MERGED - iPhone

Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

in a country where someone won against mcdonalds for coffee being too hot and a fat woman beat some fast food spot for getting her fat...lawsuits like these happen...will they progress? who knows, but they can file and see what happens, free country...

If a class action lawsuit catches steam, it does not look good for Apple.

It is in their best interest to find a solution to this prior to a lawsuit.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

First some cac sues because he can't stop his Toyota Prius
from accelerating...... now this.:hmm::hmm:
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

If a class action lawsuit catches steam, it does not look good for Apple.

It is in their best interest to find a solution to this prior to a lawsuit.

they best hope it doesn't reach national news...i can see apple giving those bumpers away for free now just to shut people up but if its proven they put out a defective product on purpse your right it's not good for them plus their answers to inquiries regarding the matter doesn't help them either.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

they best hope it doesn't reach national news...i can see apple giving those bumpers away for free now just to shut people up but if its proven they put out a defective product on purpse your right it's not good for them plus their answers to inquiries regarding the matter doesn't help them either.

Does reach national news?

Dude, it has already. It was all over the news on launch day: CNN, Fox, MSNBC, CNBC all over.

It is no longer a secret. Everyone is aware of this issue, and if anything is waiting to see what Apple will do to resolve it.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

Does reach national news?

Dude, it has already. It was all over the news on launch day: CNN, Fox, MSNBC, CNBC all over.

It is no longer a secret. Everyone is aware of this issue, and if anything is waiting to see what Apple will do to resolve it.

nah I mean this class action lawsuit...apple better not hope it reaches national news. i read on cnn about the current problems its even being covered on the bbc...
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

Judge: Were you allowed to return the phone?
Plaintiff: Yes your honor.
Judge: Why didn't you?
Plaintiff: We'd rather sue.
Judge: Case dismissed.
:lol:
 
Re: MERGED - IPhone 4

I notice HTC fanbois haven't in this thread lately.. maybe they are busy trying to unbrick their phones? :lol:



Uh oh: That HTC EVO 4G update might be bricking phones
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by Greg Kumparak on June 28, 2010

brick1.png


A quick word to the wise for those about to party with the just-released OTA update for the Sprint HTC Evo 4G: tread carefully.

While I’m mostly hearing success stories, we’re also getting a fairly surprising number of tips in our inbox from folks saying that the OTA update just bricked (read: broke) their handset. While the vast majority of this group admits that their handsets were rooted (read: hacked for customization’s sake), some are alleging that their EVOs were daisy-fresh factory configured units.


Of those with supposedly standard units that are now broken, we’re told that the update appeared to come through a second time after updating. Thinking it was a two-part update or that they’d been chosen for some secret special upgrade, they tapped the update button again — and blammo, bricked phone. Unfortunately, a hard reset doesn’t seem to be fixing things for anyone we’re hearing from.

We just put in a quick call to Sprint CS, and the agent we talked to confirmed that they’d been getting calls about this issue since the update rolled out. The only current recommendation they’ve got, it seems, is to pop into a Sprint store and hope they’ve got a unit available for exchange.
 
Re: MERGED - IPhone 4

Its not. Those cats are impatient and thought it was in a update loop. They shut their phone down in the middle of updating and fucked their shit up. Because when i updated me and my girls EVO today it took a while and it runs the update in stages that look the same.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

in a country where someone won against mcdonalds for coffee being too hot and a fat woman beat some fast food spot for getting her fat...lawsuits like these happen...will they progress? who knows, but they can file and see what happens, free country...

It drives me nuts when people have a knee jerk reaction to the hot coffee lawsuit. The Coffee was way to hot to be safely sold. Mcdonalds should understand that coffee will spill and when it does it shouldn't cause a major burn.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

I copped my iphone 4 today. Add me to the list of no reception when gripping the phone
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

Apple engineering team knew of problems but apple design team overruled them. Apple purposely put out a defective product b/c it looked nice.

http://gizmodo.com/5575412/apple-design-vs-apple-engineering

this will help that class action lawsuit. its not about returning the phone anymore...it should have never been sold. They knew of the issue and simply didn't care. Thats fraud.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

I copped my iphone 4 today. Add me to the list of no reception when gripping the phone

Are you saying when you hold the phone you get no reception or you dont have the reception issue?
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

Iphone 4 has exchange issues as well... wow this phone is a clusterfuck of problems...

