Flow
Flow
Flow
TriniTuner.com  |  Latest Event:  

Forums

The | Apple Inc.  | Thread - WWDC 2025

this is how we do it.......

Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods

User avatar
Sony P910i
Posts: 0
Joined: August 5th, 2005, 7:32 pm
Location: South
Contact:

Postby Sony P910i » June 21st, 2009, 8:21 pm

That pic is real.....I know he had an Iphone last year

He has a blackberry now...I dont know if he still has the iphone

There is even an Obama app on the iphone

User avatar
streetlifestyle
Sweet on this forum
Posts: 306
Joined: September 20th, 2007, 4:54 pm
Location: lurkin

Postby streetlifestyle » June 21st, 2009, 8:27 pm

he had an iphone yeah.....
BUT not in THAT PIC!!!!!!
LOL!!!!!

But is a cool scene tho.... Seen that same pic minus the "iphone" and the "headset" attached to his ears tho...
LOL!

User avatar
Sony P910i
Posts: 0
Joined: August 5th, 2005, 7:32 pm
Location: South
Contact:

Postby Sony P910i » June 21st, 2009, 8:34 pm

Article here

Barack Jammin on iTunes; loves his iPod

http://images.google.tt/imgres?imgurl=h ... N%26um%3D1

User avatar
Sony P910i
Posts: 0
Joined: August 5th, 2005, 7:32 pm
Location: South
Contact:

Postby Sony P910i » June 21st, 2009, 8:42 pm

that 0.7.2 update is primarily for PPC and Icy.


Anyone try redsnow 0.7.2 ?

They got ICY also ?

User avatar
TriniStore.biz
Posts: 0
Joined: May 9th, 2008, 6:51 pm
Location: Aranguez | 303-5466
Contact:

Postby TriniStore.biz » June 21st, 2009, 9:05 pm

Photoshop :mrgreen:

SRASC
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 3272
Joined: January 13th, 2008, 10:53 am

Postby SRASC » June 22nd, 2009, 9:06 am

Apple said Monday that it sold over one million iPhone 3GS models during the first three days the handset was on the market, while its new iPhone 3.0 software was downloaded by six million customers in the first five days since its release.

"Customers are voting and the iPhone is winning," said Apple chief executive Steve Jobs. "With over 50,000 applications available from Apple's revolutionary App Store, iPhone momentum is stronger than ever."

__________

With another year of mobile development under its belt, Apple has released another major update to its mobile operating system and introduced the new iPhone 3G S hardware to entice new buyers and another flurry of upgrades. Here's what's new.

iPhone 3.0 Software

If you're already using an iPhone or iPod touch, you've had several days to try resisting the urge to upgrade. Fortunately, iPhone 3.0 seems to have none of the standout problems that plagued the ambitious iPhone 2.0 release last year. If you own the original iPhone or picked up an iPhone 3G over the past year, the new software is a free upgrade. If you have either model of the iPod touch, the new software is a nominal $9.95.

If you're an iPod touch user and thinking of complaining about that upgrade price, keep in mind that there aren't any apps in iTunes that offer the major upgrade in features of the new iPhone 3.0 software. Also, remember that if you had a music player made by anyone else, there'd be no 3.0 major upgrade to obtain, let alone for just $10.

AppleInsider has previously covered new features in the iPhone 3.0 software, but here's a brief refresher:

Spotlight Search gives you a global search for quickly finding apps, notes, emails, calendar events, contacts, music and other media files (below). You can selectively enable what items you want show up in your search results from the General / Home / Search Result page in Settings. The Spotlight page is fast, smart and easy to pull up; just hit the home button once to get to the main page, then hit it again to slide over to the search page. Boom. It's also fun and clever that the home page icons slowly dim and fade to black as you enter the Spotlight page.

Spotlight searching is also available within apps, such as Contacts, where its previous omission was a cloying annoyance. Now you don't even need to use Contacts - just pop up the Spotlight page and find who you're looking for. It performs searches on first, last and company names of your contacts, but it doesn't search the middle of words. That means RO would pull up Robert and Dr. Roy, but searching for OB wouldn't find either Robert or Bob.

You also can't search by phone number or email, which is a bummer, although you can draft an email and pull up a quick list of mail matches as you begin entering the address. You can't do the same when dialing a number using the Phone app, however.

