lazy. Typical mod will read it and say, "Do the research? I already know what's out there and this guy's a troll." Sucks maybe, but that's how it is. I however, did do some research, and I found your beloved Nokia 6220 Classic has a weak battery life with a talk time of only 3.5 hours.
Do you see what I did there? I made a specific point and backed it up. It gets attention and it's way different than saying generic insults like, "the Nokia 6220 Classic isn't good enough in some areas," and it is different than saying, "your phone sucks, here's a bunch of links to prove it." Big difference.
Finally, don't get angry so easily. It's just an internet forum and getting angry makes you look stupid, which I have no reason to believe you actually are.
As you said, a certain number of the mods actually agreed with you, so all you really have to do is say stuff in a way that doesn't attract troll mods and you'll get modded up. Even if I think your point was rather inane (although half of it was probably right).
Qxe4
I've been hearing these complaints from iPhone users and it's not the iPhone or Infineon's fault. I call it the "teetering on the edge of networks" bug because it happens when 3G's around 1-2 bars while edge is around 3-4. It appears that the phone's trying to get the best possible connection but when 3G and EDGE are about the same, the phone will switch between networks, often repeatedly, causing dropped calls, download problems and whatnot. This is all assumption, but I've been privied to enough to AT&T phones to feel I almost hit the nail on the head here. I only wish there were a "to hell with 3G" option available on any of these phones so I could confirm my theory.
Charisma is the measure of someone's ability to lie with a straight face.
I have zero sympathy for those that buy a technically inferior product...an overpriced technically inferior phone missing features so common they are considered industry standard
One assumes you are referring to the iPhone's lack of MMS and video capture and swappable battery. And on that front you are correct.
On the other hand, you neglect to list all the features the iPhone has that should be industry standards, like an intuitive interface that doesn't hide features in layer after layer of menus. Like a bright, large, functional touch screen. Like a built-in speaker that sounds pretty good. Like easily purchased (or free) software that installs with incredible ease.
If the iPhone isn't for you, then great; enjoy your 6220. But calling those who opt for alternatives to your phone "cultists" or "stupid" is not only unnecessary but downright incorrect if the iPhone feature set matches their needs.
"We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
Apparently some of the older sims handed out by AT&T were not properly registered to allow access to all 3G cell towers.
This is great info, as someone who has myself experienced repeated dropped calls while using my iPhone 3G in my living room. (Friends tend to start making fun of your new iPhone after they get dropped four times during a single conversation.)
The question is, how can I know whether I have such a SIM in my iPhone?
"We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
This is an issue for a large production product...
I see a lot of people of fanbois running to say all products have glitches blah blah blah...
This is a large production product and it is not an 'only' nor even a 'new' technology...
You can get a 4yr old Razr or 715 or even a free Samsung R500 at Walmart that have outstanding 3G reception, and this is the 'cheap' stuff, not even a pocket PC or pda class phone device.
Apple 'pretends' to be better or provide a 'better' product, but it isn't reality anymore, and hasn't been for years and years. They are more of the 'me too' crowd and when it comes to hardware quality, they will buy the cheapest crap they can find making even model to model have different LCDs, GPUs, or chipsets on their computers because they get a 'deal'.
They have gotten way too much of a free ride on SlashDot because of Darwin, which is now nicely closed up in all important areas, and in their products and business practices they make Microsoft look like the 'nice' consumer friendly company...
Well I guess the question is, how did that "apple products are supposed to be good" thought get into their head? Apple certainly has slick marketing, no doubt, but it's not like they're beaming subliminal messages into people while they sleep.
Is it word of mouth? I don't see anything wrong with that. I've got a pretty decent grasp on technology and am more than capable of doing thorough research, but when one of my good friends said that he thought I'd really like an iPhone, that's a really significant endorsement to me. He's a guy a know really well, he knows me really well, we've generally had very similar opinions on various pieces of technology over the years, and so his judgment is solid as far as I'm concerned. I'm not just blindly following some stranger yelling on the side of the road, I'm letting a source that I trust do some of the research for me. On the flip side, I love my mom to death but her views and uses of technology are very different than mine, so her suggestions about cell phones are mostly useless to me.
Are a lot of iPhone buyers getting them because they love their iPods and figure that Apple can get the phone thing right as well? Maybe, and that seems like a pretty valid reason to me as well. It's not a completely seamless jump from music player to cell phone, but the devices do have many similar features and Apple's earned a decent reputation in terms of designing interfaces.
There's been lots of media hype about the iPhone, no doubt, but the majority of what I've read in the past year has said that the iPhone is a good product. Many professional tech critics as well as less technologically focused writers have said good things about it, and for a lot of people that's good enough. Like I said before, for some people it's better to let others do the research for you. If you have the time and desire to sit and read every last detail about a bunch of phones before you make your choice, then good for you. That's not a compelling option for many people, but that doesn't make them mindless drones.
Even the iPhone commercials don't strike me as particularly shallow or trendy. They mostly just show some of the basic functions of the phone, and how they're accomplished.
One time I threw a brick at a duck.
I think you're overestimating the size of the Apple fanboy market. That crowd certainly exists, but you're going to have a hard time convincing me that everyone who's got an iPhone got it just because it has an Apple logo on the back. That crowd was tapped out in the first couple weeks or so. The iPhone must be offering something to people that's making so many of them spend money on it.