Complaints are starting to mount from iOS 4 users that are having a difficult time synchronizing their iDevice with their Exchange environments. The bug in question prevents iOS 4 from synchronizing email, calendar, or contact data from a users Exchange server to an iOS 4 device (usually just one of the three data points won’t synchronize, and from the looks of it Calendar is the big one). Apple released a knowledge base article with a potential quick-fix, but a quick gander at the Apple discussion boards tells us that it didn’t quite get the job done. Add this latest snafu to the list of fires Apple is currently trying to extinguish. How about it, anyone having issues with their iOS 4 device synching to an Exchange server?

http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2010/06/29/ios-4-exchange/
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

Are you saying when you hold the phone you get no reception or you dont have the reception issue?

when i hold the phone I get no reception on the left side. Even apple fanboys (excluding divine) claim and show this on youtube vids, such as Jon4lakers
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

when i hold the phone I get no reception on the left side. Even apple fanboys (excluding divine) claim and show this on youtube vids, such as Jon4lakers

the fuck? :smh: Apple has no excuse for this shit. Are you keeping it? I expect a major recall @ some point.. I know thats gonna be a nightmare for Apple to manage.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

nah I mean this class action lawsuit...apple better not hope it reaches national news. i read on cnn about the current problems its even being covered on the bbc...

Gotcha.

I hope it does reach national news.

I am not a fan boy for Apple or any other company, but Apple needs to do what is right. Again there is no way they did not know about this issue prior to releasing the phone especially with the amount of testing that goes into products like the iPhone?

Do you remember the NexusOne production testing videos?



Apple definitely has similar testing and there is no way this was not caught.

It is a big time fuck up by Apple, and the way they handle this issue will say a lot for the company going forward.

On another note, I looked at a friends HTC Evo this morning, and I am honestly not impressed. Shit, all these smartphones Evo, i4, Droid are all getting to look the same anyways :smh: Might have different functions, but all are looking about the same.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

the phone has exchange issues now too... so its affecting the biz sector. That will hit national news if it continues... apparently apple did know the engineering team told them but the design team won... so its form over function with apple.

Gotcha.

I hope it does reach national news.

I am not a fan boy for Apple or any other company, but Apple needs to do what is right. Again there is no way they did not know about this issue prior to releasing the phone especially with the amount of testing that goes into products like the iPhone?

Do you remember the NexusOne production testing videos?



Apple definitely has similar testing and there is no way this was not caught.

It is a big time fuck up by Apple, and the way they handle this issue will say a lot for the company going forward.

On another note, I looked at a friends HTC Evo this morning, and I am honestly not impressed. Shit, all these smartphones Evo, i4, Droid are all getting to look the same anyways :smh: Might have different functions, but all are looking about the same.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

the fuck? :smh: Apple has no excuse for this shit. Are you keeping it? I expect a major recall @ some point.. I know thats gonna be a nightmare for Apple to manage.

A recall will be a nightmare. I mean it's not like a car where you take it to the dealership or something.

Apple only has limited stores, and I do not think such a problem can be fixed in-store. They need to figure it out ASAP.

How do you recall a phone? A device that is part of everyday life for users of cellphones? :smh:
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

A recall will be a nightmare. I mean it's not like a car where you take it to the dealership or something.

Apple only has limited stores, and I do not think such a problem can be fixed in-store. They need to figure it out ASAP.

How do you recall a phone? A device that is part of everyday life for users of cellphones? :smh:

The only way I could think of them doing it would be an exhange program by mail in which they prepaid for the express shipping. It would probably have to be a collab with AT&T to adjust user's bills for the inconveinence. A fucking nightmare.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

the phone has exchange issues now too... so its affecting the biz sector. That will hit national news if it continues... apparently apple did know the engineering team told them but the design team won... so its form over function with apple.