Image

MobileMe features: Mail now supports new server-side search when using a MobleMe mail account (below), allowing you to very quickly pull up any messages from the thousands of mails on your mailbox rather than painstakingly loading new pages of 25 messages at a time to find what you're looking for. You can search emails' to, from, or subject field or everything, which searches the body as well. Server-side search in itself makes a MobileMe mail account a thousand times more valuable to mobile users.

Last year's push messaging features have also been built upon with Find My iPhone and the ability to push your phone a message along with a signal ping helpful if you lost it in the couch. The ability to Remote Wipe a lost or stolen phone might also come in handy for users who have suffered a lost phone and are worried about the thief gaining access to their private data. These features work across multiple devices you configure for push messaging.

Announced but not yet available are new iDisk features for accessing your files stored on the MobileMe cloud from your phone from anywhere. You'll also be able to share file access to other iPhone or iPod touch users by sending a link to files in your public iDisk folder, or open access so that anyone who has your email address can look up and browse the documents you publish publicly.

Image

New Text features: Cut, Copy, and Paste and the new Landscape Keyboard make it easy to enter and move around blocks of text as you like. If you make a mistake, shake to undo and a clever button slides in from the side to enable a backtrack (below). There's also new support for 23 languages and 40 keyboard layouts, and new sync support for Notes. There's also those clever Voice Memos if you'd rather say it than type it.

Notes syncing is another one of those "why wasn't it here sooner" things, but I can't think of any major features of iPhone 1.0 or 2.0 that I would have delayed just to sync my scribbles. In any event, all those Notes you tapped into your mobile over the last two years are now synced to Mac OS X Mail via iTunes, making the Notes feature actually pretty useful. Notes also get synced to MobileMe and between your mobile devices.

Image

iTunes and iPod features: You can now buy or rent movies, download TV episodes and audiobooks, and get free podcasts and iTunes U content from iPhone 3.0's iTunes app. It also lets you set up and edit your iTunes account and redeem gift card certificate numbers right on the device.

There's also new support for Stereo Bluetooth headphones for any iPhone or iPod touch apart from the original first generation iPod touch, which lacked bluetooth hardware. A new Shake to Shuffle playback feature works like the latest iPod nano, and can be turned off if you don't like it.

Nike+ iPod software is included for models that support the sensor hardware, which includes the iPhone 3G S and the second generation iPod touch. You just need to activate the software from Settings.

Image

Home Button: In addition to taking you to the home screen and to the Spotlight page, the Home button can also be configured to do a few more tasks when double clicked. As before, you can jump to your Phone Favorites dialing list or launch iPod playback controls. But now you can also set it to directly to Spotlight search or launch the Camera app. When music is playing, it will continue to pull up music controls unless disabled.

This new option on the Settings / General / Home page makes it a bit easier to pull up the camera to grab a photo, or to start shooting video, a feature that's limited to the new iPhone 3G S. The new phone also has a press and hold Voice Control feature tied to the Home button, described below. How many other features can Apple pile onto the unit's only facing physical button? At some point, perhaps Morse Code input.

Application and Gaming Features: everything is slightly faster, with big boosts for Safari browsing. New applications include Voice Memos, which works on any device that can support audio input (that leaves the original iPod touch out), improved Stocks and Calendar with meeting creation features, and new MMS features for sending photos, audio clips, contacts, and videos (videos are only supported on the new iPhone 3G S) through the old phone system to other MMS phone users, if you prefer to pay per message. In the US, AT&T hasn't gotten its MMS support up and running for iPhone users yet, and once it does, you'll need a 3G phone to do MMS.

Using any iPhone or iPod touch, you can already send stuff through regular email to desktop users or other smartphones that can handle real mail with standard attachments. Using copy and paste, you can also now send multiple photos or videos in a mail message. You can also upload photos and movies to MobileMe and videos to YouTube.

iPhone 3.0 also delivers lots of new potential for developers with support for new hardware accessories, Bluetooth peer to peer networking (which again requires a device with Bluetooth), and Push Notification features. It also expands Parental Controls, which are called Restrictions under Settings. This lets you password protect access to Safari, YouTube, iTunes, installing Apps, the Camera and Location Services.

