The iPhone Blog


iOS 4.3 unlock working on iPhone 4 basebands 3.10.01 and 2.10.04?

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 03:58 PM PST

iOS 4.3 for iPhone is surely on the horizon and that leaves many unlockers wondering whether or not there will be an unlock ready. It’s been a while but it appears a tweet from @sherif_hashim may be confirming that the issues have finally been worked out.

Don’t go upgrading just yet though! MuscleNerd of the iPhone Dev Team stated earlier that an iPhone 4 unlock solution would not be released until after iOS 4.3 goes public. This unlock would allow iPhone 4 users to unlock their phones on the newer basebands (3.10.01 and 2.10.04).

If all goes well and the unlock does perform as expected, we can probably expect a release a few weeks after iOS 4.3 is released to the public. Any of you unlockers stuck waiting for a solution so you can upgrade? Sound off in the comments!

Redmond Pie

iOS 4.3 unlock working on iPhone 4 basebands 3.10.01 and 2.10.04? is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


MobileNotifier is a great start to what iOS notifications should be [jailbreak]

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 03:58 PM PST

MobileNotifier is a great start to what iOS notifications should really look like. Keep in mind this app is still in beta before you go replacing LockInfo. I’ve been playing with MobileNotifier today and it’s got a lot of potential.

One thing I really like is the ingenious way MobileNotifier makes use of the wasted space while multitasking. When the tray is pulled up, the top of the screen is really just a bunch of empty space. Why not make use of it? MobileNotifier does by putting all your notifications in it. The latest beta also adds support for a lockscreen mode. The app doesn’t currently have any built-in settings but we’ll have to keep in mind it’s an early release of the app.

With an early release comes compatibility issues and bugs. BiteSMS currently doesn’t seem to want to populate in MobileNotifier for me. Hopefully this and several other compatibility issues will be addressed in a future beta. Hit the jump for a couple more screens and to find out how you can grab MobileNotifier!

You can get MobileNotifier for free by adding the following repo to Cydia -

http://phajas.xen.prgmr.com/repo

Check it out and let us know what you think!

MobileNotifier is a great start to what iOS notifications should be [jailbreak] is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


TiPb Picks of the Week

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 03:52 PM PST

TiPb.com Picks of the Week

Every week a few of us from team TiPb will bring you our current favorite, most fun and useful App Store apps, WebApps, jailbreak apps, even the occasional accessory, web site, or desktop app if the mood strikes us. As long as they're iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch related, they're fair game.

To see what we picked, and to tell us your pick, follow on after the break!

Ally and George’s pick: Tiny Wings

Ally: I tend to lean towards games that have a simple concept but keep you entertained for hours. Tiny Wings fits right into that category. It has beautiful graphics and backgrounds but the controls and game play are dead simple. You are a bird and you have one dream, to fly. But your wings are tiny.

You use the hills in order to make your bird propel himself high into the sky. You’ll tap and hold the screen to tuck his wings and make him dive down hills. If done properly, he’ll peak high into the sky after using hills to propel himself. The goal is to fly (glide) as far as you can before night falls.

It’s an incredibly simple game but the graphics alone are worth the $0.99 it costs. Check it out and let us know what you think!

George: This is by far the most addicting game I have played on my iPhone! Its so simple, yet quite difficult at the same time.

Gorgeous yet basic retina graphics, extremely easy, one button controls, and amazing original background music, makes this an even more fun game to play.

Simply race against the clock, and get as far as you can, but avoid 'night fall' as you'll fall asleep, and see the end of your trip.

If you think this game looks too simple, you'd be wrong, as its packed full of bonuses, like 'fever mode' and speedboosts, and objectives, like, getting a certain number of coins, or having to play the whole game upside down!

Pick up this game, and watch time go by, but watch out for night fall!

[0.99 - iTunes link]

Alli’s pick: Soundrop

Totally free, totally mindless, totally entertaining.

The idea is to drop little balls onto tubes to make… well, sound. When the balls hit the tubes, they make a pinging sound. The pitch changes depending on the distance between the “drop” and where the ball strikes the tube.