So stupid.

They should work in tandem to find the proper solution for the device. One department should never trump another: work together to find the best solution. :smh:

I am really thinking hard of canceling my pre-order. Fuck it, I will hang on to my Tilt: It still functions as a phone even when held with a deadly death grip :smh: no matter what hand it is held in :smh:
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

A situation like this makes me understand more why the Evo has been so limited/sold out. I know they had issues about their screens, its possible they want to get all that corrected BEFORE they sale 1.7 million (or whatever # Divine is always quoting) and have to go back and start replacing them. Just an assumption though.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

A recall will be a nightmare. I mean it's not like a car where you take it to the dealership or something.

Apple only has limited stores, and I do not think such a problem can be fixed in-store. They need to figure it out ASAP.

How do you recall a phone? A device that is part of everyday life for users of cellphones? :smh:


a recall would cripple apple, they put all their eggs in the iphone basket...even now developing a hybrid iOS/macOS system.... and people will sue once they realize apple did this on purpose...and there will be FTC inquiries....that would be a mess on so many levels b/c not only did they put a defective device on the market and promoted it as a multi-use device it for many can and would save lives. can u imagine being in an accident and trying to make a life saving call and the phone won't work b/c in a panic u held it wrong according to apple?

fanboys will dismiss those reasons but they are very real. apple needs to fix this as quietly as they can or recall the phones and face the storm of angry backlash.

It might actually be too late if the issues and press keep mounting.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

fanboys will dismiss those reasons but they are very real. apple needs to fix this as quietly as they can or recall the phones and face the storm of angry backlash.

It might actually be too late if the issues and press keep mounting.

They have sold almost 2 million devices.. they are past the point of a quiet fix.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

They have sold almost 2 million devices.. they are past the point of a quiet fix.

Yup, no way a recall will be quiet. It will hit them hard, even their stock will take a huge hit.
 
Re: Class Action suit against Apple for i4 problems in the works...

So stupid.

They should work in tandem to find the proper solution for the device. One department should never trump another: work together to find the best solution. :smh:

I am really thinking hard of canceling my pre-order. Fuck it, I will hang on to my Tilt: It still functions as a phone even when held with a deadly death grip :smh: no matter what hand it is held in :smh:

common sense would imply that but this is apple, they have always been about form and style...function is not their issue long as it looks nice. Steve jobs even believes that.

they are a greedy company who wants the headlines of # sold and pre-ordered as a way of saying we make the best products. they don't actually care long as people buy and let that 30 day return lapse, for years they blamed at&t but now it seems the issue was never really at&t it was apple...

fucked up thing is apple is refusing to take responsibility for these errors and making it seem like a bumper and eventually software fix will solve the issues and if they don't ppl will be assed out and apple will have their money and the headlines about # sold.

if this continues public trust in this company will be shaken except with the fanboys they'll just dismiss it even if the phones are recalled, hell the fanboys won't return them.

sad shit.
 
Apple Is Discriminating Against Africa!!! Refuses to sell the iPhone there...

All you Steve Jobs lovers out there might find this interesting.

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2010/06/23/let_africa_have_the_iphone?page=0,0

An African iPhone? There’s No App for That.
Why Steve Jobs should let Africans buy his new toy.
BY DAYO OLOPADE | JUNE 24, 2010

africanphones.jpg


When I touched down in Lagos, Nigeria, this week, the first thing I did was buy a cell phone. The city's Saka Tinubu district hosts dozens of mobile vendors arrayed in small shops, piled high with all the major brands: Nokia, Motorola, Samsung. Among them is Belle-Vista Phone Warehouse, which styles itself as a "Blackberry Outlet." Young professionals stopped by after working hours to scoop up the Storm, the Curve, and other popular smartphones nestled in the display cases. Apple's iPhone -- ubiquitous in American cities, and about to become more so with the release of the product's much-anticipated version 4 today -- was nowhere to be seen.

