Apple May Bring a Non-iPhone To Verizon Wireless 194
The Narrative Fallacy writes "According to BusinessWeek, Verizon Wireless is in talks with Apple to distribute two new iPhone-like devices that are not iPhones. (Apple has created prototypes.) AT&T's contract with Apple, which has not been made public, is believed to cover all models of the iPhone, but only the iPhone. So if Apple builds something that isn't an iPhone — and perhaps doesn't even make cellular calls — they won't be violating their exclusivity contract with AT&T, which runs through at least 2010. One device is a smaller, less expensive calling device described by a person who has seen it as an 'iPhone lite.' The other is a media pad, said to be smaller than a Kindle but with a bigger screen, that would let users listen to music, view photos, watch high-definition videos, and make calls over a Wi-Fi connection. (And read books?) Apple could use the prospect of an iPhone-esque device as leverage to prevent Verizon Wireless from introducing the Palm Pre, or at least to delay its introduction on Verizon's network. 'The media pad category might go to Verizon,' said one person who has seen the device. 'We are talking about a device where people will say, "Damn, why didn't we do this?" Apple is probably going to define the damn category.'" Reader stevegee58 writes with word that Verizon may be playing both ends against the middle. Marketwatch reports that Microsoft and Verizon are in talks to develop a touch-screen mobile phone that would run on Windows Mobile.
Question (Score:2, Insightful)
T&T's contract with Apple, which has not been made public, is believed to cover all models of the iPhone, but only the iPhone.
I don't mean to be nit-pickey, but somehow, the meaning got lost in the translation.
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THIS makes sense (Score:5, Insightful)
The back story here is that verizon is switching away from CDMA. they are expected however to maintain CDMA for voice and phase in the new network for data. Apple has said they are not eager to develop for CDMA since it has no future.
So if apple came out with a data device, say a netbook, for verizon it could run on the new network and not bother with CDMA.
makes total sense.
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You know, those two devices described in the article don't sound half bad. A Kindle that can make Wi-Fi calls?
I'm in.
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In an attempt to keep things exciting, most 3g technologies use a CDMA (or W-CDMA) carrier.
Serious Verizon/WinMo WTFs (Score:5, Informative)
I have a touchscreen phone that uses Windows Mobile. It's the HTC mogul and it's a damned sweet phone when you load it up with SkyFire browser. (IE mobile takes suck to whole new levels)
I browse and post on slashdot/digg/reddit/etc, watch movies on hulu, play mp3s and all that jazz but unlike the iPhone, it has a real keyboard that doesn't suck to type on. (touch screen keyboards blow HARD)
It's a pretty awesome phone. But dangit, it's still windows with all its suck. The interface is inconsistent, laggy, it runs out of memory when you run too many progs at a time, and it just crashes about 1x/week without warning. Oh, and there's no spider solitaire.
It's a great phone except for the windows part.
It was great irony this morning... using Outlook mobile, Exchange (Zimbra) and Office mobile, it refused to open a word document in an email because it might 'harm my system'. Something ironic about MS' product telling me that another of their products is dangerous to use?
I opened it w/my Linux laptop, Kmail, and Open Office just fine, thank you!
PS: I typed this post on said phone. Verizon is developing a touch screen phone? What am I using, then?
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sure there is. lots of them, actually. here is a link to a freeware one: http://www.not-big-deal.com/product.php?product_id=1 [not-big-deal.com]
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Also, given Verizon's history of lockdown, I'm suspicious of the "voice calls over Wifi" claim. Verizon will want you to also have one of their voice devices and use their network minutes.
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Douche.
This sounds exciting... (Score:2)
> Microsoft and Verizon are in talks to develop a
> touch-screen mobile phone that would run on
> Windows Mobile.
Seems to me there used to be a bunch of these options, and they all failed in the market.
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My current "smart" phone is a Windows Mobile device, and compared either to my previous Palm OS device or the iPhones I've handled, the OS seems not only not great as a phone, but not great for the PDA features of a smartphone, either. When I replace it, I can guarantee that the one thing I won't be considering is another Windows mobile offering.
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Amen. I got tired of having a phone that freezes up. Windows Mobile made me too paranoid to get an iPhone, even, so when it came time to replace it I just got a plain jane Samsung and an iPod Touch.
It's nice to have a phone with a decent battery life again, too.
Re:This sounds exciting... (Score:4, Insightful)
One of my CS professors in college said something I wrote down, because it was a great quote, especially since he has a very thick Czech accent. Here's the quote, with all grammatical mistakes intact:
"When you pick up phone at your house, it just works. You don't wait two minutes to boot up, then it gives you blue screen of death."
