Slashdot Mirror


Chinese 'Apple Peel' Turns iPods Into iPhones

angry tapir writes "The Apple Peel 520, a Chinese-developed product that drew the media's attention for being able to turn an iPod Touch into an iPhone-like device, is coming to America. The add-on device, which just went on sale in China, has been billed as a more affordable option for users wanting to get their hands on an iPhone, but lacking the budget."

22 of 178 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Oh, that's what they do? by Thanshin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Funny, I always said that is a case of them doing whatever the hell they please because they have no appreciation for the hard work of others.

    Because, as we all know, Apple developed their products from scratch. They started with the fire, then the hardened wooden spear, etc. Up to the iPhone.

  2. Re:I hear lawyers licking their chops... by myowntrueself · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I get the feeling that China values innovation far more than the USA does.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  3. Re:Oh, that's what they do? by FuckingNickName · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wait, are you saying that tethering your iPod Touch (or any other TCP/IP client) to some sort of mobile network gateway is, "a case of [those pesky Chinese] doing whatever the hell they please because they have no appreciation for the hard work of [Apple]"?

    The biggest differentiator between an iPhone and an iPod Touch is the 3G radio. Guess who didn't develop GSM tech, but doesn't adhere to the licensing terms offered by the developer? I guess it's a case of [Apple] doing whatever the hell they please because they have no appreciation for the hard work of [Nokia].

  4. Yikes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    TFA,

    Earlier this month, solar technology company GoSolarUSA signed an agreement with the Chinese developer of the Apple Peel, Yoison Technology, to develop the device, file it for a U.S. patent and distribute it in America. The first demonstration models of the Apple Peel will arrive in America this week, GoSolarUSA said in a statement on Monday.

    Who is GoSolarUSA?
    http://www.gosolarusa.com/company.html

    Apparently they don't do anything yet. Okay, let's check out CEO Tyson Rohde. Says he /was/ CEO of Biotricity before this gig.
    http://www.biotricitypower.com/company.php?main_cnt=our_team

    Huh, what a shock. Biotricity is /another/ company that doesn't seem to do anything. Including list the current CEO who replaced Tyson.

    Okay, how about Brewer Captital Group? Ah, well their link redirects to a 404.
    http://www.brewercapital.com/

    Goldbridge Energy Partners then? I get "network problem" -- no site available.
    http://goldbridgeenergypartners.com/

    And none of those "companies" or Tyson Rhode have managed a mention in Wikipedia of course.

    I thought it was a little unlikely to see a solar energy company going into dubious electronics, but this is looking like a less unlikely match with every link. Maybe this'll even get some steam and be good for a couple of weeks of /. stories. I kinda miss Darl.

    1. Re:Yikes by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'd say these articles at least demonstrate a history that indicates this product is in true development and why the company might have shifted direction so dramatically.

      I'd argue the exact opposite. Every single one of those "supporting articles" was a press release issued by GoSolarUSA. You do understand what a press release is, right?

      --
      This guy's the limit!
  5. Re:I hear lawyers licking their chops... by Der+Huhn+Teufel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    China values imitation much more than the USA does.

  6. To use a Fark meme by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    LOL WUT?

    Are you serious? Have you looked at the Chinese market? China does very little innovation. Their economy is nearly entirely based around either producing things to the specifications of other companies (some of their best known places like Foxconn do this) or to copying devices that other made. China is big on knockoffs. You innovate, they'll copy.

    Even when they try and innovate, it is often rather shallow. For example China has been trying to enter the CPU market with the Loongson processors. So, some amazingly new innovative system right? No not at all. It is just a MIPS chip, and not a very good one. Initially they just copied the architecture and tried to work around patents, now they simply license it. So a bit of innovation I suppose, it is a new chip, but not much.

    The Chinese economy is many thing but innovative it is most certainly not. That is just not how they've based it. That may change but currently they are all about building things that others designed. Often times it is a work for hire, other times it is straight up copying/fraud.

    1. Re:To use a Fark meme by Magada · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People were talking about Japan in the same disparaging terms during the early seventies. Ten years later those same people were all "japanese work ethic" this and "kaizen" that and "we must be saved from cheap, excellent, innovative Jap cars" the other.

