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iOS 4 Releases Today

tekgoblin writes "Today Apple releases the much anticipated iOS 4 for iPhones and iPod Touches. No word on when we will see this update on the iPad." Can't wait to see all the neat new stuff that won't run on my stale phone.

702 comments

  1. Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I personally can't wait to see what measures this new software takes to control its users and limit their access to other programs.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
    1. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I've heard you can send your first-born son to Steve Jobs in trade for full access.

    2. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's funny to see how Slashdot was was railing against MS about Trusted Computing, DRM and Palladium. Now Apple implements them in a shiny box and not only there's not a peep about the DRM in the iDevices but many Slashdot posters fawn all over and write long justifications about how it is good. I guess Trusted Computing was meant to come wrapped in a pretty box for the masses to not notice it. Now even MS is following in the same footsteps with Windows Phone 7 Series. Sad.

      --
      This space for rent.
    3. Re:Can't wait to see by intheshelter · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I personally can't wait to hear what bullshit the whiny ass pussies make up to vent their hatred of Apple.

    4. Re:Can't wait to see by Bender+Unit+22 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Whine whine whine whine. It is getting old.
      Don't you think the users buying those phones are quite aware of that now. And it is not like we don't have proper alternatives by now.

      I admit it is really scary that the average user just want computers and gadets that works together well without the need to have any technical knowledege at all, and for the average user, the limits are nothing compared to getting the average phone to sync properly with windows or navigating through the eel infested waters of the internet safely without getting vira etc.
      Even some HTC phones with android have been terrible with unstable windows drivers and I have spent more than one evening fixing other peoples computers, so that they could do something that should be Plug'n'Play 10 years ago(syncing their Hero phone with XP).

    5. Re:Can't wait to see by kpainter · · Score: 1

      You ought to know.

    6. Re:Can't wait to see by Richard_at_work · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's funny to see how Slashdot was was railing against MS about Trusted Computing, DRM and Palladium. Now Apple implements them in a shiny box and not only there's not a peep about the DRM in the iDevices but many Slashdot posters fawn all over and write long justifications about how it is good. I guess Trusted Computing was meant to come wrapped in a pretty box for the masses to not notice it. Now even MS is following in the same footsteps with Windows Phone 7 Series. Sad.

      Are we visiting the same Slashdot? There is lots of outcry here about the DRM and walled garden that is the Apple mobile platform, just hang around in this story for another twenty minutes or so and you will see plenty of comments about it.

    7. Re:Can't wait to see by Threni · · Score: 1

      I'll skip that, but keep an eye out for genuine, well-founded abuses of what grownups are traditionally allowed to do on hardware they've paid for and own.

    8. Re:Can't wait to see by thren · · Score: 1

      Hasn't the dev team already announced a jailbreak to iOS4 (at least when it was in beta)

    9. Re:Can't wait to see by mblase · · Score: 2

      not only there's not a peep about the DRM in the iDevices but many Slashdot posters fawn all over and write long justifications about how it is good.

      You must be reading a different Slashdot than I've been reading.

    10. Re:Can't wait to see by whisper_jeff · · Score: 0, Troll

      Don't like it? Don't buy it. Some of us quite enjoy the user experience it provides. I'm sure you think we're sheep but we don't care. Just like we bought the product we liked and are happy with that purchase, we're fine with you buying the product you enjoy. So, again, you don't like the iPhone or any other Apple product? Fine. Don't buy it. Go buy something else.

    11. Re:Can't wait to see by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the comment you replied to? The sarcasm was so thick it looked like it was put on by Paris Hilton's make-up artist.

      You, sir, are sick in the head.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    12. Re:Can't wait to see by Rockoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think if you set your minimum Score level to 4, you will see the slashdot that he is reading.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    13. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notwithstanding the fact that you can jailbreak the devices, it's not like people that buy them are unaware of the limitations at time of purchase.

      If you don't want to abide by the constraints Apple imposes, don't buy the product. There's a broad variety of alternatives. Oddly, though, there's large numbers of grownups around the world who appear to have decided that they just don't care about what the Slashdot community perceives and incipient fascism.

    14. Re:Can't wait to see by AHuxley · · Score: 3, Interesting

      MS did take the music away, Sony took the Linux away, Amazon did take the books away and now Apple takes the software away.
      Slashdot is wise enough to list all the evils for users to note.
      Our last real freedom is Linux.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    15. Re:Can't wait to see by Message · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      MS has really stepped up their embrace and extend if they are putting windows drivers on Android phones now

    16. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "it's not like people that buy them are unaware of the limitations at time of purchase."

      I am not so sure that is really true, at least if the sort of people I interact with IRL are any indication. They are certainly aware that there are limitations, and some even have a vague notion that those limitations are deliberately imposed by Apple, but very few people seem to be aware of the full extent of what Apple is doing. Most people seem to have either forgotten or completely missed the news about political cartoon apps being blocked, or the Ulysses app, or the apparently arbitrary nature of what Apple decides to reject. It is even worse with the iPad: people have become conditioned to having their cell phones restricted and sabotaged, but the idea that Apple would ever try to do such a thing to a tablet computer seems to be lost on the average consumer.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    17. Re:Can't wait to see by X.25 · · Score: 1

      Don't like it? Don't buy it. Some of us quite enjoy the user experience it provides. I'm sure you think we're sheep but we don't care. Just like we bought the product we liked and are happy with that purchase, we're fine with you buying the product you enjoy. So, again, you don't like the iPhone or any other Apple product? Fine. Don't buy it. Go buy something else.

      People don't have problems with iPhone.

      People have problems with Slashdot reporting every time Steve Jobs farts.

      I miss the old Slashdot, that actually used to have some relevant news :(

    18. Re:Can't wait to see by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      There's plenty of outcry about Apple's closed platform here. The posts are at a 1:5 ratio with posts complaining about how there isn't an outcry against Apple, but they're there.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    19. Re:Can't wait to see by jgagnon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In my experience, the average user doesn't know what they want until they see something they like, and then they want it. This especially applies to computing products since so few understand what they are capable of, so imagining the possibilities isn't all that easy for them to do.

      And no, the average person reading this post is not the same as the average user mentioned above.

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    20. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Our last real freedom is Linux."

      http://www.tivo.com/

      I think you meant, "Our last real freedom is GNU/Linux," or perhaps you meant, "Our last real freedom is GPLv3 software," or just, "Our last real freedom is Fedora/Ubuntu/Slackware/[distro of choice]."

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    21. Re:Can't wait to see by dkh2 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Correction. That sarcasm was applied so thick that makeup artists for Tammy Faye Baker were humbled.

      --
      My office has been taken over by iPod people.
    22. Re:Can't wait to see by whisper_jeff · · Score: 1, Troll

      Actually, it's become cool and "in" on Slashdot to bitch and complain about everything from Apple. It's _also_ a problem that Slashdot seems to report every time Steve Jobs sneezes (or whatever) but that's not what the OP was complaining about. He was doing the typical "Apple is a big bad poo poo head" thing that is all the rage.

      Remember, Apple is no longer the underdog struggling against their evil corporate counterparts. They're now an evil corporation and thus everything they do is to be reviled. That, of course, is despite the fact that they make excellent products that are popular which are also forcing other companies to adapt and evolve (seriously, look at the (smart)phone landscape before the iPhone and compare it to after the iPhone).

      The problem some of us have is that there are times that Apple needs to be called out for stupid shit because, as with every single company out there, they aren't perfect and they fuck up from time to time but they really don't need to be called out Every. Gawddamn. Time. It's kinda tedious reading the same bullshit over and over again. Repetition doesn't make it more true...

      Read on - I'm sure someone is, right this moment, comment on how we all used to hate on Microsoft but Apple is now worse than they ever were while someone else is bitching about Apple's walled garden approach.

    23. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, dude. Do you know why the screen resolution has been boosted?

      In order to plant tiny subliminal messages. The iPhone wasn't featured on "The Curse of the Jade Scorpion" because it didn't exist yet. Shame.

    24. Re:Can't wait to see by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "it's not like people that buy them are unaware of the limitations at time of purchase." I am not so sure that is really true, at least if the sort of people I interact with IRL are any indication. They are certainly aware that there are limitations, and some even have a vague notion that those limitations are deliberately imposed by Apple, but very few people seem to be aware of the full extent of what Apple is doing. Most people seem to have either forgotten or completely missed the news about political cartoon apps being blocked, or the Ulysses app, or the apparently arbitrary nature of what Apple decides to reject. It is even worse with the iPad: people have become conditioned to having their cell phones restricted and sabotaged, but the idea that Apple would ever try to do such a thing to a tablet computer seems to be lost on the average consumer.

      I'm not so sure you understand the general public. They don't care. They really don't. They've never once thought "I need to SSH into my box at home to...", or "If only this API were allowed". They read about the things they CAN do and go "cool!" and then they buy it. They hear about some artist that they don't care at all about being censored - and they don't care. They hear about some app they don't care about not being approved - and they don't care. They hear about some app they think would be cool not getting approved - and they're sad for 10 seconds, but they realize they didn't lose anything other than the possibility of an app, which may still become actual, and they move on to caring about things that actually affect their lives in a meaningful way - i.e. not a cell phone or tablet computer manufacturers policies.

    25. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Besides the fact it is being decried in every Apple article, just because Microsoft was slammed doesn't mean all of it was warranted. Mention Microsoft in any article and you get a bunch of frothing-at-the-mouth retards chiming in to appear cool, with their own half-formed opinions. As if it's not already easy enough to berate Apple and Microsoft (and Google). It's hard to measure the range of common opinion, when trolls outnumber sane posters by 2 to 1.

    26. Re:Can't wait to see by jo_ham · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, you really won't - there are just as many +5 "Apple are worse than WW2 dictators" (read about 5 messages upwards in this very thread).

      The moderation system really doesn't hide that.

    27. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First bib-dribble of the morning!

    28. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. Yet an upgrade to something that device should have had long time ago, makes the "news".

      P.S. I call it "device" because I have one, and despite the pretty (sometimes sluggish) interface, as a phone, works really bad.

    29. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      That, of course, is despite the fact that they make excellent products that are popular which are also forcing other companies to adapt and evolve (seriously, look at the (smart)phone landscape before the iPhone and compare it to after the iPhone)

      You mean like how MS is now following in their footsteps by DRM'in the hell out of Windows Phone 7 Series (Unlike Windows mobile 6.5 and less which were open) ? If that is the impact that Apple is having on other companies, I would rather not have that.

      Read on - I'm sure someone is, right this moment, comment on how we all used to hate on Microsoft but Apple is now worse than they ever were while someone else is bitching about Apple's walled garden approach.

      Aren't both of them true? Almost everyone here united to rail against MS, but now Slashdot has broadly split into two camps, the Apple fanboys and the freedom lovers. The fanboys used to hate on MS because they loved Apple, not because they truly loved freedom. Now that distinction in falling apart with the recent moves by Apple.

      --
      This space for rent.
    30. Re:Can't wait to see by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Our last real freedom is Linux.

      Really? Because according to AHuxley, "Sony took the Linux away".

      We have nothing left.

    31. Re:Can't wait to see by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 2, Informative

      People have problems with Slashdot reporting every time Steve Jobs farts.

      I miss the old Slashdot, that actually used to have some relevant news :(

      If you really don't care, then change your Slashdot settings to not show apple stories on the front page. Problem solved.

    32. Re:Can't wait to see by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are describing the Kano satisfaction model.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    33. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "He was doing the typical "Apple is a big bad poo poo head" thing that is all the rage."

      No, actually, I was pointing out the fact that Apple has put deliberate restrictions into the software, which they could at any time remove, but which they do not. You are making it seem as if there is no valid criticism of Apple's tactics with the iPhone/iPad.

      "They're now an evil corporation and thus everything they do is to be reviled."

      First of all, people were speaking out against Apple's proprietary software a long time before the iPhone. We criticized their approach to iTunes, which they did eventually change, back when they were still the "underdog." We criticized their harsh and heavy handed approach to journalists. They were criticized for pushing proprietary software on their Macintosh line before Slashdot even existed. The fact that Apple is now a major force in technology only means that when they pull something like this -- the "walled garden" approach -- it is that much worse, since it has a much broader effect.

      "The problem some of us have is that there are times that Apple needs to be called out for stupid shit because, as with every single company out there, they aren't perfect and they fuck up from time to time but they really don't need to be called out Every. Gawddamn. Time."

      Yes, they do need to be called out every time, when they are pulling the same thing over and over. Otherwise, they could just sit around ignoring critics until everyone forgets that there was ever a time before walled gardens. We did not stop criticizing Microsoft, so why should Apple be spared?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    34. Re:Can't wait to see by eliotw · · Score: 1

      Yes Apple is at times doing a bad job of policing their App store, but remember there are zero filters on web based HTML content. So people who think there is a big brother conspiracy should be using HTML. And most people recognize the iPad as a grown up iPhone. And millions don't care. The rest can buy the HP Slate.

    35. Re:Can't wait to see by todd10k · · Score: 1

      i'd mod this funny if i had the points.

    36. Re:Can't wait to see by bonch · · Score: 0, Troll

      I'm always amused by bitter Apple-haters and their generic, non-specific criticisms. Absolutely nobody is forced to buy an Apple device, they're not "controlling" me in any way, and Apple's app screening is required for quality control and the fact AT&T requires them to because apps are using their wireless network. Stop being goofy and melodramatic. You'll die happier.

      See you in line for an iPhone 4.

    37. Re:Can't wait to see by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      I think anyone with an ounce of common sense and no hatred of Apple sees your point, but you see many of these posters envision themselves as freedom fighters. Trying to rid the world of tyranny because only they can see the true way someone else's product should be sold.

    38. Re:Can't wait to see by jittles · · Score: 1

      Whine whine whine whine... I have spent more than one evening fixing other peoples computers, so that they could do something that should be Plug'n'Play 10 years ago(syncing their Hero phone with XP).

      Wasting mod points here... but I used to have an iPhone 3G and now have the HTC Evo and syncing with Outlook is just as plug and play as the iPhone. You install the drivers/software and then when you plug in the phone it syncs. According to my brief google search, you do the same thing with the Hero. With the iPhone you just installed iTunes instead of "HTC Sync".

    39. Re:Can't wait to see by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 1

      And it's not like there's anything new on the iPhone lockdown/DRM/appStore front. At this point, if you have a problem with Apple's policies, you either spend the whole five minutes it takes to download Spirit and jailbreak the thing, or you do without and get a Nexus One or an EVO. Or you're okay with Apple's approach and you get a standard un-jailbroken iPhone.

      That's been the status quo for quite a while now. With nothing new, there's no news to post; unless you count self-indulgent pontificating.

      --
      Imagine all the people...
    40. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      "So people who think there is a big brother conspiracy should be using HTML."

      Can we please refrain from misconstruing the criticisms of Apple? There is no "big brother conspiracy," but there is a corporation that deliberately prevented politically or sexually themed applications from running on their customers' devices. Yes, that is something which deserves criticism.

      As for using HTML, the current situation puts HTML/web apps at an inherent disadvantage against native applications. First, there is the obvious: offline web apps have not yet taken off (maybe this will be different a year or two from now), and wireless coverage is not exactly universal yet. Then there is the fact that Apple pushes the "apps store" in everyone's face, and so people are likely to look toward the apps store first and the web second. The "HTML is the answer" approach is nothing more than a way to excuse Apple's behavior.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    41. Re:Can't wait to see by Andy+Smith · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...until Jobs retroactively amends the first-born T&Cs and full access becomes void after lil bubba's first tooth appears. Or 28 days, whichever is sooner.

      You are also prohibited from producing any further children as your genetic information is now (C)Apple. That was also in the T&Cs. Not at the time you agreed to them, but it is now.

    42. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The difference is that most of Slashdot used to be united against MS but now it has basically split into two camps, Apple fans and FOSS fans. The Apple fans railed on MS and appeared to side with FOSS. not because they loved freedom, but because they loved Apple and MS was enemy number one. And the Apple fans have a lot of mod points and use them indiscriminately in the discussions both to mod up positive comments about Apple and to mod down any criticisms(legit or not) about Apple. This shows in every Apple story.

      --
      This space for rent.
    43. Re:Can't wait to see by o'reor · · Score: 4, Funny

      Express'd in the EULA, let the forfeit
      Be nominated for an equal pound
      Of your fair flesh, to be cut off and taken
      In what part of your body pleaseth Steve.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, our new overlords are belong to all your base.
    44. Re:Can't wait to see by Maury+Markowitz · · Score: 1

      > but very few people seem to be aware of the full extent of what Apple is doing

      I'm sure that includes yourself. Yet none of us know what apps MS rejects for the XB360, or Sony on the PS3, etc. This just generates more flamage because the haters can't figure out why no one cares about this except themselves.

      > political cartoon apps being blocked, or the Ulysses app

      All of these were released.

      > arbitrary nature of what Apple decides to reject

      It's not arbitrary at all. The people that enforce it sometimes are.

      This is no different than any other aspect of life. The police give out or ignore speeders with equally random behavior.

      Maury

    45. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried that and Steve claimed he didn't meet Apple's performance standards (he was just 3 months old). I am now stuck without full access to my phone.

    46. Re:Can't wait to see by samkass · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you meant, "Our last real freedom is GNU/Linux,"

      No, I think he meant "Linux". Unless you want to rename the product to "X/MIT/GNU/BSD/Apache/Linux", there's no real need to explicitly cite everyone who's contributed to Linux.

      --
      E pluribus unum
    47. Re:Can't wait to see by Qwavel · · Score: 1, Interesting

      > There is lots of outcry here about the DRM and walled garden

      Please don't use those terms together like that.

      Yes, Apple has used its proprietary, non-licensable, DRM to help enforce its walled garden, but DRM does not have to be used like that.

      For me, DRM would be acceptable, if it were not used as a tool to lock me in to a particular vendors products or otherwise restrict my legit use of the product. I'm a proponent of open technology, but I understand and accept the content owners desire to put some restrictions on the duplication of their content.

      So, you are free to hate both DRM and the wall, but please don't lump them in together like that.

    48. Re:Can't wait to see by timster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sophistication and priorities? Hmm.

      Apple doesn't, in any actual fact, dominate how I use my iPhone, you know. On my un-jailbroken device there are no restrictions on which Web sites I can visit; the built-in Mail app allows the use of any IMAP/POP/Exchange account; the Phone app allows me to call anyone; the SMS app allows me to send any text to anyone. As a communications tool my use of the iPhone is dominated by those I choose to communicate with, really. And if I want to write software for my own iPhone, I can do so without encountering the App Store approval process (ad-hoc distribution).

      You're talking about developer freedom, and it's true that developers are heavily restricted on the iPhone (ad-hoc distribution is limited to 100 users). It's not really clear that this "sucks" for users though. For one thing, people have seemed satisfied with devices and services that are completely closed (cable/satellite TV, effectively) as well as platforms that are way more restrictive than Apple's (like all video game consoles from 1985 to the present).

      Let's step back a second. Beyond command-line junkies like you and I, the 1995-2005 period in computing history was dominated by two factors: the massive rise of computing in general, and the massive gap between potential of software and the end-user reality. Everyone here knows that software, with its incredible theoretical flexibility, can do so many things -- yet actual end-users seem to use their computers as little more than sophisticated typewriters! If you weren't frustrated by the state of end-user computing in 2005 you never watched someone who doesn't read Slashdot try to perform any task outside the "box" of MS Office.

      Apple has seized on a particular paradigm of human-computer interaction designed to address this gap, and I think it has been successful. End-users on the iPhone/iPad are much more comfortable than PC users in making use of a diverse array of applications. Yes, these apps are all approved by Apple, but I personally believe that part of the reason users are comfortable with the App Store is the simple fact that downloading apps will not, generally speaking, trash their device, take it over, or do something unexpected. Compare this to the open PC where you have huge amounts of malware and where even legitimate applications act in anti-user ways (like Sun's JVM which tries to install the Yahoo! toolbar). No surprise that other mobile platforms have introduced app stores of their own.

      In this environment claiming that Apple "dominates" usage of iOS or that the experience simply "sucks" doesn't seem that sophisticated to me.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    49. Re:Can't wait to see by bonch · · Score: 3, Interesting

      People have problems with Slashdot reporting every time Steve Jobs farts.

      Bullshit. Here's Slashdot's RSS feed as of this post:


      Carbon Nanotubes Batteries Pack More Punch
      iOS 4 Releases Today
      Toshiba Demos Dual-Touchscreen Notebook
      Google Wave Out of Beta
      Why Being Wrong Makes Humans So Smart
      New Air Conditioner Process Cuts Energy Use 50-90%
      What US Health Care Needs
      California Wants To Put E-Ads On License Plates
      Former Soviet Republic of Georgia To Become IT Tax Haven
      In NJ, Higher Tech Lowers Crime
      Swype Beta For Android Is Open, Temporarily
      Windows Phone 7 Lacks Copy-and-Paste
      German Radar Satellite Lifts Off Tonight
      Utah Attorney General Tweets Execution Order
      AU National Broadband Network Signs $11 Billion Deal With Telstra
      Made-For-Torrents Sci-Fi Drama "Pioneer One" Debuts
      Verizon Makes Offering Service Blocks A Fireable Offense
      Better Development Through Competition?
      DHS Wants To Monitor The Web For Terrorists
      "Cumulative Voting" Method Gaining Attention
      UK's RIAA Goes After Google Using the US DMCA
      Potato-Powered Batteries Debut
      Turning Attackers' Tools Against Them
      Google Builds a Native PDF Reader Into Chrome
      Apple Quietly Goes After Mac Trojan With Update
      Getty's Flickr Sales, Money Spinner Or Ripoff?
      Why Google's Wi-Fi Payload Collection Was Inadvertent
      SpaceX Falcon 9 Relatively Cheap Compared To NASA's New Pad

      If anything gets covered to a higher-than-average degree, it's Google and Google products, and even that's not by much. It's just a lazy, mindless meme from Apple-haters to claim Apple gets more coverage, because they are apparently unable to use their mouse to manipulate the scrollbar and move past the big ol' Apple story on the front page that they hate so much.

    50. Re:Can't wait to see by Rockoon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      This thread doesnt have a thousand posts yet. It will. The apple boys have been saving their moderation points. They will use them here, and not on the carbon nano-tube article, the health-care article, or the google-wave article.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    51. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      Except that you are then forced to include TiVo -- which is locked down and not freedom respecting. Yes, I know that "GNU/Linux" as a term is a problem since there are few people who just use GNU and a Linux kernel, but just "Linux" can mean a lot more than "free operating systems." Personally, I tend to refer to specific distros, i.e. I will say "Fedora" when people ask me what operating system I am running, but that approach is a failure here, since most desktop, server, and mobile distributions fit the "freedom" criteria -- and that is 100s of distributions.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    52. Re:Can't wait to see by yttrstein · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Full disclosure:

      I am a network security professional who has been in the field for about 20 years. I own Apple equipment specifically because after 20 years, here is what I want:

      No more goddamn hassles. I'm tired of tweaking. I'm tired of having to think about that sort of thing in my spare time. Life is short, and I'd much rather spend as much of it as possible with as few headaches as possible. Which is why I recently replaced my laptop with an ipad. No foolin'. And I use it for pretty advanced stuff, too. AND I'm one of those people who just want my gadgets to work together well.

      Right now, despite the kneejerk reaction of people who don't actually own any apple equipment, my ipad is loaded with pornography, mostly from the hardcore likes of kink.com and environs. More than half the videos on my ipad have no DRM, because I pirated them. Or I ripped them from other media via open source applications under OS X.

      Without any problems at all.

      So, to tally up, from my own direct experience:

      You can have all the non-DRM, pirated goodness on an ipad or iphone that you want.
      You can be a computer super-geek and even a guru to some and still actually enjoy Apple equipment and software.
      You can look at all the porn you like on your Apple devices.
      And if you really care that much about what *I* choose to use for *MY* own enjoyment, you probably just have sour grapes because you can't afford one on a dell helpdesk salary.

    53. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notwithstanding the fact that you can jailbreak the devices

      Maybe you misread GP's post. When they've paid for the hardware, inherent in that is the warranty. I shouldn't have to void my warranty to be able to do whatever I want with my hardware. Would you buy a car on the basis that the warranty stands only so long as you don't drive it on streets with a K in the name? If it's accepted that jailbreaking is normal, they should either cover jailbroken phones under the same warranty, or they should just open up the device so that jailbreaking isn't necessary.

    54. Re:Can't wait to see by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Read on - I'm sure someone is, right this moment, comment on how we all used to hate on Microsoft but Apple is now worse than they ever were while someone else is bitching about Apple's walled garden approach.

      Except Apple doesn't have anything close to a monopoly on anything. The critics of Microsoft had a point. The Apple critics are just whiners.

      (And yes, you can be technically correct and still be a whiner. You don't have the right to force Apple to run their phone business to your satisfaction. You have the right to buy a non-Apple phone, or no phone. Apple has the right to make a phone you like, or make one you don't like. Please stop whining.)

    55. Re:Can't wait to see by koiransuklaa · · Score: 1

      Remember, Apple is no longer the underdog struggling against their evil corporate counterparts. They're now an evil corporation and thus everything they do is to be reviled. That, of course, is despite the fact that they make excellent products that are popular which are also forcing other companies to adapt and evolve....

      There isn't as much hypocrisy here as one might think: at least I can respect Apple for their UX design and how the marketing is an integral part of the product and cheer them for forcing people to think about interoperability (at least in the sense that people realise Microsoft isn't the only game ion town). Yet at the same time I hope they never ever make it to the same position that Microsoft has within the desktop computing space... That could easily be worse for computing diversity than Microsoft ever was.

    56. Re:Can't wait to see by whisper_jeff · · Score: 1

      Except Apple doesn't have anything close to a monopoly on anything.

      Not true. Portable music players. Last number I heard had iPods at _about_ 80% of the market which is a dramatically dominant position. That said, most people who complain about Apple often accuse them of "abusing a monopoly" in markets in which they not only don't have a majority of the market share - they aren't even the #1 player NOR the #2 player so how they could be abusing a monopoly is beyond me. But, Apple does have a near-monopoly in one (and only one) market - portable music players.

      Ironically, the one market in which they have a near-monopoly seems to be the one market that people don't accuse them of abusing a monopoly...

    57. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      Except Apple doesn't have anything close to a monopoly on anything. The critics of Microsoft had a point. The Apple critics are just whiners.

      Don't they have something close to a monopoly on tablet computers now? Or iPods?

      What about the scary scenario in which two companies (Apple and MS?) have 45+ market share each, do both of them get free passes to abuse developers and customers just because they're not a monopoly?

      --
      This space for rent.
    58. Re:Can't wait to see by jollyreaper · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Are we visiting the same Slashdot? There is lots of outcry here about the DRM and walled garden that is the Apple mobile platform, just hang around in this story for another twenty minutes or so and you will see plenty of comments about it.

      But you're going to have to read at -1 to see them.

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    59. Re:Can't wait to see by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Are we visiting the same Slashdot? There is lots of outcry here about the DRM and walled garden that is the Apple mobile platform

      Maybe's he's not browsing at -1 as any post not suggesting that the Iphone is the greatest invention to grace the earth is modded down by fanboys.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    60. Re:Can't wait to see by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      I personally can't wait to see what measures this new software takes to control its users and limit their access to other programs.

      Welp, you came to the right place for a ton of theories about how that'll happen. Did you know that there's no apps on the iPhone for finding employment? That's because Steve Jobs internally trademarked his name so 'job finder' apps are automatically rejected from the store.

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    61. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The issue is about restricting developers by the use of "Trusted Computing" and DRM, not about whether it can play non DRM stuff. Can you make it play WebM? No, because Steve Jobs hates it, you cannot. That's the freedom that's being lost.

      you probably just have sour grapes because you can't afford one on a dell helpdesk salary.

      This is the smugness of rabid Apple fanboys that irritates people I guess. There are plenty of us who can easily administer real computers(unlike you) and want nothing to do with flaunting shiny restricted iDevices as a symbol of riches inspite of being easily able to afford them.

      --
      This space for rent.
    62. Re:Can't wait to see by yeshuawatso · · Score: 0

      My question to ask: Are we helping the average consumer or hurting them by dumbing down their software/hardware? Most of the frequent readers of Slashdot are quite intelligent, regardless of their fanboy-ism to whatever platform. But if we keep dumbing down devices to match the intelligence of the average American, are we doing more harm by encouraging their inability to process complex situations? It just makes me think of the Idiocracy movie (ignoring the complexities of the props that make up the world their stuck in) and our notion that whatever is the shiniest or whomever spends the most on advertising or makes the product the least complex becomes the standard. Examples of this are the calculator. The calculator can be a very beneficial tool when needing to complete complex calculations in a short time period. However, when we begin to use the calculator for simple arithmetic, aren't we encouraging stupidity? It's like the housing market crash or the accounting scandals of the late 90's early 2000's. People don't understand that handing out a bunch of loans to people who can't afford them will hurt the system in the long run. Those who did understand this (Goldman Sachs) took out credit default swaps on the same loans they just repackaged and sold to average consumers. In the Enron, et al. scandals you have similar stories. The average consumer should know that 200% growth year over year for five years is not likely. Instead, the stock price was bigger and we didn't have a calculator to find out at what growth rate nor how much money was tied up into one asset. Then when things go wrong, we blame everyone but ourselves. At least most of the liquidity problems in the banking system were behind closed doors, but banks continually hashed out bad debt and increased their leverage to the shutdown point; again, no calculator available to understand reserve ratios.

      I get it, the iOS platform is about simplicity and getting things to work together (with the exception of sharing data between programs, apparently) without knowing the technical background. But if we remove the ability for people to educate themselves about the technical background, then any problem, regardless of human error or not, is the devices/company's fault. My iPhone won't turn on. Apple must make a terrible device if it can't last forever. Have you tried charging it or did you assume that energy must be magic because you didn't pay attention is science class to know that electrical energy is converted into heat and light to make the device work? It's the same question people are asking with text messaging shorthand replacing the English language. Soon evrythng will be notn but acros & bad grammr to fit 180 lttrs or LOL.

      I'm not saying that the average American should know the basics of quantum mechanics (or a transistor for that matter) before they use any device with a microprocessor, but if we build devices for the stupid, are we encouraging the stupid? Why not build devices for the masses that at least transitions people into more complex thinking? We can sort of do this if we buy a simple cell phone, then a feature/messaging phone, and then an iPhone, then an/a Android/Blackberry/WM phone. But know we've got at least three devices that need to be recycled or disposed of properly without harming the very planet we're on.

      This isn't a rant, but serious questions that I think you /.'s can help me understand. For the sake of the argument, disregard economic reasoning because that can cause an entirely new debate that can get off the topic at hand.

    63. Re:Can't wait to see by delinear · · Score: 1

      Don't like it? Don't buy it. Some of us quite enjoy the user experience it provides. I'm sure you think we're sheep but we don't care. Just like we bought the product we liked and are happy with that purchase, we're fine with you buying the product you enjoy. So, again, you don't like the iPhone or any other Apple product? Fine. Don't buy it. Go buy something else.

      Don't like the opinions of a large group of people on a forum which has a history of supporting open standards and opposing closed standards? Don't read it. Some of us quite enjoy being able to promote openness and discuss products that threaten that when they become ubiquitous enough that their closed practices have a good chance of leading market trends. I'm sure you think we're sheep but we don't care. Just like we read the forum we liked and are happy with that forum, we're fine with you reading a forum you enjoy. So, again, you don't like Slashdot or the Slashdot ethos? Fine. Don't read it. Go read something else.

      Actually I'm being facetious, but your argument comes across as don't like what I like? then go away, I don't want to talk to you. In truth I'm more than happy to hear both sides of the argument, so long as one side isn't telling the other they've not right to even speak their mind. A better approach is that we should all question things we disagree with and discuss the pros and cons, and that way we might all reach some kind of a consensus which embiggens us all, instead of just believing whatever corporation X is telling us to believe today.

      For the record, I know people who are incredibly happy with the iPhone, I know other people who are disappointed with the lack of features (and these aren't "power users", just regular people who'd like to be able to share ring tones via bluetooth, for example) - what I don't see is Apple spending any time telling the average user what the limitations are, and without that how can anyone make an informed choice? If people choose a device with full disclosure, that's all well and good, but the only way people will get full disclosure is if they read about it online, in discussions like this, which is why it's important that we do ask the questions, and equally important that both sides of the argument put their points across, while it's tremendously counter productive to come here and suggest that the answer is to just go buy something else.

    64. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...a time before walled gardens." You must be very young. I remember Commodore, Atari, Tandy and Apple all ruling their own kingdom. That was the way it was.

    65. Re:Can't wait to see by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Shhh! you are not supposed to let that out...

      Oh BTW...

      Applites! time to strike is now.... The ipad is out of the barn, I repeat the iPad is out of the barn....

      Green team go! Blue Team go! Red team go! Yellow team, you can mellow a bit.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    66. Re:Can't wait to see by yttrstein · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As much as I try, friend, I cannot seem to feel this "freedom being lost", because I cannot make my ipad play WebM. I cannot make it play blu-ray disks either, which also seems to affect my feeling of "freedom" in no way whatsoever.

      And I gave up administering "real computers" ages ago in favor of a higher salary and a much more interesting job. What a high holy pain in the ass THAT was.

      And lastly, I don't actually flaunt my ipad, because I live in the middle of New York City and I don't want it stolen. I keep it to myself, except at work and at the coffeeshop near my apartment, where I have been known to break it out occasionally and play with Wolfram Alpha. And figure this out: I still adore it, despite not flaunting it everywhere I go. Because I didn't get it to make people feel bad, friend. I got it because I really, really like them.

      I'm sorry if my motivation doesn't fit the character of the cut of the jib you seem to be laying on me, but maybe this is a good opportunity for you to "think different".

      Bahah. I see what I did there.

    67. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Used to be. Now there's a fair number of MS apologists and other corporate drones around as well. Just watch what happens when someone dares to spell it with a dollar sign.

    68. Re:Can't wait to see by yeshuawatso · · Score: 0

      I apologize in advance for the following spelling/grammatical errors:

      Examples of this are the calculator
      Should be: An example of this is the calculator....
      [I removed the other examples to conserve space]

      We can sort of do this if we buy a simple cell phone, then a feature/messaging phone, and then an iPhone, then an/a Android/Blackberry/WM phone. But know we've
      Should be: We can sort of do this if we buy a simple cell phone, then a feature/messaging phone, then an iPhone, and then an/a Android/Blackberry/WM phone. But now we've...

      Soon evrythng will be notn but acros & bad grammr to fit 180 lttrs or LOL.
      Should be: Soon evrythng will be notn but acros & bad grammr to fit 180 lttrs or (less than sign) LOL.
      [Slashdot stripped the less than sign out.]