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You should try the Jaadu VNC app for the iPhone. I've never used Samsung's VNC client but I seriously doubt it would be in the same ballpark as Jaadu's iPhone client.
SSH, I don't know about.
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There are ssh apps for it. Some of them are even free I believe.
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You should be aware that the iPhone can do those things with a 3rd party app.
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The iPhone has free SSH and VNC apps. I have them installed.
5 MP in a cell phone is fooling yourself. Zoom one of those pictures up and inspect it pixel by pixel. You MIGHT be getting 2 MP effective resolution. Everything else is just wasting memory capturing lens blur.
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No ssh or vnc? I do both of those on my iPhone. I also have a full bash terminal (iphone runs a type of bsd dont you know) and all my standard desktop bash scripts work just fine.
I can log into windows terminal services for work, get my emails and calenders and work contacts pushed to the phone instantly. Pretty much anything you've heard the iPhone 'can't do' is probably a lie unless the hardware for it physically is not there.
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Full Keyboard and Captive touchscreen
Decent enough resolution camera with built-in video recording
Copy/Paste
Bluetooth Tethering
Full Bluetooth features
Built-in GPS
An OS with the ability to easily add in software from any source (and the official source must not have stupid restrictions like the app store on the iPhone)
A decent media player with all major codecs supported
Flash, and if not Flash then YouTube and othe
Re:This sounds exciting... (Score:5, Funny)
So, in other words, you want a laptop.
Re:This sounds exciting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, the iPhone has all of those except tactile keyboard, copy/paste, tethering, MMS, and Ogg support. If you count the upcoming release of the iPhone OS, you'll only be missing a tactile keyboard and Ogg support.
Seriously, why do people get so hung up on Ogg support? Less than 1/10th of 1 percent of digital music listeners even know what it is or care to use it, so why should Apple support it? DRM free AAC is good enough quality and unencumbered enough to use (unencumbered as in Apple pays for the license so wtf do I care?).
Motorola V980 does all this too (except for...) (Score:2)
Actually, the iPhone has all of those except tactile keyboard, copy/paste, tethering, MMS, and Ogg support.
So the Iphone has all of those, except the ones it doesn't? Thank you Captain Obvious, I think that was the point he was making - it's not like those are trivial irrelevant features. (Did they finally add video recording? What about Flash, and the ability to "add in software from any source" without hacking the product?)
In fact, let's recheck the OP where he says:
The iPhone is a great phone, but it has
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The iPhone is a great phone, but it has the stupidest design issues such as the lack of basic features like MMS, copy/paste, multiple codecs for audio and video
How are these design issues? These are software issues, and some of them will be fixed soon. Do you really need multiple codecs on your phone? It is quite standard to convert content to fit on the phones screen better, and make it more playable.
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How are these design issues? These are software issues,
Software isn't design?
and some of them will be fixed soon.
I'm sure that all phones will get better with time. He's presumably talking about what's on the market now, not what might be in years to come.
Do you really need multiple codecs on your phone?
Do you really need a web browser, touch screen, GPS or anything else like that on your phone? No. But presumably he wants multiple codecs on his phone, otherwise he wouldn't have mentioned it.
It is quite st
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HTC Touch Pro 2 is pretty much what you describe. I currently own a HTC Touch HD which is pretty much all that except full keyboard (don't need it). Touch Pro 2 is the same but with a keyboard and a somewhat smaller screen (3.6" 800x480 vs 3.8" 800x480).
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I fail to understand Blackberry Love. I have a bold, and frankly it's junk.
The most basic interface issues haven't been considered. I'm surfing a restaurant web site and I want to call and make a reservation. I need to get out of the browser to type a phone number in, which I do incorrectly four times because I'm driving and can't use a pen and paper to write it down.
On an iPhone, I'm surfing the same web site...I tap the phone number and the phone asks me if I want to call it. One more tap and I've dialed.
FTW (Score:2, Funny)
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I'm not sure that's really "funny" as it's been modded. Anti-Trust measures WERE being considered against Apple in some jurisdictions, on the basis of Apple's iTunes DRM.
When Apple dropped DRM those calling for anti-trust prosecutions basically lost any grounds on which to fight. The iTunes Music Store doesn't lock you into an iPod anymore...you can play what you buy anywhere and your iPod can play tunes purchased from anywhere. iPods are a bit locked to iTunes in terms of loading data onto it, but there's
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How does using m4a lock anyone out of the iTunes Store? Virtually all of Apple's competitors support it in one product or another, which Apple has done nothing to prevent. How is it remotely an anti-trust issue?