The best-kept secret about Africa in the last decade is the continent's rapid and creative adoption of modern technology. African countries have for the most part leapfrogged the technologies of the late 20th century to adopt those of the early 21st en masse. There are now 10 times as many cell phones as land lines in sub-Saharan Africa, and since 2004, the region's year-over-year growth has been the highest in the world. When Nokia's billionth handset was sold in 2000, it was in Nigeria.

Africa is a multimillion-dollar mobile market, and plenty of the major technology companies, Western and otherwise, are there already. Multinational telecoms like MTN, Safaricom, and Zain are competing to cover a continent of 500 million mobile consumers, improving connectivity and dropping prices. Low-tech Chinese imports and no-contract, prepaid plans have made the technology easily accessible; Belle-Vista alone sells 500 phones a month. Nokia, which established its first African research center in Nairobi in 2008, has just unveiled a telephone that will allow consumers used to toggling between two or three devices to use multiple SIM cards in the same phone. BlackBerry has likewise responded to explosive demand by opening an office in Nigeria this year. Google, whose Android operating system is the strongest competitor to the iPhone, has had a presence on the continent since 2007 and now operates in 45 African countries, hiring and training African developers to convert its well-known suite of Web applications (Maps, News, Finance) for local use -- often over mobile devices.

These companies and their technologies are opening a line into the flattening world we've heard so much about, creating markets, enabling information access, and building relationships in ways that have changed poor countries from the bottom up. But it's hardly philanthropic work -- market leader Nokia's regional revenues were 1 billion euros in 2009, and Research In Motion, named Fortune's fastest-growing global firm in 2010, sold 1 million BlackBerries last year in South Africa alone.

So where is Apple?

The earlier-generation iPhones are, ostensibly, available on the continent -- Vodacom, a subsidiary of British Vodafone, signed a 10-country distribution deal with Apple in 2008 that included South Africa and Egypt, and the phones do work on local networks. Vodacom has also announced that it will distribute and service the iPhone4 in Africa in the near future. But for the vast majority of Africans, Apple effectively doesn't exist. The iTunes store's music offerings have never been available on the continent; African IP addresses are blocked. The iPhone goes for $1,000 at local retailers -- 10 times the current U.S. price for the same model, a big-enough markup that most iPhones on the continent are purchased abroad instead -- and because of limited bandwidth and apps availability, owning one is "like having a Maserati in traffic," according to Tayo Oviosu, CEO of Pagatech, a mobile banking firm in Nigeria.

This is a shame, considering what even inexpensive, basic cell phones have done for Africa. In poor countries, cell-phone penetration has been linked to positive economic and developmental outcomes. A 2006 study of emerging markets suggests that a 10 percent increase in mobile penetration correlates with a 0.6 percentage point increase in economic growth rates. In Africa, the trend is lifting all boats: A fisherwoman without refrigeration in the Democratic Republic of the Congo can keep her catch on the line in the water, waiting for customers to call; selling access to a mobile phone in poor or rural areas of Uganda has become a viable business model. Professionals stuck in Johannesburg traffic make deals on their BlackBerries; demand for skilled labor in the information and communication technology sector has created 400,000 jobs in Nigeria since 2000.

The advent of mobile money -- the transfer of funds by cell phones, rather than banks or ATMs -- in poor countries has further expanded the reach and value of cell phones. Fifteen-thousand new mobile-banking customers sign up daily in Tanzania, 12,000 in Kenya, and 18,000 in Uganda. Paperless payment creates meaningful efficiencies: Bill-paying has ceased to be a day lost in line at the bank. Rather than sending an envelope full of cash with a bus driver to another town, an individual can text remittances to a distant relative or friend.