Turning off allow access makes that item unavailable in the iPhone user interface. If you have Location Services turned on and then turn off Allow access, you have effectively locked the service on (below). This offers great potential for locking in settings, but Apple hasn't yet defined a restriction for locking your email accounts or push settings, so it can't currently be used to prevent a thief from quickly disabling your device before you can locate it using the new Find My iPhone feature. In order to do that, you'll have to activate a passcode and leave it on and locked all the time. A thief can still wipe out your device using iTunes, but they won't be able to access your data or ring up calls, and you may have the opportunity to locate them first.

Image

Restrictions also allow you to set a password lock on content. You can turn off support for In App Purchases and configure a threshold for ratings, turning off playback of music and podcasts marked as explicit, turning off movie playback or setting an maximum allowed rating of (when set to US ratings settings) G, PG, PG-13, R, NC-17, or anything (including unrated movies apparently); TV shows rated TV-Y, TV-Y7, TV-G, TV-PG, TV-14, TV-MA, or anything; and App Store titles rated as 4+, 9+, 12+, 17+ or anything.

This rating system not only allows parents to set appropriate ratings for their families, but opens up the potential for developers to release apps for mature audiences. Perhaps we'll see a speedy return of both the Kama Sutra reader and the Baby Shaker app.

Page 2: iPhone 3G S Hardware; S is for Speed; and Network Speeds

Page 3: Same on the outside; New on the inside: Voice Control; New on the inside: Accessibility features; New on the inside: Camera; and New on the inside: Compass.

Page 4: Same on the outside; New on the inside: Voice Control; New on the inside: Accessibility features; New on the inside: Camera; and New on the inside: Compass.

Image

iPhone 3.0 Software
At free, an awesome deal.
Image

iPhone 3G with AT&T
Seriously don't waste your money, or your AT&T subsidy.
Image

iPhone 3G S with AT&T
Apple has made it really hard to find fault, but AT&T's policies crushed a star.
Image

Pros:
Huge jump in speed and overall usability
Video and network enhancements give it future potential.
Very practical, good quality video camera.
Smart, simple photo capture controls on the improved, autofocus camera.
Smart use of compass in Maps.
Smart Voice Control for dialing and media playback.

Cons:
You have to hold your nose and pay AT&T to use it.
Last edited by SRASC on June 22nd, 2009, 9:28 am, edited 1 time in total.

SRASC
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 3272
Joined: January 13th, 2008, 10:53 am

Postby SRASC » June 22nd, 2009, 9:08 am

Maserati wrote:lol note the phone Clarkson is using :mrgreen:

Image


How he ended up later...
Image

Also not the 1st time he's been with an iPhone:
Image

User avatar
pete
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 9836
Joined: April 18th, 2003, 1:19 pm
Location: Cruisin around in da GTi
Contact:

Postby pete » June 22nd, 2009, 12:41 pm

The 2nd gen ipod touch has bluetooth?

SRASC
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 3272
Joined: January 13th, 2008, 10:53 am

Postby SRASC » June 22nd, 2009, 1:29 pm

Cydia has been updated to version 1.0.2948-58. ! The update does seem to make Cydia run a little smoother.

To update Cydia, all you need to do is open the Cydia application and you will be prompted that there is an essential update. You can then choose to update it.

Image

Also there is an update for Caller ID for 3.0

pete wrote:The 2nd gen ipod touch has bluetooth?


Apparently so, & 3.0 unlocks it.

iphone
Posts: 0
Joined: November 30th, 2007, 8:05 pm

Postby iphone » June 22nd, 2009, 1:40 pm

crocsrule wrote:
computer wrote:are you unlocking Iphone 3GS ?
yep...


http://forums.trinituner.com/forums/vie ... &start=480


The 3GS already unlocked?

User avatar
ZeroOne
12 pounds of Boost
Posts: 2253
Joined: August 5th, 2008, 4:10 pm

Postby ZeroOne » June 22nd, 2009, 2:21 pm

iphone wrote:
crocsrule wrote:
computer wrote:are you unlocking Iphone 3GS ?
yep...


http://forums.trinituner.com/forums/vie ... &start=480


The 3GS already unlocked?


There is currently no jailbreak for the 3gs and hence it cannot be unlocked as yet.

