iPhone: Will It Blend?

1 08 2007

So we’ve all grown to love our nifty lil iPhones.  They can make phone calls, play your music and videos, let you surf the web and allow you to watch Youtube videos, and a whole lot more.  But the question is…will it blend?

Well the curious guys over at WillItBlend.com put it to the test.  Click here to watch the video.





Adding Custom Ringtones To Your iPhone

13 07 2007

Looking to add custom ringtones to your new iPhone. Here’s a step by step guide on how to do it. The instructions make use of both the iPhoneInterface and jailbreak hacks which opened up full access to the iPhone’s UI and filesystem. Unfortunately, the former only works on the Intel-based Macs at the moment.

The instructions (23 steps) can be found here: http://www.hacktheiphone.com/iphone_ringtone_installation.html





Warning – Do Not Use Your iPod During a Thunderstorm!

12 07 2007

Becareful with your iPods while out in a thunderstorm during lightning!! Read….

Lightning Strikes Reported by iPod Users


 

Listen to an iPod during a storm and you may get more than electrifying tunes. A Canadian jogger suffered wishbone-shaped chest and neck burns, ruptured eardrums and a broken jaw when lightning traveled through his music player’s wires.

Last summer, a Colorado teen ended up with similar injuries when lightning struck nearby as he was listening to his iPod while mowing the lawn.

Emergency physicians report treating other patients with burns from freak accidents while using personal electronic devices such as beepers, Walkman players and laptop computers outdoors during storms.

Michael Utley, a former stockbroker from West Yarmouth, Mass., who survived being struck by lightning while golfing, has tracked 13 cases since 2004 of people hit while talking on cell phones. They are described on his Web site, http://www.struckbylightning.org .

Contrary to some urban legends and media reports, electronic devices don’t attract lightning the way a tall tree or a lightning rod does. Read the rest of this entry »





PSP2 Is Coming!

10 07 2007

So with E3 kicked off the rumormill has been going frantic over the coming of the PSP2 in a few months. Rather than a “proper” PSP2, Sony is apparently going to follow in Apple’s footsteps and gradually upgrade the PSP’s features and capabilities while keeping the price more or less the same.

The rumors suggest that Sony will upgrade the built-in memory from 32MB to 8GB of NAND storage based on memory chip industry movement; Others say, the 8GB storage is not gonna happen and the PSP2 will only be the 4GB of NAND variety instead.

It is also said that the PSP2 will feature a new video chat service via a tiny integrated camera which will allow users to stream live video to the PlayStation 3 via WiFi before linking up with that HUB PlayStation service. Sony will add a built-in Eye-Toy-like camera to the PSP2. The off-the-shelf video camera is said to be located directly below the PSP’s screen (where the logo is currently) and presumably of the Motion Eye variety already available in some Sony Ericsson phones and Vaio laptops.
Sony will also retool the UMD drive into a slot-loading drive. Naturally, the upgraded PSP will be slimmer than its predecessor.

The larger memory is expected to be used for Sony’s as-yet-to-materialize scheme for downloadable games and other content (Possibly similar to the Sony Store available currently for the PS3).





One Week Review Of My iPhone

7 07 2007

So as I sit here writing this, next to my laptop lays the Holy Grail of cell phones right now – the Apple iPhone. I purchased my iPhone on the day of its release, Friday, June 29th. Its been a week since I’ve owned this extremely coveted device and I think I’m ready to report on what I like and dislike about it.

First and foremost, without any bias or to simply praise the iPhone, I want to start off by saying that the iPhone is the nicest, slickest, and the phone with the best interface that I have experienced to date. Mind you…I’ve gone through my array of mobile devices through the last decade or so…

As I had mentioned in a previous blog entry, I had no issues activating my iPhone through iTunes on June 29th. It was an extremely easy process and went quiet flawlessly. In less than 5 minutes, my iPhone was registered, a new number assigned to it, and it was ready to rock. In order to register and activate the iPhone, the most recent version of iTunes – v. 7.3 needs to be installed on your PC or Mac.

To make a phone call using this device is pretty quiet simple. All you have to do is either type out the phone number on the touch screen or select one of your contacts. The clarity of the call was ok although in some instances there was a problem with the volume/loudness on the call and I could barely hear anything the person on the other end was saying. This may have just been signal strength or network issues, even though I had a very strong signal as did the person I was speaking with.