    69. Re:Can't wait to see by eliotw · · Score: 1

      "a corporation that deliberately prevented politically or sexually themed applications from running on their customers' devices"

      Yes, an app being delivered via an app store run by said corporation. This is no different than your local 7-11 deciding not to sell your porn mag of choice. As a consumer you could choose Quickie Mart instead and you could use HTML for porn or another smartphone platform all together that offers the apps you want. Now if you're an app developer missing out on a new revenue stream that's just tough luck.

      Time and Place.

    70. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've heard you can send your first-born son to Steve Jobs in trade for full access.

      You mean that unemployed teenager on my couch? Deal. Steve, you should know I have a strict no-return policy.

    71. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at recoiledsnake's comment history; Clearly a shill.

    72. Re:Can't wait to see by intheshelter · · Score: 1, Troll

      Steve Jobs hates it? Wow, I didn't see that. Can you send me a link to where he said he hated it?

      Apparently the only freedom being lost is the freedom to tell the truth rather than misrepresenting everything when you discuss Apple? It's not smugness of Apple fanboys you should be worried about, it's the blind hatred and dishonesty of Apple haters such as yourself. Apple fans only come out in force when they see dishonest stupidity like you just wrote. They have to constantly correct the lies and disinformation of those like yourself who can't seem to grasp that everyone doesn't have to conform to your vision of the world. That (gasp!) people don't want to ADMINISTER their computers or devices at all, they just want them to work so they can move on with their day.

      When you can get past your own ignorance and smugness then maybe you'll be able to see clearly to comment on others.

    73. Re:Can't wait to see by atrain728 · · Score: 1

      That's not really a very accurate analogy.

      It'd be more accurate to ask, "Would you buy a car on that basis that the warranty stands only as long as you don't reprogram the ECU?"

      That seems pretty reasonable to me.

    74. Re:Can't wait to see by raddan · · Score: 1
    75. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what sense did they rule their own kingdom? They made proprietary computer hardware, but anyone could 1) create software for the computers without the computer manufacturer's permission, and 2) create peripherals for the computers without the computer manufacturer's permission. And there was no sign of firmware updates that would destroy compatibility with third-party products.

    76. Re:Can't wait to see by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      I apologize in advance for the following etiquette lesson: STFU with the grammar corrections. No one cares.

    77. Re:Can't wait to see by mystikkman · · Score: 1

      Steve Jobs hates it? Wow, I didn't see that. Can you send me a link to where he said he hated it?

      Apparently the only freedom being lost is the freedom to tell the truth rather than misrepresenting everything when you discuss Apple? It's not smugness of Apple fanboys you should be worried about, it's the blind hatred and dishonesty of Apple haters such as yourself. Apple fans only come out in force when they see dishonest stupidity like you just wrote. They have to constantly correct the lies and disinformation of those like yourself who can't seem to grasp that everyone doesn't have to conform to your vision of the world. That (gasp!) people don't want to ADMINISTER their computers or devices at all, they just want them to work so they can move on with their day.

      When you can get past your own ignorance and smugness then maybe you'll be able to see clearly to comment on others.

      Err, see http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/10/05/20/steve_jobs_says_no_to_googles_vp8_webm_codec.html

    78. Re:Can't wait to see by CoffeeDog · · Score: 1

      Almost all my friends end up jailbreaking their iPhones after playing with mine for a few minutes and seeing what you can do when a bunch of Apple's restrictions are lifted. A few who aren't "techy" people by any stretch even became much more interested in tinkering around with their devices as a result. I don't think the problem with the public is apathy like you suggest, it's basically ignorance that there is an alternative that works with what they want.

    79. Re:Can't wait to see by yeshuawatso · · Score: 0

      At least you care enough to let me know that you don't care.

    80. Re:Can't wait to see by DJRumpy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Never heard of either of these 'apps' until they hit /. I suspect that's true for the vast majority of users. Trying to re-brand the iPad as a 'tablet computer' when it is not, doesn't help your case. It was never presented as a full blown computer as it has obvious ties with the iPhone/iPod Touch line given it uses the same OS.

      I agree with the poster below. Regular people just don't care. The iPhone is a solid performer and does just about anything a regular user needs. I think the oddly emotional response we see on slashdot now, and the total willingness to dismiss any objective thinking when it comes to questioning something that slams Apple simply has to do with the fact that the typical ./ user feels slighted in some way that Apple simply doesn't care what the geek crowd thinks. Is it possible some of these apps didn't do as the developer described? Is it possible they crashed or used private API's? Who cares. They make apple look bad, so lets just go with Apple == Evil. Then we see pages of posts about the 'fascist' Apple who is worse than Hitler, Nero, and Napoleon, all rolled into one. A little perspective would be refreshing given those comparisons.

      What's even more odd is the fact that those that are irrelevant to Apple's iX line (namely geeks), will seemingly spend hours complaining about someone who doesn't care, or require their input. I can only hope that if Linux ever spreads in a meaningful way to the desktop, that the community in general acts a bit better than the Android community has here on Slashdot. They have become yet another 'fanboi' (hate that word) cult who is just as fanatical as the worst Apple and MS fan. In some ways they are worse than the established 'fans' in the simple fact that they have had nothing to clamour about for so long, that when they finally did get a very successful (and rightfully so) product, they turned into a "I told you so" and "You had it coming" crowd that is just as ugly in it's own right. (and mods, understand that this is an observation, not some random flamebait or trolling attempt).

      In the end, it all comes down to money, both to the developers who invest in the platform, and for the end users who buy it. Given the satisfaction rate the iDevices have, and that over a billion has been paid out to the developer community, it would seem to be profitable for most folks, it works, and it helped to spawn the Android market. Something as an iPhone user, I'm actually grateful for, as it forces Apple to think in new ways, adapt to compete, and not be such tight asses.

    81. Re:Can't wait to see by cgenman · · Score: 1

      Even then, knowing what you want is a misnomer. People can only "want" things or concepts presented to them. If you say "Do you want more storage in your phone?" people can say yes or no. If you ask them what they want, unless the concept has been presented to them they probably won't say "an automatic calendaring system that can negotiate open times in schedules to do tasks." But they do want something that helps stuff to get done. Given the survey feedback from above, a company would probably just increase the amount of storage on the phone, without investing the development time in something revolutionary that people would *really* want if they ever saw it in use.

      - survey guy

    82. Re:Can't wait to see by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      It's funny to see how Slashdot was was railing against MS about Trusted Computing, DRM and Palladium. Now Apple implements them in a shiny box...

      Comments critical of Apple (even if true), are marked flamebait and overrated faster than they can be replied to. Apple marketers troll /., unlike MS marketers (who recognize a lost cause when they see one).

    83. Re:Can't wait to see by Shikaku · · Score: 1

      Your analysis is so close but not 100% correct.

      People don't know what they want until they don't have it.

      This applies to everything. Relationships, tech, money...

    84. Re:Can't wait to see by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

      And if you really care that much about what *I* choose to use for *MY* own enjoyment, you probably just have sour grapes because you can't afford one on a dell helpdesk salary.

      Quoted for awesomeness. Suck it, Winders hell desk cretins!

    85. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sophistication and priorities? Hmm.

      Apple doesn't, in any actual fact, dominate how I use my iPhone, you know.

      Can you play files encoded with WebM on your phone? No, because Jobs doesn't want you to. Can you run the native version of Google Voice? Nah. REJECTED.

      Just because you are in denial of the control that Apple has on the iPhone doesn't mean that there is no control or domination. It's probably more akin to some kind of Stockholm syndrome.

      End-users on the iPhone/iPad are much more comfortable than PC users in making use of a diverse array of applications. Yes, these apps are all approved by Apple, but I personally believe that part of the reason users are comfortable with the App Store is the simple fact that downloading apps will not, generally speaking, trash their device, take it over, or do something unexpected. Compare this to the open PC where you have huge amounts of malware and where even legitimate applications act in anti-user ways (like Sun's JVM which tries to install the Yahoo! toolbar). No surprise that other mobile platforms have introduced app stores of their own.

      Err, no one is asking to abolish the App store. Just that there is a button somewhere deep down hidden which can activate software installs bypassing the App store. You can still have all the benefits you listed in this scenario.

      In this environment claiming that Apple "dominates" usage of iOS or that the experience simply "sucks" doesn't seem that sophisticated to me.

      Positing that Apple doesn't absolutely dominate the iOS by arbitrarily and capriciously rejecting and approving Apps for no discernible reasons is far from sophisticated.

      --
      This space for rent.
    86. Re:Can't wait to see by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Commodore didn't force you to use their distribution channels if you made software.

    87. Re:Can't wait to see by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      I am a network security professional [...] I own Apple equipment specifically because after 20 years, here is what I want: No more goddamn hassles. I'm tired of tweaking.

      So, you own Apple, but you don't like tweaking for security. ipfw is your only firewall tool on OS X, and that takes a little tweaking. So does full disk encryption and boot-up password. I can think of tons of things that require tweaking for an initial OS X setup, and tweaking that is not GUI based, too. I think either your tolerance for tweaking is higher than most people's and you don't realize it, or you don't care about your own computer's security.

      More than half the videos on my ipad have no DRM, because I pirated them.

      Hmm, Unethical security professionals are always at the top of the list for promotions. Hopefully no one at work knows your /. ID.

    88. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It took me a while to realize the difference, and I was of the same opinion as you. As soon as I heard how locked down the iPad is, I reconsidered my intentions to get one. After all, if it can't do everything a comparably-priced laptop can do, then what's the point?

      Here's the difference: the iPad is not supposed to be your computer. It's not supposed to be a laptop. It's supposed to supplement your computer. There are times when you want to do something on the Internet but you don't want to carry around a laptop. You could get a netbook, which is similar in shape and size and half the price of an iPad. You can't do very much on them either, not because you are prohibited (except in Win7 Starter where you have an arbitrary multitask limit) but because the hardware's just not that powerful. Netbooks are a great choice, but the iPad presents a few advantages that make it worth the extra money: you don't need to flip anything open, you can hold it in any orientation, simple interface, and ease of access.

      Compare that to Microsoft's push toward Palladium. They wanted to lock down your main computer. They wanted to administer it, and with it your rights go down the crapper. You get all the drawbacks of the iPad and its like, but none of the benefits. And since computers are such necessities at this time, you would have little choice but to submit. Sure, you could keep your old stuff, but the hardware would eventually die and the software would be EOL'd. At least with the iPad, nothing changes with your main computer. You can choose not to buy it if it's not as convenient as you'd like for the price.

    89. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      "Never heard of either of these 'apps' until they hit /."

      Which was exactly my point: most people are not aware that Apple is rejecting apps left and right for reasons other than "quality."

      "Is it possible some of these apps didn't do as the developer described? Is it possible they crashed or used private API's?"

      Possible, sure, but there is no evidence of that. All the available evidence points to their being rejected because they lampooned politicians -- and then being accepted when the lampooning is removed or made non-specific.

      "Who cares."

      Some people do care, considering how popular these devices are and the projections of how much more popular these devices will become. We care even more when Apple starts courting publishers to release apps for the iPad, including publishers of well respected newspapers and journals which influence public opinion.

      "In the end, it all comes down to money"

      Has it occurred to you that maybe that is not the best thing for society? Maybe a system where the rich minority have a greater say over everyone's lives than anyone else is not a system that is conducive to a successful democracy (maybe you do not agree that democracy is a good thing, but that is a whole other issue)? A system driven by greed is not necessarily a system that will produce the best outcome for its participants, unless you are willing to define "best" as "whatever results in the greatest amount of profit for successful businesses."

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    90. Re:Can't wait to see by goldspider · · Score: 1

      "And if you really care that much about what *I* choose to use for *MY* own enjoyment, you probably just have sour grapes because you can't afford one on a dell helpdesk salary."

      I doubt anybody here cares at all.

      Does narcissism come standard with an iPad or did you have to pay extra?

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    91. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forcing you to call it "GNU/Linux" is freedom restricting! You should be able to call it whatever you like!

    92. Re:Can't wait to see by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 2, Interesting

      With nothing new, there's no news to post; unless you count self-indulgent pontificating

      If we put a moratorium on self-indulgent pontificating, Slashdot would dry up and blow away overnight. :)

    93. Re:Can't wait to see by jgagnon · · Score: 1

      I disagree, at least on a personal level. I come up with concepts all the time that I can't readily find "in the wild". Sometimes they are, seemingly, completely new and other times they are a combination of several previously known but disconnected ideas. We all stand on the shoulders of giants, so to speak, but we don't always know that we are.

      I'm a computer programmer by occupation and as a hobby. I think of things often that are not within the realm of what I know to exist on a computer (from a software perspective, which is what I meant on my original post).

      Sometimes, I make them. Sometimes, I explore a bit and expand my known realm and find them. Other times, I go without. Point is that most people don't have that first option (making them) and many (as in most average users) won't think of or go through the effort of the second option (expand their world enough to find an existing solution).

      So, for most average users if they can't readily find it then they will go without. Again, this is the computer software realm I am talking about.

      Admittedly, and fortunately, the average user is progressively improving their understanding of computing exploration and discovery. The newer, computer focused generation is a lot more open to experimentation and new ideas with their computing devices, primarily because of the readily available "mods" like applets, plug-ins, and the like.

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    94. Re:Can't wait to see by jgagnon · · Score: 1

      That is not my experience. I'm a custom applications programmer (made-to-order, so to speak) and have been for two decades (at a professional level). People unfamiliar with the flexibility of computers tend to go without and readily accept the tenet of "if it isn't there already then it is probably too much hassle to get it" or focus far more on what they know how to do instead of thinking of ways they might do it better (in other words, not even recognizing they don't have something).

      Your experience may vary, of course.

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    95. Re:Can't wait to see by whisper_jeff · · Score: 1

      Some of us quite enjoy being able to promote openness and discuss products that threaten that when they become ubiquitous enough that their closed practices have a good chance of leading market trends.

      Sorry, but there's the key problem I see with this entire discussion. The belief is that, if Apple is successful with their walled garden approach, it threatens open products everywhere. Which is wrong. There will always - ALWAYS - be open products for those who want them. There will always be people who champion the cause of open source and they will produce products for that market. The mass market may move towards closed options for a wide variety of reasons but there will always be open options for those who want them. Apple's success with a walled garden approach does not threaten that in any way.

      The implication is that a walled garden is bad for consumers. It's been proven that it isn't. The majority of consumers want their dishwasher to wash dishes, their toaster to toast bread, their music player to play music, and their smart phone to be a smart phone. Power users may want to do more with their products (*) and they can but the majority of people just want their stuff to work. That's why a walled garden is so successful and isn't a bad thing. But it doesn't threaten the open options because there will always be power users that want to do more.

      * And, sorry, I just don't buy any argument that suggests that power users can't do more with an iPhone (for example) - they have the _choice_ to jailbreak their phone and do more with it. They can be a power user and push the device beyond it's design specs and make it do things it wasn't intended to do. Which, last time I checked, is the very definition of a power users. The majority of consumers, however, don't give a fuck what CHMOD means and don't want to have to google things every time they want to change something on their phone. they just want the device to work without having to think about it. Power users like to think about things and be challenged.

      I love my iPhone and iPad. I also love my MSI Wind which I've hacked to run OSX. Sometimes I just want to use my device and sometimes I want to push my device beyond what it was intended to do. And Apple's success hasn't hindered my ability to do either of those things.

    96. Re:Can't wait to see by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

      Google is in the middle of a high profile lawsuit between governments of several countries and them, so it's only natural that they are currently getting more press because of it.

      From the list of Google stories from the RSS feed:
      The first, Google Wave Out of Beta is a month old Dupe, which proves that Cmdr. Taco lives in a cave.
      The second, UK's RIAA Goes After Google Using the US DMCA, involves Google being sued.
      The third, Why Google's Wi-Fi Payload Collection Was Inadvertent, also involves Google being sued, this time by the governments of multiple different countries.

      Apple stories on the other hand, are almost always "iDevice comes out [today/tomorrow/next week], it's insanely great!" or "Apple announced X support for new iDevice" with the occasional "OSX security update was released today" or "Safari [nextversion] will have support for X." The only recent negative Apple story is actually one on your list: Apple Quietly Goes After Mac Trojan With Update.

      --
      GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
    97. Re:Can't wait to see by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Um, when I thought "I need to SSH into my box at home", I downloaded an app called TouchTerm. I don't use it much because it's clumsy to type anything useful on my iPhone, but that's hardly the app's fault. Nor is anybody in the general public going to think "If only this API were allowed", considering that I have to define API any time I mention it outside programming circles. Heck, in a spirit of scientific inquiry, I have confirmed that I can view certain things through the browser that are often considered banned on the iPhone.

      The fact is that people do not, in general, want freedom to do that which they don't understand. I doubt you are campaigning for the freedom to emfozz (if I spelled that right). What people in general look for is stuff that works for them.

      They'll also notice when they want to do something but they can't. If Apple bans too many things that people want, it will hit their sales. Similarly, if gamers can't get games they want for their console, they'll get another console.

      Nor are they going to go from something peripheral like smartphone freedom to basic civil rights. Since the general public won't perceive this as a restriction on their freedom, any more than they'll see buying games for their video consoles as a restriction, it isn't going to stop them from supporting the ACLU.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    98. Re:Can't wait to see by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      No, all of the evidence presented is from one side (from the application developer). Apple isn't rejecting apps 'left and right'. I can think of two high profile apps and a smattering of lesser ones like the comic strip above. 95% are approved within 7 days. That's a huge number out of the 200,000 plus apps. Claiming they are rejecting apps hand and fist when that is obviously not the case speaks to what I also mentioned in the above post. The fact that the anti-apple folks have become fanatical that they would have you believe that every useful app is rejected, that you can't accomplish anything on an Apple device due to it's walled garden nature, and that the end of the world as we know it (no pun intended) is here and now, when the obvious fact is that none of these are true, the vast majority of apps are approved without issue, and those that aren't disregarded the agreement (they crash, they don't do as described, or they use private API's), all of which are believable.

      Did it ever cross your mind to question these reports with a little objectivity, given that you're only hearing one side of the story?

      As far as technological advances go, free market and profit would take a huge lions share for motivation. It's all very fine to claim the high ground and espouse higher morals and the need to do the 'right' thing, but I take a more pragmatic approach. These advances are strictly due to profit, market power, and consumer wants/needs, and right now, the needs of the geek market simply don't matter. I think that is the root of this anti-apple crusade. The geeks feel slighted or insulted and we see the result in 'Apple Sucks +5 Insightful' posts every day on Slashdot.

      Apple fails to notice. No film at 11...

    99. Re:Can't wait to see by timster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Can you play files encoded with WebM on your phone? No, because Jobs doesn't want you to. Can you run the native version of Google Voice? Nah. REJECTED.

      Just because you are in denial of the control that Apple has on the iPhone doesn't mean that there is no control or domination. It's probably more akin to some kind of Stockholm syndrome.

      Please, let's not claim that either of us is addled by some psychiatric disease -- I think that's a weak argument. I'm not in denial of the "control". I just don't think the actual control exercised matters as much to end-users as it does to you.

      I don't use much video on my phone, but I think what's important is that neither the content, nor the providers of video is restricted -- note the Netflix app among many others. Why is the format the most important thing? Video decoding is still a pretty intensive activity, likely to require hardware acceleration, so in a practical sense the video formats on a portable device are going to be limited regardless.

      Err, no one is asking to abolish the App store. Just that there is a button somewhere deep down hidden which can activate software installs bypassing the App store. You can still have all the benefits you listed in this scenario.

      It's not going to be a "deep down hidden" setting when Google/Sun/Microsoft do whatever they can to get people to set it, so that they can cover up your app launcher with the Google Toolbar, and replace your media player with Windows Media Player, etc. You're back to the Windows PC scenario where a user wants to watch some video of a skateboarding dog and ends up replacing their Web browser.

      If you live in a world without people who have useless System Tray icons a mile long, consider yourself lucky. But please don't pretend that world doesn't exist, or that it isn't a problem.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
    100. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      As much as I try, friend, I cannot seem to feel this "freedom being lost", because I cannot make my ipad play WebM. I cannot make it play blu-ray disks either, which also seems to affect my feeling of "freedom" in no way whatsoever.

      Not being able to play BluRay is a physical restriction whereas WebM is an artificial one imposed by Apple. And just because you don't feel the loss of freedom doesn't mean others don't or that it's a good thing.

      Because I didn't get it to make people feel bad, friend. I got it because I really, really like them.

      I call BS on that. If that was the case you wouldn't have insulted your parent poster by saying:

      "you probably just have sour grapes because you can't afford one on a dell helpdesk salary."

      --
      This space for rent.
    101. Re:Can't wait to see by iamhassi · · Score: 1

      "I personally can't wait to see what measures this new software takes to control its users and limit their access to other programs."

      Insightful or Troll? Decisions, decisions.... do we love Apple this week or not? We need a chart that updates weekly based on positive and negative posts and how they're rated.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    102. Re:Can't wait to see by Xest · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not sure what a random selected news feed is meant to prove. That it's not involved in the majorities of stories on Slashdot? That's fair enough.

      The problem is that it's activities are still reported to a degree grossly disproportionate to their marketshare in many given sectors, and also despite the fact that other companies news simply does not get reported. Case in point, what percentage of Android, Symbian, or Blackberry handsets have had news stories posted on Slashdot on release in relation to the percentage of new iPhone models? What percentage get multiple stories about a new handset and it's features?

      So the GP is really quite right, we do hear about every single fucking thing Apple does, to the detriment of the movements of other, sometimes bigger, more important players not having anything posted at all about their products and actions even when they're more worthy.

      It's not just Slashdot that's guilty, even usually respectable sites like the BBC do the same- advertise every new Apple product for them whilst completely ignoring competitors, sometimes better, more innovative products- contrary to popular belief Apple does not hold a monopoly on innovation.

      Even 2 stories in a list whose categories stem pretty much every possible technology, politics, and science new story in the world is grossly disproportionate. Oh, and I agree, yes, Google get far more than their fair share too.

    103. Re:Can't wait to see by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Sorry, all I heard was "Blah, blah, blah... wah! ::sniff::" Though that sniff may have been my imagination.

      Though to be fair, I'd probably be crying too if reality matched your description of events.

    104. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. Google just happens to fart more than Apple.

    105. Re:Can't wait to see by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      Stockholm syndrom is not a disease, just a phenomenon that can happen to anyone. Anyway, my apologies for that, I take it back.

      Coming back on topic:

      Freedom is not free. Just because some people cannot keep their systems clean doesn't mean that everyone should be locked out from installing what they want on their own device.

      As Mark Twain said:

      Censorship is telling a man he can't have a steak just because a baby can't chew it.

      --
      This space for rent.
    106. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      "No, all of the evidence presented is from one side"

      Well, Apple has issued statements in the cases where it becomes a media spectacle, and their statements have been something akin to, "We made a mistake." The only other evidence from "the other side" has been the emails Apple sends developers, detailing why the app was rejected -- and they only cite the clause about "objectionable content." That does not really bolster a case for these apps being rejected for reasons of quality or for using undocumented APIs (why the latter should be reason for rejection is questionable in and of itself).

      "Apple isn't rejecting apps 'left and right'."

      Only if you neglect to count the thousands of sex themed apps they rejected.

      "Did it ever cross your mind to question these reports with a little objectivity, given that you're only hearing one side of the story?"

      I have never neglected to read what Apple has to say on the matter, but they really do not bother to say much. The only objective conclusion that can be drawn is that Apple does not want sex or political cartoons to be associated with their devices. There is a lot of secrecy surrounding Apple's decisions, so I am not going to try to guess at why that is the case, but there really is no other conclusion that can be drawn here.

      "It's all very fine to claim the high ground and espouse higher morals and the need to do the 'right' thing, but I take a more pragmatic approach."

      Or in other words, you want to dismiss any moral arguments.

      "These advances are strictly due to profit"

      Which advances would you be referring to? From what I have seen, the advances in consumer products, including Apple products, are the result of research that has mostly been carried out using grant money. What I see in Apple is a company that is very good at marketing those advances -- no objection there -- but to claim that profit is the only reason those advances were ever developed is a bit of a stretch.

      "the needs of the geek market simply don't matter."

      The ability to publish political cartoons is not a "need of the geek market." If I wanted to make a case for the needs of "geeks," I would have been talking about the restrictions on programming languages, the restrictions on the ability to use GPLed code, and so forth. Political cartoons are important for society, and the trend right now is for more and more content to be delivered to mobile devices like the iPhone or iPad, cartoons included, and Apple is a powerful force in that market. If Apple refuses to allow a political cartoon app to be distributed for the iPad, it puts that particular cartoon at an inherent disadvantage (since the apps store is pushed in everyone's face by Apple). People will still find the cartoons, but to a lesser degree than before, and that is a result of Apple's deliberate, calculated decisions regarding its products.

      Maybe there are some people who fit your theory about the "anti-Apple crusade," but I do not think I am one of them. I view this as an issue of what is best for society and democracy, and Apple's behavior simply is not -- even you had to dismiss moral arguments before you could justify their behavior.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    107. Re:Can't wait to see by mystikkman · · Score: 1

      Quite true. Post anything that can be remotely construed as negative about Apple and you get downmodded for DAYS after posting. It's as if the Apple fanboys bookmark the comments they absolutely need to punish and then come back to them after they get modpoints to teach the posters a karma lesson that nothing Apple does is worthy of criticism. This only happens with Apple stories.

    108. Re:Can't wait to see by Gulthek · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      So submit well written story summaries for the news items you think are underreported. /. is community driven news after all.

    109. Re:Can't wait to see by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      Apple didn't say you couldn't put sex or political cartoons on the device. It agreement says content which is 'objectionable or derogatory'. Apple isn't in the market to sell a portable porn device. They are fully within their rights to do so. If you wish to browse porn, you are also fully capable of doing so in the browser. They are also not required to publish an app with comics depicting people of color hanging from trees. They are the distributor of these apps, and they would be responsible for any backlash. They are apparently willing to accept that. You also claim' thousands of sex themed apps'. Can you cite a source for that or are you just grandstanding?

      Do you question the "Disney Channel's" right to not show adult content? Have you written any complaints to Disney voicing your objection and their attempt to destroy democracy? Of course not. It is a closed system, and they control the content. This is no different. You may own the TV, but you elected to watch that channel and as such, you agree to the limitations they impose.

      As far as the cartoon strip, it was later approved once they sent it up the chain. Looking at the strip that was rejected, it depicted genitals (albeit poorly), which I can understand why it would have been flagged. If the user elected to go to the web site and view it via the browser, that would take Apple out of the loop legally, and you could obviously do so if you were interested.

      They did not ban all political or sexual cartoons, and you do a diservice implying such. They refuse to distribute them. You are free to access them via browser. To my knowledge, there have been 2 such apps that have been rejected. The above comic strip, and a political cartoon that 'ridiculed a public figure' in violation of the developer agreement:

      "Applications must not contain any obscene, pornographic, offensive or defamatory content or materials of any kind (text, graphics, images, photographs, etc.), or other content or materials that in Apple's reasonable judgment may be found objectionable by iPhone or iPod touch users."

      Yes, in my opinion, you do fit the profile of someone on an anti-apple crusade, just given your comments here. A single cartoon strip, depicting genitals was flagged for further review, and you claim that Apple is suddenly banning all political and sexual cartoons.

      It is irrational to develop an app that is clearly in violation of an agreement you had to 'sign', knowing it would be rejected, and then complain when that very rejection is received.

      Who is in need of a little more objectivity here?

    110. Re:Can't wait to see by yttrstein · · Score: 1

      "I call BS on that. If that was the case you wouldn't have insulted your parent poster by saying:

      "you probably just have sour grapes because you can't afford one on a dell helpdesk salary.""

      Actually I typed that last line specifically to make a point, and here it is, since it's become evident that it went entirely misunderstood:

      It's one thing to decide that you're not going to buy something because of whatever reason you like. It is something else entirely to come all up in MY face and imply that I'm foolish, or an idiot, or some sort of ego-freak because of my choice of computational equipment. The first one is something that any reasonable person does throughout their day. The second is only something that someone who is most ironically foolish, stupid, or possessing an ego clearly far larger than mine, does.

      It was an object lesson, get it? The meaning of my sentence was commentary on the argument used in the message to which I was responding.

    111. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, Apple would never use the screening process to stifle competition. I mean, stuff that competes against Apple's own would obviously be confusing to the user and any kind of cross-platform development short of rewriting the whole thing from scratch is just an excuse for substandard apps.

      See? They have only your best interest in their mind and there are no other financial motives of any kind!

    112. Re:Can't wait to see by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      But you're going to have to read at -1 to see them.

      Modding me down for saying that apple critics are modded down. Can you get any more meta?

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    113. Re:Can't wait to see by StikyPad · · Score: 2, Informative

      The apple boys have been saving their moderation points.

      It doesn't work like that slick. Use 'em or lose 'em.

    114. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sony took the Linux away, ...
      Our last real freedom is Linux.

      If Sony took the Linux away already then how can it be our last real freedom?

    115. Re:Can't wait to see by anyGould · · Score: 1

      The issue is about restricting developers by the use of "Trusted Computing" and DRM, not about whether it can play non DRM stuff. Can you make it play WebM? No, because Steve Jobs hates it, you cannot. That's the freedom that's being lost.

      Question 1: Why do I need my iPod/iPad to play WebM?

      Question 2: What the heck *is* WebM?

      Question 3: Why should I care that it can't play WebM? I don't use it, I don't even know what it is, and it's not part of the feature set I was looking for when I bought the device. My TV, DVD player, computers, and microwave don't play WebM either.

      My Apple devices do what I need them to do (play media). The tradeoff between ease of use and reliability vs tinkerability is a known one, and one I made knowingly. You may weigh the benefits differently and make a different decision, and that's OK.

      (In the meantime, why hasn't someone done the Open Source microwave?)

    116. Re:Can't wait to see by nephilimsd · · Score: 1

      Funny you should mention the carbon nano-tube article, since I just burned all 5 mod points there =P

    117. Re:Can't wait to see by imthesponge · · Score: 1

      "Apple didn't say you couldn't put sex or political cartoons on the device."

      Great. So where can I download these apps to my iPhone? (without voiding the warranty)

    118. Re:Can't wait to see by mrops · · Score: 1

      With iOS 4, your first born's arms and legs would do and is actually preferred by Steve, apparently Gizmodo heard him say something to the effect of meat's softer and torso is a bitch to dispose off.

      It seems you can keep the torso to yourself.

    119. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      "You also claim' thousands of sex themed apps'. Can you cite a source for that or are you just grandstanding?"

      http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/10/02/22/apples_overtly_sexual_iphone_crackdown_purges_5000_apps.html

      Or is AppleInsider now considered to be a rabidly anti-Apple website? Perhaps removing 5000 apps does not count as "rejecting thousands?"

      "To my knowledge, there have been 2 such apps that have been rejected."

      http://www.cloudfour.com/apples-policy-on-satire-16-rejected-apps/

      At least 17 political cartoon apps were rejected, and most of them remain rejected, just for being political cartoons. Of the ones that were ultimately accepted, only 2 were accepted without modification, and unsurprisingly those 2 were the subject of mass media attention.

      "It is irrational to develop an app that is clearly in violation of an agreement you had to 'sign'"

      In the USA, political cartoons are not considered "defamatory" or "objectionable" by the majority of people, and cartoons represent an important form of protected political dissent. Why would a cartoonist have any reason to believe that his cartoon is in violation of the agreement he makes with Apple?

      "Who is in need of a little more objectivity here?"

      The person who cannot be bothered to use a search engine to see how many apps Apple has actually rejected for being politically or sexually themed? Really, the numbers are there. The reports are there. The statements from Apple on the matter are there, but there are not many to go around, and they all amount to apologies for specific instances.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    120. Re:Can't wait to see by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      Open iTunes, go to the App Store, and search for "political cartoons". I see a wide variety available.

      You can also just browse to the site of interest as well.

    121. Re:Can't wait to see by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      Can you play files encoded with WebM on your phone?

      Yes. It's called transcoding. Unless for some reason you HAVE to download them directly to the device, and have no control over the server - that's a poor argument.

      Which it would be anyway, given how few people are using WebM video today, and that it lacks hardware acceleration currently. Later when there in fact is decent hardware acceleration for the format, then it makes more sense to complain if it's not supported on a mobile device.

      Just because you are in denial of the control that Apple has on the iPhone

      You seem to be in denial about the freedoms that users have. Yes there are restrictions but it's not like the end user does not have a lot of options for many things they do.

      It is good to note the limitations of the device, but not to the exclusion of everything else.

      Err, no one is asking to abolish the App store. Just that there is a button somewhere deep down hidden which can activate software installs bypassing the App store.

      It's called "jailbreaking". It's not that difficult, and millions of people are doing just that.

      Positing that Apple doesn't absolutely dominate the iOS by arbitrarily and capriciously rejecting and approving Apps for no discernible reasons i

      Actually Apple has a lot of very sound reasons. Sometimes the rejections ARE arbitrary and capricious, and that is truly the process at its worst. But most of the time the rejections are breaking one of the very carefully spelled-out rules. Now you may dislike some of the rules but that does not make them arbitrary, as long as the rules are clear.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    122. Re:Can't wait to see by Rewind · · Score: 1

      What new measures? It is a cellphone isn't it? If anything the iPhone is bringing a more open (I don't mean in an OSS way...) world to regular phones. I mean I have an LG Dare now. You know what I can do with it that Verizon doesn't want me to? Not a damn thing. Same with my Razor before that, and my... some wretched audiovoxx, and my StarTac before that. Apple didn't invent the locked down cell phone. Would I prefer it to be more open? Sure. However, it is not some new evil Apple invention to lock down phones. And as far as phones go, the iPhone is actually decently open.

      --
      ?
    123. Re:Can't wait to see by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      And yet every one of these political cartoons is available via the browser. They are not banned on the device or I wouldn't be able to find them on Google via the built in Safari browser.

      Apple refuses to distribute them. There is a difference.

    124. Re:Can't wait to see by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      Except that websites are at a disadvantage and are less likely to be discovered by iPhone/iPad users. Apple pushes native apps fairly aggressively, much more so than web browsing. Native apps are also available offline, something which most websites currently are not.

      Apple does not simply refuse to distribute these apps; they refuse let anyone run them on iPhones and iPads. People are forced to hack their device to run those apps, voiding their warranty, being legally threatened by Apple, and risking having an update brick their device. Apple cannot completely block the content, you are correct in that assertion, but they can certainly reduce the likelihood that a user will come across it.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    125. Re:Can't wait to see by Glothar · · Score: 1

      I believe that's called a cartel.

      They are illegal as well.

    126. Re:Can't wait to see by Dreadrik · · Score: 1

      I admit it is really scary that the average user just want computers and gadets that works together well without the need to have any technical knowledege at all

      This is not scary. This is how computers were supposed to work all along! The fact that there are so many computer geeks is a biproduct of the usability failure of the computer industry.

    127. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is someone prevented from 'running' these via browser? These apps must also connect to the internet to download content. People are hardly forced to 'hack' their phone. Much easier to click the Safari icon, find your bookmark, and your there.