BTW that guy is ridiculously expensive :roll:

sexyicon
3NE 2NR for life
Posts: 104
Joined: August 21st, 2006, 3:38 pm
Contact:

Postby sexyicon » June 22nd, 2009, 3:14 pm

If I have an 3G iphone thats been upgraded to the latest 3.0 software, this phone is given to me to work here in Trinidad, is there anyway for me to downgrade the baseband and the firmare to unlock and use ? ? I've seen tutorials on how to downgrade the firmware but was wondering if there was any confirmation on downgrading the baseband once its been upgraded to this version.

User avatar
Limerboy
Ricer
Posts: 16
Joined: September 29th, 2004, 12:14 am

Postby Limerboy » June 22nd, 2009, 3:18 pm

dont downgrade ultrapwn will be here soon

User avatar
Sony P910i
Posts: 0
Joined: August 5th, 2005, 7:32 pm
Location: South
Contact:

Postby Sony P910i » June 22nd, 2009, 3:21 pm

You mean ultrasn0w

Even so, its not possible to downgrade once as you have upgraded to 3.0

sexyicon
3NE 2NR for life
Posts: 104
Joined: August 21st, 2006, 3:38 pm
Contact:

Postby sexyicon » June 22nd, 2009, 3:22 pm

Sony P910i wrote:You mean ultrasn0w

Even so, its not possible to downgrade once as you have upgraded to 3.0


Ok in a case like that what should someone do to get their baseband down so it can work unlocked ?

User avatar
Sony P910i
Posts: 0
Joined: August 5th, 2005, 7:32 pm
Location: South
Contact:

Postby Sony P910i » June 22nd, 2009, 3:28 pm

It might be easier to wait for ultrasn0w....They saying its 98% completed

The only 3G Iphones that can be downgraded and unlocked without a turbosim are those manufactured somewhere before Oct 2008

sexyicon
3NE 2NR for life
Posts: 104
Joined: August 21st, 2006, 3:38 pm
Contact:

Postby sexyicon » June 22nd, 2009, 3:39 pm

Heard its supposed to be released soon..will check it out when it does come out..thanks

iphone
Posts: 0
Joined: November 30th, 2007, 8:05 pm

Postby iphone » June 22nd, 2009, 3:40 pm

ZeroOne wrote:
iphone wrote:
crocsrule wrote:
computer wrote:are you unlocking Iphone 3GS ?
yep...


http://forums.trinituner.com/forums/vie ... &start=480


The 3GS already unlocked?


There is currently no jailbreak for the 3gs and hence it cannot be unlocked as yet.

BTW that guy is ridiculously expensive :roll:



So hes mistaken ?

zcrugby
3NE 2NR for life
Posts: 126
Joined: June 26th, 2008, 9:40 am
Location: Glenco

Postby zcrugby » June 22nd, 2009, 3:44 pm

Sony P910i wrote:It might be easier to wait for ultrasn0w....They saying its 98% completed

The only 3G Iphones that can be downgraded and unlocked without a turbosim are those manufactured somewhere before Oct 2008


no one said its 98% completed. Planetbeing on twitter said to sumone who asked for a percentage that it cud reach 98% an then run into a bump so its misleading which is not sayin its reached 98%. So please dont post unsure info an get ppls hopes up. an the dev team has also said that all iphone 3g will be unlockable not jus ones manufactured b4 oct

sexyicon
3NE 2NR for life
Posts: 104
Joined: August 21st, 2006, 3:38 pm
Contact:

Postby sexyicon » June 22nd, 2009, 3:48 pm

I've heard once the 3g Phone hasn't been upgraded to 2.2.1 that it can be unlocked ? Anyone confirm this ? Meaning that the baseband hasnt been upgraded

SRASC
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 3272
Joined: January 13th, 2008, 10:53 am

Postby SRASC » June 22nd, 2009, 3:57 pm

Sounds like the iPhone's 'Find My iPhone' feature yielding results already...

---

Myself and two compadres, Ryan and Mark, are in Chicago (each of us for the first time) to attend Brickworld, the world's largest Lego convention. Yes we're a bunch of dorks. Yes you totally wish you were here too.

Last night, after seeing Second City improv, we ate at a pleasantly sketchy dive bar in uptown Chicago, where the food was mediocre and the characters were questionable. I definitely had my iPhone while at our table, and I definitely did NOT have it (whoops!) when we were 100 feet down the street.

I raced back into the bar, not even particularly concerned, but it was gone like baby. In less than five minutes, with very few people in the small place, my beloved JesusPhone had managed to vanish into a black hole. Our waitress was sympathetic, and I left a number, but I was immediately glum about my prospects of seeing it again.