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
  7. Re:It is a phone by RDW · · Score: 5, Informative

    'It juts uses the iPod as its UI.'

    Or to put it another way, it replaces the cheap phone components that Apple left out of the Touch so that it could cash in on the low end of the market without threatening the status of its expensive flagship product. Although the true cost is often buried in a contract, in the UK you can buy an unlocked 64Gb iPhone 4 for £599. The equivalent iPod Touch is £329. Obviously the iPhone 4 is more expensive to produce, but not £270 more. The cost of this device (not to mention the cost of a complete PAYG Android phone, about £100 over here) shows that Apple could produce a much cheaper device if they chose to. But rather than owning the whole smartphone market (as they already own the mp3 player market all the way down to the Shuffle), they've decided to focus entirely on the high end. Whether this will turn out to be a wise decision in the long term remains to be seen, but it's obviously highly profitable right now! In the meantime it leaves us with the oddity of the iPod Touch, a device designed by bean counters, which has no real competition in the market because only Apple can get away with selling a 'smartphone without a phone'.

  8. Re:I can do better then that! by wgoodman · · Score: 2, Informative

    Just so you know, My iPhone dual boots into Android as well. Current release only gives internet/voice/mms functionality (if your SIM is unlocked), but next release should have the Android app store.

    http://www.iphodroid.com/

  9. This will work great by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This will work great... right up until apple releases a firmware upgrade that intentionally breaks it.

    --
    -1 disagree is not a modifier for a reason. -1 troll, flaimbait, redundant, overrated are NOT acceptable substitutes.
  10. Re:I hear lawyers licking their chops... by jimicus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's almost certainly what they'll do, and I'll tell you how they'll do it.

    They'll point out that iPhone, iPod and Apple are all trademarks of Apple Computer. If the distributors wish to continue selling their product, they'll have to sell it with a description along the lines of:

    "The new Peel device turns a well-known MP3 player into a telephone! But we can't tell you which MP3 player it is!".

    Wasn't a well-known parallel importer from Hong Kong closed down with a similar suit?

  11. Re:It is a phone by khchung · · Score: 5, Insightful

    only Apple can get away with selling a 'smartphone without a phone'.

    I recall something that was called "PDA" which seems to qualify quite well as a "smartphone without a phone", and quite a few companies like Palm, HP has been quite successfully selling those before smartphone became popular.

    I know it is trendy with moderators to bash Apple here, but at least try to bash for things they are actually guilty of, ok?

    --
    Oliver.
  12. Right because the USA makes nothing by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well except for CPUs. Every desktop CPU is designed in the US (both AMD and Intel are there) and a large number are made in US fabs. But that's it. Oh well and graphics cards, nVidia designs their cards in the US (AMD in Canada). And ICs like A/D converters (Texas Instruments designs in the US). And airplanes, one of the two remaining major airline designers/manufacturers is Boeing, who is in the US. And search engines, both Google and Bing are developed in the US...

    Getting the point? The US actually innovates a hell of a lot. You find a great many new, high tech, things are developed in the US, even if they aren't built there.

    This is NOT an example of Chinese innovation, it is an example of the opposite. Apple did the innovating, to the extent there was some. The developed the platform, the OS, the UI, all of that stuff. This just adds a cellphone radio to the iPod Touch. That isn't innovative, that is what an iPhone is. Not saying it may not be nice for people but innovative it is not. They just bought off the shelf GSM parts and wrote an app (probably using Apple's development tools) to modify another off the shelf device to act just like yet another off the shelf device. Neat? Perhaps (though if iPhones are too expensive just get something else, seriously there are plenty of other good, maybe even better, smartphones out there). Innovative? Not hardly.

    Seriously, this hate on the US's industry shows nothing but your own ignorance of the actual markets. Do some research, if you actually care, and you'll discover that the US designs (and actually builds too) a whole lot of high tech, state of the art, shit. You'll discover China does not. Usually when they make somethign high tech, it was designed elsewhere and many of the parts are made elsewhere too.

