At least for most of the US, the iPhone isn't the issue, it's the AT&T 3G network. It majorly sucks.
Spring EVO 4G:
Spring EVO 4G:
Last edited by Ilocano (2010-07-07 11:41:31)
Last edited by Ilocano (2010-07-07 11:41:31)
sweetIlocano wrote:
At least for most of the US, the iPhone isn't the issue, it's the AT&T 3G network. It majorly sucks.
Spring EVO 4G:
http://static.bf2s.com/files/user/11550 … _EVO4G.JPG
My mate got his yesterday!Poseidon wrote:
Just got shipped.
PUMPED.
CapnNismo wrote:
sweetIlocano wrote:
At least for most of the US, the iPhone isn't the issue, it's the AT&T 3G network. It majorly sucks.
Spring EVO 4G:
http://static.bf2s.com/files/user/11550 … _EVO4G.JPG
thats not even on the 4g networkjsnipy wrote:
CapnNismo wrote:
sweetIlocano wrote:
At least for most of the US, the iPhone isn't the issue, it's the AT&T 3G network. It majorly sucks.
Spring EVO 4G:
http://static.bf2s.com/files/user/11550 … _EVO4G.JPG
They don't smash easily.Zimmer wrote:
I can't believe people actually buy this POS. Antenna problems, smashes after 1ft drops... why the fuck would you touch a thing like this?
Especially when the company that has made this product comes out with comments like "You're holding it wrong". Absolute fail. I wanted to smack the little girl that had the iPhone 4 in a restaurant a week back. Sheep will always be sheep I guess.
Pretty much every phone I've had has survived 5-6' drops and nothing happened to them. My current blackberry has been dropped a few times and is fine.Uzique wrote:
i thought that would be the case... and my iphone 3gs is one indestructible little piece of technology
I'm sorry, http://gizmodo.com/5572279/apples-ackno … -like-thatUzique wrote:
they didn't say users are "holding it wrong" - they said that there is a fault and advised on ways to hold it to avoid the fault. very different stance and attitude - and a very shitty purposeful bit of misconstruing the facts there on your behalf. the iphone 4 smashed from a 1-foot drop, by the way? haven't heard about that... my iphone 3gs has been dropped so many times and is still intact and working, with hardly any cosmetic damage. i would have thought that the metal chassis for the iphone 4 would make it even stronger, if anything. could be wrong though - but again, don't base your entire judgement on the phone's structural strength on a few anecdotes. anecdotal evidence a rule doth not make.
They're real. The email headers were verified by an ex-Apple employee. They're posted on BGR, pretty much the most trusted source on tech leaks on the internet.Jenspm wrote:
Those Steve Jobs e-mails can't be real?
No it wasn't. I've seen all the public corporate statements about the phone. A dismissive one line email from a guy who seems to be relentlessly hassled by customers, as far as I can make out from your links, is not the same as what the corporate stance on an issue is.Zimmer wrote:
I'm sorry, http://gizmodo.com/5572279/apples-ackno … -like-thatUzique wrote:
they didn't say users are "holding it wrong" - they said that there is a fault and advised on ways to hold it to avoid the fault. very different stance and attitude - and a very shitty purposeful bit of misconstruing the facts there on your behalf. the iphone 4 smashed from a 1-foot drop, by the way? haven't heard about that... my iphone 3gs has been dropped so many times and is still intact and working, with hardly any cosmetic damage. i would have thought that the metal chassis for the iphone 4 would make it even stronger, if anything. could be wrong though - but again, don't base your entire judgement on the phone's structural strength on a few anecdotes. anecdotal evidence a rule doth not make.
http://gizmodo.com/5577316/steve-jobs-t … st-a-phone
What? Uzique, I respect your opinion, but their stance first of all was that there WAS NO FAULT. Their second stance was to just HOLD IT DIFFERENT. It's a fucking phone, I should be able to hold it how I wish.
Holding it that way doesn't matter much. You take a reception hit, but it's not as massive as is made out.Zimmer wrote:
I also love it how all the iPhone 4 ads show the WRONG way of holding it. Absolute fail.
Which fault? The fault which means it loses marginally more reception than a 3GS when held tightly, but typically gets better signal overall due to improved SNR?Zimmer wrote:
http://gizmodo.com/5572227/fuuuuuu-gizmodos-first-accidentally-dropped-iphone
http://gizmodo.com/5571658/first-iphone … +foot-drop
http://gizmodo.com/5570742/first-iphone … e-the-last
I didn't come in this thread hating Apple. I actually spent time reading up on everything that has happened with the iPhone 4 and wasn't quick to judge.