You can change the length of the tubes to make a higher or lower pitched ping, and you can change the angle so that the balls will bounce up at a new angle where you can create new tubes for the balls to hit, thus creating more pings. If you’re good, you can get the right angles, distances, and number of tubes to create simple melodies. Or you can just make annoying pinging noises.

Either way it’s a nice break from anything productive!

[Free - iTunes link]

Andrew’s pick: Color Splash

Color Splash is a photo app that lets you turn any picture into a black and white photo so you can touch it up with some color, making your photos unique and artistic. The effect is really quite dramatic and can turn any old photo into an inspiring piece with a ’splash’ of color, redirecting the viewers’ attention to the portion of your photo with color. The app also supports all of the bells and whistles of iOS 4 and the iPhone 4’s Retina Display with fast app switching and high-resolution graphics.

If you want a full rundown of how the app works then check our Chris V’s forum review to get a better idea of how fun it is to use. If you’re looking for a quick and easy way to give your photos a new and dramatic look then head over to the App Store and check out Color Splash now!

[$0.99 - iTunes link]

Chris O's pick: Movie Player

This app offers one thing that I find really useful, the ability to create video playlists. I do not understand why the built in video player for the iPhone and iPad fail to offer this simple feature.

My 20 month old daughter uses the iPad in the car to keep her entertained on long journeys. With the built in video app, I have to stop and reach over, take the iPad out of the holder, start the next video and off I go again. Using Movie Player I can create a playlist and it automatically plays the videos one after the other. Stress free driving!

Movie Player also supports lots of formats like divx, avi, flv, mov, wmv, mpg, mpeg, mpeg1, mpeg2, mpeg4, mp4, m4v , mpv, vob, ts, ogv, ogm, mkv and a few others without the need for conversion. It can be a little buggy and fussy sometimes but it is worth it for the playlist feature.

The app is a universal binary, so you only have to buy it once and it runs on the iPhone, iPod Touch and the iPad

[$2.00 -iTunes Link]

Chris V’s pick: Weather Doodle

I am always on the hunt for nice weather apps. I don’t really know why, weather is weather, but I am always looking for apps that either have a really nice user interface/display or contain all the weather data that I want available too me.

Recently, I came across Weather Doodle, which fits nicely into the former category. Weather Doodle does not display pages and pages of weather information, severe weather alerts, weather maps, etc. Instead, it has focused on graphics, and really only shows you the basic current weather (temperature, humidity, etc) as well as a five day forecast. The graphical design is reminiscent of a child’s doodle (thus, the name), but it is not sloppy or poorly done. Simple but pleasing is the best way to describe it. The graphics are animated as well, so you see the rain and snow falling, the clouds moving, the sun shining. In addition, they have in app purchases available to buy other graphical schemes. If you want a simple weather app to replace the basic weather app on the iPhone, Weather Doodle is one that might be worth looking at.

[$0.99 - iTunes link]

Rene’s pick: TouchPad

No not the terribly iPad-looking new tablet announced earlier this month by Palm HP and set to ship sometime between now and the end of the Mayan calendar (or Summer, whichever comes first), but the wonderful iOS app by Edovia that predates it by… a lot. This TouchPad turns your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad into pretty much the best remote ever. It’s more functional than Apple’s, Boxee’s, VLC’s, and XBMC’s combined and far better looking than anything ever produced by the company formerly known as Sony. Seriously.

If you have a Mac Mini media center or a MythBuntu box you don’t even need any extra software. It just works. If you have a Windows Media PC then… well, you need to grab a VNC service but then it also just works. Well, works as in the opposite — being lazy. One crack at TouchPad and your butt will seldom if ever need to leave the comforts of your couch again.

It’s got full on gesture support, so iOS and Mac OS users will feel especially well at home. I’ve often asked-as-in-begged Apple for a Magic Mouse app for the iPhone. Embarrassingly, there was no need to. Edovia had already made it.

Good luck with your TouchPad HP. iOS already has a great one.

[$4.99 - iTunes link]

Your pick?

You're part of the team as well, so jump into the comments and let us know your pick of the week!

TiPb Picks of the Week is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


iPad Live podcast tonight 9pm ET! Come chat!