      As to the claim that people won't find it, isn't it a bit irrelevant if the user isn't interested in the content to begin with? If they are, a simple google search will find what they need.

      The term is oft overly used here, but this isn't rocket science.

    128. Re:Can't wait to see by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Personally I think the smugness of the people who assume that because they don't like a product that anyone who does must be an idiot is more annoying than fanboys.

      The fact that you imagine no better reason than status why people might want these devices says volumes about you, none of it good.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    129. Re:Can't wait to see by Altus · · Score: 1

      and nothing of value would be lost.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    130. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or, to paraphrase:

      Is it really a "walled" garden if you never bump into a wall?

    131. Re:Can't wait to see by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ. Anybody can code up a WebM client, so that when you surf to a page with WebM video it will launch the application that is designated as the default handler for that data type, much like how Youtube works on the iPad right now.

      WebM is hardly worth sneezing at at this point in time anyway.

    132. Re:Can't wait to see by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Awesome! This simple wiki entry will increase my logical skills when it comes to slashdotting exponentially. For example, when people gripe about iPhone doesn't do X, I can point them to the "One-dimensional Quality". And when "Fanbois" overlook the otherwise egregious designs of their favorite tech piece, then you have the "Attractive Quality" at work.

      It has always irked me that companies can get away with a coffee carafe that is bigger than the reservoir, or the "off" feature is hidden under the "Start" button, but never had a term for it until now. Thanks!

    133. Re:Can't wait to see by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      People can only "want" things or concepts presented to them.

      This isn't necessarily true. We provide product-line software development based on the client's requirements. They know what they want the software to do and it's our job to make the software do it. Sure, we'll try to dissuade/persuade them they need feature X if it helps our bottom line, but in the end, the customers ultimately know what they want. Whatever is "presented to them" is called marketing.

    134. Re:Can't wait to see by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Plug and Play: if you are installing software and drivers, you're doing it wrong.

    135. Re:Can't wait to see by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      If anything gets covered to a higher-than-average degree, it's Linux and Open Source advocacy

      FTFY.

    136. Re:Can't wait to see by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I don't think he is claiming Apple is under-reported. He is merely positing that it is not over-reported.

    137. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's change the moderation system a little, then.

      If a user has recently done a lot of modding in an X-related story, next time he will be unable to mod X stories until he spends N points on modding stories related to Y and Z.

      Slashdot has received a lot of facelift recently. I think it's time to revisit the guts as well.

    138. Re:Can't wait to see by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Holy shit, man. Take your meds quick before the bugs come.

    139. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they're still waiting on their iPhones to update with the new OS, which takes about 3 hours. Then they'll be on saying how great it is. (Disclaimer: I have an iPhone, too).

    140. Re:Can't wait to see by yyxx · · Score: 1

      Don't you think the users buying those phones are quite aware of that now.

      No. And Apple is spending hundreds of millions in marketing dollars to make sure that they don't care. Why does it bother you when people keep reminding potential Apple customers of this?

      And it is not like we don't have proper alternatives by now.

      Good, we should let the world know about it.

      I admit it is really scary that the average user just want computers and gadets that works together well without the need to have any technical knowledege at all

      That's not scary at all. Too bad that Apple doesn't deliver on this promise.

      Even some HTC phones with android have been terrible with unstable windows drivers and I have spent more than one evening fixing other peoples computers, so that they could do something that should be Plug'n'Play 10 years ago(syncing their Hero phone with XP).

      You don't need to sync an Android phone with a desktop, it syncs with the cloud. iPhone is the only major phone platform left that still syncs with the desktop, an outdated and cumbersome model.

    141. Re:Can't wait to see by dannys42 · · Score: 1

      If I may add to your comments... The mobile market was far worse before Apple as well. Take my Verizon VX836 for example.. yes it's a freebie phone, not a smart phone. But how are you ever going to write apps for that? Yes, some of the tools are available and there's simulators and such. And you might even be able to install on your own handset. But if you want to get it distributed, you have to go through Verizon. And they're FAR more restrictive than Apple. And believe it or not, their process is far less well documented/established.

      I worked for a short time at a mobile startup. Unfortunately it went under because Verizon decided not to carry it. I'm sure we wouldn't have had that problem if we aimed for the iPhone (but this was before the iPhone came out).

    142. Re:Can't wait to see by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 1

      The apple boys have been saving their moderation points.

      It doesn't work like that slick. Use 'em or lose 'em.

      Uh... you have a couple days to use your mod points. Considering that there's bound to be one Apple story at least every other day (just click on the 'Apple' section to see how frequent they are), it is possible that they refrain from using their mod points until the next Apple story.

      That being said, I think it's bat-shit insane to believe in Apple fanboys belonging to a conspiracy like that. There are many reasons such a conspiracy is absurd - the primary being the average fanboy's 1.2 second attention span. :-P

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
    143. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what sense did they rule their own kingdom? They made proprietary computer hardware, but anyone could 1) create software for the computers without the computer manufacturer's permission, and 2) create peripherals for the computers without the computer manufacturer's permission.

      Are you kidding me? Atari, at the very least, guarded all developer documentation related to the Atari 8-bit computers like it was state secrets. They wanted you to jump through all kinds of hoops to be permitted to write software for their platform. The main reason the general public ended up being able to write software for them was end user reverse engineering and leaks.

      And there was no sign of firmware updates that would destroy compatibility with third-party products.

      They kinda didn't have flash memory back then, y'know. Firmware was mask ROM, so updating it meant replacing chips.

    144. Re:Can't wait to see by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Away from your ps3, thankfully Linux is resilient

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    145. Re:Can't wait to see by jordan_robot · · Score: 1

      Of course they do. They've got a monopoly on ipads, ipods, iphones, apple computers, os x... wait a minute...

    146. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't have mod points so i'll just go ahead and say "insigful" instead :P
      The Apple Fanboy force is incredibly present on the Internet. Much more than FOSS, or any other. They might be less, but they're the loudest and most annoying and will use mod points and whatever is necessary to make Apple appears as god or smth in these lines.

    147. Re:Can't wait to see by 1+inch+punch · · Score: 1

      I think you're over-reaching when you claim to speak on behalf of the "average person" because the "average person" may not necessarily share your view on what's important to him. Right now it seems the "average person" is richly rewarding Apple with record sales quarter after quarter.

    148. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that's where Steve got his liver!

    149. Re:Can't wait to see by tknd · · Score: 1

      You're talking about developer freedom, and it's true that developers are heavily restricted on the iPhone (ad-hoc distribution is limited to 100 users). It's not really clear that this "sucks" for users though. For one thing, people have seemed satisfied with devices and services that are completely closed (cable/satellite TV, effectively) as well as platforms that are way more restrictive than Apple's (like all video game consoles from 1985 to the present).

      I don't buy that. Plenty of people are annoyed with their cable service but they put up with it because they have no other choice. When you're in that situation as a consumer, it really does "suck". You now play the cable company's game, not the other way around. The same is true in any situation. When a monopoly takes over, it really does "suck" for the consumer's available choices.

      What you're suggesting is that everyone is perfectly happy with one option. But that's far from the truth. Let's take grocery stores for example. Safeway seems to provide what most people need, yet we still have direct competitors as well as niche competitors that provide services Safeway will simply never provide. For example the area I live in has many Asian grocery stores that offer many Asian products that Safeway will never carry.

      The Apple policy and model is detrimental to users. A good example is Google Voice. Apple users do not have access to Google Voice therefore they cannot use it and in many cases don't even know about it despite their device having the capability of doing such a task. Yet Apple managed to convince the masses that the iphone can do anything with "there's a app for that" ad campaign. So when people go into the market for a new phone, they think their iphone can do everything when it can't.

    150. Re:Can't wait to see by mR.bRiGhTsId3 · · Score: 1

      WebM was released like a month ago. Do you really think Apple is going to try and shoehorn it in when they have stated time and time again that they make sure they do features right.

    151. Re:Can't wait to see by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Remember, Apple is no longer the underdog struggling against their evil corporate counterparts. They're now an evil corporation and thus everything they do is to be reviled. That, of course, is despite the fact that they make excellent products that are popular which are also forcing other companies to adapt and evolve (seriously, look at the (smart)phone landscape before the iPhone and compare it to after the iPhone).

      A common misconception. Corporations by themselves aren't good or evil, they're purely money making machines. Their products by themselves can be evil, but such are exceedingly rare in practice - it'd probably take something like a database to account for Jews for Nazis to get to the point of speaking about "evil software".

      What can be evil are specific actions made by companies, and that is quite orthogonal to the quality of their software.

    152. Re:Can't wait to see by thoughtfulbloke · · Score: 1

      I use a Macintosh at work. I use a Macintosh at home. I used my mod points on the Juggalos article (being a science education fan-boi).

    153. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not really about "contribution", at least not in the way you've indicated. The name GNU/Linux is really about distinguishing userland and kernel. All the stuff that runs above the kernel can typically be compiled for a number of kernels, including BSD and Darwin. Now while the name GNU is not a perfect match for everything in userland- you mention X, and I could probably add GNOME and or KDE- it is representing a larger part of the OS than Linux proper (which really is just the kernel.) So a desktop machine like mine might be formally designated KDE/X/GNU/Linux. And perhaps a web server would be PHP/Apache/Linux.

    154. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most software in a typical GNU/Linux desktop is GNU. Do you know any ntoskrnl.exe user?

    155. Re:Can't wait to see by Xest · · Score: 1

      They're already there- check Firehose, the editors just never accept them.

    156. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who even cares, it's already jailbroken anyway.

    157. Re:Can't wait to see by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Whilst there are still thankfully comments against Apple, there is nonetheless plenty of support for them and their closed platforms; as well as the fact that the former almost always get modded down, whilst the latter are modded up.

      There's also the point that Apple get multiple stories a day, even for products that are in a minority of the market (Iphone), or not even shipping (Ipad) or announced (Itablet/stale/pad/whatever) whilst the market leaders in those markets (Nokia) and many other companies (selling phones, netbooks) rarely get a single story ever for an actual product release.

      Whilst Microsoft do get coverage, it's still less than Apple, and often the stories are only to criticise.

      So yes, the original poster's comments were spot on. The fact that a few of us here still criticise Apple hardly changes anything. Imagine going back to the /. of 10 years ago, and seeing large numbers of comments supporting Microsoft, with daily stories about Windows (never about Linux), and lots of people criticising open source. Would you be there, going "But there's still an occasional comment from someone supporting open source"?

    158. Re:Can't wait to see by Snowmit · · Score: 1

      I hope that when they hear the news about the political cartoon apps being blocked they also hear the news about how Apple reversed course and unblocked them.

      --
      I have a lot of opinions about Cyborgs and Architects
    159. Re:Can't wait to see by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      you either spend the whole five minutes it takes to download Spirit and jailbreak the thing,

      Apple - it "Just Works", right Out Of The Box.

      or you do without and get a Nexus One or an EVO

      Exactly, so you agree with this criticism of Apple. Just like when people criticise Windows, and you can run Linux instead. This is exactly the point being made.

    160. Re:Can't wait to see by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      but the iPad presents a few advantages that make it worth the extra money: you don't need to flip anything open, you can hold it in any orientation, simple interface, and ease of access.

      There are other netbooks/tablets/etc that can do this too.

      What's the simple interface?

      But yes, I agree that Apple products aren't computers/smartphones, they're just additional consumer gadgets. But why do they get treated as if they were computers or smartphones? Since when did Slashdot cover consumer products - would there be stories about Fridges, if Apple made one?

      Compare that to Microsoft's push toward Palladium. They wanted to lock down your main computer.

      In 10 years' time, when mobile computing is far more prevalent and powerful, do you think people are going to expect to lug around a separate "main" computer like a desktop?

      Either Apple will still require this - in which case it'd be another disadvantage for the platform. Or they won't, in which case it will be true that they're wanting to lock down your main device.

      You can choose not to buy it if it's not as convenient as you'd like for the price.

      That's exactly the point people are making. Just like when Linux/Mac users criticise Windows - obviously they're point is that people shouldn't buy it. You would hardly have the Windows fan saying "But you don't have to buy it" - that would be conceding defeat.

    161. Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Limit access to only a choice of 200,000 programs, and oh yea anything online written in HTML 4 or 5.

    162. Re:Can't wait to see by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      It's one thing to decide that you're not going to buy something because of whatever reason you like. It is something else entirely to come all up in MY face and imply that I'm foolish, or an idiot, or some sort of ego-freak because of my choice of computational equipment. The first one is something that any reasonable person does throughout their day. The second is only something that someone who is most ironically foolish, stupid, or possessing an ego clearly far larger than mine, does.

      If you choose a Speak and Spell for your computational equipment for the same reason that E.T. chose one, then I commend you. If you choose one to use it as the manufacturer intended, well...

    163. Re:Can't wait to see by jittles · · Score: 1

      Well then every vendor ought to standardize on a specific hardware interface. Of course that may prevent devices from implementing innovative features. Anyway, my point is that the iPhone is no more plug and play than Android phone (except on a Mac, perhaps).

    164. Re:Can't wait to see by Orange+Crush · · Score: 1

      ^I doubt they will. There are segments of the market in both computing and mobile devices that Apple simply doesn't want to bother with (budget, alternative form factors in mobile devices, etc). And so they will never have a true monopoly in those spaces because they just plain don't want one. They'll be a major player for the foreseeable future, but they're not interested in taking everything over.

    165. Re:Can't wait to see by bandmassa · · Score: 1

      I am neither constrained nor controlled in my use of my iPhone. It does exactly everything I want it to, if there was any feature I required, I would have gone with another platform. You're an idiot and you don't know what you're talking about. "Whinge whinge, I can't program in Flash, whinge whinge, I can't release any old shit code that bypasses the recommended safeguards." I've read all the arguments "against" iPhone and having used one for nearly 5 months (I was a resistor, I thought it a wank) I can honestly say, all the "walled garden/police state" whining is bullshit. If you must program in Flash or Java, go and rot in the Ovi store world, I wouldn't be using your apps if I was on that platform, either.

      --
      "I hope you like Guinness, Sir. I find it a refreshing substitute for, er... food." Col. Jack O'Neil, SG-1
  2. Hypers will hype by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As soon as possible! Lemme repeat, AS SOON AS POSSIBLE!

    Doesn't Apple ship Service Packs? ;-)

    1. Re:Hypers will hype by __aatgod8309 · · Score: 1

      Ship? I thought they sold them?

  3. AT&T by jsnipy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wonder if AT&T's network will melt :/

    --
    -- if you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine
    1. Re:AT&T by flipper9 · · Score: 1

      The iOs update has nothing to do with AT&T's network. It's installed via iTunes, not over-the-air.

    2. Re:AT&T by nurb432 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hasn't it already?

      And i bet more do it via itunes off their PC anyway.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    3. Re:AT&T by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Funny how your attempt to be sarcastic only highlights your lack of understanding of the whole platform. AT&T has nothing to do with it.

    4. Re:AT&T by jsnipy · · Score: 1

      You are correct, i do not understand the whole platform. My phone gets OS updates ota. I thought this might have been similar.

      --
      -- if you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine
    5. Re:AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol so revolutionary, updating a phone by plugging into a computer. This requires such deep understanding. kys.

    6. Re:AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wasn't the iPhone4 (unrelated to this update) meant to hardware-support alternative carriers anyway? Has there been any news on that?

    7. Re:AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why would it? iphone updates don't go over the ATT network... they download via itunes on your computer.

    8. Re:AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meltdown to allegedly commence at 1700 UTC.

    9. Re:AT&T by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Because millions of phones each downloading hundreds of megabytes over an already congested wireless network is a hum-dinger of a good idea, right?

      Idiot.

      This isn't a 4 MB ROM for your Motorola RAZR. This is a full blown OS.

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    10. Re:AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hahaha not my fault you need to feel technically empowered with your iPenor running on a shabby network. Enjoy your itunes and your aids.

    11. Re:AT&T by delinear · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be surprised to see increased network traffic in the first few days as people try out the new features, though.

    12. Re:AT&T by delinear · · Score: 1

      No reason it couldn't work over WiFi, where available, though?

    13. Re:AT&T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't do an over-the-air update, it has to be hooked up to itunes.

      The problem is, the phone has to re-activate when it's done.

    14. Re:AT&T by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      Not very likely since people will be downloading the upgrade on their computer, not the 3G network.

  4. Why? by uofitorn · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Make sure you are ready today to get the update as soon as possible.

    --
    "What kind of music do pirates listen to?" -Paul Maud'dib
    "Yeeeaaarrrrr n' Bee!!" -Stilgar, Leader of Sietch Tabr
    1. Re:Why? by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have an iPhone 3G. It can make use of some of the newest features in iOS 4 but cannot support multitasking (among others). I will not be upgrading my iPhone.

      There are always going to be "bleeding edge early adopters". They serve a purpose: they allow those of us who are more patient to see how well/poorly something new works. I expect glitches and other problems for those upgrading ... but nothing too drastic. If they want to jump in with both feet I say "let them".

    2. Re:Why? by Rogerborg · · Score: 5, Funny

      Because FreeBSD 10.4 (or whatever they're calling their fork) will detect nearby devices with previous versions, and laugh at them. Do you want to walk into Starbucks to a chorus of iSniggering?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    3. Re:Why? by MBCook · · Score: 1

      That's the boat I'm in. I tend to jump on Apple updates, I like playing early adopter. But with my 3G I can't get Multitasking since I don't have enough RAM.

      That leave me with only a few features. Combined mailboxes is nice, but I only have one account so that doesn't matter. Faces in Pictures is cute, but not a big deal. Folders is kind of nice, but I only have about 2.5 full pages worth of apps, so it's not necessary for me. Background images? Cute, but unnecessary.

      Updated apps using new iOS4 APIs would be the main reason to get this update for me, but since I've got an iPhone 4 on order, that issue will soon me moot. If I had a 3GS (like my parents and many of my friends), I'd jump on it. For a 3G... it's kind of 'eh'.

      And all this ignores that in the last two years, there have only been a tiny handful of times when not having multitasking has annoyed me.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    4. Re:Why? by Leafheart · · Score: 1

      I have an iPhone 3G. It can make use of some of the newest features in iOS 4 but cannot support multitasking (among others). I will not be upgrading my iPhone.

      Wait, what? You don't support multitasking? How? Don't you multitask on your computer?

      --
      --- "When you gotta do something wrong. You gotta do it right. (Fighter)"
    5. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jailbreak it. I have a second-generation iPod touch, which has the same limitations as the iPhone 3G. I'm running a jailbroken copy of the iOS 4 GM candidate, and I was able to turn on all the restricted features, no problem.

    6. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, what? Dude, like, what are you talking about? Are you talking to the guy's phone? Does his phone use a computer? Like, dude, what?

    7. Re:Why? by delinear · · Score: 1

      And all this ignores that in the last two years, there have only been a tiny handful of times when not having multitasking has annoyed me.

      Likely because that's what you're used to. Having only used an Android for a few weeks, I found it frustrating using my GF's iPhone without it over the weekend, so likely the target audience is people who currently use phones with this feature rather than those who are already happy living without it. Having said that, I'll probably encourage her to wait for the update until it's clear there are no drawbacks/kinks to work out (although Apple generally get this right as far as I can tell, I'm just naturally wary of being early-adopter cannon fodder on any device :)

    8. Re:Why? by delinear · · Score: 1

      He said the phone (3G) doesn't support multi-tasking, not him personally.

    9. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can multitask on a 3G with a simple text-edit

      Find and copy the .plist file /System/Library/CoreServices/SpringBoard.app/N82AP.plist to your computer.
      Make a backup of this file and then open it with a test editor.
      Make two small entries into the .plist file under the capabilities key:

      multitasking

      homescreen-wallpaper

      Save it back to the location and reboot then phone. This unlocks multitasking and wallpapers on the iPhone 3g and iPod Touch 2g.

    10. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woops, the code didn't show up right.

      Just see here:
      http://pixelatedgeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/iPhone3G_keys.png

    11. Re:Why? by H0p313ss · · Score: 2, Informative

      Because FreeBSD 10.4 (or whatever they're calling their fork)

      I think you misspelled NeXTSTEP (... or NextStep, or NEXTSTEP, or OPENSTEP.)

      And given that Darwin is actually Mach I think you should just give up your geek card and get back under your bridge.

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    12. Re:Why? by cgenman · · Score: 1

      Because updating to Apple's latest and greatest as soon as possible is always a good idea that never results in bricked electronics, decreased wireless signals, scratch problems, or occasional drowsiness.

    13. Re:Why? by jbeach · · Score: 1

      I have a 3g, and I'll be upgrading and then jailbreaking it again. So I can get back video recording and multitasking, and actual pictures for contacts in my address book (inexplicable why Apple hasn't done this yet).

      Also if the 4.0 doesn't provide it for the 3g, I'll go ahead and pay for the Bluetooth keyboard stack via Cydia.

      At this point, I'm just want a solid Android phone that can run a couple of the apps I use - number one being 1password, which has saved my ass countless times. I will be resisting the Jobs borging as long as possible.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    14. Re:Why? by Johnno74 · · Score: 1

      Jailbreak it. Seriously, just do it. Look up spirit, it will do a fully automated untethered jailbreak, meaning you *don't* have connect your phone to itunes while it boots for it to work. I've got an ipod touch 1g and I jailbroke it a while back for fun and I was amazed at how many of the things that bugged me about the whole itouch/iphone thing it removed. I installed backgrounder, kirikae and winterboard, and now I can customize the heck out of it, including enabling a background wallpaper on springboard. I can also easily enable any app to keep running in the background when I press home, and I hold home for a couple of seconds to bring up kirikae (task manager) to change to or shutdown a running app.

    15. Re:Why? by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      I will, since I'm satiated by your feeding me.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    16. Re:Why? by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      How's the weather down there?

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  5. What is all this shite? by Hognoxious · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    IE

    Firefox is better.

    backup your phones or touch's

    Assuming I had a touch, you appear to have omitted the thing that belongs to it.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    1. Re:What is all this shite? by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 1
      I don't think tekgoblin is going to get your sarcasm if he actually submitted that summary. I also wonder who's editing these days?

      Make sure you are ready today to get the update as soon as possible, IE backup your phones or touch's so you can get it as soon as possible.

      Obviously they aren't aware that iDevices create a backup every time they sync or update.

    2. Re:What is all this shite? by crossmr · · Score: 1

      The backup is not mandatory.
      It can be canceled/avoided before syncing to save time.

  6. Re:iPod touch's by MyGirlFriendsBroken · · Score: 4, Funny
    Let me fix that for you

    The plural of "touch" is "touches" you fucking dumbass'. People who put an apostrophe on every fucking word that end's with an 'S are starting to really piss' me off.

    --
    If you read a speed reading book, does it take you less time to read the second half?
  7. The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't wait to see all the new stuff that I had on my Android phone a year and a half ago.

    1. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

      If that bothers you, why not buy a phone from the Japanese market, and see all the "new" stuff that you'll have on your Android phone in 3 years time?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    2. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by sjonke · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      In Android 2.3 you will be able to type the word "can". As a bonus, you'll alsoget a cookie.

      --
      --- What?
    3. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by MistrBlank · · Score: 1

      Which you had to root to get access to, which is no different than a jailbreak. Good luck with your android OS on an inferior device.

    4. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but your tired comment was used about a million times by some other retard over a year and half ago. Maybe when you can come up with something original you'll have the right to criticize someone else's hard work.

    5. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And on my WinMobile device half a decade ago.

      Digital zoom, multi-tasking, homescreen wallpaper changing, bluetooth keyboard support... Yup, all on my HTC Himalaya (released 2004).

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    6. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by MBCook · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Has the lack of multi-tasking annoyed many iPhone users?

      I've had my 3G for 2 years, but there have only been a handful of times when I would have liked multitasking, mostly for switching between a webpage and something else (like SMS). When I use my phone, I'm often playing a game that I want to focus on.

      Outside of Skype and last.fm type things, has this been a big frustration for many iPhone owners?

      I'll be glad to get the feature when I get a iPhone 4, but it hasn't been a deal breaker by any means.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    7. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's a shame the iPhone is going the way of "jack of all trades, master of none".

      As long as they don't try to emulate the shit brown interface of Ubuntu we'll be fine.

      (disclaimer, I run Ubuntu, even with the *ahem* "earthy" interface).

    8. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      I don't own an iPhone, but lack of multitasking on my Touch has been frustrating. The best case I could come up with is listening to Pandora and wanting to play a game or run some other 3rd party app. While it wasn't exactly a deal breaker, multitasking hand held devices isn't exactly a revolutionary concept either.

    9. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by afabbro · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I can't wait to see all the new stuff that I had on my Android phone a year and a half ago.

      I'm laughing because this funny and obvious joke was somehow marked Flamebait. "Oh no! He insulted Steve! Mod him down!" they cried as the pitchfork-wielding crowd surged forward...

      --
      Advice: on VPS providers
    10. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 1

      Has the lack of multi-tasking annoyed many iPhone users?

      I've had my 3G for 2 years, but there have only been a handful of times when I would have liked multitasking, mostly for switching between a webpage and something else (like SMS). When I use my phone, I'm often playing a game that I want to focus on.

      Outside of Skype and last.fm type things, has this been a big frustration for many iPhone owners?

      I'll be glad to get the feature when I get a iPhone 4, but it hasn't been a deal breaker by any means.

      The times I would have liked multitasking would have been easily satisfied by applications that resume where I left off upon exiting, which is something application programmers will STILL have to do with iOS 4.

    11. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by willyd357 · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, Google and/or HTC, etc. aren't actively trying to prevent anyone from gaining root access in Android, nor to I recall them threatening to brick anyones device for having done so. Thats the difference, Android has a restricted privilege level by default but can be "legally" rooted, while the same activity in iOS is considered a sin against Jobs. Frankly, I think having a device which is "inferior" in the hardware department in a fair trade off, at least then I can use it to it's full potential without any interference.

    12. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Jailbroken 3G user here. And backgrounder/circuitous is frankly the only reason I have to jailbreak the thing. I do have to say, the ability to go do something else while Pandora or iHeartRadio is playing in the background is very, VERY nice. But I've never run into another need for multitasking on the thing. And *nothing* else I've found on Cydia has been compelling enough to keep.

      When I get my iPhone 4 on Thursday, I will most like never jailbreak it. There's just nothing in the jailbreak scene that I need or want besides backgrounder.

      --
      Imagine all the people...
    13. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by blai · · Score: 1

      when you buy an apple product, you do not buy for their features. you buy for the polish.

      Also why I don't buy apple products.

      --
      In soviet Russia, God creates you!
    14. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by oakgrove · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That sounds interesting. Could you provide some examples?

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    15. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Good luck with your android OS on an inferior device.

      I'm having excellent "luck" on my Droid. I'm curious though, in what way is my device inferior?

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    16. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by kisrael · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Bang on-- the only reliable example of people really missing it are Pandora. Or, possibly, GPS turn directions? Basically, audio-only stuff, which brings us to an interesting point, with both iPhone and iPad, YOU'RE not really a multitasking device either -- it's nice how these devices don't try to divide your attention, and running a new app is a bit like running a new, more specialized device.

      That said -- 90s era Palm had better culture of "resuming right where you left off" apps, but now maybe iOS gets that back... and I think I might start liking that bottom of screen app bouncing the same way I like alt-tab in Windows...

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    17. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by kisrael · · Score: 1

      people also buy it for the infrastructure, and continuity w/ upgraded devices.

      Infrastructure probably isn't a big sales pitch for you either-- I mean, I don't buy any music via iTunes, just good old MP3s from Amazon. But I appreciate the AppStore for making a very viable way of letting small developers sell cheap cool stuff, despite Apples irritating rejection policies.

      --
      SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
    18. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, you don't switch between SMS and other stuff often? There is no way I could survive on the iPhone then... yikes. All I do it switch between SMS and what I'm doing.

    19. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by cgenman · · Score: 1

      I use streaming Pandora for a car radio, which makes it difficult to check directions on a map or e-mail. Similarly, I'll be writing a response post to something, and will need to switch over and check a piece of data somewhere. Because of how the phone is setup, there is no guarantee that when I return to the original page, the response post will still be there or that the session will even still be valid.

      Multitasking would allow for staying on IM sessions while updating calendars. Or background uploading of photos to FTP sites while still using the phone. Background map apps that beep when you get to your destination.

      It's not a be-all-end-all of anything, but it is an expected way that modern computers behave. It will be nice to flip away from something, flip back, and have it properly remember what was going on (rather than all of the half-arsed implementations now that might work properly, and might erase everything and start you over again). Or keeping an IM window open in the background.

    20. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      Has the lack of multi-tasking annoyed many iPhone users?

      How about when searching for an address? There are plenty of times where I've gotten to some store's website to look up their address and wanted to copy & paste (due to the combination of my poor spelling ability and the ways people come up with new street names) from the browser to the GPS.

      Fortunately, I don't have an iPhone and have been able to do this already.

    21. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Bingo. Apple always chooses to sell something that does fewer things better.

      You may not want it personally, but you'll also never sell one billion of anything.

    22. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by jbeach · · Score: 1

      I'ts completely fricking irritated me, to be listening to streaming radio on one app and then have to stop it to switch briefly to another app.

      So, I jailbroke mine and added multitasking. :) No biggie at all.

      --
      The Invisible Hand of the Free Market is what punches workers in the nuts.
    23. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by oakgrove · · Score: 1

      Put my phone down, punk, before I go over there and kick your ass.

      --
      The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
    24. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Lucky. Fucking. You.

      You can run cronjobs and ftp servers on your cellphone. And for what?

    25. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by jbarr · · Score: 1

      I use a jailbroken iPod Touch running OS v3.1.3. I have the "Backgrounder" app installed that lets me run apps in the background (aka multitasking) but it is a bit overrated in my opinion. Apps tend to open and close quickly, and most retain the place you were at when you return (yes, there are some severe exceptions.) And unless there's enough shared RAM, multitasking just won't work well.

      --
      My mom always said, "Jim, you're 1 in a million." Given the current population, there are 7000 of me. God help us all!
    26. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Microlith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He can't, because aside from some market features (train pass, 1seg) there's nothing special whatsoever about Japanese phones. Tragic, really.

    27. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Jeeze, I feel like I totally wasted my money buying a new iPhone when I could have had a WinMo phone from 2004. If only I had know such a glorious alternative existed last week when I placed my order.

    28. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by noidentity · · Score: 1

      I don't need my phone to do anything other than let me hear the other party, and let them hear me. That's enough multitasking.

    29. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about the iPhone, since I don't own one, but the first day I used my iPad I found myself extremely frustrated at the lack of multitasking. That and popup notifications.

      For example, when you receive an instant message, a window pops up in your current app, which forces you to cease what you are doing and interact with it. This happens every. time. you. get. a. message. To respond to a message you have to leave your app, open the IM app, respond, close the app, open your previous app, and if it didn't save your place (which a good deal of apps don't, I've found) get back to where you were.

      Then when your friend responds to you, repeat the process. In other apps I've found myself wanting to play background audio or background video. The restriction is such that I find it frustrating to navigate and use the device, and I find myself on my netbook istead; even if it isn't as responsive, it fits my usage patterns better.

    30. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well to be fair, the iPad isn't for doing actual work. It's for playing games, reading the news and watching movies.

    31. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not? A smart phone is a mobile computer, and as such it should be able to handle any task it's owner(not it's manufacturer) deems necessary. It's ridiculous to think that anyone could find a purposefully crippled device like the iOS platform to somehow be superior.

    32. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Draek · · Score: 1

      Has the lack of multi-tasking annoyed many iPhone users?

      Well, did the lack of web browsing annoy many non-smartphone users before the iPhone? no, not really. But it's one of those things you never knew you needed 'til you get it.

      I give it about two months before all the iPhone users are flaunting how great and wonderful it is, and decrying any phone that doesn't have it as "obsolete" and "unacceptable in today's market".

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    33. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Draek · · Score: 1

      Yeah, poor Microsoft went bankrupt trying to cater to more than one market at a time. And Nokia! a pity about their fate, poor upstarts, but they had it coming with such lack of focus on their phones' design, I've heard they even allowed a CLI on some of them, can you imagine?

      People in general don't care *why* your product can't do the things they want them to do, only that they *can't*. Which is why the world still revolves around companies-which-are-most-decidedly-not-Apple.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    34. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the hell is this insightful? Go look it up, that poster's right.

    35. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by IKnwThePiecesFt · · Score: 1

      Fortunately my iPhone can copy paste addresses between apps so multitasking has no relevance to this task?

    36. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, for example:
      1. kinetic scrolling and magnetic snap
      2. gestures such as pinch to zoom
      3. multitouch sensor
      3. browser that would allow to browse at level even close to iPhone
      4. 12mm thick smartphone
      5. capacitive touchscreen
      Wait...or was it the other way around? :D

    37. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by shird · · Score: 1

      Other than 'audio only stuff', there is also net access. On 2G/3G net access can be quite slow. So slow in fact, that it makes sense to background the task and do something else while you wait. It needs to continue downloading in the background and cannot be 'paused'. No idea whether the older iPhones do this, but my old Sony E certainly can.

      --
      I.O.U One Sig.
    38. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by daver00 · · Score: 1

      The main problem I see is that you con't install a 3rd party app which is persistently running on your phone. That means no custom keyboard (I just installed swype for example), no resource monitoring, no custom file manager (like Astro), no custom calendar app (Android calendar is lacking to say the least, but don't get me started on iPhone), etc. Less important is the fact that I can basically have tabbed web browsing on my phone, while listening to music in the background. I can open 6 apps and copy/paste data and text between them willy nilly. Problem with the wireless in the web browser? Easy, quickly hit home and adjust wireless settings then pop straight back to where you were browsing. Its easy to dismiss multitasking when you don't have it, but I use it at least once a day on my Android phone, its a truly killer feature.

      Sure, if you don't care about these things then by all means you can probably get by without it, but its silly to claim there isn't much benefit to it, there is sufficient benefits that Apple at least have gone the extra mile to introduce it. Really its a must-have feature if you ask me.

    39. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Has the lack of multi-tasking annoyed many iPhone users?

      An interesting question would be, how many of iPhone users today have actually ever used a different smartphone (which allows full multitasking)?

    40. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it's certainly pissed me off, because I have wanted to:
      1. Receive calls in Skype without always leaving it running in the foreground.
      2. Be able to use other apps while using Skype to look up info, etc.
      3. Be able to have a background app update Google Latitude, etc.
      4. Have things like data sync (Dropbox, whatever) run in the background and/or at scheduled times.
      You get the idea.

    41. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      Not my point at all.

      These are things a device I owned did in 2004. What my WinMobile device can do now is more than that, and more than the iPhone (which has just caught up with 2004). I also had sat-nav, mobile games, stupid sound apps... The only thing the iPhone has which is better than my Himalaya is a music player and a faster processor. However, the Himalaya allowed removable storage access to the SD card, and installation of codecs for other media sources, so maybe it was even a better media player.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    42. Re:The iPhone and finally walk and chew gum! by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Of course if you bought the same smartphone as most people in Japan, you would be purchasing an iPhone...

