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Archive for the ‘iPhone’ Category

Loving life on unlocked 3.0!

23 Jun

The mysterious Dev Team released its carrier unlock, labeled Ultrasn0w, for jailbroken iPhones very early this morning. Very early. Yours truly woke up at 3:30AM to upgrade and unlock his 3G. Please pardon any typos in this post.  =)

I’ve been carrying around an extra iPhone for the past several days in anticipation of the unlock. It’s a 3G that I purchased at an unbelievable price after an individual tried to update it through iTunes, updating the baseband in the process. The bootloader was too new to reverse the process, so the phone was not unlockable.  I figured I could wait for the hopeful unlock or dump it on eBay — either way, it would be worth it.

When the 3.0 firmware was released on Wednesday last week, I upgraded that phone after hearing that I could eventually unlock it when Ultrasn0w was released. And I began taking it with me to work and back home in hopes that the unlock would come soon.

Well, I left that extra iPhone at work today as I didn’t go back to the office after an appointment. I thought about going back to pick it up throughout the night, but never did. And, of course, Ultrasn0w was released.

After days of carefully watching Twitter searches, the Dev Team’s blog, tech news sites (TechVi.com and TUAW.com only, of course!), I woke this morning to use the restroom — gotta love middle age… and diabetes — and hit TweetDeck on my 2.2.1-sporting iPhone 3G. *BOOM* It had been released!

I thought *very* briefly about going to the store to get my extra iPhone. As giddy as I was to see Ultrasn0w, I was still sane enough to avoid a 3:30AM dash to Backslash in my PJs. Instead, I went back to sleep.

I *tried* to go back to sleep.

You see, if you aren’t much of a techie, you may not get this. My wife doesn’t. It’s very similar to Christmas morning, only instead of some fat guy in a red suit, we wait for some mysterious hackers with humorous Twitter handles like @MuscleNerd.

I was up in 15 minutes, hooking my personal 3G up to the MacBook Pro I leave by the side of the bed most nights.

Careful to turn the brightness down on both devices, so as to not wake my snoring, slumbering wife, I was awake enough to remember to backup the iPhone in iTunes before continuing. After that process, I transferred my pictures to a folder on the MBP and used the custom firmware bundle I had created five days earlier for the phone sitting snug in its box on my desk at work.

While restoring, Randy Butler, a former employee hit me on IM. He, too, was awake too early and had already unlocked his iPhone. We talked while my phone’s firmware was upgraded, Cydia was updated, and the appropriate repo was added. Thanks, Randy, for keeping me awake enough to follow through!

The unlock was rather uneventful. It simply worked. My first call was to the always-awake Time & Temp Guy at a local bank. His voice had never sounded so good.

Now, I’m writing this as iTunes restores all of the music, podcasts, videos, photos, and apps to my beloved 3G. I’ve done literally nothing on the phone yet. But I have noticed that the battery percentage shows next to the green icon — something that allegedly would only happen on the newer 3G S hardware. I used to have a similar function on 2.2.1, but that was added by SBSettings, a program that no longer exists on my phone. Besides, the version on SBS appears differently, lacking the percent sign and replacing the batter icon when tapped rather than appearing next to it as it does now.

I’ll try to update my blog with thoughts about 3.0 and the unlock, etc. when I’m more fully awake. Suffice it to say, I’m very grateful to the Dev Team and everyone that contributed to the unlock.

 
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Refresh of Kindle content buying site does not mean new iWhatever on the way

11 May

Computer World has an article that suggests Amazon’s refresh of its Kindle content store for iPhone indicates the coming of a new device by Apple. Personally, I don’t buy it.

I believe that a much more primal instinct is at work: the pursuit of money.

The Kindle app for the iPhone is certainly not perfect.  In fact, it’s worse than the longtime FREE app, Stanza, which is probably why Amazon just bought LexCycle, the makers of that competing app.  It’s more likely that the changes to the store are related to that acquisition rather than a new Apple iTablet or whatever the latest rumor site is calling it.

Amazon is simply making sure that they can sell as many downloads as possible, and making the experience better for users of the hottest cell phone around is a great way to do that.

Of course, another reason could be that iPhone owners found the old version too cumbersome to navigate through Mobile Safari, and it was too inconvenient to deal with on their computers.  Making it easier to buy books and other content right from the mobile device will help move content, which is the only reason Amazon offers a free iPhone app in the first place.

I’m not saying that I don’t think there will be new hardware announced at next month’s WWDC.  I’m just saying that Amazon didn’t leak anything.