    Like say you buy a Denon receiver. Very high tech gadget with lots of nifty features. Unless you buy the high end ones, it is made in China (the high end ones are made in Japan). However all of them are designed in Japan, China only does the assembly per Denon's specs. Also the DSPs, the heart of their capabilities, are designed by Analog Devices (USA) and fabbed at either their US or Irish fab. Their converters are designed and made by AKM Semiconductor in Japan. Their room correction software is designed by Audyssey Labs in the USA. It's video processing system was designed by IDT (USA) and made by TSMC (Taiwan).

    So while the label may say "Made in China," all that means is they assembled the parts. All the "innovation" went on in other countries.

    Go research it, if you care, but please stop spouting off if you aren't willing to.

    1. Re:Right because the USA makes nothing by pr0nbot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is an example of the kind of innovation that happens in the developing world, where ingenious, relatively low-tech, cheap solutions are found to problems that don't really exist in the developed world.

      The Economist had an article on this in the last year or so (and a stupid name for it that was irritating but would at least have helped me google it up for you).

  13. ...and? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I never said China wouldn't change. My statement is on what the situation is, not what it will be. The original poster seems to have this idea, as do many online, that the US doesn't do anything. Nothing comes out of the US anymore except movies...

    Well that is completely false and it takes not much research to discover the fact that the US does tons of R&D, tons of innovation (and for that matter is still the world leader in manufactured goods, though China will overtake them by 2020 or sooner). It also doesn't take much research to reveal that China does not do hardly any innovation. Their economy is currently all about either building things to spec, or copying things.

    I am not judging that as a bad thing, just stating a fact.

    This is also particularity silly in this case, where it is something that is very non-innovative. They took a device designed by Apple, added to it off the shelf GSM components, and made it work like another device designed by Apple. That's fine, but innovation? Hardly. Innovation would be creating a new smartphone platform from scratch. This is just attempting to cash in on the fact that Apple sells an iPhone without the radio for significantly less than the cost of adding a radio. Business savvy, but not innovative.

  14. Re:It is a phone by FalcDot · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Except that my Touch needs to be recharged maybe once a week, depending on exactly how much I use it for gaming on the subway. My ordinary cell phone also lasts about a week on a charge. Yet if I were to combine both, I'd end up needing to recharge it every day. And I'd better have my charger around 'cause it might not last through the entire day.

  15. Re:It is a phone by MacGyver2210 · · Score: 2, Informative

    If you 'recall' then, Apple was also first on that bandwagon. Newton anybody?

    --
    If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
  16. Re:I hear lawyers licking their chops... by jonaskoelker · · Score: 2, Funny

    China values imitation much more than the USA does.

  17. Re:It is a phone by Zen-Mind · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, I recall an article on Anandtech that states the various differences between the latest iPod Touch and iPhone. They didn't just drop the phone part, they also have a different casing which could indicates different internal structure, lower quality display, speaker, camera and no GPS. Are these worth the £270, probably not, but it means it might not be as bad as it looks.

  18. Re:It is a phone by joeyblades · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ... components that Apple left out of the Touch so that it could cash in on the low end of the market...

    This is so disengenuous as to be silly. Not everyone wants an iPhone. A lot of those people who don't want an iPhone might be in the market for a high end mp3 player. There are two different markets, ergo two different products. Yes, these products have a lot of synergy, but that's just good business.

    ... only Apple can get away with selling a 'smartphone without a phone'.

    If Apple didn't already have the iPod before they had the iPhone, your rant might actually sound clever. However, in light of actual history it just sounds like a lame rant.

  19. Re:It is a phone by aristotle-dude · · Score: 2, Interesting

    my android phone lasts 3 days if i don't run games or listen to music. also, i can recharge it on any USB port in the world, a compatible cable (micro USB) is dirt cheap.

    and i only have to carry one device.

    Uh, the iPhone/iPod touch charges on USB. A micro USB cable is still not a standard USB cable so there is no real difference. Just carry the the dock connector to USB cable with you and you can charge on any plane with a USB port in the seat back or on any USB port you find on a computer. I find it hard to believe that you cannot carry a USB to dock cable with you. It takes up about the same space as any other USB cable other than the dock connector end being a bit bigger.

    The iPhone has the advantage of being compatible all around the world including in Japan. Many android phones do not work in Japan because they generally do not support as many frequencies.

    --
    Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.