Africa has also led the way in putting mobile phones to NGO-like use. Using SMS platforms, organizations can send patients reminders to take medication, offer technical assistance to farmers, and provide mothers simple prenatal checklists. Ushahidi, a Kenya-based start-up, deployed its SMS-based crisis-mapping software in Haiti after January's earthquake, for which it was later honored by the Clinton Global Initiative. These mobile-centric models don't just do good -- they add real value to the sizable investment made by lower-income individuals in poor countries.

What could the iPhone contribute to this ongoing renaissance? The iPhone4 may serve these developmental functions better than anything else on the market, if its features are as described. The new FaceTime feature, for instance, which allows videoconferencing directly from a mobile device, could do much to support the distance education projects being pioneered at the University of South Africa and Makerere University in Uganda. In addition to GPS and access to the mobile Web, geotargeted applications could help traders find market prices, businesses find customers, and make news delivery and political organizing easier. All-in-one video shooting and editing software makes the iPhone4 a powerful media tool that competing smartphones like the BlackBerry or Nokia Nseries just can't duplicate. Even the longer battery life will add value in places where electricity is unreliable.

Most importantly, the iPhone's application development ecosystem would engage the talented, tech-savvy demographic on the planet's youngest continent. According to a paper from the Institute for Development Policy and Management at the University of Manchester, software production is an industry "essential for the growth of the economies of developing countries"; the $1.43 billion iPhone application market, with its low barriers to entry and friendliness to entrepreneurs, is ideal for Africa's burgeoning class of small-scale software programmers. In Kenya -- a country where software tinkering is popular enough to warrant a prime-time cable TV show -- some eager programmers created applications for the first iPhone well before it was even available in the country. "We're going to see people developing applications that solve specific challenges in the African context," says Oviosu. "If the iPhone comes here and catches on, of course we'll build [one]."

It isn't just Africans who are losing out from Apple's disinterest in the continent. As mobile data usage comes to replace traditional computing in Africa, the new unit of engagement for business, government relations, and humanitarian work may be the smartphone -- and it stands to reason that the company with the best local presence will reap the benefits of rising incomes and demand on a continent of nearly 1 billion. If it is Apple, it will reinforce the company's slogan: This changes everything. Again.
 
Re: Apple Is Discriminating Against Africa!!! Refuses to sell the iPhone there...

colin
 
Divine? Has Jobs mentioned any of this when you two have pillow talk? Or does he throw you some paper towels, tell you to clean up and get out.

Sent from my HTC Hero using Tapatalk
 
Keepin' it real fake: Air Phone NO. 4 out-KIRFs the KIRFs with FaceTime app.

iphone4-kirf-06-29-2010.jpg

We've already seen some pretty good iPhone 4 KIRFs, but it looks like there's a new king in town: the Air Phone NO. 4. Not only does it faithfully emulate the iPhone 4's hardware design with what we can only assume is the highest quality materials (it even eliminates those pesky seams), but it packs a "non-smartphone OS" that has all your favorite apps including Safari, Mail, "Games," "Sound" and, last but not least, FaceTime -- or a FaceTime icon, at least. Curious to see what other wonders await behind that familiar veneer? Then you can apparently snag one of these in China right now for just $100.

http://i.engadget.com/2010/06/29/keepin-it-real-fake-air-phone-no-4-out-kirfs-the-kirfs-with-f/
 
Re: Keepin' it real fake: Air Phone NO. 4 out-KIRFs the KIRFs with FaceTime app.

damn u could tell a muthafukka thats a iphone and they wouldnt know the difference.
 
Re: Apple Is Discriminating Against Africa!!! Refuses to sell the iPhone there...

I would have though Nzinga created this thread with the mention of Africa

:lol::lol::lol:
 
Re: Keepin' it real fake: Air Phone NO. 4 out-KIRFs the KIRFs with FaceTime app.

would be hilarious if it actually worked and held a call...
 
Re: Apple Is Discriminating Against Africa!!! Refuses to sell the iPhone there...

Good read.
 
Re: Apple Is Discriminating Against Africa!!! Refuses to sell the iPhone there...

bottom line nobody really needs the iphone. it's not stopping anybody from doing jack shit not to have it.
 
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