  8. Unfortunately by Yvan256 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not for all the iPhone and iPod touch models. The first generation is being left behind.

    So that means a lot of users stuck with devices running iOS3. Please don't forget that when making apps, unless you don't like profits of course.

    FYI: the 1st generation iPod touch is the slowest, least powerful of all the iDevices. If it runs properly on that, it will run on all others.

    1. Re:Unfortunately by Lord+Grey · · Score: 4, Informative

      While I obviously can't speak for everyone, here are some actual statistics regarding hardware usage for one of my apps compatible with iPhone OS 3.1 and higher:

      • Apple iPhone 3GS: 51.3%
      • Apple iPhone 3G: 24.1%
      • Apple iPhone 1G: 5.9%
      • Apple iPod Touch 2G: 5.6%
      • Apple iPad: 3.4%
      • Apple iPod Touch 3G: 2.0%
      • Apple iPhone: 0.4%
      • Apple iPod Touch 1G: < 0.1%
      • Apple iPod Touch: < 0.1%

      7.2% were simulator usage. The app used here is a paid business app, with not-very-exciting sales figures. Still, I would think that the hardware distribution would be meaningful. If so, it would indicate that one could profitably ignore the first generation iPhone.

      --
      // Beyond Here Lie Dragons
    2. Re:Unfortunately by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      Anything below iPhone 3GS will not support iOS4. I expect iPod Touch's of similar build times to be the same.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    3. Re:Unfortunately by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You mean the iPhone suffers from this fragmentation thing Apple people accuse the Android platform of having?

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

      Technically the 3G is supported, but it's such a half-assed implementation that Apple (and 3G users) would have been better off not supporting it at all.

    5. Re:Unfortunately by HogGeek · · Score: 1, Informative

      Close, but no cigar.

      All iPhones support the new OS, but not all of the features.

      The only iPod Touch that won't run the new OS is the first gen.

      Otherwise all iPod touches and iPhones are "good to go*"

      * = some features not available.

    6. Re:Unfortunately by jacktherobot · · Score: 1

      Compatibility with all devices would fly in the face of steve's vision! Apple doesn't want cross platform apps. They want developers to take advantage of apple's latest innovations!

    7. Re:Unfortunately by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      So that means a lot of users stuck with devices running iOS3. Please don't forget that when making apps, unless you don't like profits of course.

      I don't think that's going to be too much of an issue, since they're rolling this out as a free update. That means almost everyone who is able to upgrade will. I'm afraid there aren't that many 1st gen devices out there in comparison to 2nd & 3rd gen, so developers will have little incentive. I say this as a developer whose only device is a 1st gen iPod Touch. :(

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    8. Re:Unfortunately by richdun · · Score: 1

      FYI: the 1st generation iPod touch is the slowest, least powerful of all the iDevices. If it runs properly on that, it will run on all others.

      FYI: 1st generation iPod Touch is not supported.

    9. Re:Unfortunately by vlm · · Score: 1

      It's not for all the iPhone and iPod touch models. The first generation is being left behind.

      And brand new 8GB 3G touch owners are left behind also, as per apples website:

      "iPod touch 3rd generation 32GB and 64GB (late 2009)"

      Its a pity really... I wanted phone and PDA functionality, but didn't want to pay $3000 for the iphone experience, so I bought an $185 8G third gen touch and a $10/month pay as you go phone, I figure I get 99% of the functionality for about 20% of the price. Pity it can't be upgraded, but I don't think my end-user-experience would be much improved by the features, anyway.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    10. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because it's not a third generation device. It's sold on the same page as the 32GB and 64GB third generation iPod touches, but the 8GB model is and always has been second generation.

    11. Re:Unfortunately by gbrandt · · Score: 0

      There is no such thing as iOS3, so I suspect that nobody is running it.

      It was called iPhone OS 3

    12. Re:Unfortunately by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Business users are more likely to have an iPhone than an iPod touch, so your sales figures might not reflect the percentage of devices used by non-business users.

    13. Re:Unfortunately by intheshelter · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That's not the fragmentation they accuse Android of, but nice try. The fragmentation they refer to is multiple hardware configurations where the buttons are all in different places and so app developers can't be assured of what controls are available to each user. On the iPhone the hardware buttons are the same in all the versions so app developers don't have this issue.

    14. Re:Unfortunately by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      I didn't think the 8GB models were third generations, only left around to provide a lower cost, entry level model but didn't have the faster hardware and additional memory. The wiki page lists only 32 and 64GB models as third generation.

    15. Re:Unfortunately by fermion · · Score: 1
      Apple typically has a policy of three years of new OS support for old hardware. For instance, my Powerbook was last produced in 2006, so Snow Leopard released in summer of 2009 did not support the PowerPC. This was a bummer, but it meant they could optimize the OS for current machines. This does not mean the PowerPC cannot be used. OS 10.5 is still good. Typically I can run an OS through two releases, which means that any given mac has a lifetime of 5 or 6 years, if I wish.

      What this means is that there is no expectation of support of iOS 4 on the original iPhone. Likewise, the next OS is not going to support the 3G. That is jus the way the support cycle typically works. It does not mean that original iPhone is no longer useful. I might take this as a impetus to jailbreak mine.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    16. Re:Unfortunately by Xylaan · · Score: 2, Informative
      Try reading it again. The pictures you quoted from are the compatible devices, not the incompatible ones.

      "The iOS 4 Software Update works with the second- and third-generation iPod touch. Not all features are compatible with all devices."

    17. Re:Unfortunately by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Yes it does. And that has never been a secret.

      It's not just CPU and RAM either - the versions prior to the 3GS don't have a magnetic compass, for example, and they have less accurate accelerometers I believe. The 3GS and above also have video recording and a better camera with adjustable focus and a bigger sensor.

      Fragmentation is not mentioned as a downside that only Android suffers from - just a point that needs to be considered by any platform that uses more than 1 physical hardware configuration.

    18. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also close, but no cigar. In the computer world, an OS supports hardware, not the other way around. So, "the new OS supports all iPhones, but not all the new features will be available".

    19. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as my apps don't start disappearing because I can't upgrade, I won't mind.

    20. Re:Unfortunately by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      It's not for all the iPhone and iPod touch models. The first generation is being left behind.

      You make it sound like Apple is doing it intentionally to boost sales of their new phones. The simple fact of the matter is that the first generation of iOS devices only has 128MB of memory, which is not really enough to run more than one program at a time. Apple doesn't want to give users a bad experience on their device, so it's better to just let them run iOS 3 and not complain about applications crashing because they ran out of memory.

      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    21. Re:Unfortunately by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      It certainly is part of it. Also in terms of hardware configuration - how do you deal with the iPhone 4 and the iPad - both of which have vastly different hardware (and resolutions) than previous iPhone devices?

      Probably the same way Google deals with it :) - application manifests and in application condition checking.

      Was that a better try?

    22. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Er, no. Common 'fragmentation' complaints are of the network carriers publishing their own individual and behind-schedule firmware update ROMs, and issuing proprietary custom app stores for their subscribed users.

      Hardware fragmentation... is really not a big deal for 99% of apps on a VM-based platform like the Android.

    23. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats simply not true, I am running ios 4.0 on my 3G and aside from lack of double press home button multitasking it seems to be working just fine.

    24. Re:Unfortunately by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      The small percentage of users and the fact that in some cases not even the 3G can handle the new capabilities hardware-wise means that you might safely ignore the original iPhone users. Also it depends on what the app does. Only some of my apps would ever use then new functionality anyways.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    25. Re:Unfortunately by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      The original iPhone does not support iOS 4.0.

    26. Re:Unfortunately by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      I do understand that the new hardware has more RAM and a faster CPU and GPU, however some of the things that Apple and I could both really benefit from is for example the iBooks application. It would allow me to use my iPod touch as a portable PDF reader (great for datasheets) and it would allow publishers and writers to have a larger userbase of potential buyers.

      It's not like my iPod touch can't read PDFs because it works just fine either when clicking on a PDF in a website or as an email file attachment. Does the iBooks application really require 256 MiB of RAM?

    27. Re:Unfortunately by eliotw · · Score: 1

      iOS 4 is not supported on the original iPhone. (And some early iPod Touches but I forget which ones)

      That said there are still plenty of improvements on the iPhone 3G to make it worth the FREE upgrade. You don't get multi-tasking but you get:
      - Folders (as an app hoarder I need this badly)
      - Unified mailbox and threaded view
      - Digital zoom on camera
      - iBooks w/ PDF support
      - Create Playlists on the phone
      - Faces and Places in Photos
      - Wallpaper
      - Spell Checking in many apps
      - Wireless keyboards support

    28. Re:Unfortunately by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2, Informative

      The original iPhone and iPod Touch will not be supported. The iPhone 3G and iPod Touch 2G will be supported but not all features will be available due to hardware limitations.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    29. Re:Unfortunately by PhilHibbs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, the iPhone suffers from this old-hardware-becomes-obsolete thing that the IT industry has lived with since forever. You buy a computing device, it will become obsolete some time. I'm sure there will be things that iOS6 can do that the iPhone4 can't do, and it probably won't even run iOS7 at all.

    30. Re:Unfortunately by eliotw · · Score: 1

      Also you get:

      - Can disable cellular data in addition to 3G and full "airplace mode"
      - Better control over location services. Allow on an app by app basis and status icon indicating an app is using location info
      - Longer passcode support w/o needing the enterprise tools
      - lots of other little things. Did I mention the 3-d looking _shiny_ dock at the bottom of the screen?

    31. Re:Unfortunately by illumin8 · · Score: 1

      I do understand that the new hardware has more RAM and a faster CPU and GPU, however some of the things that Apple and I could both really benefit from is for example the iBooks application. It would allow me to use my iPod touch as a portable PDF reader (great for datasheets) and it would allow publishers and writers to have a larger userbase of potential buyers.

      I didn't know that iBooks wouldn't be available for iOS 3. That's too bad because it seems like it could definitely work with only 128MB of RAM.

      --
      "When the president does it, that means it's not illegal." - Richard M. Nixon
    32. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was obviously talking to application developers, so your link is meaningless.

    33. Re:Unfortunately by cgenman · · Score: 1

      What's the difference in your data between "Apple iPhone" and "Apple iPhone 1G?"

    34. Re:Unfortunately by cgenman · · Score: 1

      Some of those hardware limitations are overcome on 3rd party app stores. It looks like some features won't be available due to hardware limitations and some features won't be available due to creating the perception of value with higher-end phones.

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

      I would expect the stats for iPhone vs iPod Touch to depend a lot on the type of application. I use a Touch, so many network-oriented apps are of little use to me. Also, the people who would want a paid business app might be more likely to have the more expensive iPhone, depending on what kind of business app it is. (Not just because of price, but also due to mobility. A businessperson who travels a lot and has a busy schedule probably needs a sophisticated phone. Not everybody needs that.

    36. Re:Unfortunately by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      [Citation needed]. From what I know the multitasking won't be available for certain on the 3G and 2G Touch. These two devices use ARM11 cores while the next generations use Cortex A8 cores. Presumably the difference in CPUs is the main reason. Given that, it might be possible to implement multitasking on the hardware but it might not be a very usable phone if you did.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    37. Re:Unfortunately by madsenj37 · · Score: 1

      You can buy an iPhone without a contract, so your quoted price of $3000 is off. A $200 iPhone w/contract is sold for 3-4 times the unsubsidized price if you really want one without a contract. Still your point is valid for those willing to carry two devices, but your prices are off by a good $2000+.

      --
      Choosing the lesser of two evils is a choice for evil.
    38. Re:Unfortunately by Chardish · · Score: 1

      You clearly don't understand what fragmentation is.

      Fragmentation isn't one device superseding another in capabilities, or rendering the first one obsolete. Those are all normal parts of evolving technology. No one expects a Pentium II to be able to run Crysis. It's simply beyond the capabilities of the older hardware.

      No, fragmentation is when you have two devices of the same generation that support a different set of features. For example, the Red model might support features A and B, and the Blue model might contain features B and C. Want to make an app that requires features A and C? Tough luck!

      You can call a "feature" hardware buttons, software support, or even whether a particular carrier has locked out a certain capability or not - but either way, this is a real problem that Android has that iPhone doesn't. Is Android better or worse than iOS? Debatable. But iOS isn't fragmented, and that's a point in its column.

    39. Re:Unfortunately by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      I have a 1st gen iPod touch, but I certainly don't except the app devs to support it.

      1) iPod Touches are a minimal chunk of the iPhone market to begin with

      2) 1st Gen iPod Touches are even more minimal than that

      I hardly think that their profits will be driven by supporting this aging device, but quite the opposite. Time they spend getting their app backwards compatible could be better spent adding awesome features.

    40. Re:Unfortunately by technomom · · Score: 1

      You say tomato, I say fragmentation.

    41. Re:Unfortunately by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I know the multitasking won't be available for certain on the 3G and 2G Touch. These two devices use ARM11 cores while the next generations use Cortex A8 cores. Presumably the difference in CPUs is the main reason. Given that, it might be possible to implement multitasking on the hardware but it might not be a very usable phone if you did.

      It's not about the CPU. You can multitask just fine on an ancient 8-bit CPU from the 1980s. It's the memory, or lack thereof. iPhones do not have swap space and the amount of physical RAM is very limited on older phones. IIRC, first generation iPhones had 128MB, 3G had 128, 3GS had 256, and the new iPhone 4 has 512.

      128MB is just barely enough for the OS and one application. Apple set some hard limit (64MB I think, the rest being reserved for OS use) which an app could not exceed without being summarily killed for running out of memory. Many apps could coexist inside 64MB, but given the original design which allowed apps to assume they could take all of it, enabling multitasking on a 128MB iPhone would be a recipe for users encountering lots of application pairs which could not successfully multitask together.

    42. Re:Unfortunately by sqrt(2) · · Score: 1

      You are wrong about digital zoom, wallpapers, and wireless keyboard for the iPhone 3G. I am using it right now and those features are absent.

      --
      If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
    43. Re:Unfortunately by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      You may have an app that requires the new gyroscope, front facing camera or some other service - that a previous iPhone doesn't have. Some iPhone like devices are running 3.x, some are running 4.x (and some won't be able to run 4.x). Its the same thing Android deals with - some Android phones have front facing cameras - some don't. Some have keyboards, some don't. Some are running 1.6, 2.x etc.

      Google uses the application manifest to filter results on their store - in other words if your app requires a keyboard or a front camera, or a gyroscope, or a whatever - it won't let you download (or even see!) that app on your phone's marketplace.

      Sounds like the same issues to me ;).

    44. Re:Unfortunately by Chardish · · Score: 1

      The fragmentation issue is that there might be two phones and App #1 will run on the Red Phone but not the Blue Phone, and App #2 will run on the Blue Phone but not the Red Phone.

      Apple doesn't have that problem, because everything will run on the newest model of the phone. As soon as they break that trend, they're fragmented, yes.

  9. It's bad enough if... by fiendie · · Score: 2

    ...Apple rumor blogs do this.
    Why not wait until the damn thing is actually released?

    1. Re:It's bad enough if... by HaeMaker · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Why is /. reporting on something that should happen, not has happened?

  10. Yeah really. by markov_chain · · Score: 4, Funny

    And if you have a jailbroken phone, make sure you are ready today to NOT get the update as soon as possible :D

    --
    Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
    1. Re:Yeah really. by srjh · · Score: 1

      Or a 3G... I've been running the GM for a few days now, and even after removing some of the best features (wallpapers, rotation lock, multitasking), it still runs like crap. I'd rather stick with my jailbroken 3.1.3 (almost all the 4.0 features were available as jailbroken apps, often implemented better), but Apple makes it extremely difficult to roll back firmware upgrades.

      Hopefully they improve the performance issues in a later release, but I get the feeling some of us older users are being pushed towards an iPhone 4.

    2. Re:Yeah really. by splatter · · Score: 2, Informative

      Also this means everyone should be saving their SHSH blobs via Surak or using umbrella. I personally have them saved with both just in case. Last time Suraks servers dumped and I lost my 3.1.2 backup.

      Remember 4.0 means Apple won't sign for 3.1.3 releases, so in order to roll back or jailbrake you need a tss server, or to rely on Suraks server if you need to restore.

      http://thefirmwareumbrella.blogspot.com/2009/09/tinytss-all-your-iphone-restores-are.html

      dp

      --
      "(I) have this unfortunate condition that causes me not to believe a single thing any politician says when a mic's on.
    3. Re:Yeah really. by Kenja · · Score: 1

      It is rather interesting that a "JailBroken" iPhone stops getting updates, while a 'Rooted" android phone gets updates sooner and more often then standard.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    4. Re:Yeah really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if you have a jailbroken phone, make sure you are ready today to NOT get the update as soon as possible :D

      Errr....Rooted android phones? Isn't that the same thing?

  11. Blatant Self Ad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    The summary is almost 90% of the article linked. Also the user who submitted this is linking back to their "blog" that goes for the short form summary that doesn't contain any useful info.

  12. An ever shorter leash for the end users by FreeUser · · Score: 1, Funny

    I personally can't wait to see what measures this new software takes to control its users and limit their access to other programs.

    A suspect a new, tighter collar for all the iSlaves out there, along with a much shorter leash. But hey, it's from Apple and it's shiny!

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    1. Re:An ever shorter leash for the end users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say that as if it would be universally disliked.

      But I supposed you mean how you can now load DRM-free PDFs into the iBooks app? Or what?

      Other than that, I can't see where any more restrictions were imposed.

    2. Re:An ever shorter leash for the end users by bonch · · Score: 0, Troll

      "iSlaves?" The smugness from the Apple-hating Slashbots today is pretty amusing and shows how out of touch this readership is getting. It's bad enough you get news half a week behind everyone else.

    3. Re:An ever shorter leash for the end users by patch0 · · Score: 1

      Just bought an iPad, it goes with my iPhone 3GS and my Airport Extreme and my AppleTV. I'm fully aware of the Apple media walled garden, I don't care about that in the slightest. Why? Because their DRM is so piss-poor I know I can break it if I want to without enourmous effort. In the end I've bought these Apple products because I like the convenience of having a single media collection that coordinates simply accross all my various devices (~30GB music ~30GB photos, several hundred GB of film and TV shows).

      I know I can have all those things with various FOSS solutions such as Myth TV etc, or even Windows devices. But to be honest I work in IT all day long, often doing unpaid overtime, I don't want to come home and wrestle with my computers at home too, be they Linux based or Windows based. Apple's devices are more expensive than they could be, but for me at least, they are well designed, very easy to use (for the non-technical members of my household this is very important) and very very convenient. In the end, I bought those Apple products because I'm lazy and I can afford them. I also don't understand the frankly bizarre levels of spleen directed at Apple for daring to produce products that people clearly want.

    4. Re:An ever shorter leash for the end users by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok Ok, itards is that better?

      I save up mod points just to mod the asshole mcfanboys down to try and establish some balance.

  13. Yes, the cat does have my tongue by sjonke · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've been checking for the update periodically all morning. I'm definitely looking forward to it, but not looking forward to their servers getting overloaded. Probably I should just forget about it and try to update tomorrow or Wednesday.

    --
    --- What?
    1. Re:Yes, the cat does have my tongue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? I've never understood the rush to get a new OS version for anything. Yes, there are new features, but with features come bugs. I *never* upgrade on day one, and usually wait until the X.1 or at least X.0.1 versions when most of the day-one bugs have been fixed.

      In other words, why wait until as soon as tomorrow or Wednesday? Wait a couple of weeks, and let the anxious guinea pigs run their experiments, complain when things break, and eventually get the problems sorted out.

    2. Re:Yes, the cat does have my tongue by cdrudge · · Score: 1

      why wait until as soon as tomorrow or Wednesday? Wait a couple of weeks, and let the anxious guinea pigs run their experiments, complain when things break, and eventually get the problems sorted out.

      Because if everyone waited, then there would be no early adopters. Someone has to go first.

  14. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    and iPod touch's.

    iPod touch's what? Why does my iPod's touch have anything?

    IE backup your phones

    No it doesn't. It's a web browser. Why would I use it to backup my phone?

    phones or touch's

    My touch's WHAT?! The suspense is killing me.

    . "

    . . .

  15. Pfft.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who needs an iPod touch when I have my Compaq portable?

    1. Re:Pfft.. by jgagnon · · Score: 1

      Back in the day they were Compaq luggables. :p

      Luggable

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    2. Re:Pfft.. by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Actually you answered your own question. Anyone with a Compaq portable would need an iPod touch.

  16. Slashvertising at its worst? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why post a 'releases today' article when you can wait a few hours and post a 'released today' article? This is news about future news instead of actual news.

    1. Re:Slashvertising at its worst? by jgagnon · · Score: 1

      Why post this response now instead of waiting a few hours and posting it when it is more relevant?

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
  17. Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by King_TJ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's get a grip on reality here, people. First and foremost? This device is a CELLPHONE. Many, MANY cellphones have been made before the iPhone was released, and many more have been made since then which NEVER get a firmware update at all! You simply "get what you get" with them, often meaning even functionality the original manufacturer intended the phone to have is stripped out by your cellular carrier and their custom version of the firmware. (EG. Despite it supporting bluetooth data transfer, you *may* get blocked from copying over your own ringtone files from a computer -- or maybe you're disallowed from moving over your contact info as vcard files, or ??)

    Yet along comes the iPhone, which by contrast, has an INCREDIBLE amount of flexibility, and people are screaming FASCIST?!

    As phone handsets go, it's pretty empowering, I'd say. (And I say this as someone who used to own the original iPhone as well as a 3G, but now uses a Samsung Messager II phone instead of "drinking the kool-aid" and extending my AT&T contract out another 2 years just to get the latest iPhone.)

  18. No word on iPad? Um, no. by daveschroeder · · Score: 4, Informative

    There has been "word" on when iOS 4 will be available for iPad, and the word is "this fall".

    There were two separate development trains for iOS (previously known as "iPhone OS"); one for iPhone and iPod touch, and one for iPad.

    1. Re:No word on iPad? Um, no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure ? Because your suggestion is actually two words.

    2. Re:No word on iPad? Um, no. by anonymousNR · · Score: 1

      Who gives a damn if there is no Word on iPad... ahh wait a minute.
      (note to self) Should stop using MS products.

      --
      -- It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. -- Aristotle
    3. Re:No word on iPad? Um, no. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Using Word on a touch tablet with no hardware keyboard? That's a very perverted category of BDSM right there, sir!

  19. Left in the dust by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

    I'm not entirely sure why they didn't release it for the 1st Gen iPhone & iPod Touch, does the OS take advantage of hardware not present on those? I'm hoping that my 1st Gen iPod Touch isn't rendered obsolete by this update. I know when iPhone OS 3 came out, there was a big push that all apps needed to be OS 3 tested, I wonder when the same will be required for iOS 4?

    --
    Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    1. Re:Left in the dust by voidptr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Required to be tested against iOS 4 isn't the same as requiring iOS 4. You can still build against the 3.0 SDK if you want to support older devices, you just need to make sure it doesn't break when running on iOS 4 too. You can still build against 2.X if you really want to, but it needs to not crash on 4.0.

      --
      This .sig for unofficial government use only. Official use subject to $500 fine.
    2. Re:Left in the dust by jittles · · Score: 1

      I didnt' think the 3G could go to 4.0 either. The hardware between 3G and the first iPhone is almost identical. The only difference is the radio, I believe. I know the processors are identical.

  20. It's so exciting! by copponex · · Score: 1, Funny

    Dear Steve,

    Thank you for letting us know what we can do with our computers! I cannot wait to see the choices you have made for me with this latest update. My favorite artists are now too profane for my equipment, but now I am the mayor of my local Starbucks!

    Most men, after a little freedom, have preferred authority with the consoling assurances and the economy of effort it brings. -Walter Lippmann

    1. Re:It's so exciting! by webdog314 · · Score: 1

      Dear Walt,

      You're welcome - but if you're using your phone as a computer, then you seriously need to set it down and step outside for an hour or ten. Hug a tree. Take a walk. Find a girl... okay, maybe that last is a bit unrealistic, but you get the idea. Starbucks will still be there when you get back, along with an email coupon for a free latte.

      Magically,

      Steve

    2. Re:It's so exciting! by copponex · · Score: 1

      Dear webdog,

      This is Steve Jobs. I'd like to thank you for your support of our platform. We offer freedom from programs that steal your private data, unless we decide to use it for marketing. Freedom from programs that trash your battery, even if it's something you'd like to do, like multi-task. Freedom from porn, even if you enjoy porn. Yep, freedom. The times they are a changin', and some traditional PC folks feel like their world is slipping away. It is.

      In the future, if we decide to spread the iOS to more platforms in order to preserve our user experience, we are glad you will be so ready to accept the terms and conditions under which you will be allowed to store and access your own data.

      All the best,
      Steve Jobs

      PS: Be careful about recommending the girl thing, even if you think you are sterile. The court battles can be expensive, even when you're a millionaire like me.

    3. Re:It's so exciting! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer is simple...Don't Buy and iPhone if you are not satisified with the Features, Functions and Limitations of that solution.

      Quit pissing and moaning over what Apple chooses not to enable and go buy a different solution. You want to send a message, then send it with your wallet. Then Apple can decide if the financial impact is enough for them to change direction or if it they are satisified with their current results to continue on with the way things are now.

      Frankly, it is a little old hearing the same bitching and complaining about Apple won't let me do this or Steve Jobs is a tyrant. He built the platform and the infrastructure to support it, if he wants to limit the functions/features or the content, then he has the right to do that and customers have the right to seek alternative solutions.

      No one is putting a gun to your head to buy an iPhone. If you feel too restricted on it then you are free to go elsewhere. So, quit whining and find a solution that works best for you.

  21. Something baffles me slightly by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why has Apple created a disparity between its two newest products, released only a couple of months apart? The iPhone 4 will have twice as much ram as the iPad, a better screen and now a newer OS - why is the iPad looking like the second rate child here?

    Don't get me wrong, I have an iPad and I love it, but I am baffled as to why Apple once again puts noses out of shape by making such an obvious difference in spec between the two products. Its almost as tho the iPad is the last of the previous generation, rather than the current generation.

    1. Re:Something baffles me slightly by sjonke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The iPad's specs are better then any currently available iPhone or iPod touch, so I'm not sure what you're saying. Should Apple have released a less capable iPhone 4? If you're asking why they aren't releasing iOS 4 for the iPad today, yeah that's a decent question. I have to presume they'd have liked to have had iOS 4 out for the iPad today too, but for reasons unknown they aren't going to be able to do that today.

      --
      --- What?
    2. Re:Something baffles me slightly by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Why has Apple created a disparity between its two newest products, released only a couple of months apart? The iPhone 4 will have twice as much ram as the iPad, a better screen and now a newer OS - why is the iPad looking like the second rate child here?

      You're going to feel foolish for asking this question when the second generation iPad comes out.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Something baffles me slightly by ewrong · · Score: 1

      So they can release the iPad 2 with more ram and a new screen once the initial sales rush has died down?

    4. Re:Something baffles me slightly by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2, Informative

      The iPad's specs are better then any currently available iPhone or iPod touch, so I'm not sure what you're saying. Should Apple have released a less capable iPhone 4? If you're asking why they aren't releasing iOS 4 for the iPad today, yeah that's a decent question.

      The iPad was first released a little over two months ago, while the iPhone 3GS was released a year ago - the iPhone 4 will be with us in the next few days.

      With that in mind, the iPad has the same amount of ram and the same quality screen as the previous generation of iPhone and iPod Touch, despite being released ten months later, and only two or so months before the new iPhone version. Why?

      The screen I could live without, but doubling the ram would have been extremely handy - there have already been suggestions that the iMovie app will not run on the iPad because of ram restrictions.

    5. Re:Something baffles me slightly by blahbooboo · · Score: 1

      Why has Apple created a disparity between its two newest products, released only a couple of months apart? The iPhone 4 will have twice as much ram as the iPad, a better screen and now a newer OS - why is the iPad looking like the second rate child here? Don't get me wrong, I have an iPad and I love it, but I am baffled as to why Apple once again puts noses out of shape by making such an obvious difference in spec between the two products. Its almost as tho the iPad is the last of the previous generation, rather than the current generation.

      It's called iPad 2. How else they gonna get you to buy it?

    6. Re:Something baffles me slightly by ma3382 · · Score: 1

      I don't really understand why you are asking this. I thought we all knew Apple likes to hold out on putting things into their first couple of models... They released the iPad with hardware comparable to currently released iPhone. Then they release the new iPhone with new hardware so people will want to buy that too. If you had gotten an iPad with that Retinal display whatever, would you really want to dig into your pocket a second time?

    7. Re:Something baffles me slightly by cyber0ne · · Score: 1

      My thoughts exactly. I don't think they put quite the effort into the first iPad that they really could have because its success on the market was so questionable. The device was a risk to say the least. But the sales numbers speak for themselves at this point and it's probably proven to be worth more investment from Apple.

      Speaking for myself, I don't see the iPad really justifying its price tag right now. That's just speaking in terms of my own gadget budget and gadget needs. But I'm definitely counting on future releases to make product a _lot_ better. Maybe the next one will be worth the $600 or so. And/or maybe the release of the next one will drive down the prices of the legacy one if there's such a gap in the specs. It's all just speculation of course, but I'd be willing to bet money that the next iPad will be pretty awesome (for definitions of awesome which fit within the iDevice ecosystem, so the average Slashdotter can apply their own metrics there).

      --
      http://publicvoidlife.blogspot.com
    8. Re:Something baffles me slightly by jo_ham · · Score: 2, Informative

      The iPad will get the iOS4 upgrade later this year. The development of the iPhone OS was running in parallel for the two platforms, and will now be rolled together when both are up to date with the iOS 4 upgrade. Presumably it's not quite ready on the iPad yet.

    9. Re:Something baffles me slightly by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Well for the most part, Apple will remove features from new products if they don't work and release them in subsequent versions. The main goal is to get a working product first. People here on slashdot complain about this all the time. That's why I personally don't get Apple products for a few generations because I'm waiting on certain features I know the first gen won't have.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    10. Re:Something baffles me slightly by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      It's called a product pipeline. At some point you have to freeze the specs and wrap up all the loose ends or you constantly keep pushing out a product release date, or you release a very shoddy product. It's very difficult to keep these two product lines exactly in sync without introducing other problems into the mix. It's often better to freeze the specs, wrap up the loose ends, and release a product on time that works well.

      I understand what you're saying, and I know that iPhone and iPad both use iOS, but I don't think it's as simple as outsiders think it is to balance these multiple product lines (no matter how similar they seem).

    11. Re:Something baffles me slightly by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      To all who consider this, a very valid question in my opinion, a troll - get out doors sometime, because you need a life outside of all your Apple insta-defending.

      Its getting seriously annoying that you cannot ask a seemingly innocent question on Slashdot these days without corporate whores and fanbois lining up to mod you down at the mere hint of any negativity in your post. Go fuck yourselves.

    12. Re:Something baffles me slightly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The cynics will probably assume that Apple hasn't figured out yet whether to charge the iPad owners for the update or not. Or maybe they're waiting a few months so they can at least charge some of the early adopters.

  22. Features by DaMattster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It does look kind of neat but I have all kinds of goodies on a jailbroke touch. I don't think I am going to upgrade to iOS 4 until someone comes up with a jailbreak. The goodies from Cydia repos are worth more than just a few extras that I really don't need.

  23. Re:21/6 for eff sake..... by GizmoToy · · Score: 1

    Those silly Americans, always screwing things up. ;-)

    In all seriousness, putting the month before the day is stupid. How did we get into that habit, anyway.

  24. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by benbean · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    No mod points today, but +1 sir, +1.

    --
    It's a Unix system - I know this.
  25. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    iPod Touch is not a CELLPHONE.

  26. What about the iPad? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ignoring the fact that we're entering an era of mobile computers, iOS 4 runs on the iPad too. Is that a phone too by your twisted logic?

    --
    This space for rent.
    1. Re:What about the iPad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignoring the fact that we're entering an era of mobile computers, iOS 4 runs on the iPad too. Is that a phone too by your twisted logic?

      Guess you didn't even make it to the second sentence of the summary...

    2. Re:What about the iPad? by omnichad · · Score: 1

      If the SIM card fits (3G model).

    3. Re:What about the iPad? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      Ignoring the fact that we're entering an era of mobile computers, iOS 4 runs on the iPad too. Is that a phone too by your twisted logic?

      Guess you didn't even make it to the second sentence of the summary...

      From the original press release:

      "iPhone OS 4 will be available as a software update to iPhone and iPod touch users this summer. A version of iPhone OS 4 will be coming to iPad this Fall."

      So, talking about the iPad in this discussion about iOS is perfectly justified.

      --
      This space for rent.
    4. Re:What about the iPad? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Let's see, the 3G version:
      Speaker: check
      Microphone: check
      Camera: check

      Wait!!! It's a videophone!

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    5. Re:What about the iPad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the fact that there are locked down Linux based homes proves beyond a doubt that Linux is locked down. Thanks for the info, Mr. Twist'o'Logic.

  27. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    "This device is a CELLPHONE"

    Which device, pray tell, is a "CELLPHONE?" When last I checked, the iPad is a tablet computer (at least in terms of its hardware)...

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  28. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This device is a CELLPHONE.

    And that's why any iPhone applications that aren't necessary for calling people are banned. Oh wait, no they aren't; in fact iFans love pointing out the general-purposeness of the device: "there's an app for that". Claiming that these iThings are appliances is pure bullshit; they are computers with massively reduced user freedom.

  29. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's get a grip on reality here, people. First and foremost? This device is a CELLPHONE. Many, MANY cellphones have been made before the iPhone was released, and many more have been made since then which NEVER get a firmware update at all! You simply "get what you get" with them, often meaning even functionality the original manufacturer intended the phone to have is stripped out by your cellular carrier and their custom version of the firmware. (EG. Despite it supporting bluetooth data transfer, you *may* get blocked from copying over your own ringtone files from a computer -- or maybe you're disallowed from moving over your contact info as vcard files, or ??)

    Yet along comes the iPhone, which by contrast, has an INCREDIBLE amount of flexibility, and people are screaming FASCIST?!

    As phone handsets go, it's pretty empowering, I'd say. (And I say this as someone who used to own the original iPhone as well as a 3G, but now uses a Samsung Messager II phone instead of "drinking the kool-aid" and extending my AT&T contract out another 2 years just to get the latest iPhone.)

    If by "flexibility" you mean "you may buy the apps we approve, or the apps we approve, and only from our store so we get a cut" then yeah Apple's phones are just spiffy. So why was Google Voice blocked for such a long time again -- was that because of popular demand by the users? Why is it so hard to get a good solid backed-by-facts explanation for why a particular app is rejected from the App Store again (i.e., quote the exact section of the ToS or similar that it violates)? Nothing fascist to see here, please move along.