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 11:34 AM PST

iPad Live podcast tonight 9pm ET! Come chat!

iPad Live hits the air tonight with Georgia, Chad and Rene and you know you won’t want to miss it!

Time: 9pm ET, 6pm PT, 2am GMT

Place: http://www.tipb.com/live/

If you have any questions or topics you’d like us to discuss, just leave them in the comments then come be part of the show!

(And yes, you can watch from iPhone via Ustream Viewer app (here’s how) and iPad (we recommend Duet Browser.)

Chat with you soon!

iPad Live podcast tonight 9pm ET! Come chat! is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


Apple starts using WebKit2 in Mac OS X Lion Safari… Will iOS 5 be next?

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 11:33 AM PST

Apple starts using WebKit2 in Mac OS X Lion Safari... Will iOS 5 be next?

Looks like Apple has finally shipped WebKit2 as part of Safari 5 in the recent Mac OS X Lion beta — so does that mean we can expect it in iOS 5 for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad? Originally announced in April, 2010 just as the first iPad was arriving:

WebKit2 is designed from the ground up to support a split process model, where the web content (JavaScript, HTML, layout, etc) lives in a separate process. This model is similar to what Google Chrome offers, with the major difference being that we have built the process split model directly into the framework, allowing other clients to use it.

WebKit is the open-source browser rendering engine that originated as KHTML/Konquerer on Linux but was taken under Apple's wing and became the core of Safari on both the desktop and the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. (Google also uses it for Chrome, Android, and Chrome OS, Palm for the webOS browser, and RIM is developing a WebKit browser for BlackBerry).

While a year from announcement to deployment (even in beta) isn’t screaming fast, it does make for better, more stable browsing and if anything can benefit from that, it’s mobile. Let’s hope iOS gets it this year as well.

[MacRumors]

Apple starts using WebKit2 in Mac OS X Lion Safari… Will iOS 5 be next? is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


imagining iPad 2. Again.

Posted: 27 Feb 2011 10:06 AM PST

Back in November I tried to imagine what Apple might present as iPad 2. So now, with the iPad 2 event scheduled for next Wednesday, March 2, I decided to go back, update them with any more recent information, and see if anything substantial had changed.

Note: There’s been some debate about whether or not Wednesday will bring a “real iPad 2″ or more of an “iPad 1.5″. Apple has always been very clear about this. The original iPhone was 1,1; the 3G was 1,2; the 3GS 2,1, and iPhone 4 was 3,1. To Apple the guts — CPU, GPU, etc. — are far more important when determining generational jumps (iPhone 3G to 3GS) than case design or radios (iPhone to iPhone 3G).

By every indication we’re getting iPad 2,1 next week — a full generational jump. It may not be the extreme jump some of us want, but then some of us won’t setting for any jump that doesn’t include a vibranium/adimantium shell with full on Cerebro UI. (That’s not happening this year. Maybe not even next).

What we likely will get is enough to make an already great product thinner, faster, and yes — better.

My guesses after the break!

Size and weight

Steve Jobs downplayed the value of 7-inch tablets on a recent Apple conference call which means a) Apple will never make one or, b) Apple is about to make one. Take your pick. I pick the former, at least for now. Apple is making a big deal about how competitors can’t match the iPad’s aggressive pricing so are opting for smaller screens. Jobs also — rightly — pointed to how 9.7-inch screens allow for a fundamentally different software experience than 7-inch devices, which are closer to the 3.5- to 4.3 smartphones. So, the raw size of iPad 2 will probably be the same, as will the aspect ratio (more on that later). It will no doubt be thinner, however. Even if it’s by 1mm, Apple needs to say it’s the thinnest iPad ever when they introduce it or the keynote just won’t seem complete.

That leaves weight. Amazon has thrown down the gauntlet on form factors, claiming sunbathing lady readers can’t hold up an iPad in one hand. It’s comparing unitaskers to multitaskers but never mind that for now — it’s a consideration. However, Apple manufactures iPad out of glass and aluminum and both of those are heavier than the plastic on plastic Kindle. They’re also heavier than the plastic used for the Galaxy Tab (which I’ve said before reminds me of my 1980s Hasbro toys, absent the ability to “transform and roll out).