 
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Another feature in iPhone 2.1

16 Sep

I have read countless articles and posts about the new firmware for the iPhone.  There are a bunch of bug fixes, a few new features – like better podcast control! – and a change here and there.  But there’s one thing I haven’t seen anybody mention.  When you update an app that you’ve downloaded via the Apple App Store, the icon will REPLACE the icon in the exact location that the old version held.

People – including me – have complained since the App Store opened about the annoying fact that when you upgrade a program, the original icon is deleted but the new icon is placed in the next available location.  You constantly were re-arranging your icons to move those apps to “normal” place you had them.

I’m very surprised that I haven’t seen this mentioned as it was such a sore spot for many people in the past.  Apparently the continuing lack of system-wide copy and paste functionality overshadowed the minor advancements Apple has made with issues such as this.

 
 

"Update All" feature pulled from App Store

22 Aug

I noticed last night when I did my semi-daily app updates that the Update All button was no longer a choice in the App Store. I’m guessing that the small change was made as part of the 2.0.2 firmware, but I haven’t seen it mentioned anywhere.

The Update mechanism has drawn fire in the past from those that exerience various issues. I personally have had the phone big way down or have trouble completing an update of multiple apps.

I’ve also had problems viewing ANYTHING in the App Store while installing or updating other apps. That problem seems to be better after the firmware update.

On a side note, what do you think Apple’s motive us for not listing what’s in a firmware update? Seems pretty ridiculous to me to not tell about new features or specific bug fixes. I know that they do the same thing with other software including OS X updates, but it doesn’t make sense there either.

 
 

iMisspell

19 Aug

Just a quick post to share a VERY humorous item I ran across.  I just used the Mail portion of the MobileMe web apps and typed a message.  It performs a spell check automatically before sending and I was extremely amused when it didn’t recognize “iPhone”.

That’s right – Apple’s BRAND NEW service and collection of web apps, MobileMe, doesn’t even recognize the name of APPLE’s hottest product!

Too funny!

 

PLEASE fix the App Store Updates!

31 Jul

As soon as 1Password hit the App Store, I downloaded it to my iPhone with great hope. For those of you who don’t know, 1Password is a password-keeper for the Mac with a great reputation. I had never used it.

After downloading the free app and playing with a few settings, I decided that I should also download the desktop version. I figures that I would at least give me an easier way to input the data.

Both versions seem to offer a wealth of input options and before long, I had learned to use the Import from Firefix feature. Simply amazing. It took my entire Keychain and parsed it into useable data in 1Password.

I synced wirelessly with my iPhone in no time at all and was thrilled. Cool stuff, indeed. So cool, in fact, I decided that it was worth an hour or so of my time to input everything from my wallet.

It was after doing so that I found the iPhone app apparently does not have a Wallet section. Odd, I thought, but I guessed that was just to keepthe app free for now.

I noticed, too, that I had a couple of dulicates. No big deal, I’ll just delete them. Problem: the duplicates didn’t show on the desktop app and I couldn’t figure out how to remove unwanted entries from the iPhone app directly.

It was at this point that I realized that there was extra button on the bottom – Wallet. Cool! Weird that it just showed up, but cool that all of my info was there!

Still trying to remove those duplicates, I deleted all the info for one of the entries to see if it would be removed. It wasn’t; instead, there was a blank entry listed. Well, while I was in the app, I decided to remove the Master Password protection (an extra, stronger password for extra sensative items like debit card numbers) from a few website logins.

The iPhone app crashed. Hard. After relaunching, I put in my four digit code only to see all if the pretty icons on my (Customized, finally) Springboard.

It crashes every time I put in the code now. No passwords, no logins, no wallet, no 1Password.

A trip to the support forum showed that the developed, Agile Web Solutions, knows about the problem and has even FIXED it… but that fix is stuck in the whole Apple approval red tape.

I, and countless others, have to wait until Apple approves the update for an app that it already has approved! Until then, 1Password’s rating slides because people review it as worthless when it crashes.

The App Store needs a few tweaks and one if them is definitely the update process. As ridiculous as the whole approval thing is, I can at least understand the motivation behind it. Apple doesn’t want junk in there crashing iPhones and dirtying their image. But why does an UPDATE to a previously approved product have to take a week or two to be approved???

The only exception that I know of so far was the game Aurora Feint. It was pulled from the store altogether after it was discovered to be sending all of your contacts unencrypted over the web! A fix was released immediated and it was reinstated. Why was it fast-tracked? How was it approved in the first place?

And why can’t ALL updates be that quick?!?

I’m bummed. 1Password is exactly what I was looking for but it appears as though the update feature in the App Store is going to cause me to do without for a while. Back to saving everything in Notes, I guess!

 
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