Re:FTW (Score:5, Insightful)
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I am a tad surprised you don't already have a horde bitching at you about how horrible iPods are, or how evil Apple is, or whatever.
Personally, I think MS should have stuck with WinCE over WM. Not for any technical reason...I just think the fact that they let a version of Windows called "wince" out the door is hilarious.
And as far as Android being better in the long run...I don't know that I entirely doubt th
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So?
Wake me up when your iPod Touch can do A2DP.
Oh, by the way, how low Slashdot has fallen - people here don't know the difference between operating system and GUI anymore and they call themselfs "geeks".
Introducing the iFone (Score:5, Funny)
The thinnest, lightest fuck you to ATT on the market!
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And it's only 110 dollars!
http://www.dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.5179 [dealextreme.com]
Wow. (Score:5, Funny)
So this an article that isn't about iPhones, but feels the need to define it in terms of an iPhone.
(Car analogy time) That's like saying Ford is developing a new Non-Mustang vehicle.
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Re:Wow. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Wow. (Score:5, Insightful)
You miss the point. All it's saying is Apple can make a device strikingly similar to an iPhone but at long as it's not called "iPhone" it's not required to be on AT&T.
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Maybe they'll call it the iPod Touch?
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The iPod Touch with phone? Or why the hell do they need verizon? Unless it will let you browse the internet over mobile network, and let you make calls with skype?
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It'd be more like if Ford had a contract with a certain steel company to produce all steel for the Mustang until 2015, and Ford one day announces that they're making a new car that has exactly the same components as the Mustang, but isn't officially a Mustang, so they aren't contractually obligated to keep the same steel supplier.
So (Score:2, Funny)
Palm Pre (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Palm Pre (Score:5, Insightful)
The Palm Pre needs to come out first for that particular plan to work.
Re:Palm Pre (Score:4, Insightful)
The Palm Pre needs to come out first for that particular plan to work.
Palm needs to break their exclusivity agreement with Sprint for that particular plan to work.
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Clearly, Apple has shown them the way. Palm just needs to make a new prototype of different dimensions and different functionality, and call it a Finger Pre, or a Thumb Pre, or a Little Finger Pre.
What could possibly go wrong.
Re:Palm Pre (Score:4, Funny)
I dont own an iPhone because it doesn't have a tactile keyboard.
The iPhone 3.0 software enables the 'Spring Surprise' tactile feedback:
Two steel bolts that, upon the activation of the keyboard, spring outward and pierce the user's hands and fingers.
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The iPhone 3.0 software enables the 'Spring Surprise' tactile feedback: Two steel bolts that, upon the activation of the keyboard, spring outward and pierce the user's hands and fingers.
Alright, an Apple/Monty Python crossed memes thread!
Apple iPhone 3.0: "If we took the bones out, it wouldn't be snappy."
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*That is, of course if you don't want to do things that Ap
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> *That is, of course if you don't want to do things that Apple says that you can't do such as emulators, using "undocumented" features, or
> "obscene" applications, but that is what jailbreaking is for, right?
That, or just getting a phone which supports Windows Mobile, Symbian or Java apps.
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i like the iphone keyboard.
note: i am someone curses when i have to type on any computer keyboard not equipped with cherry mx blue or alps white keyswitches.
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You want a tactile keyboard. Ok, so do a lot of other people. But many people don't, I definately don't. I don't want the wasted space.
Have you ever heard of the blackberry, i know it has only been out for years and years, but it has caught on with a couple of people (50 million sold).
Somehow I still see that there is a market for the iphone?
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personally, I have an old Motorola E815 (hacked to enable OBEX) and a BlackBerry 8320 (for work). I have little desire to buy an iPhone, the wife has a Palm Centro (I'm a 12 year loyal Palm user myself). I might actually buy a Pre if it doesn't have some glaring problems when it comes out.
Re:Palm Pre (Score:4, Funny)
Sounds familiar (Score:5, Insightful)
This sounds an awful like what Jobs did when he decided to kill off the clone makers after he came back as CEO. They had a license for OS 8, so he just changed the name to OS 9.
Re:Sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
This sounds an awful like what Jobs did when he decided to kill off the clone makers after he came back as CEO. They had a license for OS 8, so he just changed the name to OS 9.
To be fair, it's not like going from 7.5 to 7.6 to 8.0 to 8.1 to 8.5 to 8.6 to 9.0 was a completely shocking progression.
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Well other than the fact the features in OS 9 really didn't warrant a new version number.
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Well other than the fact the features in OS 9 really didn't warrant a new version number.
But the changes between Vista ad Windows 7 do? Anyway, if Apple had skipped 8.6, the changes from 8.5 would have been enough for the new version number.