However, they’re not that much heavier than the similar sized Android and HP/Palm tablets announced since, even though some of those use plastic shells.

Amazon Kindle bikini ad

Making iPad 2 thinner will probably shave down the weight a little. There are rumors Apple is experimenting with carbon fiber as a lighter alternative to aluminum but what can they do to make the glass lighter?

Speaking of which, switching to chemically hardened glass like the back plate of iPhone 4 would be interesting as a design choice, and case makers would no doubt benefit, but a sheet of glass at that size just seems too breakable on a device like iPad.

While iPhone 2G to iPhone 3G was also a significant design change, iPod touch 1 to iPod touch 2 was less so and that’s what iPad feels like at the moment — too early in the product cycle for anything radical.

Slimmer trim, flatter back, a look that better matches iPhone 4 and iPod touch 4 no doubt, but the size and weight probably won’t change too much.

(Though it better have a slimmer bezel the way Georgia’s been going on about it — or she’ll have some explaining to do come next week’s podcast!)

Display

iPad has a 9.7-inch LED backlit, IPS panel at 1024×768, which works out to 132 pixels per inch. That’s astonishingly less than iPhone 4 and iPod touch 4’s Retina Display at 326 ppi. Will Apple go Retina Display with iPad 2? I don’t think they can.

2048 x 1536 at 9.7-inch just doesn’t seem affordable given current technology. Nor does it seem necessary. When you use an iPhone or iPod touch, due to their smaller size you need to hold them closer than you need to hold an iPad. Retina Display (pixels too small to be seen with normal vision) is relative to distance held, so an iPad would need a lower pixel density held at a further distance to still qualify it as a Retina Display. So could they go 1.5x? I doubt it. If Apple doesn’t pixel double the current display in both directions — like they did with iPhone 4 – it would be a nightmare for developers.

So I don’t think Retina Display is likely for iPad 2, nor do I think a change in aspect ratio to 16:9 is likely either. The so-called “wide screen” 16:9 ratio has always been a compromise and it wouldn’t be a good one for iPad. Yes it’s wider than the current 4:3 iPad ratio and the 16:10 ratio of some MacBooks but what content really uses 16:9? Not books. Not web pages. Not email or calendars. Not most things you’d use an iPad for, not even movies. Movies are typically much wider than 16:9 so would still require letterboxing. Only HD TV shows are consistently 16:9. If you’re making a unitasking TV viewing tablet, sure, 16:9 is the way to go. If you’re making a tablet that’s meant to do several types of media well, I’d argue the extra height (in landscape mode) of 4:3 is far more valuable.

We’ve heard Super PLS rumors as well, but not enough suppliers to really deliver panels at the scale Apple needs yet. So iPad 2 will likely get the new, bonded/laminated screen of iPhone 4, so reflectivity will be reduced, and perhaps a better, brighter, more colorful panel, but that’s probably it for the next generation.

Wireless and cellular

I won’t hold my breath for LTE in iPad 2. Apple released the original iPhone 2G with EDGE-only support so they’ve shown themselves to be immune to early cell technology adoption. Verizon and AT&T are both pushing for LTE networks but 2012 seems like a target Apple would rather aim for.

A CDMA version, especially one using the new GSM/CDMA hybrid chipset from Qualcomm is certainly a possibility. The Verizon iPhone uses that chip, albeit with the GSM part not enabled. Could Apple do the same thing, use the Qualcomm chip for economies of scale, but only enable GSM/HSPA on some models and CDMA/EVDO on others?

Certainly. Maybe even probably. But enabling it to work on both carriers would be a huge plus. It would keep the product line simple for users and give them more choice with the same device.

And it would be one way to somewhat mitigate the chance of everyone just switching to Personal Hotspot (or Mobile Hotspot on other devices) and a Wi-Fi only iPad…

Capacity

iPad, like iPod touch, is currently capped at 64GB. Increases in NAND Flash density could see that bumped to 128GB in iPad 2 provided Apple can get the chips at a reasonable enough cost to keep the current price points intact. An ultra-cheap 16GB model — or even a 2010 iPad at $399/16GB — would be attractive if $599 and $699 shifted to 64GB and 128GB respectively. (The new MacBook Airs provide 128GB and 256GB Flash options, albeit at a significantly higher price point). Content gluttons would love it but Apple has shown with the Apple TV that streaming and rental content are their future and that means they may not invest in making iPads with bigger local storage.

