The device is absolute junk to anyone who cares about security and business functionality --
They really need to start over from scratch, think about security and integration into the corporate world, expand the options available (including carriers) and make something that can be priced competitively / realistically.
The only people that this thing is good for are the fanboys, but they'll swallow any load that Steve Jobs coughs up --
Seriously, why would anyone sane person buy one of these things?
Anyone who knows anything knows that the iPhone is junk --
This type of crappy behavior should be expected. Come on, it is an Apple product --- did you expect it to be useful?
I think we should get more than $100 back for being locked into using iTunes -- the buggy, incredibly vulnerable program that led to hundreds of thousands of apple software users' personal information being stolen, etc ---
Don't you?
You obviously don't have much practical experience with PCI-DSS --
There are actual three different docs to look at --
1. A one-page overview listing the 12 major bullet points to compliance.
2. The 16 page document that you refer to that lists sub-categories under the 12 major bullet-points.
3. The ~50 page auditor guidelines that detail exactly what you need to do.
Go read some more, young lad.
The device is absolute junk to anyone who cares about security and business functionality -- They really need to start over from scratch, think about security and integration into the corporate world, expand the options available (including carriers) and make something that can be priced competitively / realistically. The only people that this thing is good for are the fanboys, but they'll swallow any load that Steve Jobs coughs up -- Seriously, why would anyone sane person buy one of these things?
Seriously. No intelligent person would ever purchase anything that company makes. Apple is lucky that there are so many idiots out there --
Anyone who knows anything knows that the iPhone is junk -- This type of crappy behavior should be expected. Come on, it is an Apple product --- did you expect it to be useful?
Ho hum ---
I think we should get more than $100 back for being locked into using iTunes -- the buggy, incredibly vulnerable program that led to hundreds of thousands of apple software users' personal information being stolen, etc --- Don't you?
Does the power supply die after 300 uses and have to be sent back in to Apple for a week while it is replaced at a paltry cost of $100?
You obviously don't have much practical experience with PCI-DSS -- There are actual three different docs to look at -- 1. A one-page overview listing the 12 major bullet points to compliance. 2. The 16 page document that you refer to that lists sub-categories under the 12 major bullet-points. 3. The ~50 page auditor guidelines that detail exactly what you need to do. Go read some more, young lad.
So has anyone compiled an application to make the battery last longer than 3/4 year and not cost $100 to replace?