So I felt like about zero cents, but then we giddily realized that I had *just* activated the brand-new Find My iPhone service. Even better, Mark had a Sprint (yes, Sprint) USB dongle giving him Internet access over 3G on his MacBook Pro. Excited to try it out, we hopped onto me.com and clicked the Find My iPhone link.

"Your iPhone is not connected to a data network or does not have Find My iPhone enabled."

Well, crap. I guess all bets are off if the thieving person has the bright idea to turn the iPhone off. Oddly the phone still rang when we called it, suggesting it wasn't off; but, one way or the other, it was unable to broadcast itself to Apple so I could track it down. We sent a message to the phone - "CALL 512-796-xxxx" - but no luck. The MobileMe website said it would send me an email when the message had been displayed, but no email arrived.

Dejected, we prowled the bar one more time, but it wasn't that big a place and there weren't any places for the phone to be hiding. Game over. We went back to the hotel and I was disconsolate. This morning we checked again with no additional luck, and when Mark tried dialing the phone around noon, it *did* go straight to voicemail. The odds of ever seeing the phone again were slim to say the least.

After lunch, while at the Lego convention, I checked my email...

Image

Holy crap! I jumped back to me.com and clicked Find My iPhone again, and to my absolute shock and amazement, it displayed Google Maps and drew a circle around Medill St.:

Image

The block was about four or five miles west of the bar. It was too perfect to be a random glitch.

I sent a second message to the phone, slightly more to the point: "This phone is missing. Please call 512-796-xxxx to return it. $50 reward." Almost immediately I received a second confirmation email that it had been displayed on the phone. And yet, the minutes ticked by and no call was coming. I kept refreshing the location, and though the circle varied in size, it kept floating around that same block, five miles west of the bar.

The Lego convention was drawing to a close and it was time for the closing ceremony. But I wasn't about to spend an hour sitting through awards and Lego-themed thank-you speeches while my poor lost iPhone sat in some random Chicago neighborhood. So we packed my Lego creations, tossed them in the rental car, and drove from Wheeling back into town. Mark reestablished his trusty Sprint connection and as we drove, every five minutes, he refreshed the location. The phone wasn't moving. It appeared to be in a row of buildings on the north side of Medill St.

Image

We parked along Medill and hopped out. It was a Puerto Rican neighborhood. On the south side of the street, an outdoor birthday fiesta was convening, and some of the participants eyed us three honkeys questioningly. Now at this point I had no fricking clue how we would find the phone; did I think I'd find it under a bush? I certainly didn't plan to go door-to-door, nor did I expect the cops to regard a blue circle around the entire block as sufficient cause for a search warrant. I sent a third message to the phone that I'd been formulating in my head: "We have tracked the phone to Medill St. and are locating it. Please call 512-796-xxxx to help us and claim a reward." Short version: WE KNOW WHERE YOU ARE.

In a burst of inspiration, I took Mark's computer with me as we walked down the block, figuring the recipient of the message might see us prowling the area with an open laptop and realize we meant business. I kept refreshing; the circle kept hovering; but it still stretched across the entire block, and worse, this included a big apartment building.

Suddenly Mark called my number - the umpteenth time he'd tried - and to our shock, somebody answered! He immediately passed the phone to me, but by the time I could say hello, the person on the other side had hung up. DAMMIT! I knew we were on the trail, but as we walked up and down that block of Medill for the third time, I had no idea how we'd get any closer. I pictured the possibility of driving away from the neighborhood knowing my iPhone was around. It was more frustrating than having had no idea where it was. I pulled up Google Translate, and sent a 4th message to the phone: "Por favor, devuelva el teléfono o nos pondremos en contacto con la policía." The email confirmations were arriving immediately in my Inbox, meaning our threats were showing on the phone's screen in real time.

Then an amazingly lucky thing happened. I refreshed the iPhone location and the circle moved, to the corner of the block, and shrunk in size to maybe 100 feet across. I waited a minute and refreshed again. The small circle had shifted southward down Washtenaw.

"THAT WAY!"

Us three skinny white guys walked at a rapid pace in the direction of the circle. We moved past the birthday party, curious if one of the participants might be culpable, but the circle again shifted farther south. I was ready to break for our car if the phone started moving away faster than we could catch it, but it hovered at the very end of the street, at the corner of Washtenaw and Milwaukee:

Image

Ryan and Mark raced ahead, literally making a flanking maneuver to the left and right, as I approached the intersection.