Do you seriously think that the iPhone would have sold anywhere close to the numbers it has now if it was the exact same thing, but made by someone like Samsung? (for example)
This stuff can all be seen as anecdotal from both sides, but still, interesting to discuss.
It's also the media hype around their products. You hear Apple everywhere, people are bound to take notice subconsciously even if they aren't paying attention.
No, I haven't met many iPhone users who actually approved of the device even though they showed off a few things.
The majority of people I know who have iPhones never had a iPod (I know 15 people who own a iPhone, 3 of which had a iPod before - note: I know far more people with a blackberry, you can pretty much guess what kind of people I associate with). I am certain quite a few of those people I know got it because it was 'trendy' at the time.
funny enough, I've heard the opposite about the iPhone -- usually long rants about how it offers nothing unique in British news articles.
I don't own a TV, nor do I want one. I'm not even sure if Apple actually advertises in the UK or if it's just the mobile phone operator.
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
That's lazy. Typical mod will read it and say, "Do the research? I already know what's out there and this guy's a troll." Sucks maybe, but that's how it is. I however, did do some research, and I found your beloved Nokia 6220 Classic has a weak battery life with a talk time of only 3.5 hours.
That's lazy? But it's reasonable to expect me to list out a feature comparison of every phone out there vs the iPhone?
The worst thing you could find about the 6220 classic is 3.5 hours talk time? I don't know how you use your phone but if I spent 3.5 hrs/day on the phone I'd be re-mortgaging my house. Did you check the standby time? In practical use I can go 3 or 4 days without charging it. 8 hours talk time vs 3.5 realistically means I have to charge my phone twice a week instead of once. Usually I just put it on charge every night and be done with it.
Whereas the buggy crap radio chipset on the iPhone means you get 1 bar of signal when everyone else is getting full signal. Which phone would I rather? Let me just think about it.
Do you see what I did there? I made a specific point and backed it up. It gets attention and it's way different than saying generic insults like, "the Nokia 6220 Classic isn't good enough in some areas," and it is different than saying, "your phone sucks, here's a bunch of links to prove it." Big difference.
Yes I did see what you did there. You made a weaker point, provided less backup (at least when asked to, I pointed to links instead of just pointing to a figure without stating my source), and then were condescending about it to boot. Another thing: If you pointed me to a better phone I'd have NO problem at all saying yes, you're right, wish I'd seen that before I bought. Not so with the iPhone and it's fans.
Finally, don't get angry so easily. It's just an internet forum and getting angry makes you look stupid, which I have no reason to believe you actually are.
As you said, a certain number of the mods actually agreed with you, so all you really have to do is say stuff in a way that doesn't attract troll mods and you'll get modded up. Even if I think your point was rather inane (although half of it was probably right).
Look I'm not here to abuse anyone or feign superiority. I hold nothing against you personally. However I am tired of people continually saying how fantastic Apple products are. I've bought Apple products twice in my life. An Apple IIe when I was 8 years old, which was overpriced and only to see Apple pull software sales from non-Apple outlets (essentially meaning I'd be lucky to be able to buy software twice a year), and a pair of iPods (for my wife and I) which also have been problematic (my clickwheel doesn't work. Hers had to be returned). There are people on this discussion board that could run circles around me in terms of technical knowledge and expertise, but some of those same people will buy bad product based on brand and then fool themselves (and others) into thinking that it's superior. That really gets my goat. It brings down the quality of all products on the market and gives me less choice while rewarding bad behaviour from companies. Why would any company go to the extra trouble and expense of making a good product when a bad one sells just as well?
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
It's actually the opposite with the iPhone. In my house I get spotty AT&T reception. But if I have my phone in EDGE only mode, I usually will only drop a call if I go in the basement. With 3G turned on, if the Phone decides it wants to use the 3g signal when I am calling someone or receiving a call, it is almost guaranteed I will drop the call. The phone refuses to switch back to EDGE.
Exactly what I'm talking about. You go all off on your attacks because you're coming from a mode of fear. Although I didn't need to re-read your post, I did and there's no change in my analysis. Because you don't like something, it's obviously inferior and anyone that does like something you don't like has some severe fault allowing them to like that thing.
Your response is just more of the same. People who don't have what you have suffer from "brand loyalty crap". And since I actually deigned to point it out, I "can't comprehend plain English", and am "a twit" that "can dish out criticism but can't take it". Even though you never once criticized me in your original post because - hey - I wasn't even in your discussion line. If it would make you happy I suppose I could go all defensive to try to make your point for you and start calling you names. But then we'd both be acting that way.
I've had mine for about 2 weeks now. Today was the 4th time my phone would go into 'No Service' mode. A restore doesn't help, and the phone will spontaneously re-connect to the network after a few hours/days of being down. I've just set up an appointment with my local Apple store for them to look at it (and hopefully replace this lemon). As an 'upgrade' to a Treo 700w, I'm starting to regret my purchase (Not only do I get these downtime issues, but their current Activesync/Exchange implementation is atrocious (compared to the WM platform).
http://digitaldaily.allthingsd.com/20070810/iphone-deadspot/
Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.