    Look, here's the deal: if Apple wants to control the platform and the approve all the apps, and use nebulous/arbitrary criteria to reject apps for any length of time even against the express wishes of its users, then they open themselves up to being accused of being fascist control freaks worse than Microsoft. THEY open THEMSELVES up to that accusation, for it otherwise would hold no water. Got it?

    The way you fanboys defend and stick up for companies who already have multimillion dollar marketing departments is just sick. Most major corporations engage in business practices that are in some way detrimental to the rest of us. Even your beloved object of fanboy worship does this and is not above doing this. Get over it and quit trying to shoot the messenger who points it out when your beef is with your beloved company.

  30. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by somersault · · Score: 1

    As phone handsets go, it's pretty empowering, I'd say

    That's like saying "as evil dictators go, Mussolini wasn't so bad".

    --
    which is totally what she said
  31. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by morgauxo · · Score: 1

    My old Wince phone was far more flexible and updateable than an iAnything. My new Android phone is better yet!

  32. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by mjpaci · · Score: 0, Redundant

    You, Mr. AC, are a pedant.

  33. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by garaged · · Score: 1

    how many of those cell phones that never got a FW update cost 400 usd ?

    --
    I'm positive, don't belive me look at my karma
  34. Please become a CTO. by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where I work, IE6 represents about the same 6% that the 1G iPhone does for you. But we're still expected to devote considerable effort supporting that decrepit old fossil. Every once and a while somebody decides, for this project or that, that we can leave IE6 behind. But no one's stood up and made the decision that the company as a whole will do so.

    Ironic... in an industry where we talk so much about Moore's law and how your latest shiny new toy is already obsolete when you walk out the store and such; that we still haven't dropped something so godawfully old and busted as IE6.

    --
    Imagine all the people...
  35. Apple is going down the Android path by antifoidulus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So the iPad won't be running iOS 4 right away.... Apple is really running the risk of having a very segmented market a la Android, but they are doing it without any of Androids advantages. For instance even though it was only released two months ago the iPad only has half the amount of RAM that the iPhone 4 has and a lot fewer sensors. This means that there will be a large group of applications that will run on the iPhone 4 but will not run on the iPad which will wind up frustrating users to no end. While I realize that technology advances with time, there was no rational reason for Apple to upgrade hardware, but when you release devices within 2 months of each other that vary so wildly, you are doing something wrong.

    And while this problem is unlikely to affect them in the near term, in the long term users are going to become as frustrated with the segmentation of the iOS market as they were/are with the segmentation in other cell phone environments. The EXACT same segmentation that Steve decried when first announcing the iPhone/iPod touch SDK.

    1. Re:Apple is going down the Android path by nine-times · · Score: 1

      So the iPad won't be running iOS 4 right away...

      When they announced iOS4, they announced that it would be released for the iPhone in June and for the iPad "in the fall". This is not a surprise. Also, iPad applications have a different UI, so things aren't really any more segmented now than they were before.

      Basically introducing the iPad introduced a new device with a different feature set and a different target market. That the market is "segmented" there isn't weird or problematic. Android, on the other hand, has several different devices from several different manufacturers with feature-sets that are mostly the same as each other, but which are basically incompatible with each other. That's a different problem.

      For emphasis, think of how many different iOS devices there are. It's basically 4 iPhone models, 1 iPad model, and... something like 3 iPod touch models. So somewhere in the neighborhood of 8. For most purposes, you can treat a lot of these the same and say that there are 3 or 4 meaningfully different devices to target. How many different models of Android phones are there out there?

    2. Re:Apple is going down the Android path by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Segmentation is inevitable. It's not a question of Apple not segmenting -- it's a question of who will segment more.

      "As is the case with most other alternative smartphone platforms, Android users appear to often remain stuck with the firmware version their phone shipped with originally," McLean reports. "This is primarily due to fragmentation problems that require the hardware maker, software platform vendor, and the mobile provider to work together to create and deliver custom updates for each model."

      Consider iPod 2G shipped with iPhone OS 2.0 and now it's still upgradable iOS 4.

    3. Re:Apple is going down the Android path by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      I didn't buy an iPad expecting all development at Apple to stop. In fact, if you buy a first generation iDevice you really should expect that it will be obsolete in half the time of a second generation iDevice. It doesn't mean the iPad will suddenly become a brick when the iPad 2nd gen comes out with it's kinect video interface and gigabytes of memory or whatever; it just means that a cool device has a new version.

    4. Re:Apple is going down the Android path by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      But I am not comparing the current version with the future version, I am comparing it with something they released less than 2 months(only a few weeks in some overseas markets). The devices should have very similar capabilities but they don't. That introduces market segmentation and was an uncharactaristically bad move by Apple. They are going down the whole "minimum requirements" hole. Something that really should have been avoided.

    5. Re:Apple is going down the Android path by Sandbags · · Score: 1

      1 correction: iPad app developers have ACCESS to only 1/2 the RAM of the iPhone 4. They use the "exact same A4 processor" which just happens to have 2 layers of RAM. The iPad's RAM specs have never been publicly released. Apple has a history of unlocking latent hardware with new OS versions (WiFi N in macbook Pros a few years ago, video capabilities of the iPhone, etc).

      The iPad also has some additional considerations to take in mind, and also remember Jobs's hand was pushed with the leak, and they're releasing the iPhone 4 sooner than expected. The iPad OS 4 update will be forthcoming soon enough, and I'm sure with a slew of additional features, and probably a new iTunes (expecting MUCH better file handling and syncing, cloud based services from their new NC data-center, and more).

      --
      There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
  36. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by KingMotley · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Really? Have you gotten Android 2.2 on your "far more flexible and updatable" phone yet? No? Oh.

  37. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by justin12345 · · Score: 1

    To be fair, the high end iPad costs only $829.00 plus a 3G contract. As computers go that's really cheap. Someone will point out that the 3G contract is more expensive then the computer, but you don't have to get a 3G contract to have a functional iPad. The last computer I bought cost over $3000.00. They basically do the same things. Almost equally well. It's kinda depressing.

    Apple disappointed everyone (except the 2 million or so people that bought an iPad) by releasing a horribly locked down device. Everyone wanted a tablet that ran OSX. Except all the people that couldn't give less of a shit and bought one anyway.

    --
    Cool art gallery, if you're into that sort of thing.
  38. Why is it not a phone? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ignoring the fact that we're entering an era of mobile computers, iOS 4 runs on the iPad too. Is that a phone too by your twisted logic?

    It can connect to cell networks.

    Using skype I can make calls on it.

    By what definition is it not a phone?

    Just because it's large doesn't mean it can't be a phone too. Otherwise the NGage would have been an impossibility.

    And before you start chuckling about holding up an iPad to your head, two words - bluetooth headset.

    For someone on Slashdot you seem to have a pretty dull imagination as to what a phone can be.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Why is it not a phone? by ground.zero.612 · · Score: 0

      Using skype I can make calls on it.

      But, do you look cooler than this guy doing it?

      --
      "Be prepared, son. That's my motto. Be prepared." --Joe Hallenbeck
    2. Re:Why is it not a phone? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Only hardcore Apple fanbois can justify calling what is essentially a tablet computer a phone, just to justify the lockdown placed by Apple on it. I give up.

      --
      This space for rent.
    3. Re:Why is it not a phone? by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      Alright! My laptop is now a cellphone according to you. Thanks.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    4. Re:Why is it not a phone? by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Woot! My full tower case PC, mixing desk and desktop montors are now a cell phone! Might skip taking it to work though, since the thing weighs about 50kgs thanks to the subwoofer.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    5. Re:Why is it not a phone? by N+Monkey · · Score: 1

      Woot! My full tower case PC, mixing desk and desktop montors are now a cell phone! Might skip taking it to work though, since the thing weighs about 50kgs thanks to the subwoofer.

      Ahh..retro. It's like a 1980s model phone then.

    6. Re:Why is it not a phone? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      And before you start chuckling about holding up an iPad to your head, two words - bluetooth headset.

      Ignoring the fact that a BT headset will NOT pair with a iPad.

      They done have a handsfree bluetooth profile in the iPad. you cant connect a bluetooth headset to it. you CAN pair an A2Dp headphone source to it though....

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    7. Re:Why is it not a phone? by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      In my day the charger weighed 50kg... You needed an 18-wheeler to drag the phone around

    8. Re:Why is it not a phone? by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 1

      And before you start chuckling about holding up an iPad to your head, two words - bluetooth headset

      It's too late -- I'm already chuckling. That's a sidetalkin' web site waiting to happen even if there are some alternatives.

    9. Re:Why is it not a phone? by RulerOf · · Score: 1

      you CAN pair an A2Dp headphone

      Hah! That's rich. I'd double check that one myself but chances are good I'm too lazy. Still, and I've never seen one, I think you'd be hard pressed to find an A2DP headset that doesn't also support HSP and a few other things.

      The real question is whether or not the iPad or iOS 4 finally fucking supports AVRCP correctly. The fact that my old as shit blackberry can "Next Track" and "Previous Track" from my headphones but my iPhone can't is really, really sad.

      --
      Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
    10. Re:Why is it not a phone? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Otherwise the NGage would have been an impossibility.

      From a marketability standpoint, i thought it was?

    11. Re:Why is it not a phone? by cyberthanasis12 · · Score: 1

      By exactly the same logic, one can argue that it is a computer.

    12. Re:Why is it not a phone? by PFactor · · Score: 1

      Look - another phone http://www.dell.com/us/en/business/notebooks/xpsnb/ct.aspx?refid=xpsnb&s=bsd&cs=04&ref=lthp/(it meets your criteria).

      Sometimes you people amaze me.

      --
      Don't believe anything I say. I crash test crack pipes for a living.
  39. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First and foremost? This device is a CELLPHONE.

    My girlfriend just gave me an iPhone for my birthday -- it's my first cellphone *ever*. Well, I barely use it as a phone, one or two calls a week at most; anyway I hate phones, wired or not. I use the iPhone almost exclusively for internet access, GPS, agenda, etc. So no, it's not first and foremost a cellphone for me. The fact that I can make phone calls with it is like, the third or fourth most desirable feature of the iPhone; YMMV.

  40. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    they are computers with massively reduced user freedom

    I think it's an appliance in the same way that my PS3 is an appliance. There is a computer under the covers and the device is quite general purpose, but in the end its an appliance because I don't have the freedom to tinker.

    I think "computer with massively reduced user freedom" could be part of a decent definition of appliance.

  41. One problem... by afabbro · · Score: 0

    ...by all accounts, iOS 4 is a huge battery hog on the 3GS. Some have said that without doing any wi-fi, you'll be lucky to get 3 hours. Add in network usage and you're at less than two hours. That's without phone calls. So...kinda sucks to have a 3GS.

    --
    Advice: on VPS providers
    1. Re:One problem... by blahbooboo · · Score: 1

      Wow really? I heard it ran great on 3gs.

    2. Re:One problem... by Scott+Tracy · · Score: 1

      Hey, after owning it for 10 months, my 3GS now only gets about 3 hours of battery power, and that's it just sitting there, 3G-only. So I can't do any worse.

    3. Re:One problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What accounts? It isn't even out yet!

    4. Re:One problem... by davidbrit2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Interesting. I've been running it on a 3GS for about a week now and haven't noticed any stark differences in battery life so far.

    5. Re:One problem... by intheshelter · · Score: 1

      Haha! By all accounts you are making this up because the only people I have ever heard comment on it are the ones replying to you and saying that you are incorrect.

    6. Re:One problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      by my account, and all others i have heard, battery life is BETTER with iOS 4.0 on the 3GS... Dont know where you are getting your facts from, care to share a link?

    7. Re:One problem... by eliotw · · Score: 1

      FUD. Battery life has been fine on my 3GS with iOS4.

    8. Re:One problem... by soppsa · · Score: 1

      I've been running 4.0 since beta1 came out on my personal handheld as well as my dev handsets, I've never had battery issues post beta1. It's fine in the GM/final. There are other issues (performance and other concerns I have) but battery life? 3 hours? Troll harder.

  42. Re:21/6 for eff sake..... by BarryJacobsen · · Score: 1

    Those silly Americans, always screwing things up. ;-)

    In all seriousness, putting the month before the day is stupid. How did we get into that habit, anyway.

    We started "abbreviating" it how we say it: month, day, year: June 21st, 2010 = 6/21/2010

  43. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by db32 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, I think the point was that before the iPhone there really wasn't much of a sane market for cellphone apps. I totally agree with you on the walled garden crap, but the iPhone was still leaps and bounds ahead of most smart phones at the time. It's like bitching that your brand new shiny sports car doesn't have leather seats and they won't let you put in aftermarket leather seats without voiding the warranty while conveniently forgetting that you were driving a rusty pinto before. Now that other devices are catching up it is putting pressure on Apple to play a little nicer and be less draconian. I don't expect an overnight change since big part of their success is that they can deliver a very simple and identical user experience across the board. The worst part is, that if they just opened the gates for whatever app and a malicious app made it through they would be taking flak from the same people that howl about their strict control of the gate. You know, the same way Microsoft takes so much crap over shitty third party software crashing worse than a heroin addict in rehab. Also, people that don't like them don't have to buy them. However, they seem compelled to go on at length about how that device is evil and doesn't actually meet the needs of the owner and that they know exactly what would meet those needs. You know...kinda the same crap that those companies pay their marketing departments to do. The only real difference is that the marketing company actually knows more about the competing product than what they read on the internet, and they have a vested interest in getting people to switch.

    --
    The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
  44. Re:iPod touch's by intheshelter · · Score: 1

    The only thing more annoying than a slight grammatical error is when an idiot grammar Nazi shows up and posts as AC. If you are a coward and need to post as AC then shut up and F Off! If you are NOT a coward, don't post as AC, but want to correct someone's grammar then you may also shut up and F Off!

  45. Somebody call the whaaaambulance by sootman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Can't wait to see all the neat new stuff that won't run on my stale phone.

    I bought an original base (4 GB) iPhone a couple months after it came out--refurbished, $249. When the 3G came out I sold my original one on eBay for right about what I paid for it*, plus or minus a few bucks (I forget exactly, and I had a case but lost the headphones, etc.) and bought a base (8 GB) 3G. When the 3GS came out I sold my $199 3G for $305 and got I a base (16 GB) 3GS--I just had to wait a couple months for an anniversary to roll around and then the upgrade price dropped from $399 to the regular $199. Now, for some reason, AT&T is telling me I can upgrade to an iPhone 4 for good old $199 so I'm just gonna wait a few weeks--a) for them to become available again and b) because I never buy new stuff right away.

    So basically, I paid $249 three years ago and for that, I've gotten an annual free upgrade to a faster phone with more features and double the storage every time (this is the first year that won't happen) and, as a nice bonus, my phone has never been out of warranty. You'd think someone who runs a tech site might be aware of all this.

    * vendor lock-in is usually evil but it has treated me very well. :-) Due to Apple's exclusive deal with AT&T, people who want iPhones but are on other networks pay quite a bit for used ones.

    --
    Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
    1. Re:Somebody call the whaaaambulance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That "$249" fails to include what AT&T soaks you for as part of their normal monthly charges. All the cost of your upgrades are hidden in there and if you added it up, you will find out you paid out the nose for it.

      Granted, AT&T is you only choice if you want an iPhone but don't pretend that you got upgrades for nothing.

    2. Re:Somebody call the whaaaambulance by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Informative

      That "$249" fails to include what AT&T soaks you for as part of their normal monthly charges.

      And that line of thinking ignores the fact that people with an iPhone would have a phone bill anyway, and that now the iPhone is actually one of the cheapest data plans if you opt for the low-end plan and use WiFi at home/work.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    3. Re:Somebody call the whaaaambulance by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 1

      I don't know what other vendors are like, here in Canada, Telus & Bell do pretty well with phone upgrades. I can sign a 3 year contract for a $0 phone, and in about a year, they'll contact me with a promotional offer to upgrade my phone.

      I have upgraded to an HTC Touch from a Ericson from an old Samsung Flip Phone, Never going out of warranty, each a year apart, all for $0 because I kept signing another contract with them.

      I mean, it may not be an iPhone, but its not a bad piece of hardware considering I didn't pay a cent for it.

  46. It does work for you. by nweaver · · Score: 1

    Actually, it does work. There IS no 3rd generation touch at 8G, thats a 2nd gen Touch, the same relationship as the 8GB Iphone 3G vs the 16/32GB 3GS

    You just don't get multitasking (lack of RAM), but otherwise its a full iOS 4 device.

    --
    Test your net with Netalyzr
    1. Re:It does work for you. by vlm · · Score: 1

      There IS no 3rd generation touch at 8G, thats a 2nd gen Touch

      Sure about that? Here's the model numbers for a 2G and a 3G 8 GB ipod.

      Google for "ipod MC086LL" you get a thousand ads/reviews for the 8 GB 3G model. Just verified it on the About screen on my ipod in the Settings app.

      There does exist a model MB528LL/A which is a 8 GB 2G model, which I do not own. Google for "ipod MB528LL/A" and you get a thousand ads/reviews for the 8 GB 2G model.

      otherwise its a full iOS 4 device.

      Well, OK, apple's marketing website disagrees, perhaps its too big to fit in memory, but one way or another, I guess I'll find out very soon...

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    2. Re:It does work for you. by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Google for "ipod MC086LL" you get a thousand ads/reviews for the 8 GB 3G model. Just verified it on the About screen on my ipod in the Settings app.

      The 8 GB 3G model is just a rebranded 2G model. It was a marketing ploy.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  47. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by webdog314 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And the other 80% of the cellphone market that uses subscription crapware I can only get through the telco is different how?

  48. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Pojut · · Score: 1, Troll

    To be fair, the high end iPad costs only $829.00 plus a 3G contract. As computers go that's really cheap. Someone will point out that the 3G contract is more expensive then the computer, but you don't have to get a 3G contract to have a functional iPad. The last computer I bought cost over $3000.00. They basically do the same things. Almost equally well. It's kinda depressing.

    I call troll. For $500 (yes, including monitor) you can have a modern system capable of occasional gaming, playback of HD video, and minor audio production/graphic design work.

    Yes. $500. Including a monitor.

  49. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by intheshelter · · Score: 0, Troll

    That is the dumbest logic I've ever heard. I guess since I can make a call on my laptop then that makes it a phone?

    Technically a digital watch is a computer, a calculator is a computer. What's your point?

    The iPhone has done more to liberate consumers in the mobile market than any phone before or since. It's not perfect, but the mobile landscape was radically different 3 years ago and much has changed for the better because of the iPhone's release. In fact it was so good that Google, RIM, Windows, etc. jumped on the bandwagon and decided to copy it.

    The iPhone IS a phone and if you don't like the curated approach Apple takes then STFU and buy something else. Disguising your hatred of Apple as a complaint about freedom is ridiculous.

  50. Opening as always by SuperKendall · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I personally can't wait to see what measures this new software takes to control its users and limit their access to other programs.

    Obviously you were trolling, but just in case you are really that ignorant...

    With each release, Apple opens the device further. Can you download an application from anywhere and run it without jailbreaking? No, but then you never could, so that's not a reduction in user freedom.

    So what can a user do that they couldn't before?

    Multitasking
    More choice in search engines
    Freedom to use any bluetooth keyboard with the phone (finally).
    Applications that have full access to camera, phone API, and many other system features finally accessible.

    The thing people like you always miss about Apple is that they start off with very limited products, and then slowly open them up as they figure out what works. So in the end you and people like you are stuck in your old mindset of any given Apple product being incredibly closed because you never bothered to look at many details beyond the first iteration, while the later models of products have a ton of capability and people think you are bonkers for complaining.

    If you want to see if an Apple product will be successful, you only have to think of it like this - compared to the competition how much ability not offered by the Apple product COULD be offered via a software update, vs. something that is missing from the core design? When you start thinking about it that way, you may gain a better understanding as to what will work in the market.

    Using this technique for example, you could have easily predicted the AppleTV wasn't really going anywhere while realizing the iPad would be a hit.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Opening as always by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I was wondering when slashdot started submitting pure trolls as newsworthy.

  51. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I personally like apple screening all of the crap out. Sure there are some potentially good stuff they have not allowed but I dont miss it. Every kind of app I have wanted has been there in some form. When you need a phone to constantly function as a phone and be secure a more closed model where you cant install any old crap off of the internet seems to be the better way to go. Sure there are the downsides of having limitations put on what you can install from an outside source but you also have the added benefit that at least someone has checked to make sure the program is functional.

    No one can argue that apple has good reasons for denying every app that it has denied because they don't, but for people that actually own iphones, we really don't care too much.

    Irregardless of their app ecosystem apple products (hardware and software) are by far the best at total system integration. When everything works together like your laptop, phone and tablet, when they all keep in sync and the management of that syncing is easy it is a beautiful thing. I have plenty of technical knowledge and work as a software engineer so I could get all of the android syncing stuff to work, but no matter how good it works it wont have that tight system integration that apple puts in all of its products.

    If you choose to live in apple's walled garden, life is great. You have stability performance and usefulness. Once you experience this all come together everything else seems inferior.

  52. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Tim+C · · Score: 0, Troll

    So... Apple are bad, but everyone else is worse so it's ok?

  53. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by justin12345 · · Score: 1

    But he wasn't so bad. I don't get your point. You have to have an evil dictator, so don't you want one who isn't too bad?

    --
    Cool art gallery, if you're into that sort of thing.
  54. I question the validity of your conclusion. by Petersko · · Score: 1

    "For instance even though it was only released two months ago the iPad only has half the amount of RAM that the iPhone 4 has and a lot fewer sensors. This means that there will be a large group of applications that will run on the iPhone 4 but will not run on the iPad which will wind up frustrating users to no end."

    What makes you think there'll be a "large group of applications" that falls into that category? While I don't have any more of a basis for my conclusion than you do, intuitively I would think the number of apps that will require an iPhone 4 to run will be very small - mostly just high performance games, and very few of those. I'll bet the 3G will still be the lowest common denominator, and the performance target, for at least two more years.

    1. Re:I question the validity of your conclusion. by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Apple's own iMovie won't run on the iPad(or 3gs for that matter) due to RAM constraints. If Apple is already making iPhone 4 only apps, you can bet there is a horde of devs out there chomping at the bit for more RAM. Not to mention the front facing camera etc.

  55. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heavy flow day? Cramping? Bloating? Zits?
    Hope you have a better day!

  56. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by yttrstein · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Did you want to keep pointlessly whining or did you want to simply go and use something that's more suited to your needs?

  57. There are plenty of rejected political cartoons by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    Some political cartoon apps were accepted, only because of the media storm surrounding them, but not all:

    http://www.cloudfour.com/apples-policy-on-satire-16-rejected-apps/

    Also note that on that list, several of the apps were only accepted after altering their "controversial" content.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  58. iOS 4 ignored IMO the two biggest feature deficits by mclaincausey · · Score: 1

    1: A notification system that doesn't use annoying modal popups 2: Speech-to-text into all fields (*note* I refrained from mentioning the AT&T lock-in, but we all know it's an issue)

    --
    (%i1) factor(777353);
    (%o1) 777353
  59. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by intheshelter · · Score: 0, Troll

    Except for most of the time the Apple haters are the ones who get the facts wrong or exaggerate, so Apple fans spend a great deal of time correcting their lies/ignorance.

    Take your disingenuous bullshit as an example. You stuck in the phrase "only from our store so we get a cut", as some stupid attempt to insinuate that this is the whole reason behind the curated app store model. What a load of self serving tripe. This is the kind of stupidity that Apple fans get sick of and why they defend against these sorts of BS arguments.

    To correct your whiny rant I'll paraphrase your last statement:

    The way you haters attack a company and then use disingenuous arguments is just sick. Most major corporations engage in business practices that are in some way unplatable to some of us. Even your beloved object of blind Apple hatred does this and is no different that Palm, Google or any other company. Get over it and quit trying to shoot the messenger who points it out when your beef is blind hatred of Apple.

  60. Re:iPod touch's by Goffee71 · · Score: 1

    touché

    --
    If he's the Walrus then can I be a penguin please?
  61. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's get back to planet earth: $829 for a device is not insanely expensive but it's not "really cheap" by any standard: you can easily find computers for half that... $3000 on the other hand is outside the budget of 99.99% of all people, it's just not a relevant price for comparison -- frankly I thought I was getting an expensive machine when I picked the best X series Thinkpad with quite a few extras, and I only barely topped $2000.

  62. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by oodaloop · · Score: 1

    My last computer cost less than $300. A netbook doesn't suit everyone's needs, but most people don't need $3k worth of computing either.

    --
    Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
  63. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and iPad is not a CELLPHONE AS WELL.

  64. iOS by sr8outtalotech · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else read the headline and think, isn't IOS up to version 12?

    1. Re:iOS by acoustix · · Score: 1

      IOS 15 has been out for a while.

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
  65. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by robnator · · Score: 1

    uhm, who's trolling? Here is the consensus definition... "with 'trolling' being used to describe many intentionally provocative actions outside of an online context."

    If I may be so bold as to suggest, well some intentionally provocative suggestion to better your perspective and improve your love life, as opposed to spending so much clearly productive time here.

    --
    "If...you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning" - Catherine Aird
  66. Some Cisco marketing person must be fired! by nweaver · · Score: 1

    Some Cisco marketing person screwed up bigtime: he (presumably) saw a huge pile of money from Apple, but doesn't see all the hidden damage done to Cisco as now their flagship product, IOS, becomes unsearchable on the web at large and hugely confused in the future.

    As such, that idiot should really be fired for incompetence.

    --
    Test your net with Netalyzr
    1. Re:Some Cisco marketing person must be fired! by Game_Ender · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Cisco IOS seems to return decent results for me. I am pretty sure people who use that OS have enough google foo to filter out iPhone results.

    2. Re:Some Cisco marketing person must be fired! by RapmasterT · · Score: 1

      Some Cisco marketing person screwed up bigtime: he (presumably) saw a huge pile of money from Apple, but doesn't see all the hidden damage done to Cisco as now their flagship product, IOS, becomes unsearchable on the web at large and hugely confused in the future.

      This was my instant first thought as well, and it tells me that even companies like Cisco are employing senior people who have no concept of the permanence of this "internet" thing.

      By licensing usage of their brand name by a product with VASTLY larger public exposure (there's a lot more iphone/ipod users than network engineers), you lose your brand identity in the noise.

      There's no going back from a mistake like this either. There's no putting the genie back in the bottle, indexes are forever.

    3. Re:Some Cisco marketing person must be fired! by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Or, you could search on "Cisco IOS", and get exactly what you want, plus a handful of gripes like the one you just posted.

      Incoming flamebait mod in 5... 4... 3...

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    4. Re:Some Cisco marketing person must be fired! by skids · · Score: 1

      You never do get anything useful searching for "IOS" in the first place. Too much crap to wade through. You generally search for very specific command fragments like "per-client-embryonic-max" to find material. Sometimes when the terms are too generic this can be a pain, but mostly you can figure out something distinctive.

      Nor do you get anything useful searching using CiSCOs utter disaster of a site search engine. Better to "site:cisco.com" from google than to use that crap.

      I'd just love to see case-sensitivity argued in a legal case. Lol.

  67. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by intheshelter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, it's that Apple is NOT bad. They are good but not perfect. And everyone else was a HELL of a lot worse before they came along and I'm sure you weren't wrapping yourselves in the "freedom" flag back then.

    All this crap has some legitimacy, but it is blown WAY out of proportion. Never mind that other companies were (and are) far worse, but these same idiots don't seem to be posting anything about them. The reason is some people just blindly hate Apple and this is their avenue to scream.

  68. Re:iPod touch's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    touchii?

  69. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by gsgriffin · · Score: 1

    You make a good point, but the real reason they "give away" updates is so that they can continue to draw you in to purchase more apps through their store. Most other carriers make next to nothing on additional apps. Even Droid can load your phone full of goodies without paying anything for tons of apps, and yet Google will undoubtedly send updates as well. No big hooray for Apple. They make great stuff, but they are not altruistic.

    --
    jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
  70. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by MrHanky · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Sorry, but the massive overhype of everything Apple the last 12 years or so makes it necessary to point out that some of their products are in fact harmful to their customers. To twist your trite copypasta pseudo-argument: If you people like Apple's products so much, then just buy them and shut the hell up about it; stop pestering everyone else with your advertising efforts.

  71. Re:iPod touch's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > The plural of "touch" is "touches" you fucking dumbass. People who put an apostrophe on every fucking word that ends with an S are starting to really piss me off.

    I see what you did there - the split infinitive in the second sentence. Very good.

  72. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by digitalchinky · · Score: 1

    Given that it was only released 30 odd days ago, I think you can drop the bullshit.

  73. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Harmful to their customers". Oh please, do go on. Are people catching cancer from Apple products? Are children playing with them and losing limbs? Do they electrocute everyone in the house? If you feed them after midnight, do they spawn evil copies that terrorize the town?

    Please, enlighten us, how do they "harm their customers"? I am eagerly looking forward to the story of the old lady who had a heart attack because a tethering app was denied in the app Store. Or the children that caught Ebola due to lack of multi-tasking support.

  74. Not true at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I've been running iOS 4 on a 3GS for a couple weeks now (ever since they released the GM at WWDC). The battery life isn't different from the previous version.

    So, where did you hear all these accounts of the new OS being a battery hog? Cause I haven't seen them, and my own experience is quite different than what you claim.

    1. Re:Not true at all by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but what bearing does personal experience have in comparison to hearsay FUD?!

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
  75. Re:iPod touch's by Sockatume · · Score: 1

    Touch is an adjective here, wouldn't it be "iPods Touch"?

    --
    No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
  76. Where is the fractioning? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So the iPad won't be running iOS 4 right away.... Apple is really running the risk of having a very segmented market a la Android, but they are doing it without any of Androids advantages. For instance even though it was only released two months ago the iPad only has half the amount of RAM that the iPhone 4 has and a lot fewer sensors.

    The iPad has the same amount of RAM that the very latest phone (the 3Gs) offers. And the same number of sensors (minus the camera, which is not exactly a "sensor"). Only the very latest phone, which initially will have a fraction of the 3G/3Gs owner numbers has one more sensor - a gyroscope, which mostly refines what you can do with the accelerometer.

    So where is the fractioning? Most developers will still be targeting iOS3.1 as a base for a while, with support for some iOS4 features for at least a half year or so - time enough for the iPad to gain the update. In fact that point will probably be the trigger where developers could realistically move to iOS4 alone, since by then most people will have upgraded (including Touch owners since finally Touch updates are free).

    And while this problem is unlikely to affect them in the near term, in the long term users are going to become as frustrated with the segmentation of the iOS market

    In the "long term" there's iOS4, since the iPad and iPhone will both be running it - yes you can't have iOS4 on the original iPhone 1st gen, but at this point that is a fraction of the devices on the market.

    Apple has done a good job thinking around the fragmentation problem, including how to handle iPhones with different resolutions...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Where is the fractioning? by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Yes except for the fact that the iPad has a much larger screen but still no dedicated GPU memory, so for all intents and purposes it has LESS ram than the 3GS. Not to mention Steve made a big deal over the fact that the Retina display in the iphone 4 has about 75% of the pixels that an iPad has, it would be nice for developers if they could just target their application for the iphone 4 and pretty much have it work unmodified on the iPad(maybe not the prettiest but it probably would still work pretty well), but alas they cannot because Apple myopically only put 256 mb of ram in the iPad.

      The 256mb was probably the only really bad decision they made with the iPad and I have a feeling that unless they start to really standardize the basic hardware of their various mobile devices it is going to come back and bite them in the ass.

  77. Is iOS 4 Sick? by dancingmad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Releases what?

    Oh, you mean Apple releases iOS 4 today. iOS 4 will be released.

    C'mon man, let's not ruin our language.

    --
    "There is no time, sir, at which ties do not matter," Jeeves, (Jeeves and the Impending Doom)
    1. Re:Is iOS 4 Sick? by Boomshadow · · Score: 1

      You and I think alike in this matter.

    2. Re:Is iOS 4 Sick? by dotgain · · Score: 1

      "Verbing wierds language."
      -Calvin and Hobbes.

  78. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I guess since I can make a call on my laptop then that makes it a phone?

    According to the twisted logic of your fellow fanboys, yes. See http://apple.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1693064&cid=32641450

    The iPhone has done more to liberate consumers in the mobile market than any phone before or since. It's not perfect, but the mobile landscape was radically different 3 years ago and much has changed for the better because of the iPhone's release. In fact it was so good that Google, RIM, Windows, etc. jumped on the bandwagon and decided to copy it.

    Err Windows Mobile, Blackberry etc. never had restrictions on app developers. But now WP7 is going to have the same restrictions by following in Apple's footsteps. If anything, the iPhone has actually made it worse for the mobile market by your own logic.

    --
    This space for rent.
  79. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by VGPowerlord · · Score: 1

    Note: I an not the GP poster.

    You stuck in the phrase "only from our store so we get a cut", as some stupid attempt to insinuate that this is the whole reason behind the curated app store model.

    It's a reason, certainly not the only one.

    --
    GLaDOS for President 2016! "Well here we are again. It's always such a pleasure." -- GLaDOS, 2011
  80. Re:iPod touch's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The plural of "touch" is "touches" [...]

    I'll reply Anonymously since I'm feeding the trolls -- Although I am by no means an authoritative source on grammar, I believe the proper usage when pluralizing a Trademark is to leave the trademark alone and make the noun plural, otherwise you risk genericizing it.

    The iPhone is a specific type of mobile phone, so the plural is mobile phones. To avoid the redundancy of saying "iPhone mobile phones" you could just call them "iPhone devices". The firmware update is for iPhone and iTouch devices.

    See - http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/000943.html

  81. Reports where? Has worked fine on my 3GS by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    by all accounts, iOS 4 is a huge battery hog on the 3GS

    Being a developer I've been running iOS4 for around three weeks now. I've seen no alteration of battery use at all on my 3GS.

    So rather than being "by all accounts", do you have ANY accounts where this is the case? Perhaps it was the first few betas which obviously are going to have issues...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  82. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

    The Internet is the new Radio/TV. Controlling what content (software, or media) you are allowed to install on your internet-access devices is tantamount to controlling what you can watch on your TV or listen on your radio. Can you imagine not being allowed to watch Fox or MSNBC ?

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  83. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Ixokai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The way you fanboys defend

    The way you dismiss those who defend as "fanboys" is childish.

    There is more then one point of view; there are reasoned arguments to be made on more then one side, and there are more then one objective criteria that matters can be judged on, and more then one principle that can be important to people.

    Its tired. No one can be even vaguely positive towards anything Apple does without being dismissed as a "fanboy" -- even if you criticize something Apple does a breath after you praise another thing they've done. Hell, you can be only moderately-pro-Apple and then luxuriate praise on something Android does and yet if you point out even one flaw or weakness -- even if its purely objective -- and your entire point of view is immediately dismissed as a "fanboy". The *automatic* vitriol that a lot of Android supporters (Fandroids? :P) spew at anything even vaguely pro-Apple is absurd.