In addition to the simple way of making phone calls, another neat feature unique to the iPhone is the visual voice mail feature. It’s a totally new and refreshing way to get voice mails and it makes you wonder why no other phone company thought about this yet?!

The iPhone has a built-in, 2.0 mega-pixel camera that works great for a camera phone. The large screen on the iPhone makes picture taking more fun than even on a regular digital camera. You can view the images in landscape or portrait mode just by rotating the iPhone ninety degrees in either direction. You can then flick through the images or play a slideshow. The only downfall with the iPhone here is that you cannot shoot any videos at all.

The iPhone also has built in speakers that are great to use with the iPod feature. The volume can be easily controlled and is adequate for being able to listen to your music without headphones/earbuds.

Browsing the web or watching YouTube videos by simply clicking a button on the screen is great. The videos off of YouTube look really good on the iPhone’s screen. While surfing the web, you can zoom in on content real easily by touching the screen with two fingers and moving them apart at a 45 degree angle.

Setting up an email account was quiet easy for me as well. I use Gmail for my email right now, and in less than a minute, the iPhone was setup and able to receive my emails. Just make sure that you setup/turn on your POP email on your email providers site.

The Google Maps feature is another very cool tool. You can easily look up businesses by name or category, plot a course from one location to another, and easily call them with a touch of a button. As you type in a location, the iPhone tries to match it to one of your contacts. You have access to both Google’s regular and satellite maps and can view a list of driving directions with traffic information turned on or off.

To use all of these Web features you need to be either connected to a Wi-Fi network or use AT&T’s EDGE network. The iPhone easily finds Wi-Fi networks, and displays them on the screen. By simply clicking on one, you can easily connect to it.

The battery life of the iPhone is decent, but on mine I come no where close to Apple’s ratings of 8 hours of talk time and 6 hours of internet use. My iPhone is usually in need of a charge after an extensive period of use in a couple of hours. This might be because of my settings and the giant screen using up a lot of power. I’ll have to do some real testing on the battery life and report back!





Breaking Open An iPhone! What’s Inside and the Costs

5 07 2007

So…now that you have your pretty little iPhone, wonder what the inside of it looks like?!  Here are some pictures of what the innards of the iPhone look like:

Breaking the iPhone Open:
  The $27 touchscreen module that enables the iPhone’s cool touch navigation originates from Balda and TPK Solutions.

This closeup shows the bottom of the iPhone’s applications circuit board. The open slot (1) houses the AT&T SIM card; the iPhone not only is locked to AT&T service, but it’s also locked to the specific AT&T SIM card that comes with it. We tried inserting a non-iPhone AT&T SIM card–and the phone wouldn’t recognize it. Hidden under (2) is 8MB of multipurpose flash memory–which is in addition to the iPhone’s 4GB or 8GB of primary flash storage.


The heart and soul of the iPhone…Pictured here: The quad-band GSM (850-, 900-, 1800-, and 1900-MHz)/EDGE transceiver (A); power amplifier (B); Bluetooth 2.0 chip set (C); the wireless 802.11 a/b/g chip set (D); the baseband chip set (E); and power management chip set (F).

Read the rest of this entry »





iPhone Magic

5 07 2007

Cool vid of a guy performing “street magic” with his iPhone!

 





Unlocked iPhone’s Coming In About a Week

5 07 2007

In the midst of the whole iPhone release and launch, one question that kept coming up was how long will it be before someone can actually unlock the iPhone to work with other carriers? The iPhone’s OS passwords have already been cracked, and the encrypted restore image which contains the machine’s instructions to run has already been found. 

An unlocked iPhone will spoil the deal that AT&T has with Apple in being the sole service provider for the iPhone’s for the next 5 years… July 2012 in the US. 

Hacker: Unlocked iPhones Coming in One Week or Less

Hackers have already succeeded in cracking the iPhone’s activation process, a step towards unlocking the iPhone.

Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service

Hackers may successfully unlock an iPhone in as soon as three to seven days, according to a representative of one effort that aims to unlock Apple Inc.’s new handset.

“We believe it will be easy. We are privately aware many of the iPhone engineers came from other handset manufacturers, and we understand their design techniques fairly well,” said gj, speaking in an interview conducted using IRC (Internet Relay Chat). He requested that his real name not be used.

“Easy to us means inside one week,” he said, offering an estimate of three to seven days.

Unlocking the iPhone means users will be able to use the handset with other service providers, not just AT&T Inc., which has an exclusive deal to sell the phone in the U.S.