I clicked Refresh. The circle moved again. It was directly over the bus stop on the south side of Milwaukee Avenue.

Image

I yelled and pointed.

Now, put yourself in the shoes of the iPhone thiever who will momentarily be entering the story. You might have told yourself, "Hey, free iPhone!" the night before. You might have seen the gently-threatening messages and ignored them, maybe even scoffed. Then the phone told you it was on Medill St. It talked to you in Spanish. And you saw three skinny white guys prowling in the street with a laptop computer open.

So you take off down the road, and to your shock and horror, the honkeys follow you. You stand at your local bus stop, expecting to lose them. And they converge on your location from across the intersection, the bald one with the laptop yelling and pointing at you. You probably think the angels of death have found you.

He sheepishly waved me over.

"Have you got it?" I asked as I marched up to the guy, acting far more intimidating than I felt. Our iPhone-pilfering friend apparently works at the sketchy bar, and as he fished around in his bag, he gave a questionable alibi about having found the phone, intending to return it, but being intimidated by "all these scary-looking messages" that kept popping up on the display. "Um, yeah, those were from me," I replied curtly. He pulled my phone out, totally unharmed, and handed it over. I resisted the urge to giggle.

I shook his hand - Lord knows why I did that - and the three of us walked off. We laughed triumphantly, adrenaline racing, feeling like the Jack Bauer trio. (Disregard the fact that we'd just left a Lego convention.)

I'd been amazed that the phone had enough battery life to make it through the night and still beam its location; the moment its battery was dead, then it would be game over for our little scavenger hunt. I unlocked my phone and saw almost 20 missed calls. And then, at that very moment, the iPhone shut down and displayed the "Connect to power" icon. My phone's battery literally hung on until the second it was in my hand. I wuv you, iPhone.

All said and done, it was almost worth losing the phone just for the thrill of finding it like this. We want to pitch a reality show to the Discovery Channel: "Phone Hunters." It certainly felt like we were in one there for a second.

And that, my friends, is why the MobileMe service is worth the damn money. It's been around for just over seven years and it FINALLY got a killer feature.

Image

SRASC
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 3272
Joined: January 13th, 2008, 10:53 am

Postby SRASC » June 22nd, 2009, 4:28 pm

Apple has begun changing all references to the name of the new iPhone from 'iPhone 3G S' to 'iPhone 3GS', according to a TidBits article.

I was ecstatic to see this morning that not only had Apple started following my construction in the press release announcing the iPhone 3GS's excellent initial sales, but that the company had also retroactively edited the press release announcing the iPhone 3GS to avoid the spaced-out name. For a few hours, that initial release's headline link on the main Apple PR page still used the old name, but I now see that even that headline has been fixed.

Its unclear whether this change will improve search results for the new device. It will however make things a bit easier for bloggers.

User avatar
Sony P910i
Posts: 0
Joined: August 5th, 2005, 7:32 pm
Location: South
Contact:

Postby Sony P910i » June 22nd, 2009, 4:31 pm

sexyicon wrote:I've heard once the 3g Phone hasn't been upgraded to 2.2.1 that it can be unlocked ? Anyone confirm this ? Meaning that the baseband hasnt been upgraded


Once you are on 2.2.1 or below
There is an app on cydia....Fuzzyband Downgrader

Run it and it will tell you if your baseband can be downgraded...

If it can downgrade, you can use yellowsn0w to unlock it

If it cannot be downgraded, the only method to unlock it currently is via turbosim


Other than that you have to wait for ultrasn0w

sexyicon
3NE 2NR for life
Posts: 104
Joined: August 21st, 2006, 3:38 pm
Contact:

Postby sexyicon » June 22nd, 2009, 4:34 pm

Thanks for the clear up will look out for the update if anything haha

SRASC
3NE 2NR Moderator
Posts: 3272
Joined: January 13th, 2008, 10:53 am

Postby SRASC » June 22nd, 2009, 6:38 pm

Approximately 12% of consumers who visited a retail store this past weekend to make their iPhone 3G S purchase said they were replacing a BlackBerry handset, the latest sign that Apple continues to make headway against rival Research in Motion in the high-stakes smartphone market.