    Grow up and drop the ad-hominem nonsense: if you need it to win an argument, you are just utter fail. Recognize there are *actual reasons* people *actually like* Apple products. Recognize there are *actual reasons* why people *actually do not like* Apple products.

    Recognize that these reasons may be *different* for *different people*, and that it doesn't make anyone stupid, brainwashed, or some mindless cult without any sort of reason.

  84. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by atlasdropperofworlds · · Score: 1

    I don't understand something.

    A $829 tablet is as useful as a $3000 computer?

    Perhaps if all you do is browse and check email. If you have any actual work to do, I'd be willing to bet that the iPad rapidly becomes lacking. In fact, as someone has already pointed out, you can get a computer more powerful than the iPad for less.

    Quite frankly, the iPad is pretty much a toy. There is no real utility in it, aside from being a somewhat different way of sitting at the couch and surfing the web (different than say, sitting at the couch and surfing the web with you laptop). I can see some utility in capacitive touchscreen laptops because they have both an actual keyboard and a mouse-alternative (touching the screen for action). When I encounter such a system, I will buy it instead.

    And it will likely be a better system for the money than the iPad.

  85. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by FaasNat · · Score: 2, Informative

    Which device, pray tell, is a "CELLPHONE?"

    The iPhone.

    --
    There's never enough when you have too little
  86. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by donny77 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why? Today Apple will release iOS4. Tonight I will have it on my iPhone 3G. Why is 30 days not a long time to wait?

  87. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 2, Informative

    And the other 80% of the cellphone market that uses subscription crapware I can only get through the telco is different how?

    Erm, what about Android, Blackberry and Windows Mobile? You don't need to go through the telco for them.

    --
    This space for rent.
  88. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yet along comes the iPhone, which by contrast, has an INCREDIBLE amount of flexibility, and people are screaming FASCIST?!

    typically only Anarchy kiddies that dont even have $5.00 to their name to buy tacos at taco bell...
    iPhone Sux man... they are too expensive, that means the suX!

    stick it to the man! I'm being an anarchist... I'm Cool....

    Ignore them.

  89. I'm a little confused by bennomatic · · Score: 1

    I've got a 2g iPod Touch, and while I don't expect to see all the features, it's my understanding that it's compatible with the new OS. Downloaded the new iTunes, and it says that IOS 3.1.3, the version that's installed already, is up to date. Does the iOS update go out separately from the iTunes update? Or is something screwy with my iPod?

    --
    The CB App. What's your 20?
    1. Re:I'm a little confused by CoolCash · · Score: 1

      Updates are downloaded when you connect your device to iTunes. Its a separate download than iTunes 9.2.

    2. Re:I'm a little confused by dancingmad · · Score: 1

      It's not out yet. It'll be released today but as of me writing this (12:13PM EST) it's not hit the servers yet.

      --
      "There is no time, sir, at which ties do not matter," Jeeves, (Jeeves and the Impending Doom)
    3. Re:I'm a little confused by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      Ah, thanks.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    4. Re:I'm a little confused by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      Gotcha. It didn't download when I connected the device, but per the previous poster, it looks like the iOS update isn't available at the moment.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
  90. The Correct Way(TM) by KingSkippus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As far as I'm concerned, there is one and only one Correct Way(TM) to write a date or date/time. It is:

    2010-06-21 15:37:21 (Which is the exact date and time in UTC that I typed that.)

    You go from most general (year) to most specific (seconds). Always write times in 24-hour format, and always include leading zeroes. Why is that the Correct Way(TM)? Because when you ASCII-alphabetize a list of such dates and times, they will sort into the correct chronological order.

    I guess the 21/6 rationale is that some people call it "the twenty-first of June." Those people are wrong. It is "June twenty-first," or if you prefer, "June twenty-one." Do those people call the time "the thirty-seventh of three p.m."? I think not.

    If you really want to get fancy, you can use alternative separators. 2010.06.21 15:37:21 is fine. Or if you're into saving space (like in a script or program), just 20100621153721 works, too. The Oracle format for that is 'YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS'. I use the same format for storing dates in MySQL and SQLite. Whenever I write a timestamp to a log file, I use that format so that the GNU sort command works on it. Whenever I name a file with a date in it, I use the format so that sane operating systems that sort files by name will also sort it chronologically. When I put dates/datetimes in something like Excel, I also use the format in case someone ever exports the file to a text file or to a CSV or something.

    I really, really do wish that everyone would stop using all other crazy date/datetime formats.

    It kind of reminds me of how, I can't remember who it was, but one of the early developers of protocols said that he regretted making hostnames things like mail.google.com. It really should have been com.google.mail. Think about it; it looks weird now, but if that were the way it worked and you had a ginormous list of FQDNs and sorted it, all your top-level domains would collate together, followed by all of your company names collating together. com.google.docs, com.google.mail, com,google.maps, com.google.www would all be together, instead of mail.google.com, mail.yahoo.com, mail.whatever.com all globbing up. It would also really make it hard for phishers who use URL munging to mislead people.

    1. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by bfe369 · · Score: 0

      I concur that this is the correct way, but I tried setting my Windows 7 64-bit to display thusly and totally broke Acrobat Reader 9.3. I do mean it wouldn't even come up at all until I changed it to something else. :-/

      --
      -- Brad Felmey
    2. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by cheesybagel · · Score: 2, Funny

      It will stop ASCII sorting properly once we reach year 10000. Yeah, I know I'm being pedantic.

    3. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by rawls · · Score: 1

      Do those people call the time "the thirty-seventh of three p.m."? I think not.

      We say "twenty-three minutes to four".

    4. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm sorry old bean, but regardless of the unix `date` command output, only American says "June 21st". The rest of the world uses the correct date expression of "the 21st of June". Even enlightened Americans agree.

    5. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      And Germans might say "Halb-sieben", if I recall my elementary German - "Half Seven". Meaning, of course, six-thirty.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    6. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by Bryan3000000 · · Score: 1

      And I say that right now it is:

      around dinner time on the summer solstice, the year of our Lord MMX

      What it lacks in precision and sortability, it makes up for in descriptiveness and literary quality. Incidentally, it was parsed with reasonable accuracy by Google Calendar's quick add, although the same time next year was not... I'll have to report that bug.

    7. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a rather long-winded way of spelling ISO8601 http://www.iso.org/iso/date_and_time_format.

    8. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      American date format is, much like most other things Americans do, shorter and more to the point. That is why it will ultimately prevail.

      (I'm not an American, nor a native English speaker.)

    9. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Some (older) people do say half of three, or quarter of three (less often three quarters of three, more often one quarter to four), and I am sure there are precedents for this in other languages. And despite what arrogant Americans may think, most English speakers around the world do say "22nd of June" and not "June 22". While I do, in general agree with your rant (which is largely about the ISO endorsed date format, and the reasons behind it, after all), I do think the big-endian date format you talk about is just one of two "most-valid" representations- the other being this little-endian format I have just exemplified. The one unfortunate thing about little-endian, however, is that it doesn't mesh with our left-to-right language's odd choice of writing arabic numbers backwards (as if we were quoting them) instead or reordering them to fit our word order.

    10. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by Zixia · · Score: 1

      I guess the 21/6 rationale is that some people call it "the twenty-first of June." Those people are wrong. It is "June twenty-first," or if you prefer, "June twenty-one." Do those people call the time "the thirty-seventh of three p.m."? I think not.

      And do you call the full date 'two thousand and ten June twenty-one'? I think not.

      Your 'one and only' correct date format makes sense for computers but not for people. I do not ASCII-sort dates in my head and I seem to prefer more specific information first before the more general.

      I'll stick with 21st June 2010. You can do what you like.

    11. Re:The Correct Way(TM) by zpeidar · · Score: 1

      I guess the 21/6 rationale is that some people call it "the twenty-first of June." Those people are wrong. It is "June twenty-first," or if you prefer, "June twenty-one." Do those people call the time "the thirty-seventh of three p.m."? I think not.

      Well, as far as I can see, the 6/21-rationale is only a result of how dates are read in the english language, and not in any other way "The Right Way", is it more rational to have your dates MM/DD/YYYY, than to have them DD/MM/YYYY, the first one is middle-endian and really weird, while the second one is a little-endian approach, that appreciates the fact that the month and year part to an increasing degree might be implicated.

      I agree on YYYY/MM/DD being practical for sorting purposes, but DD/MM/YYYY is just as practical for reading fast. If you have YYYY/MM/DD, you'll have to read either right-to-left, or make some small mental adjustments for the order. When is knowing the year more important than the date of something? Mostly in historical discussions, where the date is often less important than the year (and in many cases, the year might be the best known part of a historical date), but with current events, the first thing you'd like to know, is the date (or perhaps the month if the timescale is a bit bigger), then the month, and then whether it will happen in the far future (some other year), or just simply this year.

      What it comes down to for me, is that MM/DD/YYYY is a weird NUXI, somewhat of an abomination in the concept of writing down dates, either use little-endian dates, or big-endian dates. Quite a few languages even appreciate this, and pronounce dates DD/MM/YYYY. As an example, norwegians say "21. Juli 2010".

      The argument for MM/DD becomes even worse when looking at how the clock is read, "Quarter Past Three", would imply writing time MM:HH, which is quite in line with writing little-endian dates...

  91. Re:21/6 for eff sake..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Geeze, I already had to correct somebody on the usage of plural trademarks, and now this!

    The optimist in me wants to believe that they're just conforming poorly to ISO 8601 by leaving the year out.

    I do agree, though, that mm/dd/yyyy serves no useful purpose, and only tends to confuse people.

    ISO 8601 for everyone! It makes sorting algorithms happy!

  92. Re:iOS 4 ignored IMO the two biggest feature defic by RapmasterT · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1: A notification system that doesn't use annoying modal popups 2: Speech-to-text into all fields (*note* I refrained from mentioning the AT&T lock-in, but we all know it's an issue)

    How about "wireless sync"? Can someone tell me why a wireless device has to be plugged in to sync a damn MP3 file? I have no less than 6 apps on my iPhone that do some form of wireless sync with my PC, but the core phone features dont' support it. I'm sure we know the reason: "Steve doesn't like it", but what I want to know is WHY??

  93. Applause. by Petersko · · Score: 0

    "I'm not so sure you understand the general public. They don't care. They really don't. They've never once thought "I need to SSH into my box at home to...", or "If only this API were allowed". They read about the things they CAN do and go "cool!" and then they buy it. They hear about some artist that they don't care at all about being censored - and they don't care. They hear about some app they don't care about not being approved - and they don't care. They hear about some app they think would be cool not getting approved - and they're sad for 10 seconds, but they realize they didn't lose anything other than the possibility of an app, which may still become actual, and they move on to caring about things that actually affect their lives in a meaningful way - i.e. not a cell phone or tablet computer manufacturers policies."

    I'm not a guy who posts "I agree!". I usually just nod and move on. Your post, however, describes perfectly the point I've tried to make a few times with varying degrees of success.

    Slashdot is not the world at large. Here you'll find that small group of people who actually care about the small differences that they feel make Android phones superior. Nobody else gives a crap. I know the differences, and I don't give a crap.

    I've been a computer hobbyist for 25 years, a senior systems analyst for the last 13. During the day I enhance and maintain pipeline scheduling and simulation software. I have three systems at home that I tinker with endlessly... and three months ago I bought an iPhone. It's terrific.

    Sure it's a walled garden. But it's a pretty great garden. And now that this product is out, I'm even happier in that garden. iRig

    1. Re:Applause. by Nerdfest · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I understand your point of view, but I look at it like this: soft comfy handcuffs are still handcuffs. It's better to complain about them or avoid them right up front, instead of waiting until they stop you personally from doing something you want to do. Think back to the famous "First they came for the trade unionists ..." .

    2. Re:Applause. by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      If you're complaining about soft handcuffs, you have the wrong girlfriend.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  94. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Heavy flow day? Cramping? Bloating? Zits? Hope you have a better day!

    Nature-show announcer voice: The Apple Fanboy is a fickle beast, able to turn rabid and frothing-at-the-mouth suddenly and without warning upon fact-based criticism of Apple. Observed behavior may include, but is not limited to, hyperbole, excessive use of capitals and punctuation, a belittling or insulting tone in response to factual criticism, and a literal interpretation of "fascism" when convenient despite realizing it is meant to express "too controlling". Despite these maladaptive traits, this species has been successful in the wild and multiplies at a very high rate.

    About the Google Voice deal, I'm betting that the only reason why Apple reversed their decision is because Google is a large well-known company with a lot of clout. Had Apple remained completely unreasonable about Google Voice, it would be trivial for Google to make sure that tens of millions of people knew all about it. Indeed, we did learn about it. That makes Google a bit more difficult to push around than the average individual developer. What we don't know is how many other innovative apps have been denied from individuals and companies who are small-fry and unable to do anything about it.

    You want to create a walled garden, I'm fine with that so long as you do not hold a monopoly provided that certain conditions are met. These conditions are:

    • Explicit, very clearly spelled-out rules and criteria defining what is and is not an acceptable app for your App Store.
    • All rules and criteria are based on empirical data, such as observed application behavior and/or implemented features.
    • All rules are so explicit that whether a given app is accepted or rejected is 100% predictable ahead of time.
    • Any app that does not demonstrably break one of the rules/criteria is guaranteed to be accepted.
    • Any app that is rejected comes with a statement detailing the precise rule that it fails to follow, along with screenshots or other documentation proving application behavior in violation of the rules.
    • All instances of application rejection, the rule allegedly broken, and the documentation of the app breaking that rule is publically available on a searchable Web site.

    That'd be the correct way to do walled gardens. It would greatly cut down on shit like "hey, Google Voice uses data services to send voice which might reduce our revenue from voice minutes, we better find some made-up reason to reject it!"

  95. Re:iPod touch's by Spansh · · Score: 1

    You seem to be a little touchy on the subject!

  96. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Palm Treo $699.00
    Nokia smartphones $499-$999
    Samsung phones in general NEVER have upgrades available... $499-999 in price.
    motorola phones outside the Android ones never get updates. and the Droid took forever to get 2.1 to it... mostly because of users screaming at Verizon about it...

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  97. Re:Only Apple haters are stuck in the dark ages by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Err what?

    I am beginning to think that you might not actually be a Apple fanboy but a cunning troll. I can't imagine someone being really this stupid.

    --
    This space for rent.
  98. Doesn't matter because you couldn't max out RAM by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Yes except for the fact that the iPad has a much larger screen but still no dedicated GPU memory, so for all intents and purposes it has LESS ram than the 3GS

    That is true, but for development it actually doesn't end up mattering much. Because even though you have 256MB of RAM, you were never allowed near that ceiling as a developer. Since memory is constrained you always had to be careful when using a lot of memory, and respond to system memory warnings.

    In practice, there's been no difference targeting the iPad and the 3Gs, even developing photo applications - those can use so much memory anyway, you have to be VERY careful of the memory you are using no matter the device.

    What it does mean for the end user when multitasking arrives, is that the iPad is a more likely to have large background apps booted out of memory sooner (stuff like Pandora should be fine since it consumes virtually no memory to simply stream audio).

    There will be some classes of applications (like iMovie) that have to have the extra RAM and cannot work without it. But that's a pretty limited class of applications. Mostly there would at most be perhaps a few features enabled on an iPhone 4 that would not be on an earlier device... except that of course with double the resolution, the iPhone 4 ends up looking more similar to a 256MB phone than it would seem at first glance. I think iMovie might be as much about the processor as the RAM.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  99. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 3, Insightful

    they are computers with massively reduced user freedom

    I think it's an appliance in the same way that my PS3 is an appliance. There is a computer under the covers and the device is quite general purpose, but in the end its an appliance because I don't have the freedom to tinker.

    I think "computer with massively reduced user freedom" could be part of a decent definition of appliance.

    I am getting sick of the game console comparisons. People are NOT replacing real computers with gaming consoles, but there's an increasing push(especially by Apple fanboys) that the iDevices are the future of computing.

    Read about how a 'network security expert' replaced this laptop with an iPad --> http://apple.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1693064&cid=32641740

    Read these articles about how the iPad is supposed to take over computing and make desktops and laptop obsolete:

    http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9175600/The_iPad_is_the_future_for_home_computing
    http://gizmodo.com/5506692/ipad-is-the-future
    http://www.macworld.com/article/146038/2010/01/ipad_future_shock.html
    http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/02/ipad-future/
    http://techcrunch.com/2010/01/27/ipad/

    Gaming consoles were never considered the future of computing, that's why they don't represent a threat to freedom. This is the reason that people are justifiably upset about Apple's restrictions.

    --
    This space for rent.
  100. 15" Laptops by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    15" Laptops start at around $500 for a dual core and decent (but not amazing) battery life. I'd have to say that $829 is only competitively priced if you're comparing it against a Macbook. But I suspect most people who get an iPad will also get a laptop, and that the two devices aren't competing with one another. Because the iPad and tablets in general are less functional than laptops in many ways, but are useful enough to some people for the sales on tablets to have picked up finally (after 2 decades of struggling). I'd argue it is a combination of the richness of the web, the ubiquity of wireless and multitouch interfaces that turn tablets from a dead duck into a media darling.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:15" Laptops by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      I think that people who have a desktop replacement laptop will buy something like an iPad. But people who have a netbook, or a small form factor notebook, won't.

    2. Re:15" Laptops by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      Let's flip this around, a bit. People who haven't bought a netbook yet might choose to buy an iPad instead. And people who have a netbook wish they would have waited for an iPad.

      just to be clear, a $500 15" dual core laptop is not a netbook and or a desktop replacement. although many people have one of those affordable laptops and don't own any other sort of computer.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re:15" Laptops by anyGould · · Score: 1

      I have an iPad and a netbook (my wife has pretty much commandeered the netbook, though), and the functionality is pretty much the same for normal use (check mail, surf web, light document work). Mentally I've filed the iPad as the "Mac netbook".

    4. Re:15" Laptops by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I suspect Steve Jobs views the iPad as a netbook done right.

      I use my netbook primarily for programming, so an iPad is not much of a substitute in my extremely unusual circumstance.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  101. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Wait a second. 'Flexibility' is a neutral term -- it can be either good or bad. Flexibility controlled by the end user is almost always good. Flexibility controlled by the producer can be good, but has a history of being used in less than benevolent ways, especially in the computer industry.

    Flexibility, improperly implemented, can be just another way for a corporation to screw over its customers. To my mind, the jury is still out on exactly how Apple intends to use its phones' flexibility.

    --
    Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
  102. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by bm_luethke · · Score: 1

    The so called "smart phones" have become much more (or less depending on how you look at it) that simply a cellphone. Were it simply a phone I doubt there would be much arguing here, but they have are becoming general purpose computing devices. In many cases (both the iPhone and ANdroid sets) the phone gets less attention than the application framework does - they are OK phones but if you primarily want a phone there are MUCH better choices out there.

    Would we be arguing about HTML5/Flash on just a cellphone? The openness of a application store? No, that's because we have highly mobile computing devices that just happen to also work as our cellphones. As such yes it is important as to how open.

    Apple won on both the iPhone market and iPod market because they noticed people griping about what they couldn't do and went and did it. The iPod is *not* a multi-purpose device - it is primarily a music player that just happens to have some other stuff tacked on. No one is looking at their iPod and saying "Gee, I *really* wish it did this". People were doing that with the older MP3 players. People were also heavily doing that with thier smart phones - all sorts of wanting it to be a general purpose computing platform. Apple understood this and made the first go at it. What Apple isn't seeing is that many people are *still* going "Gee I really wish my smart phone would do this" and they are going to loose because of that (the iPod market is pretty much wrapped up, their vision works VERY well there).

    One can argue all day that it isn't fair, and heck maybe you even have something of a point (for some they are phones first and the applications are secondary) - but in the end all it matters is user are frustrated with certain things and when something comes out that satisfies those complaints whilst not breaking their old uses the they get replaced. The Android phones may do it, but there are still complaints there that someone could address so unless those get fixed (and Google is more than capable of doing so) there they will not be the long term winners either. Apple has never and most likely never will understand this. That being said Apple has historically been happy that way and turns a profit so I can't say they are wrong either - people who agree with the Apple way of doing things loves them and are dedicated customers - just do not drink the cool aid and think it is going to do something it is not. Lets face it, the iMac is profitable and many consider all five sold a year to be a HUGE success story - those that like the idea love theirs, one can do a lot worse than that.

    --
    ------- Sorry about the spelling, I suffer from two problems. Dyslexia makes it difficult to spell well, lazy makes it
  103. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's get a grip on reality here, people. First and foremost? This device is a CELLPHONE. Many, MANY cellphones have been made before the iPhone was released, and many more have been made since then which NEVER get a firmware update at all! You simply "get what you get" with them, often meaning even functionality the original manufacturer intended the phone to have is stripped out by your cellular carrier and their custom version of the firmware. (EG. Despite it supporting bluetooth data transfer, you *may* get blocked from copying over your own ringtone files from a computer -- or maybe you're disallowed from moving over your contact info as vcard files, or ??)

    Yet along comes the iPhone, which by contrast, has an INCREDIBLE amount of flexibility, and people are screaming FASCIST?!

    As phone handsets go, it's pretty empowering, I'd say. (And I say this as someone who used to own the original iPhone as well as a 3G, but now uses a Samsung Messager II phone instead of "drinking the kool-aid" and extending my AT&T contract out another 2 years just to get the latest iPhone.)

    However, compare the iPhone to other *SMARTPHONES* and it comes up woefully short. iOS 4 is finally catching up to something like the ancient Motorola Q. If the iPhone wants to be a smartphone, it has to compete against smartphones - and as soon as you start comparing it to smartphones your entire post completely falls apart. Were some smartphones locked down by mobile companies? Sure, but the vast majority weren't. All the problems and lack of flexibility was from the free or almost-free flip phones and other budget phones. Compared to something like the Moto Razr, the iPhone is amazingly flexible. Compared to an actual smartphone (you know, the category the iPhone is trying to force itself into), the iPhone is amazingly locked down, and is just now starting to get basic features most smartphones have had for at least half a decade.

    The iPhone was not unique, it did not start any revolutions, it did not set a trend, etc, etc, etc... The iPhone really only improved upon a single area - mobile web browsing. Everything else it either didn't do at all or did worse than the competition. Heck, look at the app store. People love to point to the app store as the iPhone's biggest contribution to the mobile space, but how long did it take for the iPhone to actually be able to run 3rd party apps at all? That wasn't a launch feature, it took months and months for Apple to finally let 3rd party apps onto the phone, and even then it pretty much copy/pasted BREW/J2ME's model.

  104. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    Look, here's the deal: if Apple wants to control the platform and the approve all the apps, and use nebulous/arbitrary criteria to reject apps for any length of time even against the express wishes of its users, then they open themselves up to being accused of being fascist control freaks worse than Microsoft. THEY open THEMSELVES up to that accusation, for it otherwise would hold no water. Got it?

    Best Buy is such a fascist organization. I went there the other day and insisted that the store manager place my software on their shelf, and he said no! And he didn't even quote me a section from the Best Buy Corporate Handbook! I call for a full boycott of Best Buy.

  105. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by MaerD · · Score: 1

    That's terribly unfair, sir!
    Your unfounded accusations ruin a man's rep. The Joker is not and has never been a Fascist, and I believe you owe him an apology, sir!

    --
    I put on my robe and wizard hat..
  106. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they are computers with massively reduced user freedom

    I think it's an appliance in the same way that my PS3 is an appliance. There is a computer under the covers and the device is quite general purpose, but in the end its an appliance because I don't have the freedom to tinker.

    I think "computer with massively reduced user freedom" could be part of a decent definition of appliance.

    What do you mean? I can use my PS3 as a regular computer. In fact, it's my file server. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to run a firmware on it.

  107. IOS? by jdimpson · · Score: 1

    Does Cisco care that their IOS product name is being infringed? I don't think the USPTO differentiates case.

    1. Re:IOS? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      In the slashdot post about WWDC 2010, some alleged Cisco employees chimed in that there was a deal struck between Apple and Cisco before the conference on the trademark.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    2. Re:IOS? by ekgringo · · Score: 1

      Does even 1% of the population know or care what Cisco names their operating systems? Besides, it has been mentioned in other articles that Cisco has authorized Apple to use the name.

    3. Re:IOS? by jdimpson · · Score: 1

      Does even 1% of the population know or care if someone steals your car?

  108. Re:But you DO have the freedom to tinker!! by jpcarter · · Score: 1

    So if he had said XBOX instead of PS3, would XNA have killed this argument?

    Same price, too. $99/year.

  109. Re:iPod touch's by goofyspouse · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The only thing more annoying than a slight grammatical error is when an idiot grammar Nazi shows up and posts as AC.

    Ignoring the second half of your message:

    The plural of "touch" is "touches" you fucking dumbass. People who put an apostrophe on every fucking word that ends with an 'S are starting to really piss me off.

  110. 7.2% were simulator? by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    The statistics you present appear to be for an app which isn't typical, and which has such a small sample size as to be probably irrelevant (7.2% simulator?!) For the last few months, consumer apps with large distributions typically see something around 2% of their users (+/1 one or two percent) on first generation devices (total). This doesn't really change your conclusion, but you might want to be careful about what other conclusions you draw from that sample.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  111. Where is your multiculturalism? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    Year-month-day is superior to the other two conventions because filenames sort properly. Plus, subjectively, it seems more rational to me to put the more important thing first than the least important thing. Typical Europeans putting their least foot forward. The American convention is probably from how dates are typically read in English. September sixth, two-thousand ten. Rather than Sixth of September two-thousand ten. Both work in English but the first is preferred in America and sounds less archaic and formal to my American ears.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:Where is your multiculturalism? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but "less archaic and formal" does not make it right, else you'd ditch Fahrenheit and miles for that very same reason.

      It's not just the Europeans being "typical" though, it's every country on the planet except America.

      And at least be consistent - mm/dd/yy is TOTALLY inconsistent.

      September sixth? Surely September is the ninth, not the sixth month. Perhaps you mean sixth DAY, in which case it's a contraction of "September sixth (day)" which makes no sense. So you're looking for a contraction of "sixth (day) of September" which comes out as (sit down for this, it may come as a shock) "sixth of September". OMG, the rest of the world is consistent in not only word usage but also number set order!

      Face it, the US is holding out on date format against the world, AND hanging onto Fahrenheit, AND distance in miles. Give it up please, it'll take away one more thing the rest of the world can laugh at you for, plus it'll avoid embarrassing mistakes when exchanging data internationally.

    2. Re:Where is your multiculturalism? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      "September THE sixth" works in English. You're trying to apply your own cultural bias for what is "logical" to the English language, when generally English conventions are formed by regional cultures and not an globally controlled organization or all encompassing logic. (why does character not have a 'ch' sound? illogical, maybe they should have stuck with caractere)

      (North) America is a collection of countries, which includes places like Canada. Where mm/dd/yy is used everywhere outside of the Canadian government and military (where the logical yyyy-mm-dd is mandated). Belize, Palau, Philippines, and Micronesia also use mm/dd/yy convention.

      The Brits hang more tightly onto miles than Americans. They are especially weird in how they use metric for almost everything, but pounds and stone and miles for a circumstances.
      Celsius and Fahrenheit are both pretty arbitrary and irrelevant systems. I'd probably say Celsius is slightly more convenient but doesn't form useful relationships like meters and kilograms form. Maybe something like Planck temperature is preferable if it can be scaled for everyday use.

      Fahrenheit is used in the USA, Belize, Liberia, Palau, and Burma. Some parts of the Great Britain will use Fahrenheit for weather reports, like radio stations in the north.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  112. iOS 4 Conferance by helix2301 · · Score: 1

    Let's hope this is as good as when they showed the OS to us at the WWDC.

  113. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by intheshelter · · Score: 1

    Hahahahaha! Sorry, but I laughed out loud at that. Android fanbois are hilarious in their hypocrisy.

  114. Re:iPod touch's by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

    "iPod Touch" is a proper noun that describes an object. The construction "iPod Touch's" is correct -- it is the proper possessive for that proper noun. "iPod touches" is incorrect -- it separates the two pieces of the proper noun and conflates one of them into a verb. I'd rather not have my iPod touching anybody, thank you.

    I love grammar nazis who don't know what they're talking about. They're like fish in a barrel, only less erudite.

    --
    Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
  115. Re:21/6 for eff sake..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm an American and I like 2010.06.21

  116. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by justin12345 · · Score: 0, Troll

    I'm sure you can build a shitty little computer system for $500. My mother can build a shitty little computer system for $500 (including monitor). Do you think that's a talent? I built the first machine that made me more then $100,000 for less then $10.

    Can you build it so thin?

    --
    Cool art gallery, if you're into that sort of thing.
  117. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could it be because the only side you hear is from the App developer, who may not be totally forthcoming as to why an app was rejected. As a rule, Apple doesn't comment on app rejections. Android users in here will believe any naysaying, regardless of source, and with a total willingness to suspend credulity as long as it makes Apple look bad. Apple claims a 95% of the submitted apps are approved within 7 days, and over 1 billion dollars payed out to application developers. This is hardly taking advantage of the poor developer community. Arguably if the community were more fragmented, those types of profits wouldn't be realized.

    They also stated the top 3 reasons why apps are rejected, and shockingly enough, I tend to think all three are feasible.

    1) Doesn't function as advertised
    2) Use of private API's
    3) App crashes

    I would tend to use a little more common sense when looking at some of these rejections. The high profile ones conflict directly with the developers agreement on a very obvious level. The others tend to derive from some blog of a disgruntled developer, which the Android folks just lap up like cool-aid.

    The only 'fanbois' I see on /. lately are Android users willing to suspend credulity at the drop of a hat.

  118. stuck with iOS 3 by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    I expect most app developers will move quickly to iOS4, given the small and declining incentive to develop and test for continuing compatibility with previous iPhone OS releases.

    People who are not on iOS4 within the next 30 days, even if they represent a fraction of the market, say 1/5 or even 1/3, will be dramatically underrepresented amongst the pool of people buying apps. People who won't download a free OS upgrade are unlikely to be buying apps.

    First generation devices are only a few percent of the total user base, already, and shrinking every month. Mostly, it will be the crackers and pirates on 2nd generation devices who will be stuck on iPhone OS 3.x for awhile. Since that entire pool only every buys one app to share amongst them, there's not much profit being left on the table if you don't serve them.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  119. Re:iPod touch's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That touchs' my heart!

  120. Re:iPod touch's by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

    iTouchii?

    --
    XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  121. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +1 Damn right

  122. spank your monkey in Safari by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Not to worry. You can spank your monkey all you want, with your new iOS update. HTML is the preferred platform for pr0n, or didn't you get the memo?

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  123. Re:But you DO have the freedom to tinker!! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

    Only if that also would have killed any arguments against the App Store. You still have to pay Microsoft to develop for it, you distribute through their distribution channel (Xbox Live Arcade), and they have final approval power over what goes in their store.

  124. So much for the epic Emacs / VI debates by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

    Now all you need to do to pull all the trolls into the conversation is post an article about Apple. Positive, negative, true, false, rumor or fact...

    --
    XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
    1. Re:So much for the epic Emacs / VI debates by selven · · Score: 1

      vim > anything Apple >>> emacs

      Anyone who thinks otherwise is an idiot.

    2. Re:So much for the epic Emacs / VI debates by H0p313ss · · Score: 1

      /facepalm

      --
      XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  125. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

    What about all those people building supercomputers out of PS3s?

  126. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess if you had never used a smartphone before the iphone it seemed amazing. But yes, other smartphones did not have these restrictions. Of course regular dumphones did, many of them can't even play MP3s to this very day. Big deal. In summary, you are comparing the iphone to regular phones when you should be comparing it to smartphones.

  127. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by s73v3r · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They've made it worse for the mobile market, by making it easier for developers to sell their wares, and for consumers to purchase them?

  128. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by BronsCon · · Score: 1

    Not a troll... An Apple customer.

    --
    APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
  129. iBrick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the update, you better believe Apple will limit people more, even when they say they are "open"...

    From a PC...

  130. Yes, but tell him that by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    So if he had said XBOX instead of PS3, would XNA have killed this argument?

    It would have killed his argument, since as you say anyone can build for it and thus you can in fact tinker with it also.

    Although I would say, that the iOS platform is more generally useful as to the kinds of things you can develop (though that will change when Windows 7 Mobile arrives).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Yes, but tell him that by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      that will change when Windows 7 Mobile arrives

      I doubt it. Windows as a brand is a negative in the mobile space. Microsoft has shown themselves to be pretty much totally incompetent in non-desktop operating systems.

  131. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

    They're talking about dumbphones/featurephones. You know, the type of phone that is still the majority of the cellphone market. They're locked down way more than any Apple device, and yet none of you guys were out crying "Fascism!" about them.

  132. Re:But you DO have the freedom to tinker!! by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    True, the iPhone dev kit is much more accessible. The last time I checked, a PS3 dev kit was about $2,000 (unless you were in academia) and the developer license from Sony made Apple's license look very good indeed.

  133. One problem, minus one bogus problem... by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    If I'd been running iOS 4 on my iPhone 3GS for a while now, I wouldn't be allowed to tell you that you are repeating claims which are inconsistent with my experience.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  134. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look, here's the deal: if Apple wants to control the platform and the approve all the apps, and use nebulous/arbitrary criteria to reject apps for any length of time even against the express wishes of its users, then they open themselves up to being accused of being fascist control freaks worse than Microsoft. THEY open THEMSELVES up to that accusation, for it otherwise would hold no water. Got it?

    Best Buy is such a fascist organization. I went there the other day and insisted that the store manager place my software on their shelf, and he said no! And he didn't even quote me a section from the Best Buy Corporate Handbook! I call for a full boycott of Best Buy.

    The difference is that Best Buy maintains a physical brick-and-mortar store with finite shelf space. There is a real scarcity of physical space on their shelves so they are forced to exclude a great deal of boxed software since it's absolutely not possible for all available software to be put on display in their stores.

    By comparison, the App Store is a virtual storefront. Adding a piece of software means placing a record into a database. This scales quite well and does not have the physical limitations of a brick-and-mortar store. Therefore, you are comparing two entirely unlike things and it follows that your conclusion cannot be valid.

  135. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

    Tell that to my G1. Its less old than the iPhone 3G, and yet it hasn't received as many updates, and won't be receiving an update to the newest firmware this summer.

  136. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Pojut · · Score: 2, Insightful

    My point was that a computer doesn't have to cost $3,000, like the GP claimed. I never said doing so was a talent, just that it was possible. Thanks for being an asshole though, I appreciate it.

  137. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    I personally like apple screening all of the crap out

    You mean crap like all those iFart apps?

    Sure there are some potentially good stuff they have not allowed but I dont miss it.

    Err, how do you know you don't miss it when you don't know what they are or could be?

    Every kind of app I have wanted has been there in some form. When you need a phone to constantly function as a phone and be secure a more closed model where you cant install any old crap off of the internet seems to be the better way to go

    Some people wanted to run Google Voice as an app, but were denied because Apple didn't want them to do so.