By Tuesday night, U.S. time, hackers succeeded in cracking the iPhone’s activation process, a minor step towards unlocking the iPhone but a significant technical challenge.

The activation process uses a software token that is sent from the phone via iTunes to Apple, which signs the token and returns it to the phone. When that process is completed, iTunes tells the phone to activate.

Hackers developed tools for both Windows and MacOS that allow users to activate their phones without iTunes. But users will have to use a token from an activated iPhone, which can be used to activate multiple phones. The hackers are not providing a token with the tools.

“If you don’t have a known token (which does contain identifying information) you won’t be able to use the tool,” gj said.

At least one other hacker found a way to activate the iPhone without using iTunes. Jon Lech Johansen — better known as DVD Jon, a hacker who helped develop the DeCSS tool for decrypting DVDs — released a tool that can activate the iPhone without iTunes on his blog.

“The iPhone does not have phone capability, but the iPod and Wi-Fi work,” Johansen wrote.

Cracking the activation process brings hackers one step closer to their goal of unlocking the iPhone. The phone requires iTunes to activate functions such as its camera and music player. But the process also requires signing up for a two-year data plan with AT&T.

“Activating the phone really just makes the device more ‘usable’ for those who want to use it as a Wi-Fi device, for instance,” gj said.

With the activation process cracked hackers turned their focus to unlocking the iPhone, a challenge that is expected to be easier than cracking the activation process.

“Unlocking is a function of the radio and the radio’s interaction with the SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) logic, and these are mostly standards based,” gj said.

A rumored software update for the iPhone, expected to be released on July 5, could undo some of the progress hackers made towards unlocking the phone. “If Apple releases an update on July 5th that includes ‘fixes’ for our efforts so far, it will be a setback,” gj said. “I don’t know if it will be a permanent one.”

Hackers working together to unlock the iPhone don’t belong to a specific group, and don’t plan to claim credit for their work, gj said. “We just want to see the hardware freed. We accept that others will exploit those works but hopefully it will be a lesson to Apple,” he said.

“They’re such a great company, it’s a real shame for them to lock everything down like this. The design is top notch,” he said. “They would win far more business by setting an example for the industry.”





iPhone vs. Microtech Knife

3 07 2007

Guy takes a sharp Microtech knife and draws circles with it on his iPhone screen. Surprisingly, no scratches appear on the iPhone’s screen:





How Tough/Durable is the iPhone?

3 07 2007

After watching the video of the guy dropping his newly purchased iPhone on the concrete pavement, I decided to do some research on the internet and see how people’s iPhones were holding up 5 days into its release. Interesting enough, the guys over at PC World had already been experimenting with the durability of their iPhone and here are their results:

PC World manhandles the new Apple phone to see how much abuse it can take.
Eric Butterfield, PC World

It would be a shame–after waiting hours in line and spending $500 to $600 on an iPhone–to lose it to a minor mishap. To see how well Apple’s phone can stand up to abuse, we stressed it with increasingly rigorous scratch and drop tests, which we informally conducted in the PC World kitchen, hallway, and back alley.

To see how it did, check out the video here: http://www.pcworld.com/video/id,545-page,1-bid,0/video.html.

Scratch Tests

First, to simulate how it will hold up when parked in a pocket or purse alongside house keys and car keys, we stuffed the iPhone into a plastic bag containing several key chains. We then gave the bag a few good shakes to see if the activity would scratch the iPhone’s screen. It didn’t.

Then we rubbed keys against the screen with a fair amount of force, to see what might happen if the phone and keys were in your jeans pocket and you leaned against a counter. When the iPhone emerged with its screen just as pristine as when it went in, we tried to gouge the screen with one of the keys. We were very impressed that even this deliberate attempt to scratch the screen completely failed.

Drop Tests

Next, we conducted three drop tests, increasing their severity in each round. In each instance we conducted the test several times.

First, we released it from waist height onto a carpeted floor. Then we let it fall from chest height onto a hard linoleum floor. Lastly, we let it slip from our fingers and bounce onto a concrete sidewalk from head height–as if we had been talking on the phone.

The iPhone not only continued to work after each drop test, impressively it still looked good, too. The only obvious damage it suffered was a few gouges along its metal edge from the drops onto concrete. But its glass screen came through without a scratch, despite our best efforts to mar it in repeated tests of both types.

PC World’s conclusion: There’s no need to coddle this sexy little device.”

Source: http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,133636-pg,1/article.html