The iPhone problem is just an absolute disgrace, especially from a company like Apple, who pride themselves in making the best of the best. I always understood why the iPhone was such a craze and why everyone loved it. It was lovely to use, but this fault is just pathetic.
How is this covered under competition law? There is no such thing as antitrust law in Europe.Zimmer wrote:
They're going to get their asses sued (European Anti Trust law) and there have already been over 10 law suits filed in America over trust and deliverance issues. They're also going to lose, because the fact is that this isn't acceptable with a phone.
In short: Steve Jobs is the largest douchebag in the world.
The corporate stance was "You're in an area of bad reception" until very recently. Lying to customers is not a smart move.Bertster7 wrote:
No it wasn't. I've seen all the public corporate statements about the phone. A dismissive one line email from a guy who seems to be relentlessly hassled by customers, as far as I can make out from your links, is not the same as what the corporate stance on an issue is.
I'd like to believe you, but stuff like this:Holding it that way doesn't matter much. You take a reception hit, but it's not as massive as is made out.
Marginally? Dropping to 1 and 2 bars in a strong signal area is not marginal, nor is it acceptable.Which fault? The fault which means it loses marginally more reception than a 3GS when held tightly, but typically gets better signal overall due to improved SNR?
Really? Where? Please point.The fault where in drop tests it typically comes out better than the 3GS?
What? Seriously? Ever heard of the Intel Antitrust case?How is this covered under competition law? There is no such thing as antitrust law in Europe.
Actually, it is 4G, in parts of Pasadena. Note the 4G signal icon left of the usual bars. 4G is out there now. albeit sporadic. Sprint is just being hush for now. In other words, probably some ammo in reserve in light of Verizon's recent announcement of 4G coverage.eleven bravo wrote:
thats not even on the 4g networkjsnipy wrote:
CapnNismo wrote:
sweet
Actually, that's a pretty accurate response.Zimmer wrote:
The corporate stance was "You're in an area of bad reception" until very recently. Lying to customers is not a smart move.Bertster7 wrote:
No it wasn't. I've seen all the public corporate statements about the phone. A dismissive one line email from a guy who seems to be relentlessly hassled by customers, as far as I can make out from your links, is not the same as what the corporate stance on an issue is.
I notice the article you have linked to points out in the update section at the top the Anandtech have done a much more accurate and in depth investigation into this. An investigation which I have read fully and which supports everything I have said. I suggest you read that.Zimmer wrote:
I'd like to believe you, but stuff like this:Holding it that way doesn't matter much. You take a reception hit, but it's not as massive as is made out.
http://fscked.co.uk/post/751030001/more … gnal-issue
Says otherwise. It's a massive design fault, and something which should not have passed through to the end product.
Using reception bars as any sort of technical indicator is foolhardy. Worst case scenario it loses about 24dB, whereas the 3GS loses about 14dB and the Nexus One loses about 17dB.Zimmer wrote:
Marginally? Dropping to 1 and 2 bars in a strong signal area is not marginal, nor is it acceptable.Which fault? The fault which means it loses marginally more reception than a 3GS when held tightly, but typically gets better signal overall due to improved SNR?
Making the bars more closely represent reality is a step forward, and I believe the perception of the size of the problem has certainly been exaggerated by the miscalibration - with the attendant hysteria from some of the press.
I haven't got the relevant links here. They're on my work machines. Googling won't give you an accurate picture as it's all been sensationalised around it shattering (much like the hysteria about the reception).Zimmer wrote:
Really? Where? Please point.The fault where in drop tests it typically comes out better than the 3GS?
That's because you're using American sources. In America antitrust is what they call competition law. What is anti-competetive about this phone? There is a massive choice of phones available on the market for consumers. How is there a case? With Intel it is very different.Zimmer wrote:
What? Seriously? Ever heard of the Intel Antitrust case?How is this covered under competition law? There is no such thing as antitrust law in Europe.
http://roybatty.newsvine.com/_news/2010 … rust-rules
Oh, and the Intel case:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/14/busin … r=2&hp
Only in the US. They're sold unlocked everywhere else.specialistx2324 wrote:
iphone 4 no doubt is an awesome phone, but its being pinholed in its capabilities due to their substandard wireless carrier, gay t&T.