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Back then the Mac ran on "System" whatever. System 3, System 6, System 7, you get the idea.
The clone license covered System 7, so they changed the name to Mac OS and revved the number to 8, just to be sure.
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So close! Back then the Mac ran on "System" whatever. System 3, System 6, System 7, you get the idea. The clone license covered System 7, so they changed the name to Mac OS and revved the number to 8, just to be sure.
Not quite: The last OS for the clones was MacOS 7.6(.1).
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Me want a TouchBook and here's why (Score:5, Interesting)
I hope the 'Media Pad / TouchBook' end up being true. Because it would be a product that would be useful to me.
I don't want a laptop. I have an old one, and even if my old iBook is rather small, over the years, I realized that it's not small enough for a lot of uses. Example: we don't use it at the dinner table to refer to Wikipedia and I don't bring it often when going to friends and family unless I know I'm going to use it because it's slightly too big and heavy.
On the other end, there's the iPod Touch and the like. Doubtlessly useful, and despite not owning one (I really try to buy as little stuff as possible because 'the things you own end up owning you' ;-), I fear the screen is too small to enjoy it as an input device (very small virtual keyboard) and media device (small screen too). On the plus side, smartphones / iPod Touch *are* really portable, and to a level that won't be attained by any "media pad".
NetBooks. Almost, but I don't think they're for me yet. Waiting for the next wave. Why? It's not really a laptop but it's not really that portable either. (that's obviously subjective)
And last but not least, Apple products integration. I don't consider myself a fanboy, but I want to be productive [me.com]. Despite using Debian at work everyday, Linux is still not up to my expectations yet (yet!). Is there some lock-in with Apple? Yes. Is this a problem with me? Not that much, as long at it doesn't get in my way too often. I'm ready to pay to have more pleasure using a computer. I don't want crap, even if it's free. (this is a general statement, not specifically related to software)
Now, I guess I did not need to write all this other than to have feedback from you: what do you think? Where am I wrong?
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Your requirements sound similar to the ones that led me to buy a Nokia n810 [wikipedia.org]: I wanted something I could carry everywhere without really thinking about it that I could use for PDA-type applications and internet access (it replaced a Sony Clie Palm OS-based PDA [wikipedia.org] (yeah, yeah, Sony sucks, but they sure knew how to make a Palm OS 4 device: I would still be using it if I could have gotten Wi-Fi easily)). I did consider the iPod Touch, but between the on-screen keyboard and lack of external memory slot, I wasn't in
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I'm ready to pay to have more pleasure using a computer. I don't want crap, even if it's free.
And the sad thing is that for the longest time I was paying for crap that would mysteriously stop working and force me to blow an entire evening trying to tweak drivers and the OS to start working properly again. I finally got fed up with tinkering. Sure, tinkering was fun for quite a while, but when it started to get in the way of creative work done on a computer then that's where I had to draw a line.
I bought my cast aluminum sliver of a machine a year ago March and have been very happy not having to wo
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I hope the 'Media Pad / TouchBook' end up being true. Because it would be a product that would be useful to me.
I have an iPod Touch and its great as a quick way of checking email and browsing the web around the house - the screen size and lack of keyboard being the major limitations.
Before that, my solution was an EEEPC 701 - and despite the touch's screen being smaller (physically, and half as many pixels) the slick, multi-touch zooming and panning make it far more usable.
even a 50% bigger iPod Touch would be a killer for me (it wouldn't cure the keyboard issue - although bigger/more keys would help).
...and if
Media pad - exactly what I've been waiting for (Score:2)
This is almost exactly what I've been waiting for, although I'd prefer it if I could get this thing without Verizon's taint. The netbook market is growing, and it was only a matter of time until Apple got around to putting in their entry.
Also, here's a thought: if you've already got one of those bluetooth
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I can see the marketing campaign now (Score:3, Funny)
WTF is wrong with Microsoft? (Score:2)
I mean seriously. They got the market clout AND a touch/non-touch version of WinCE on tap. For as bad as eveyone thinks the Zune is, at the very least, it shows THEY CAN DO IT.
Is it THAT hard to slap an iPhone interface to WinCE? God damn, "One Foot in the Grave(tm)", Palm is doing it and its a completely diffrent os [engadget.com] than the old Palm. In the same timeframe, we get CE
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I don't know about that track record. So far Microsoft efforts on consumer electronics have been successful when MS is willing to take heavy losses (Xbox: -$7 billion over the lifetime of the Xbox and Xbox 360) or not as successful (Zune: small profit for a year then losses). No I am not counting keyboards and mice which are not q
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PSS - Yes, I want the G1 but till its CDMA I am not giving up my 20% off Sprint from work:P
Check with your HR department. I get 19% off at Verizon through work, but they also have deals with 2-3 other carriers for similar discounts (heck our work phones have always been Alltel, and these arrangements were in place long before the Verizon/Alltel merger).