    If you choose to live in apple's walled garden, life is great. You have stability performance and usefulness. Once you experience this all come together everything else seems inferior.

    If Apple were to relax the DRM on the iDevices, people like you can still use Apple's app store only if you wanted. No one would force you to download apps from Google or whatever.

    --
    This space for rent.
  138. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

    You are wrong. Consumers have backlashed against totalitarian devices before. Examples include DIVX (no, the *other* one). As for hacking locked devices, you just need to remember the CueCat or TiVo.

    When even Microsoft used to be more open about their platform, you know you are a totalitarian asshole of a company. Just because the regime is wrapped into a layer of propaganda does not make it less so.

  139. Psst... by IANAAC · · Score: 1

    As long as they don't try to emulate the shit brown interface of Ubuntu we'll be fine.

    It's purple now.

    1. Re:Psst... by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Is that with the default Gnome setup? I wanted to try KDE 4 on my powerbook, but it does not support PPC processors.

      I suppose you can make Gnome look nice, but from my initial impressions as an unfamiliar user, KDE just... looks nicer by default.

    2. Re:Psst... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      It's purple now

      Ugh! Am I the only one who thinks they did that just to get back at the people who called their old interface "shit"?

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
  140. It's live now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yup...

  141. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

    What do you consider a computer? And why would you ever pay $3k for one? Back in the 90's yes, but today?

    Sure you can go for multiple CPU, 16 gigs of ram and 4 24 inch full HD displays in landscape... that might just about reach the 3k figure...

    I used to build my own machines up til about 2003 - my last one did cost me near that number, but that was idiocy on my part - a couple of designer LCD screens that made up 1/3 of the cost, several hard drived, top of the range CPU/PSU/MoBo/Cooler/Graphics card...

    I've matured a little and though I have a lot of respect for some of the guys out there that push their hardware to the limit, for 99+% of the population, you go for the wonderful reality of the pareto paradox... You can get 80% of the all round performance for 20% of the price (specialist uses are excluded here of course, but $600 buys you a decent machine these days...)

  142. Cisco IOS by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Nah. The handful of folk searching for IOS will start typing "Cisco IOS" in the search field. Who knows, Cisco might even be on the verge of renaming IOS, given their efforts to expand into the enterprise server market.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  143. Its there by bfmorgan · · Score: 1

    Downloading it now

    --
    I hope this caused some synapses to fire.
  144. Re:iPod touch's by intheshelter · · Score: 1

    No one cares dumbass. If it's really that big of a problem with you then put the barrel in your mouth and pull the trigger.

  145. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have fun installing iOS4 in an iPhone first gen.

  146. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess you hate the Android Marketplace then too. Will you be donning the sweet cape of freedom and taking up the crusade to ensure everyone is aware of their fascism too?

    After all, they have pulled apps as well. That makes them a bunch of Nazis. See, I too can redefine words and use them to reference something blown completely out of proportion.

  147. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Its tired. No one can be even vaguely positive towards anything Apple does without being dismissed as a "fanboy" -- even if you criticize something Apple does a breath after you praise another thing they've done. Hell, you can be only moderately-pro-Apple and then luxuriate praise on something Android does and yet if you point out even one flaw or weakness -- even if its purely objective -- and your entire point of view is immediately dismissed as a "fanboy". T

    It goes both ways, say something remotely negative about Apple and you're labeled an Apple hater and the 'Overrated' mods come on and on for days out of woodwork.

    --
    This space for rent.
  148. People miss your point all the time by Tran · · Score: 1

    On some blog and magazine forums people have been collecting critical reviews to help bolster the argument of the iPad not being good enough for whatever purpose they envisioned their need to be.
    I found one particular article disparaging the iPad very interesting and ironic. They referenced an article from either the Wall Street Journal or the New York Times, where the reviewer thought that the iPad was useless because the iPad basically turned a computer into a TV device.

    I couldn't help but smile at the irony - Wasn't that the holy grail of computing (for end users) - that a computer is as easy to use as a TV (toaster, etc)?
    Now that Apple has come pretty close to that goal (ideal?), it gets disparaged?
    Luckily the target users see the iPad for what it is, unlike so many holier than thou tech snobs in this forum.

    1. Re:People miss your point all the time by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      I found one particular article disparaging the iPad very interesting and ironic. They referenced an article from either the Wall Street Journal or the New York Times, where the reviewer thought that the iPad was useless because the iPad basically turned a computer into a TV device. I couldn't help but smile at the irony - Wasn't that the holy grail of computing (for end users) - that a computer is as easy to use as a TV (toaster, etc)?

      Almost. The holy grail of computing (for end users) is a computer is as easy to use as a TV (toaster, etc) and retains its abilities as a universal-machine. iOS as an operating system could be that holy grail, but Apple wants to wait about six more years until everyone is used to locked down Apple devices, then declare: "Freedom is the future! Be free to install whatever you want!" They need to delay the Holy Grail or else people will be satisfied with status-quo and won't buy a decade of iDevices, one year at a time.

  149. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

    It will be fun when Apple filters all third party advertising in iPhone so you can be force fed with their advertisement platform instead.

  150. platforms: Cocoa Touch, and HTML5 by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    It's unfortunate that you haven't considered the major difference between Apple and Microsoft in your analysis. Apple is a major backer of another platform, not just Cocoa Touch. The open standards based internet is supported by Apple and Google, and undermined by Microsoft at nearly every turn. Sure, there are valid criticisms of Apple's curated platform, Cocoa Touch, but there is a vast difference between them and Microsoft.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  151. Handcuffs by Petersko · · Score: 0

    "I understand your point of view, but I look at it like this: soft comfy handcuffs are still handcuffs. It's better to complain about them or avoid them right up front, instead of waiting until they stop you personally from doing something you want to do. Think back to the famous "First they came for the trade unionists ..." ."

    In what way are they handcuffs? There's a way to do literally everything I want to do within the established framework. I have no need of my phone that isn't actually being met.

    I won't invoke Godwin's law, but the comparison isn't valid. There are plenty of phones to pick from. Choosing one that has a unified and controlled app distribution system because it offers an excellent end user experience is definitely not participating in any kind of slippery slope scenario.

    The appropriate way to complain in this scenario is to buy some other phone. Or, if you're a developer, develop for a platform provided by a company whose policies you prefer.

    1. Re:Handcuffs by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "There's a way to do literally everything I want to do"

      You are not the entire world, first of all, and secondly, Apple is not just rejecting features, they are rejecting political cartoons and pornography from the apps store. People keep saying that HTML is the answer to that, but the apps store simply out-competes the web and HTML solutions are at an inherent disadvantage.

      "Choosing one that has a unified and controlled app distribution system because it offers an excellent end user experience is definitely not participating in any kind of slippery slope scenario."

      Yes, it is, considering that Apple already uses its control to do more than maintain quality.

      "The appropriate way to complain in this scenario is to buy some other phone. Or, if you're a developer, develop for a platform provided by a company whose policies you prefer."

      Except that the majority of people are not aware of Apple's behavior or the way that Apple is censoring these devices, and the minority who is aware will not make much a difference. The appropriate thing to do is to inform as many people as possible of the reality of the iProducts.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:Handcuffs by martinX · · Score: 1

      The apps store out-competes the web?

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
  152. [ot] Re:Can't wait to see by cgenman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is just my personal opinion, but there doesn't seem to have been as much Apple fanboism here as their used to be. Or FOSS fanboism. Or even anti-Microsoftism. The big evil one hasn't done anything big and evil in a while, and isn't nearly as relevant as they used to be. Linux passed from a meme into a tool, one that is stable and not terribly exciting. Like a hammer. And the diehard Apple fanbois seem to have evolved from worshiping at the feet of Jobs to admiring the hardware and complaining about the policies.

    There are still a lot of Free-Market-Fundies around, but they seem to be everywhere these days. And the Anti-Copyright Crusaders have added a lot of noise to /. discussions over the past few years. There is a lot of overlap there with the Anti-Corporates. And the Android worshipers are getting a little annoying, but are nowhere near as bad as the other fanboys used to be. They seem to be in balance with the Anti-Google / Pro Privacy twin groups.

    I know that's not a lot of evidence presented above, just personal opinion. But the pendulum seems to have moved.

    1. Re:[ot] Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I think you just managed to offend every single Slashdot reader.

    2. Re:[ot] Re:Can't wait to see by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we can all still agree, fuck the police.

    3. Re:[ot] Re:Can't wait to see by Arthur+Grumbine · · Score: 1

      Best rundown I've seen of the current /. camps. I may just be speaking for myself, but a lot of us Android worshipers are really, more generally, Google fanboys.

      --
      Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure everything I just said is completely wrong.
    4. Re:[ot] Re:Can't wait to see by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think you just managed to offend every single Slashdot reader.

      Not the GNAA, I assure you.

    5. Re:[ot] Re:Can't wait to see by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I may just be speaking for myself, but a lot of us Android worshipers are really, more generally, Google fanboys.

      I don't think so. Thing is, there really isn't that much choice these days for a free and reasonably usable mobile platform apart from Android. I'd go for Maemo/MeeGo in a heartbeat, but where are the third-party apps for that? And everything else is locked down tight.

      So, I don't much care who makes Android (though I do like other Google's stuff, too), but I very much appreciate the simple fact that it's there, and not as a niche platform.

    6. Re:[ot] Re:Can't wait to see by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      This is just my personal opinion, but there doesn't seem to have been as much Apple fanboism here as their used to be. Or FOSS fanboism. Or even anti-Microsoftism.

      I beg to differ.

      The way you detect "fanboism" is by looking for FUDish, logic-devoid posts - the pinnacle of which are single-sentence exclamations - modded up to "+5, Insightful/Informative". The presence of an opposing viewpoint is not by itself a sign that there is no fanboism; however, when it takes a well-composed post with many references to match the moderation of a single emotional shot, you know the scales are tipped.

      That said, there are plenty of such upmodded short emotional posts on both side of the pro-Apple/anti-Apple fence, so I wouldn't say that it's really skewed either way. It's a flamebait topic, though, that's for sure. Most Apple-related stories routinely go to 500+ comments in a day or so, and this has been going on for over a year now, and doesn't seem to be stopping anytime soon. And if you look at most of those comments, it's largely a flamewar about the "walled garden" / "DRM chains".

      And that's what I think GP means. In olden days of MS and SCO bashing, it wasn't like that at all.

  153. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    That's funny -- I bought a computer from Best Buy, and then got some software to run on the computer from another store, without even voiding my warranty -- even when I go ahead and install a different operating system than the one my computer came with! My friend bought an iPad, but when he tried to get some software from a store not run by Apple, he discovered that the device had been designed to prevent him from doing that, and that any attempt to circumvent that design would automatically void the warranty and came with some legal threats from Apple.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  154. It's here by duke4e · · Score: 1

    Just checked iTunes and update showed!!!

  155. unknown unknowns, and known unknowns by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    This isn't a mystery. iOS 4 will be available for the iPad this fall. The iPad development track was a secret project with a tiny staff, which started from a fork of iPhone OS 3. Their work needs to be ported over to iOS 4, and the iOS 4 needs to be ported to the iPad. Good food takes time.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  156. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So there's also a scarcity of space on Best Buy's website?

  157. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    And everyone else was a HELL of a lot worse before they came along and I'm sure you weren't wrapping yourselves in the "freedom" flag back then.

    Huh, which smartphone vendor was a lot worse before they came along? Windows Mobile was always open, Blackberry was open and Android was FOSS.

    The reason is some people just blindly hate Apple and this is their avenue to scream.

    Looks like some people just blindly loooove Apple and can't digest ANY criticism.

    --
    This space for rent.
  158. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    It's like bitching that your brand new shiny sports car doesn't have leather seats and they won't let you put in aftermarket leather seats without voiding the warranty while conveniently forgetting that you were driving a rusty pinto before.

    It's more like you can't install a GPS device in a car without forking over 30% of the price to the car manufacturer, that too only if they approve it. And the 'rusty pinto' comment makes it sound like we should be forever be beholden to Apple for gracing us with shiny iDevices and not speak out against their deficiences and desire for control.

    --
    This space for rent.
  159. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    The OP said:

    And the other 80% of the cellphone market that uses subscription crapware I can only get through the telco is different how?

    How does the 'other 80% of the cellphone market' equate only dumbphones? Anyway, Windows Mobile, Blackberry, and Android were around even before the Holy Phone debuted and still had none of the nonsense restrictions that Apple is imposing.

    --
    This space for rent.
  160. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It goes both ways, say something remotely negative about Apple and you're labeled an Apple hater and the 'Overrated' mods come on and on for days out of woodwork.

    This. It's amazing how touchy some Apple supporters seems to be to criticism. Just look at some of the responses to obvious attempts at humor here in this thread.

    Platforms/companies having supporters is nothing new, but this touchiness for Apple criticism is over the top (I especially love the chorus of "shut up and just don't buy it" as response to some policy or product of Apple being criticized, wtf kind of response to discussion and criticism is that?)

  161. Feature parity by the+grace+of+R'hllor · · Score: 1

    With the iPhone about to get multitasking and more expanded bluetooth support, I'm finally getting close to feature parity with my old N95, a phone that's over 2.5 years old. Not because the hardware was lagging, but because of choices made in software development.

    Mind you, I have an iPhone, it's got a great interface and has some interesting software. But it's very restricted, limited, it's tied to iTunes, and in the end I probably should have gone for an Android phone to get full bang-for-buck.

    (seriously, three years with a full bluetooth chipset and only *now* they're adding bluetooth keyboard support? It's probably not going to be fully controllable using just the keyboard either, like my N95 was... We'll see.)

    1. Re:Feature parity by db32 · · Score: 1

      Jailbreak :) I played with an Android a while ago and was not terribly impressed. Exchange and Cisco VPN support were major issues for me and getting that working on an Android was a nightmare. It may be different now, but at the time it was an insane mess. If android gets to a nice "Just Works" level like the iPhone then I can see it offering some serious competition outside of the geek arena. However, the geek arena alone is not exactly a well catered to market that carries much weight.

      --
      The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
  162. Dipshit Re:The Correct Way(TM) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As far as I'm concerned, there is one and only one Correct Way(TM) to write words. They should be in 7-bit ASCII. Why is that the Correct Way(TM)? Because when you ASCII-alphabetize a list of such words, they will sort into the correct order. Other people who use more that 120 or so distinct symbols or have cultural expectations to use weird symbols that are not in ASCII are just insane and cause programmers extra work. Why can't these morons understand that they need to change the way they interact with computers so that my job is easier?

  163. in the interest of accuraccy: by Thud457 · · Score: 2, Funny

    the iPhone isn't very good as a cell phone, either

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:in the interest of accuraccy: by crafty.munchkin · · Score: 1

      maybe where you live, but where i live, it shits all over the competition from on high.

      --
      ... wait, what?
  164. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    So, according to the OP's logic, the justification for the iOS 4 being locked down on the iPad and iPod Touch is that it also runs on a cell phone? Are you serious?

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    This space for rent.
  165. I've felt your pain: Rant ahead. by RulerOf · · Score: 1

    (EG. Despite it supporting bluetooth data transfer, you *may* get blocked from copying over your own ringtone files from a computer -- or maybe you're disallowed from moving over your contact info as vcard files, or ??)

    Dude! Just to let you know, you're not alone. I too owned a Motorola E815 as offered by Verizon, and so did everyone I worked with.

    Not only was I an expert at teardown and rebuild of the device (and god damn did those things love to snap off their antennas!) SEEM editing was second nature to me. It got to the point where everyone I knew, even casually, who owned that phone either had it repaired and rebuilt, or hacked through a SEEM edit by me to enable all those stupidly disabled features. To top it off, bluetooth OBEX was, among a couple of other things, the reason I bought that phone and to find out I couldn't do it when I got home with it supremely pissed me off. In total, from the moment I got the phone in front of my computer to make that discovery to about 6 hours later, I sat there scouring the web with a data cable connected to it and didn't get up (save bathroom trips) until I had a phone with working OBEX. And my [slightly] more juvenile self enjoyed that to the fullest, cutting ringtones from the songs I liked and applying them to different people. After all, why buy a song for 99 cents, then re-buy the 30 second clip which you listened to for free before buying the damn song anyway for another 99 cents. I digress.

    It is THAT experience that so jaded me against the practices of US cell providers. And it's also that experience that made me so happy for Apple's ability to take AT&T to the cleaners as a device maker and be the side that wears the pants in that relationship. It's a single entitiy and a single phone that allowed innovation to happen in the cellular space in the way that device makers had been clamoring for for half a decade at that point but had been screwed by THEIR products and features being pimped at the whim of what the wireless providers deemed was fit for their own pocketbooks. And THAT is some Grade A Bullshit(TM).

    Not to say that someone isn't screwing the capabilities of the iPhone for personal gain, but at the very least the ones doing the screwing are the ones that were visionary enough to create the damned thing in the first place. The ones that shattered the barriers and made a phone that broke the paradigm and ushered in the one that we know and love today. Finally, I say with that, much like my SEEM edit on my E815 made me happy, jailbreaking an iPhone makes me happy enough. I'm willing to take the good with the bad, though I'll admit that while it's an okay solution for me, the market as a whole could use something better.

    It's up to Google and Microsoft now. Shatter the paradigm again. Do to the mobile OS what Apple has done to the mobile device. Make us happy to part with our dollars.

    --
    Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
  166. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    None of what you said requires the draconian lockdown. Just hide a button deep down in the menus somewhere to enable apps to be installed bypassing the app store. The App store can still be in place and the benefits you list will still be there.

    But nah, Apple wants the forced 30% cut and the control so they won't. And they still will have lots of otherwise smart people defending it's every move.

    --
    This space for rent.
  167. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by sixsixtysix · · Score: 1

    i thought the android was totally open. doesn't that mean an app doesn't have to be had solely from the 'official store' but from wherever the developer wants? that would be a world of difference, right?

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    ...
  168. Oh FFS. by RulerOf · · Score: 1

    Yes. $500. Including a monitor.

    Dude, chill out, and you're full of it.

    The Mac Mini starts at $699 and doesn't even come with a Cinema Display. Obviously the GP knows what he was talking about!

    --
    Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
    1. Re:Oh FFS. by Pojut · · Score: 1

      :-)

  169. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Look, here's the deal: if Apple wants to control the platform and the approve all the apps, and use nebulous/arbitrary criteria to reject apps for any length of time even against the express wishes of its users, then they open themselves up to being accused of being fascist control freaks worse than Microsoft. THEY open THEMSELVES up to that accusation, for it otherwise would hold no water. Got it?

    Best Buy is such a fascist organization. I went there the other day and insisted that the store manager place my software on their shelf, and he said no! And he didn't even quote me a section from the Best Buy Corporate Handbook! I call for a full boycott of Best Buy.

    But if you buy a PC from BestBuy, you can buy Adobe Photoshop for it from Fry's without paying 30% of the price to BestBuy and it's approval.

    --
    This space for rent.
  170. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    Best Buy is such a fascist organization. I went there the other day and insisted that the store manager place my software on their shelf, and he said no! And he didn't even quote me a section from the Best Buy Corporate Handbook! I call for a full boycott of Best Buy.

    But if you buy a PC from BestBuy, you can buy Adobe Photoshop for it from Fry's without paying 30% of the price to BestBuy and it's approval.

    But you're Adobe, you can't force either Best Buy or Fry's to carry Photoshop if they don't want to. You don't own the distribution system, simply because you create content.

  171. Re:Only Apple haters are stuck in the dark ages by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I am beginning to think that you might not actually be a Apple fanboy but a cunning troll. I can't imagine someone being really this stupid.

    And it's stupid to imagine technical possibility why again...

    I think you forgot what has driven the industry forward. Hint: It wasn't hatred. Or thinking things had to stay the same as they were just because change was bad.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  172. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by iamhassi · · Score: 1

    "I am getting sick of the game console comparisons. "

    Maybe it's because people are gaming more on their iDevice than their consoles? I have a Wii and PS3 and play more games on my iPhone than either of those devices, mostly because it's mobility (always with me) and the huge abundance of 99 cent games.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  173. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by MightyE · · Score: 1

    Apple takes 30% of the purchase price. This represents a 43% premium you pay for iPhone/iPad apps.

    Imagine a $10 product, $3 goes to Apple, $7 goes to the developer. That's 30%, right? Nope, without Apple being in the picture, the developer would make the same profit by selling the app at $7. But they have to sell it for $3 more to make the same money. $3 is 42.9% of $7.

    App Store Purchases carry a 43% markup Q.E.D.

  174. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know that the app developers set the price right? They submit an app and say "I want to charge $1", and it's listed for $1. Apple doesn't say "ok, we're going to list it at $1.30".

  175. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by imthesponge · · Score: 1

    "And everyone else was a HELL of a lot worse before they came along"

    How so? Plenty of phones before the iPhone allowed you to install apps without the approval of the manufacturer or provider.

  176. I support both Apple and FOSS by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The difference is that most of Slashdot used to be united against MS but now it has basically split into two camps, Apple fans and FOSS fans.

    Your split is inaccurate. There are plenty of people that both support FOSS software and also the Apple platforms, which can deliver FOSS software just fine even though the platform itself is proprietary. There's also a ton of FOSS libraries around iPhone development.

    The real split is that, for whatever reason, some otherwise rational people have gone off the deep end and hate anything from Apple, no matter what. Despite otherwise being technically inclined, they refuse to update the understanding of what Apple platforms support, and even worse drop the ability to think that alternate devices from what they use can also be useful to people.

    And the Apple fans have a lot of mod points and use them indiscriminately in the discussions both to mod up positive comments about Apple and to mod down any criticisms(legit or not) about Apple. This shows in every Apple story.

    And the Apple Haters do not? I get modded "troll" and worse, for what are simply informative posts. If you check this very thread you can see a ton of anti-Apple comments modded up. Obviously there are people wielding mod points indiscriminately on both sides.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:I support both Apple and FOSS by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      "Apple platforms, which can deliver FOSS software just fine even though the platform itself is proprietary."

      Except, of course, the iPhone and iPad, for which developers are barred from distributed GPL software or using GPL libraries.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
  177. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by donny77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's just semantics. In Jobs' D8 interview he likened PCs to trucks and iPads to cars. I think this has been a greatly misunderstood analogy. To me, it means the people that do serious work will have PC. Developers, Network Admins, Graphic Artists, Publishers, these people will still use computers. Cars are for the everyday person. E-mail, Internet, occasional Word Processing, Personal Finance, Calendaring, all work great on the iPad.

    The iPad and iPhone will not replace "real" computers. They will impede the growth of computers, not because they are better, but because most people do not NEED a computer. iPads are not computers, but they are what 60-70% of the population uses a computer for, plus a little more like ebooks and some nifty apps we never knew we needed.

  178. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Are PS3s replacing or being predicted to replace laptops or desktops?

    --
    This space for rent.
  179. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Err, the example of game consoles is being given as a comparison to justify the locking down of the iDevices. Lots of people play games on PCs as well, that doesn't mean locking down PCs can be justified.

    --
    This space for rent.
  180. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by db32 · · Score: 1

    So you restated what I said with roughly the same point. You don't need GPS. It isn't mandatory. It is a significant advancement over other cars with no GPS. The rusty pinto comment is to illustrate how whiney it is to complain that you didn't get *EVERYTHING* you wanted out of a device that was considerably more advanced than the previously available devices. Welcome to reality, you don't get everything you want just by throwing a tantrum about the people that build stuff. If you want it different, you go out and build it. Use your cash to build the next iPhone killer rather than whining that the current iPhone isn't everything you want. Pretty simple. Hell, what really amuses me is that the iPhone could cause the major carriers to really compete on plan options if they break the exclusive dealing crap. At which point all of the howling about how evil Apple is would actually benefit AT&T a great deal. I don't know about you, but I will take Apples "draconian" behavior over AT&Ts actually pretty draconian behavior. Wiretaps for freedom baby!

    --
    The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.
  181. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    But if you're Adobe, you can sell Photoshop to BestBuy and Fry's customers at Walmart, or Target or on the Internet. There is no one choking the distribution system or monopolizing it like Apple is.

    --
    This space for rent.
  182. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Montezumaa · · Score: 1

    So, because people want 100% control over a device they own(sorry, but Apple product-owners do own the devices and copies of software under their control), these people are "trolls"? Sure, the mobile line of Apple products(iPhone, iPod, iPad, etc) have a lot of good features and they all have decent "flexibility", but it does not give a company the right to artificially limit the control their customers have over the devices they(the customers) own. You need to remember that things only change when people demand for change to occur, then fight for it(it is how the United States came into existence).

    You say that you were not interested in "drinking the kool-aid", but your comment sounds like one of the "magical" commercials that Apple likes to run for its products. To me, it seems like you are still drinking the kool-aid and you are just calling it something else.

  183. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by intheshelter · · Score: 1

    Let's see, in the US specifically the carriers typically disabled certain functionality on phones, like syncing with a computer, in order to force you to send pics over the network and to charge you for them. An awesome user interface that no one had before but everyone wanted to emulate since. Apps that could be installed, but they were seriously over priced and/or would expire after a period of time.

    The iPhone, like it or not, has had a huge impact in the mobile market. It has definitely improved things here in the US and has helped break the carriers and some (not all) of their horrible business practices that were crippling the user experience.

  184. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    But if you're Adobe, you can sell Photoshop to BestBuy and Fry's customers at Walmart, or Target or on the Internet. There is no one choking the distribution system or monopolizing it like Apple is.

    ... and Walmart and Target don't have to put your product on their shelf either. Maybe you misunderstand my point: if you do not own the distribution system, you don't get to whine about the distribution system not including your content. You don't get to put your home videos on ABC, you don't get to put your blog posts on the front page of the New York Times, and you don't get to have your Kirk-Picard slashfic read on NPR.
    If you don't like it, start your own distribution system, such as the ad hoc distribution system for your iPhone customers. But don't call someone a fascist for not giving you free bandwidth, storage and time.

  185. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I agree with you 100%. As a software developer I love it that Apple has popularized the slate format computer. More computers being sold equals more opportunities for me as a developer. I don't particularly like Apple's policies and that's why I'm bullish on Android and WebOS tablets.

    I've quite shocked that Microsoft is having so much trouble in this space. They were almost there with pen computing but for some reason were never able to make the jump to touch computing.

    In a recent blog entry, Russel Beattie did a pretty good job of explaining why WIMP (windows, icons, mouse, and pointer) doesn't work on a tablet.

  186. How is that not a phone? by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Woot! My full tower case PC, mixing desk and desktop montors are now a cell phone! Might skip taking it to work though, since the thing weighs about 50kgs thanks to the subwoofer.

    I also skip taking my corded phones to work as well, since they are pretty large and like your PC have no cell connection.

    But I can still call from my corded phone even though I can't take it with me. And you can still skype from your desktop. Or use some other form of VOIP.

    Welcome to 2010, where the phone is not a plastic object built solely by AT&T. This is the future, not your antiquated notion that a phone has to be only a phone to be a phone.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:How is that not a phone? by mystikkman · · Score: 1

      This is the future, not your antiquated notion that a phone has to be only a phone to be a phone.

      And the logic being that, since everything can be a phone and since phones used to be restricted devices, they can be locked down to hell and we can't protest it? Wow, just wow. The number of hoops that people jump through to support Apple.. geez.

    2. Re:How is that not a phone? by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And the logic being that, since everything can be a phone and since phones used to be restricted devices, they can be locked down to hell and we can't protest it?

      No, the logic is that people want devices on which they communicate to have a higher level of stability than PC's have traditionally enjoyed.

      And one approach to achieving that is by locking down the device to some extent, especially in terms of native applications (since of course the web is always fully open).

      Of course, you always have a right to protest and simply buy other devices. Who is claiming there is no right to protest? We are just explaining why the locked down approach is a valid technical approach. Some people may not like it but a lot of the public seems not to mind at all, so far - because Apple has been careful about making user restrictions as invisible as possible.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    3. Re:How is that not a phone? by Godai · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If Apple really was interested in stability, it'd a lot easier to swallow, but every time they update their licensing they put the lie to that sentiment.

      Some people may not like it but a lot of the public seems not to mind at all, so far - because Apple has been careful about making user restrictions as invisible as possible.

      Which is part of the danger, since its not just apps that Apple censors (at random), but apparently what gets sold in things like the book store (less random, which is worse). When the public is unaware that they're being censored, that makes the censorship all the more potent. I'm pretty anyone who'd want a book banned would salivate at the opportunity to ban a book to the point that most people don't know it even exists.

      --
      Wood Shavings!
      - Godai
  187. acipollaro by InvestmentRep · · Score: 1

    I can't wait to see what the results of this move are, I just recently read an article discussing how the new iphone may overtake the blackberry as the government issued phone, Here's a link to that article www.tinyurl.com/iphonevblackberry Im not surprised the ipad won't be running iOS 4 right away but we'll see what's to come of that

  188. At least it's free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last time, it cost me $10 to upgrade from OS v2 to v3. I almost didnt upgrade out of principle.

  189. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by JayWilmont · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, but then the developer has to set up their own store, pay for bandwidth, pay credit card processing fees, and spend significantly more on advertising since they are not in a centralized store and are less likely to be randomly stumbled across.

    So the developer would not be able to sell their $10 app on their own for $7 and make the same amount of money.

  190. How is it twisted to describe fact? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    According to the twisted logic of your fellow fanboys...

    And then you proceed to quote me.

    But you never addressed my original post (beyond "giving up"), which was in fact correct. I can make and receive calls now from any device with a data connection (and really have been able to for some time. How is that not a phone?

    It seems like the only twisting going on here is you, trying to bend the argument so that you are still in any way correct. But the facts of what is POSSIBLE simply do not support the assertion you are making. You are the one who is coming off as rather bent out of shape and rather a luddite to boot... Mentioning Skype or VOIP to you seems to be like trying to describe a CNC application to an Amish woodworker.

    If I have a device I use as a phone, why does the form factor matter? Are you saying a Mickey Mouse phone was never a phone because of the shape and size? Your arguments just get more absurd the more you spend time thinking about the implications of what you are saying.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:How is it twisted to describe fact? by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

      You're misunderstanding. My parent poster claimed that locking down the iOS 4 is justified because the iPhone just a cellphone and they were historically closed.

      I posted a reply stating that the iOS doesn't just run on iPhone but the iPad also. The implication was that his justification does not extend to the iPad or the iPod touch.

      You come along and claim the iPad is a phone. It can be used to make calls just like any PC can with Skype and a Internet connection.

      But you miss the point of the original poster and you seem to imply that since the iPad can be used as a phone, it okay to lock it down.

      Just because your big screen TV can be used as large paperweight doesn't mean it's a paperweight.

      --
      This space for rent.
  191. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by mystikkman · · Score: 1

    You misunderstand my point. BestBuy is not the only place to buy/sell software like Photoshop. But the App store is the only venue to legitimately sell software for the iDevices. That is the difference between Best Buy and the Apple App Store.

  192. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by imthesponge · · Score: 1

    It's not about Apple refusing to distribute it. It's about Apple preventing anyone else from distributing it on their own. It's as if I bought a Dell PC and every app I installed had to be pre-approved by and sold through Dell. Of course the solution is to not buy an iPhone.

  193. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    You misunderstand my point. BestBuy is not the only place to buy/sell software like Photoshop. But the App store is the only venue to legitimately sell software for the iDevices.

    I understand that you don't know about the ad hoc, non-App store distribution system. Is that what you meant?

  194. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by mystikkman · · Score: 1

    iPads are not computers, but they are what 60-70% of the population uses a computer for, plus a little more like ebooks and some nifty apps we never knew we needed.

    I agree, but the fact that they are not computers DOES NOT justify the lockdown that Apple places on them. And comparisons to game consoles are off-base. That was the point of my post.

  195. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by imthesponge · · Score: 1

    Apple graciously allows you to distribute your app to 100 people. Of course you still pay $99/year for the privilege.

  196. It's called a standard by KingSkippus · · Score: 1

    In spite of your post being significantly trollish, I'll actually reply.

    It's called a standard. Maybe you've heard of it at some point in your life. If we apply your logic, then hey, if I want to use the Mayan calendar in my correspondence, then that's perfectly valid and okay, right? Come to think of it, why are we so locked into this whole IP addressing thing where some people use four octets and a few zany forward-thinkers use 128-bit addresses? I want my IP addresses to be three base-seven numbers between 4 and 61 (that's 43 in decimal), followed by six base 10 numbers with arbitrary precision, but that must be odd.

    Unlike text, where people around the world use different glyphs to represent the sounds they make (some of which are unique to their particular language or dialect), pretty much everyone everywhere except maybe the Bushmen of the Kalahari* uses the exact same calendar and time intervals. Why would all of those people need dozens of ways to express the exact same information? Worse, some ways can be ambiguous, completely dependent on which system you're using. Is 6/2 June second, or is it February 6? Or take a date like 12/4/10. Is it:

    • December fourth, 2010?
    • April twelfth, 2010?
    • April tenth, 2012?
    • October fourth, 2012?

    If you come up with some new system that has only ten month or that divides the day into different time increments, then by all means, come up with whatever standard you want for the semantic representation of it. When throngs of people then proceed to ignore you and use their own methods that all conflict with each other, maybe then you'll understand that that's a pretty stupid way of doing things.

    *Really, I'm not sure about the Bushmen. For all I know, they use the same calendar everyone else does, too. They're actually pretty smart and resourceful.

  197. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by cyberthanasis12 · · Score: 1

    fascist control freaks worse than Microsoft.

    I thought I would never hear that something is worse that Microsoft. Sadly, I agree.

  198. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    The issue is not that the terms are necessarily bad. But there might be stores that offer 80%-20%. Or even 71%. Or treat the developers with respect. But Apple wants to be the ONLY store. There lies the issue.

    --
    This space for rent.
  199. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by recoiledsnake · · Score: 1

    Use your cash to build the next iPhone killer rather than whining that the current iPhone isn't everything you want. Pretty simple.

    Build your own Slashdot if you don't like my 'whining'. And ban me from it. ;)

    Pretty simple.

    --
    This space for rent.
  200. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by MightyE · · Score: 1

    There's no way with services like Amazon EC2 that online distribution costs (including credit card fees) come anywhere close to this.

    Maybe marketing would. Depending on the sales volume and how it was advertised, it could either be much more or much less than $3. For most large developers, it would be much less, and for most small developers, it would be much more.

    Unfortunately there's no choice no matter whether you have a high cost niche product which markets itself or a small cost broadly popular product which needs to be heard above the noise. You pay a minimum of 43% markup, and it can only go up from there.

    There is no chance for anyone else to compete in this space because Apple will not allow it.

  201. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by somersault · · Score: 1

    There are even less bad options out there though. With Windows Mobile and especially Android phones you can do pretty much anything you want. Comparing the iPhone to even more locked down phones is like comparing Mussolini to Hitler rather than simply comparing him to the full range of world leaders. Almost anyone is going to look good when compared with Hitler.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  202. Merging worlds - phone and computer by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    But you miss the point of the original poster and you seem to imply that since the iPad can be used as a phone, it okay to lock it down.