That data point is one of several interesting statistics to come out of a survey by Piper Jaffray of 256 early iPhone 3G S adopters shopping for their new handsets at Apple retail stores in New York and Minnesota this past weekend. A similar survey conducted during last year's iPhone 3G launch found that just 6% of buyers were replacing a BlackBerry, suggesting Apple may be on pace to double its market share gains from RIM this time around.

Although Nokia leads the worldwide smartphone market with a commanding 41.2% share, Apple and its iPhone are most frequently compared to RIM and its BlackBerry devices due to their similarities and target audience. The most recent market share figures from Gartner rank Apple third with a 10.8% share, behind second-place RIM with its 19.9% slice of the market.

Of those iPhone 3G S buyers surveyed this weekend, 43% purchased the higher-capacity 32GB model and 57% were content with the 16GB model. This compares to 66% of buyers who selected the higher capacity 16GB iPhone 3G last year and 95% who purchased the higher capacity 6GB original iPhone when it was launched in 2007.

Speaking to clients in a report on the matter, analyst Gene Munster said he sees this trend as a sign that Apple may no longer be able to drive the average selling prices (ASPs) of iPhones higher simply by introducing models with greater storage capacity, as the lower capacity model appears to be sufficient for most early adopters for the first time in the handset's history this year.

Meanwhile, the survey signals that AT&T continues to reap the benefits of its exclusive deal to sell the iPhone in the U.S., with 28% of early iPhone 3G S adopters reporting that they are new to AT&T. This figure compares to 38% of iPhone 3G buyers last year who said they were making the jump to AT&T for the first time.

Piper Jaffray's survey also addressed the issue of iPod cannibalization by the iPhone, given that each iPhone is also a fully featured iPod. But interestingly enough, more than half (54%) of iPhone 3G S buyers said they planned to continue using a separate iPod in addition to their iPhone, up from 51% during the year-ago survey.

Image

Overall, 56% of those surveyed said they were upgrading from an early iPhone model, with a resounding 88% saying their decision to make the jump to the new iPhone was driven by the handset's new feature set.

"We believe this shows Apple is developing brand loyalty not enjoyed by other mobile phone makers," Munster told clients. "At the outset of the company's iPhone initiative, one of Apple's goals was to develop the kind of brand loyalty they have developed among Mac and iPod customers and we believe they are succeeding thus far."

As the footprint expands, and loyalty expands as well, Apple will increasingly enjoy a base of customers who regularly upgrade to the newest version of the mobile phones the company releases in what appears to be an annual cycle," he added.

Munster maintained his Buy rating and $180 price target on Apple, saying he's incrementally more confident in his estimate that the company will sell 5 million iPhones during the current quarter ending June.

User avatar
ZeroOne
12 pounds of Boost
Posts: 2253
Joined: August 5th, 2008, 4:10 pm

Postby ZeroOne » June 22nd, 2009, 6:45 pm

i predict a ultasn0w-y morning with scattered showers for the next 2 days

User avatar
streetlifestyle
Sweet on this forum
Posts: 306
Joined: September 20th, 2007, 4:54 pm
Location: lurkin

Postby streetlifestyle » June 22nd, 2009, 10:02 pm

yeah..... possibly a night....... since it has been injected and only glitch is that its asking for a sim pin...

User avatar
ZeroOne
12 pounds of Boost
Posts: 2253
Joined: August 5th, 2008, 4:10 pm

Postby ZeroOne » June 22nd, 2009, 10:20 pm

Nah that glitch has been solved a since friday. and apparently they just fixed a typo in their code that was causing confusion with different sims.

My guess is that they currently packaging it for a public release.

BTW anyone noticed musclenerd pic on twitter :lol:

User avatar
streetlifestyle
Sweet on this forum
Posts: 306
Joined: September 20th, 2007, 4:54 pm
Location: lurkin

Postby streetlifestyle » June 22nd, 2009, 10:43 pm

he changed it??? He really said summin bout a typo...... But the language was confusing!!! lol!

User avatar
Limerboy
Ricer
Posts: 16
Joined: September 29th, 2004, 12:14 am

Postby Limerboy » June 23rd, 2009, 2:36 am

ultrasn0w is out tested and working make surey our 3g is turned off. Anyone know the Settings for the data network for TSTT?

Advertisement

Return to “Ole talk and more Ole talk”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 65 guests