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Is it THAT hard to slap an iPhone interface to WinCE?
Maybe, Maybe not. Lots of UI engineering went into the iPhone interface. But you hint at the problem when you use the verb "slap." That's the whole problem with Microsoft products. They just tend to slap something on top of a creaking old architecture, to make it look "fresh," rather than building a solid system from the ground up. It never really works, as UIs are pretty complicated and fundamental to a system's operation. Not something you use cosmetically to hide usability issues.
So Verizon is going to resell (Score:2)
Macs?
And the great thing about the iPhone is... (Score:5, Funny)
Enough with the rumors (Score:4, Insightful)
Firstly, let's hang up the old rumor mill and improve the S/N ratio.
Secondly, roughlydrafted.com has a pretty insight into why this is probably not going to happen.
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roughly drafted wouldn't know insight if it came in a box with an apple logo on the outside.
I can see it now (Score:4, Funny)
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Giving new meaning to the term "heads-up display".
Sounds like wishful thinking (Score:3, Interesting)
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I call BS (Score:5, Insightful)
This whole things reeks of making-stuff-up!
media pad? (Score:2)
The other is a media pad, said to be smaller than a Kindle but with a bigger screen, that would let users listen to music, view photos, watch high-definition videos, and make calls over a Wi-Fi connection. (And read books?)
How can this gadget be compared to Kindle? The most important feature Kindle sports is its e-paper display, while the Apple gizmo uses an ordinary LCD screen with touch function.
IOW, Kindle is a document reader, while this thing is another hyped i-something - we're talking about oranges and apple(s) here.
Smart (Score:2)
iPod Touch + Verizon Wireless Broadband (Score:2)
That's what I'm using. Lets me do all sorts of things Verizon won't let me do with their phones, like listen to Pandora or other audio streams, watch YouTube videos, buy songs and videos from iTMS.
Verizon just won't let me use my 3G Chocolate 3 phone for anything interesting. Tried Rhapsody, it's total Chrapsody. Popular artists aren't available by subscription, but only purchase (and lots of older artists: you can't get Eagles by subscription! The almost-40-year old band Eagles are too precious for subs
Call it the Newton Phone (Score:4, Insightful)
or the Mac Phone.
It would be interesting if the phone was based on the old Apple Newton device. Apple could claim IP back to the Newton before a lot of these "Smart Phones" got invented.
It only makes sense as Microsoft used Windows CE in their smart phones, that Apple recycles the Newton into a Newton phone. You got that IP there, and it can be modified to run on ARM processors, and it pre-dates the iPhone.
Re:Call it the Newton Phone (Score:4, Interesting)
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As does the iPhone, of course.
Its not about the phone (Score:2)
WiFi is the long pole in the tent. WiFi is free will == freedom.
Apple abstracts function over infrastructure. Infrastructure fade to black.
Apple disintermediates networks ala iTunes disintermediates Music
Its eyeballs, who has'em and can deliver everything that follows
Who wins with this story? (Score:2)
This smacks of Verizon using vaporware to kill the hype around iPhone OS 3.0 (as suggested by Roughly Drafted [roughlydrafted.com]), someone trying to give Verizon's stock a bump with an Apple rumpr (a tactic that previously hasn't been very well hidden [macworld.com]) or perhaps Apple trying to gain some leverage in its negotiations with ATT.
Re:Verizon + Microsoft + Windows Mobile = FAIL (Score:4, Interesting)
does it really cost $95 a month for all that stuff?
I think it actually may, in a way. Last I saw iPhone users were using WAY more data than users of AT&T's other phones. I've heard AT&T has struggled to keep up with this in some locations. Think of the $95 a month as keeping out the vast hordes that would rape and pillage their inadequate infrastructure. So for someone to compete on this aspect I think they would have to have a much more robust network with plenty of bandwidth room.
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I live in Cincinnati and I get 5 bars of AT&T 3G on my iPhone when I'm in the back of my basement in a Northern Kentucky suburb. It's fast, and everywhere I go in the city I get 3G and plenty of signal and data speed.
When I lived in Sunnyvale last year, I had frequent data slowdowns all over the valley due to the overload, but fairly reliable service in general. It's much better in the midwest, at least in this area.
But note that Cincinnati is bound to be targeted by AT&T because they are competin
Not really (Score:2)
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In no particular order,