    I think there is a melding of these two ideas though. The poster was partially right that it's OK to lock it down "because it is a phone". Where I was going is that phones and computers are merging, that there is not really as much of a distinction. So what that means for smartphone users is that now they are really carrying a computer, but they expect (and rightfully so) that it have the stability of the old-world phones they are used to. And that is where the locking down is justified as an approach, because it does lead to greater stability and battery life and security.

    Now Android has taken a different path, letting users do anything but building as stable a base as possible to give users a device that is initially that stable, but that user can more easily screw up over time by installing some thing. That's also perfectly valid, it's just an approach that comes more from the computer side of things than the phone side... basically now at this point over the next few years we'll see what people really prefer. Are they wanting to jump off the computer world and into something more controlled? Or do they want to escape the locked down world of phones into a fully configurable future? I think it's great that we have strong players backing each approach, so we can really see what people generally prefer (or as much as is possible given the variables real life offers).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  203. FOSS, not GPL only by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Except, of course, the iPhone and iPad, for which developers are barred from distributed GPL software or using GPL libraries.

    Through the app store.

    You forgot that any developer can compile and run anything they like, such as open source tethering software.

    But also, I did say FOSS - which encompasses many other licenses, it's true that most iPhone libraries are BSD (or LPGL).

    That's still FOSS - on the iPhone and iPad. In a TON of shipping apps. It's just one license that is excluded.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  204. Re:iOS 4 ignored IMO the two biggest feature defic by acoustix · · Score: 1

    How about "wireless sync"? Can someone tell me why a wireless device has to be plugged in to sync a damn MP3 file? I have no less than 6 apps on my iPhone that do some form of wireless sync with my PC, but the core phone features dont' support it. I'm sure we know the reason: "Steve doesn't like it", but what I want to know is WHY??

    How DARE you question Steve? You're allowed to use the device as Apple/Steve sees fit. Don't like it? Get an Android or BlackBerry on a better carrier.

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
  205. Bravo by Late+Adopter · · Score: 0

    If ever there were a case for +6 scores, your comment would be a candidate. The sentiment you so incisively and concisely express applies to other things covered on Slashdot, too, including ISP/Cable markets, cell carrier markets, end-user software, SaaS/the-cloud, Microsoft Windows, and Google Chrome.

    People don't care about theoretical problems, they occasionally-but-rarely care about actual problems that don't affect them. They don't care about features they won't use. They DO care about things that make their lives more interesting, fun, or easy.

    Slashdotters complain that's being short-term sheeple. I say it prevents oversensitivity to things that turn out to be non-issues in practice (at the cost of being unprepared for maybe 1 in a 1000 edge cases).

    1. Re:Bravo by Nursie · · Score: 1

      obligatory xkcd

      I agree that most people don't care.I don't agree that that's a good thing in any way whatsoever, because sooner later this stuff does affect everyone negatively, and then it's too late.

      Turns out that "I told you so, but nobody listened" really isn't that satisfying to say.

    2. Re:Bravo by Late+Adopter · · Score: 1

      I don't agree that that's a good thing in any way whatsoever, because sooner later this stuff does affect everyone negatively, and then it's too late.

      No, that's selection bias. *Occasionally* this stuff does affect everyone negatively, and it's tougher to get rid of. But for every case of Microsoft Office file formats, there's a thousand cases where Slashdotters cry fowl for something that really doesn't matter (Google collecting data from Chrome).

      I will happily grant that in the cases that matter, it's easier to address issues before they become issues, but the way the tech community crows, it entirely dilutes our credibility and makes us seem like the elitist smug characature that comic paints.

  206. Right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not being imaginative until they build a stronger cup holder into these desktops!

    -Matt

  207. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by anyGould · · Score: 1

    If by "flexibility" you mean "you may buy the apps we approve, or the apps we approve, and only from our store so we get a cut" then yeah Apple's phones are just spiffy. So why was Google Voice blocked for such a long time again -- was that because of popular demand by the users? Why is it so hard to get a good solid backed-by-facts explanation for why a particular app is rejected from the App Store again (i.e., quote the exact section of the ToS or similar that it violates)? Nothing fascist to see here, please move along.

    Couple points here:

    "You can only buy the stuff we approve" has been around for decades - anyone who owns a video game console is used to that setup.

    Any developer who complains about their app not being approved didn't read the contract - I signed up as a developer (not the least reason is that I can now install whatever the heck I want on my machines), and the contract is perfectly clear on the point: Apple decides if you get into the app store, and they can reject you for any (or no) reason whatsoever. It's astoundingly clear on that.

  208. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oooh! Innovation!

    Let's compare my old Sony Ericson V800 from 5 years ago:
    1) Rotatable 1.3MP camera for one-button 3G video conferencing. CHECK
    2) Runs 3rd party apps and games. CHECK
    3) Can suspend apps and games while still using 90% of phone functionality. CHECK
    4) Can use Bluetooth Remote Control to take control of a PC. CHECK

    If you compare with my backup phone SE W380a, ~2 years ago:
    2-4) Same. Nobody bothered with video conferencing, so why bother?
    5) Can cut and splice together video and sound and output to a new video. CHECK
    6) One-button task switching. (i.e. you come back to the app exactly as you left it) CHECK

    Apple added an on-device market, a reasonable browser, and multitouch (touch was already available on Palm and WinMo devices, so I'm not counting that). Oh, and they made it look preeeeeety.

    They innovated a little, but to say that it was revolution is a fallacy. It's more like evolution.

  209. The Mail interface is screwed up by rwwyatt · · Score: 1

    Has anyone found the difference between accounts and mailboxes?

    To me, they appear to be the exact same. Why duplicate the same information?

  210. jailbroken multitasking? by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

    how well does multitasking work on the jailbroken 2/3g models?

    --
    Bring back the old version of slashdot.
  211. Re:iPod touch's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Incorrect -- the apostrophe is only there to indicate a contraction or the Saxon genitive.

    If anything, given that it's a proper noun, iPod Touchs would be the correct spelling. Sure, it looks awkward, but the apostrophe is never the right answer in this context.

  212. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Sancho · · Score: 1

    I question why people target Apple specifically when prior to the iPhone, many phones capable of running third-party software had equal or worse restrictions.

    And it looks like walled gardens are the future. Windows Phone 7, by all accounts, will work similarly. Android is open, but has a pretty small market share and frankly isn't nearly as user-friendly as the iPhone.

  213. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by cerberusss · · Score: 1

    You might want to think twice about installing iOS4 on your iPhone 3G. It's not the fastest device anymore. One gentleman seems to have installed the development version on his 3G and says "not worth it": http://www.macgasm.net/2010/06/17/week-ios4-3g-phone-worth/

    The summary is basically that it's a lot slower than 3.1.3.

    I'm definitely going to wait a week or two and see what the results are.

    --
    8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
  214. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by justin12345 · · Score: 1

    I apologize for being an ass, I guess I woke up on the wrong side of the bed. I know its the internet and you don't have to apologize, but I am sorry.

    --
    Cool art gallery, if you're into that sort of thing.
  215. 3G on new OS hitch free so far by Pointy_Hair · · Score: 1

    I was able to get the update at about 13:30 EDT. The download took about a minute and the upgrade process took about an hour. It appears to do a full backup, wiping and reloading all data on the phone. I have a 16G model with about 11G in use. YMMV. Everything came back to life on completion. About the only minor nuisance was all apps using location services prompted again to allow it.

    I went directly to configure the tethering feature and had to change to one of the new data plans. AT&T hasn't added the tethering package to the options list in the account management portal. So I had to call 611 to talk to a live person. About 30 seconds of options and I was connected to an agent that quickly made the requested changes. Once I've had a chance to set it up I'll probably do a follow up post.

    1. Re:3G on new OS hitch free so far by Pointy_Hair · · Score: 1

      The tethering works as advertised with decent speed. The only downside is not using the iPhone as a WAP (no JB). No big deal as I can share the connection with a PC if I need to. It adds a new ethernet interface both on OSX and Windows XP. The XP change required a restart. The only action taken was to turn the feature "on" in the phone preferences.

  216. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

    Wrong. Android came out only after Apple announced the SDK and App Store for the iPhone.

    And the vast, vast majority of the cellphone market is still dumbphones. You know, the ones you get for free with a contract?

  217. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by XnavxeMiyyep · · Score: 1

    Can you imagine not being allowed to watch Fox or MSNBC ?

    The last time I checked, I can't get Fox News or MSNBC without some sort of cable package. (I have no idea if either is in the minimum cable package that comes with my Cable Internet). I can't get a package with just the specific channels I want (e.g. CSPAN and a couple movie channels). So TV is not really the best example of this.

    --
    I put the 't' in electrical engineering.
  218. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Pojut · · Score: 1

    No worries, it happens :-)

  219. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by donny77 · · Score: 1

    Already on. Seems to run as well as before, plus I have iBooks and Folders. Not surprised a development version was slow though.

  220. Not at all by SuperKendall · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    If Apple really was interested in stability, it'd a lot easier to swallow, but every time they update their licensing they put the lie to that sentiment.

    In what way? Why can you not have a primary goal of stability while ALSO supporting a number of secondary goals?

    And the stability I am talking about is SYSTEM stability, not app stability. Apple likes to ship apps that at least do not crash - beyond that, the underlying system remains stable and performant for the user no matter what madness the app might suddenly exhibit, because of the way the system is designed.

    Which is part of the danger, since its not just apps that Apple censors (at random)

    Apple does not censor (since Apple cannot control other publishing paths, Apple is only a distributor), and as I said the rejection of applications is not random, not even close to random.

    When the public is unaware that they're being censored

    How would they be unaware? There have been numerous stories about rejections. It's not like Apple keeps those things quiet, nor can they.

    And anyone can load a PDF or ePub file into iBooks so sell it your own damn self if Apple is not willing to distribute it for you.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  221. Installed it...Multitasking sucks... by flogger · · Score: 1

    I installed it on my ipod touch Latest 32 gig version.

    The folders work as expected except there are no folders within folders and only 9(? maybe 6--i forgot) icons in a folder.

    Tried the multi-tasking was going to talk to buddy on skype and play a game... No dice. The app you leave closes out. The multi-tasking seems to be a "list" of previously launched apps. Bah.

    --
    ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
    "First things first -- but not necessarily in that order"
    -- The Doctor, "Doctor
  222. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by donny77 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Game consoles are not computers = iPads are not computers.
    You want openness. Openness = Computers.

    Now yes that is simplified and it doesn't HAVE to be true. It has historically been true though. The closed systems, ie consoles, have always outsold the open ones. Why? Consumers want a device that works. When I say iPads work for 60-70% of the population, that is not 60-70% of the population including those that don't buy computers. Openness brings a certain level of confusion. One thing Apple controls through the App store is look and feel and usability. You as an IT Pro want openness and don't mind rough edges or modifying a config file. But this is a turn off to the family down the block. Apple is selling cars. If a Prius can't haul your 5 kids and boat up to the lake, buy a truck, don't yell at Toyota that the Prius is not able to tow a boat.

  223. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by guspasho · · Score: 1

    I am getting sick of the game console comparisons. People are NOT replacing real computers with gaming consoles, but there's an increasing push(especially by Apple fanboys) that the iDevices are the future of computing.

    Actually, I am. Between my PS3 and my iPhone I hardly use my desktop anymore. However, it remains to be seen if this trend survives the release of Diablo III.

  224. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Most major corporations engage in business practices that are in some way detrimental to the rest of us. Even your beloved object of fanboy worship does this and is not above doing this. Get over it and quit trying to shoot the messenger who points it out when your beef is with your beloved company.

    If it wasn't for "major corporations", you wouldn't have a cellphone at all. Not of any description.

  225. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

    That's a good point too. Mine was more about not being allowed to watch those channels under any circumstances though, no matter whether you're willing to pay or not.

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  226. To speak your language by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Baaaaaa!

  227. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Mikkeles · · Score: 1

    Hmmm; that's a benefit of which I had not thought. Thanks.

    --
    Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
  228. IOS 4 ? by bell.colin · · Score: 1

    All my Switches/Routers run at least 12.1 or higher, why would i downgrade them.

    Seriously though, how long until cisco looks to get another trademark settlement out of Apple?

  229. Yeah, there is word on when it'll run on iPad by jht · · Score: 1

    "In the fall". (at least, that's what Jobs said at the OS 4.0 announcement in April)

    More to the point, 3.2 was for iPad-only. 4.0 is initially just for iPhone/iPod Touch (basically the same device), and 4.1 (that will likely be the version number) will be a unified release supporting all iOS devices and adding some additional functionality. I'm anticipating basic printing support and some form of access to remote/server files as the major additions.

    It will probably be out in the October timeframe in time for the fall generation of iPod devices.

    --
    -- Josh Turiel
    "2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
  230. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by carrett · · Score: 1

    Are you telling us to think...different?

    --
    I'm against picketing but I don't know how to show it.
  231. Once again... by jordan_robot · · Score: 1

    I think people are going on 'cause it feels sooo good to pick sides and bicker. Nothing new. What gripes me is the whole fanboy issue. YES, we get it; each side of this "issue" has a few major douche-bags that froth, scream and whine, then they scream and whine that the others are screaming and whining louder. Just whip it out and compare sizes already. Jesus, I'm sure most of the people that read slashdot are soooo glad this gets dredged up every day, so they can hear you guys bitch and moan about who's "right" and who's "wrong". Whatever happened to respecting someone's differing opinion, having an INTELLIGENT conversation about it (if you're so moved) and moving on with your day? *I know this comment won't amount to much, I swear I've read this same gist over and over and over throughout the years.

  232. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's a smartphone. all my smartphones got software updates. and better updates than iOS4, too.
    Let me tell you:

    you buy an iPhone 2g, some years ago.. next year, you update iOS.. oh god, even scrolling the system preference menu is choppy, it wasn't before but now it is. Simple menu! New OS require more power they say.

    So you buy an iPhone 3G, next year, you update iOS.. oh god once again, that same evil system preference menu scrolling is choppy. Wtf! Well you know.. new OS, more power needed it's normal!

    So.. as a good Apple citizen you buy an iPhone 3GS. All fine, it's fast once again to scroll a simple menu.
    Bang, iOS4 is released today.. yes.. you get it, the system preference menu scrolling is choppy. And it's perfect on iOS4.

    If you haven't noticed, just go ahead and try, I'm sure many of you have an iPhone 3GS you're updating to iOS4 and noticed it's getting choppy. Just try scrolling the system menu, that menu which takes no power at all.

    Now i'm going to be called a hater, anti apple, whatever and mooded down to death but WTF is this ? I'm willing to bet they actually have code that slow down the software on purpose to make you buy the new device. There just can't be another explanation.
    Way to go Apple.

  233. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Mr+Bubble · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points to give you. Apple comes along and blows open the completely evil and locked-down ecosystem that was the cell phone ecosystem and two years later they are too closed - despite producing a hugely popular product and slowly relaxing control where and when it makes sense to do so in the context of a smooth user experience.

    --
    "The world is a construct of forceful imagination. Those who don't know walk around in the reailties of those who do"
  234. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by XnavxeMiyyep · · Score: 1

    Makes sense in a certain way, but can you submit your own TV station to a cable provider for free? If anything, the problem is that it's TOO similar to cable TV!

    --
    I put the 't' in electrical engineering.
  235. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

    Can you name any other cell phones previous to the iPhone that let you buy applications for them? Were they open? Could you buy them from just anywhere? In Japan, for example, cell phone applications were available for sale in 2002, when I first got here. They usually cost the equivalent of $3 USD per copy, and better still, often charged you a monthly fee to keep using them. Needless to say, the applications were only available from the cell phone provider's network. There was no backup of the software, either; if your phone was damaged or lost, you were screwed. Software was also available on a model-by-model basis, and if your model was more than a year old, was likely not available at all. They later introduced "PC Web" browsing, which allowed you to see actual web pages on a screen half the size of the iPhone screen. Each use of the browser cost $3, with additional charges assessed based on data transfer amounts. You could, of course, buy their unlimited data plan, which would tack an additional $50 onto your cell phone bill (usually on top of $50 base charges, which didn't include any kind of "free minute" allowance). Transferring personal files, such as addresses, photos, music, or movies to the cell phones was excruciating at best, if not impossible. You had to buy third-party software that gave you only minimal access to files, and usually only for download, not upload. The only things I miss from my Japanese cell phone are the QR code reader and the IR data transfer. Oh, and the battery life, of course. You can hate on Apple for blocking stuff like Google Voice, but keep in mind that such things may not be completely frivolous, or even completely within Apple's control. Apple currently doesn't allow any VoIP application that runs over 3G, and that's because their cell phone network partners won't allow it, as it would potentially supersede their service and eat into their profits. Skype has just now started offering their service over 3G, but they are also going to start charging for it by the end of the summer. One can assume that they've worked out a profit-sharing deal with the providers to appease their fears. What has Apple done specifically that has been detrimental to you? Are you a developer who had your application rejected out of hand, after you spent six months sweating over the code? Is everyone who disagrees with your opinion over Apple automatically a fanboy, just because they don't hate them as much as you do?

    --
    "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
  236. iAds may be the straw that broke by ridgecritter · · Score: 1

    this camel's back. The idea that the OS on my iPhone will serve me advertisements without my consent and without my ability to block them is making me rethink whether I want this thing in my life. I paid for the phone, I pay every month for the data service, and the advertisers are going to use my paid-for device and contract to generate revenue, with nothing coming my way? And I'll incur the costs of distraction and time wasted viewing those pushed ads? Having an iPhone is convenient, fun, and cool....and I can have just as great a life without one. And if it comes down to it, I can migrate to Linux from the Mac OS I've used since 1984.

    1. Re:iAds may be the straw that broke by jkoke · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure you understand the iAds concept. Apple created an ad framework that developers can use to serve advertisements within their apps. If you don't download and use ad-support applications, then you won't ever see an iAd.

      If you do see an ad, your anger should be directed at the developer, not Apple. Besides, developers are already using a multitude of ad networks to serve ads in their apps, so this doesn't change anything except to make the ads less intrusive (they don't take you out of the application if you tap on them) and more interactive.

  237. does it run... by Nyder · · Score: 1

    ... on my G1?

    No? good.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  238. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    They've made it worse for the mobile market, by making it easier for developers to sell their wares, and for consumers to purchase them?

    Yes. Market-controlling monopolies are only beneficial to anyone except themselves in short term.

  239. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    And the other 80% of the cellphone market that uses subscription crapware I can only get through the telco is different how?

    I dunno why it is always whips-n-chains for consumers in US; in my home country, people have been buying shrink-wrapped (literally) software for their WinMo and Symbian phones, and installing it freely pretty much for as long as those phones have been around (2003? IIRC).

  240. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I understand that you don't know about the ad hoc, non-App store distribution system.

    There is no legal non-AppStore distribution system for iPhone, at least in US (depending on how ACTA goes, may be more soon).

  241. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Why? Today Apple will release iOS4. Tonight I will have it on my iPhone 3G. Why is 30 days not a long time to wait?

    Was it 30 days between iOS4 and the previous release?

    Because if it's not, then your jab is quite pointless.

    For the record, Android 2.1 was out this January...

  242. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    I understand that you don't know about the ad hoc, non-App store distribution system.

    There is no legal non-AppStore distribution system for iPhone, at least in US (depending on how ACTA goes, may be more soon).

    That's probably news to Apple and their legal, non-AppStore ad hoc distribution system.

    Seriously, dude. I called it the "ad hoc distribution system". You could have Googled the "ad hoc distribution system" and not appeared so stupid. But instead, you chose to trumpet your wide-eyed ignorance in public for posterity. How embarrassing is that?

  243. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Kohath · · Score: 1

    None of what you said requires the draconian lockdown.

    Then why didn't Palm do it? Where was Microsoft providing this? Where was Linus and Red Hat?

    But nah, Apple wants the forced 30% cut and the control so they won't. And they still will have lots of otherwise smart people defending it's every move.

    Engineers at Apple should work for free?

    Apple makes their tools and their phones work great for developers and users. They do this ... in order to get the 30% cut. The "control" is the key that locks the vending machine -- if you could just open it up and take all the contents without paying, no one would ever install vending machines.

    If you don't want to pay the 30% cut, then don't charge money for your app. Problem solved.

  244. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but "up to 100 users" is not something that can be seriously considered as a distribution system in the context of this discussion.

  245. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by donny77 · · Score: 1

    Either I'm stupid or you are. Development time has ZERO effect on installation of a RELEASED product. Time to market has ZERO effect on a installation of a RELEASED product. If a product is released, it can be installed, right? Oh, you mean you reject Apple's walled garden but accept Verizon's, T-Mobile's, and Sprint's... If Apple released 4.1 tomorrow, it would be installed on my phone hours later. You know this to be the fact, but I am sorry, Android is superior and more open in every way. I bow in awe of your great Android phone.

  246. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Either I'm stupid or you are. Development time has ZERO effect on installation of a RELEASED product. ... If Apple released 4.1 tomorrow, it would be installed on my phone hours later.

    You seem to be ascribing some magical properties to a release announcement. In practice, what happens is that Apple controls both software and hardware platform, so for them a "release" means "rolling out on actual phones". An Android release is a release of a reference platform. As far as end users are concerned, 2.2 is not released yet.

    However, the matter of fact is that Android users get new releases more often than iPhone users (though that depends on the specific Android phone in question).

    Oh, you mean you reject Apple's walled garden but accept Verizon's, T-Mobile's, and Sprint's

    1) I'm not in US (hint: most of the world isn't). That said, judging from what I know about them, US mobile operators can go fuck themselves alongside Apple.
    2) I own a Nexus One, so I don't have to accept anything. I could have 2.2 running on it today if I cared.

  247. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Fishchip · · Score: 1

    Is the software you're trying to sell only written to work on the Super BBPC 9000, which only Best Buy sells? Then maybe you have an issue. If not, well, not so much.

  248. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by donny77 · · Score: 1

    When Microsoft releases a new version of Windows, I can install it on a Dell, HP, Sony, Compaq, eMachine, and any other white box I want. If it can't be loaded, it's not a released operating system. That the first I've heard Android is merely a reference platform. And I was almost convinced there is no fragmentation in Android.

    So let me get this straight:
    First, waiting 30 days and still having no install option for an OS is not a symptom of a controlled or closed system.
    Debunked
    Second it was Android gets updated more often which justifies the delay.
    Debunked
    Third it was that Android is not actually an OS but a reference platform.

    Are you going to completely change the topic again? Or maybe we can agree that ALL cell phones have limitations and strings attached. Apple's are no worse than anyone others.

  249. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    When Microsoft releases a new version of Windows, I can install it on a Dell, HP, Sony, Compaq, eMachine, and any other white box I want. If it can't be loaded, it's not a released operating system.

    It can be loaded - if you're willing to roll out your own drivers etc. Just as Windows needs driver support from actual hardware manufacturers to run on your PC. In fact, it's less of a problem with Android.

    By the way, Windows is actually very similar to Android in that. When it is released, the earliest release date is only available to OEMs (and typically also to MSDN/TechNet subscribers) - your average user can't buy the box in the store for another month or two. That time is spent to prepare machines preloaded with the OS, to polish drivers, etc.

    Similarly, a new Android release is readily usable by OEMs and developers. Users, not so much. Though there are a lot of people around running pre-release Android 2.2 already.

    First, waiting 30 days and still having no install option for an OS is not a symptom of a controlled or closed system. Debunked.

    It's not controlled. The source code is out there, and so are the images. You can flash it if you want.
    What in your imagination made you believe that you've debunked it, I've no idea. You haven't even touched on the topic.

    Second it was Android gets updated more often which justifies the delay.
    Debunked

    See above.

    Third it was that Android is not actually an OS but a reference platform. Are you going to completely change the topic again?

    I'm answering your questions. If this results in change of topic, you should only blame yourself for asking incoherent things.

    Or maybe we can agree that ALL cell phones have limitations and strings attached.

    Well, duh. We can also agree that sky is blue - unless you live in London.

    Apple's are no worse than anyone others.

    Well, no. They are objectively much more locked down - more so than any other smartphone on the market to date - which is one hell of a string.

  250. iOS? by jandersen · · Score: 1

    That would be the one formerly called i5/OS: (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_i)?

  251. iOS kool! by lemoon · · Score: 1

    you must be kidding, i just love it, iOS4 is clearly quicker, and handles apps better, at least on an iPhone 3GS. Couple the OS with the twice as powerful iPhone 4, the only thing I care about is when excatly will the iphone4 be available, I already have a iFunia iPhone 4 Video Converter which was recommended by my friends and says to be a charming apps. hmm, My special iphone4 is gonna love it :)

  252. Where's the %&/* documentation? by cheros · · Score: 1

    Oh, wonderful, "100+ improvements". So where is a guide which details them all? Is this a secret Apple attempt to curry favor with publishers by leaving it to online mags to detail it all? For the moment, it seems this is another case of "usability means not having to write manuals" - which is an illusion.

    I'm disappointed, Apple can do better. On the plus side, I just came across something that suggests Apple now give Apps a way to back up their data too. That is *very* good, although it means I'll probably face weeks of App upgrades - almost making it MS compatible if it wasn't for the absence of reboots and crashes :-).

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  253. Wait, by all means Wait by FlightlessParrot · · Score: 1

    Against the warnings of years of disappointment, I started to upgrade my 3G earlier this evening (I'm in New Zealand). It is taking a very long time (and it doesn't seem to be waiting for downloads from Apple: it's in the backup and restore part). It crapped out after a couple of hours--no, call that three--with error messages, and I seem to have iOS 4, but none of my music and my non-Apple apps don't run. After powering off and restarting iTunes on my Mac (so this is not a Windows problem), it's now offering to do a restore, and I shall see what happens. But I seem not to be the only one.

    DO NOT "UPGRADE" NOW, people. I have not had an experience like this since the days of Windows 9x. I'm sure it will get sorted in due course, but it ain't smooth now.

    1. Re:Wait, by all means Wait by sjonke · · Score: 1

      Sorry to hear that! I did get the upgrade and don't seem to have any of those issues. The only thing I saw was that my photos looked horrid, like super low resolution, but when I synced with my Mac at home (I installed the update at work), it reloaded them and then they were fine. I'm not sure why that happens, but there you go. You presumably wouldn't see this (temporary) issue if you installed the update from the same computer that you sync with.

      So far I really like the update. At first I went completely nuts with folders, even having all but 2 things on my home screen being folders, until I realized that I'd rather have my most used apps out of folders and on the home screen. It looks much better now. I'm also really liking the task switching, but not that only a very few apps have been updated to take advantage of it so far. That will change over the coming weeks, but you have to wonder why they only started taking iOS4 app submissions last week or whenever it was.... Even without app-support for task switching, it's still handy for quickly going back to an app I was using before.

      Oh, and now, with folders, bookmarklets, or whatever they are called, are actually useful! I've got a bookmarks folder for quick access to my most-used sites. That folder is on my home screen.

      For the issue you've had, I'd suggest (first backing up and then) restoring. I suspect that will fix the problem.

      --
      --- What?
    2. Re:Wait, by all means Wait by FlightlessParrot · · Score: 1

      Thanks for all that. Eventually I seem to have got there by restoring the 3G as a NEW iPhone. It seems that it's the backup and restore process that is causing problems--mine, and other people's, too. Not sure it's entirely working, because now my music is going back on, and as I've used the useful facility to transcode to 128 kbps, that is taking a l o o o ng time--like, overnight and still going. Hope it's worth it in the end.

  254. This update seems to be a clusterfuck by FlightlessParrot · · Score: 1

    When it started to go wrong on my 3G, I searched for tips about the Error -34 I was getting. This doesn't seem to be the common one, but there are plenty of people having problems.

    Buying Apple stuff is a compromise, like all such decisions. But what you expect is a very smooth user experience, so you don't have to worry about the technicalities. This ain't happening this time, for me or a lot of people. So, I'm sure at some time it will get all nice, but WAIT.

    Yes, I know I should have known better, but I thought it had been out for about 24 hours, and the stories ought to have been appearing. Where were all the Apple haters, when they could have been useful?

  255. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but "up to 100 users" is not something that can be seriously considered as a distribution system in the context of this discussion.

    I disagree. If you need to change the definition of "distribution" to support your argument, it really isn't much of an argument, is it?

  256. Worthless people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The way you fanboys defend and stick up for companies who already have multimillion dollar marketing departments is just sick."

    There is nothing "sick" about sticking up for products or services you like, regardless of marketing budgets, etc. Being able to show appreciation for good products is a strength.

    "Most major corporations engage in business practices that are in some way detrimental to the rest of us."

    Unlike worthless hunks of carbon like yourself, they have actually done something useful for most of us. Steve Jobs has seen to it that I can have a spiffy phone in my pocket. MS has hacked together a halfway decent operating system (took them a while, but hey...).

    Contrast this with worthless Slashdot whiners such as yourself who have contributed nothing whatsoever to my life, save for annoyance.

  257. Re:Reports where? Has worked fine on my 3GS by Wovel · · Score: 1

    I concur, this statement has not been true for me either. Of course, by all accounts means: I heard this somewhere, I think, but I could not possibly prove it.

    If we were to take it literally, your post completely disproves his statement all on its own.

  258. Re:iPod touch's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some of us post from public terminals, dumbass. I have a /. account and post from there when at home - but when not on my own computer I do not enter passwords into computers I do not have admin rights to.

    So fuck you right back.

  259. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by KingMotley · · Score: 1

    You seem to be misinformed about a lot of things in the cellular marketplace, especially in the US. See, in the US, we realize the stock anroid UI is absolutely horrid. The only stock android phone I know of is the nexus one. Every other one has their own custom ui placed on top of it, along with fixing some other shortcomings. So people with the nexus one can upgrade to android 2.2 now but the vast majority of users need to wait for their carrier to release a version that works with their custom pieces. Upgrading without it is either impossible( relatively) or means you have to downgrade back to the stock UI. Neither option is very good.

    Also apple releases quite a few updates. Probably averaging an update every 8 weeks or so, but you are probably only aware of the large updates that the media covers. So having to wait "30 days" (which last I heard from the major carriers is more like 90-150!) is quite a bit. You'd be 2-4 updates behind compared to apple. Which brings me back to my original point in this thread: calling android the most updateable phone is a joke for the vast majority. It would be more appropriate to say with android, you are always waiting 90-150 days for stuff to "just work".

  260. Took a long time, headphone volume control b0rked by gqgreg · · Score: 1

    It took nigh on 2 hrs to upgrade my ipod touch.

    my Apple in-ear headphone volume control doesnt seem to work, although pause works.

    --
    Powerbook G4/1.5GHz 12", Toshiba Satellite 1135-S1554
  261. Re:Reports where? Has worked fine on my 3GS by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    If we were to take it literally, your post completely disproves his statement all on its own.

    And that is why I never speak in terms of absolutes. :-)

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  262. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Hm. Fair enough, let's say that "distribution" as a word was more broad originally (but then I didn't start this thread). However, it is fairly clear that we're talking about ways of getting your application out there to users in the wild - not about deploying company-wide apps, for example.

  263. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Which brings me back to my original point in this thread: calling android the most updateable phone is a joke for the vast majority.

    I wasn't the one who called it that, by the way. I was commenting on your reply, which brought in the entirely irrelevant "30 days" figure.

    It would be more appropriate to say with android, you are always waiting 90-150 days for stuff to "just work".

    Funny, it "just works" for myself as well as my wife here and now, and has been doing that for several months. What am I doing wrong? Not living in US, I guess. Must be some - ahem - kind of "distortion field" on the ground there that causes Android phones to malfunction...

  264. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a valid business reason for Apple to update old hardware with new revisions of the software. That way apple gets to sell more apps, and keeps the platform from fragmenting into cloud of not-quite compatible versions (I'm looking at you, Android!)

  265. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do realize that before Apple wrestled control away from AT&T Android WOULD NEVER HAVE EXISTED, It's a simple fact that before the iphone was released the carriers controlled everything on their phones and FORCED the cell companies to limit features. Is your memory that bad? Apple made AT&T give up control in order to get the iphone, once they did that Verizon etc panicked and was willing to give up their control in order to hope to have soothing to compete with the iphone.

    Do you not remember paying 2.99-4.99 for a ring tone? Or 2.99 for a song that can only play on your phone and never sync with your computer? How about paying for background images, paying for the ability to post an update to facebook? Before the iphone the idea you could download a 100,000 apps for FREE over the air was unthinkable. Yes Android is now more open than the iPhone hell since I'm a geek I may consider getting a Android phone, but lets not pretend that somehow the iphone is the most controlling phone ever.

    The simple fact is there would never have been anything as close to open as the Android platform, and no one would have had the power to scare the carriers into giving up control if it wasn't for the iphone.

  266. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Sandbags · · Score: 1

    Really? Dell supports some alternate OS under warranty even though the PC came with Windows? Gee, I'd not heard that before.

    Jail-breaking the iPhone does NOT void the warranty, no different than putting Solaris on a Dell PC does its, but they DO refuse to support it until it is returned to factory specs (re-imaged and not unlocked). It's their right to support only their software, but NOTHING legally prevents you from jail-breaking the device (Though your carrier may have issue with that on a completely separate topic).

    Attempts to circumvent Apple's OS are acceptable, so long as you do not SELL a product that does so for other people (as violating the device's DRM commercially is a violation of the DMCA, not Apple's warranty).

    --
    There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.
  267. iPhone2G, now dangerous ? by Rastignac · · Score: 1

    iPhone2G won't have iOS4. But iOS4 fixes a lot of security holes.
    iPhone2G is full of security holes. Apple won't fix those.

    --
    -- Rastignac was here.
  268. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by Culture20 · · Score: 1

    What about all those people building supercomputers out of PS3s?

    What about all those people building blade clusters out of iPhones? Really? No one? You're certain?

  269. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    "Really? Dell supports some alternate OS under warranty even though the PC came with Windows? Gee, I'd not heard that before."

    Then you are not paying attention. Let's see, I am running Fedora on my laptop even though it came with Windows, and guess what? Battery failed, I got a new one shipped to me the next day. Power adapter malfunctioned, and I had a new one shipped to me. No questions asked, no demand that I return it to the factory settings, nothing of that sort.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  270. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by wye43 · · Score: 1

    yesterday's CELLPHONE != todays CELLPHONE
    Stop living in the past.

    And iPhone flexibility? Are you high? Its the LEAST flexible mobile platform. Dang, even the moronic Windows Mobile is more flexible.

  271. Re:Oh good! The trolls are out in full force! by db32 · · Score: 1

    Hush you! You must be a Fan Boi or something to dare say something that could be construed as non negative about Apple! What kind of irrational freak are you to not demand your cake and eat it too (despite that phrase not making any damned sense in the first place).

    --
    The only change I can believe in is what I find in my couch cushions.