If iTunes.com ever becomes a reality, with full on streaming, subscription, and digital locker features — so we can get the content we want, when we want, and where we want it — we probably don’t need 128GB of storage on an iPad.

Unfortunately, I don’t see either iTunes.com or 128GB options happening for iPad 2.

Processor

Apple’s first in-house system-on-a-chip, the Apple A4, debuted with iPad and has since moved through the line to iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV. While Apple doesn’t disclose the speed of those other implementations, they did announce iPad’s A4 as 1GHz. Teardowns have further revealed that the Apple A4 is built from an ARM Cortex A8 CPU and a PowerVR SGX GPU.

While those are decent enough, both have been around since iPhone 3GS and both now have successors on or hitting the market. The multi-core ARM Cortex A9 and most recent PowerVR SGX would both help push a whole new level of apps on iPad. We’ve heard rumors for a while now that Apple has advised developers to start thinking about multi-core processing for their apps. That’s a good sign.

Because Apple’s rumored next-generation processor, the Apple A5 is said to include the dual-core ARM Cortex A9 CPU and a dual-core Imagination PowerVR SGX543 GPU.

RAM

Unlike chipsets, Apple has always been completely mum about the RAM in their devices. The current iPad has an anemic 256MB of RAM which is readily apparent by how often Safari has to reload tabs or apps shut down under the new iOS 4.2 multitasking system. iPhone 4 has 512MB, a significant improvement but iPod touch 4 stuck with the dismal 256MB.

More than any other under-the-hood feature, iPad 2 desperately needs more RAM to hold more web pages, background more apps, and throw more pixels around on the screen. 512MB is what the 2010 model should have had and by the time iPad 2 rolls around, Apple should be looking at 1GB. Again, they’ll probably choose to keep costs down rather than boost performance up, and they’ll need to maintain that $499 entry level pricing, but scrimping on RAM has begun to effect user experience and that’s something Apple sometimes does value more than margins.

That said, no matter how much 1GB feels like table stakes in the 2011 tablet market, 512MB is still like the safe bet.

Camera(s)

All rumors and supposed checks with manufacturers and supply chains point to Apple sourcing a camera, if not both front and back facing cameras, for iPad 2. Given their investment in FaceTime — which now runs on iPhone 4, iPod touch 4, and Mac — that makes a lot of sense.

Will it be one or two cameras then, and will they be high quality like iPhone 4 or low quality like iPod touch 4? I’m guessing we’ll get 2 cameras simply because both iPhone and iPod touch have 2 cameras. Sure it’s almost comical to imagine someone walking the streets with a 10-inch iPad taking snapshots, but 2 cameras allow for the flexibility to easily FaceTime both you and what you’re looking at. (No “intimate moments” jokes, please.) It would also let Augmented Reality apps work better on iPad.

But for those reasons, FaceTime and AR rather than photography, I see iPad 2 getting a lower quality camera than iPhone 4. Don’t get me wrong, I’d love the 5mp sensor but if Apple’s going to cut costs somewhere, a 720p video camera like iPod touch is a place they could easily do it. (And maintain room to offer a better camera with iPad 3.)

FaceTime

Sensors

iPhone 4 and iPod touch 4 both got gyroscopes in 2010. iPad 2 should get the same in 2011. It makes gaming and location services better and Apple’s shown they can do it. This is probably one of the closest things I can point to as a lock.

Battery and Power

The current iPad gets a phenomenal 10 hours of video playback under optimal conditions. It seems almost impossible for Apple to top that but again Apple is likely to want the bullet point in his keynote so if there’a any way for Apple to hit 11 or 12 hours — and be thinner! — they will.

Connectors

Recent rumors of USB not withstanding, Apple has shown a continued aversion to any iPod, iPhone, or iPad port other than their own, now ubiquitous, 30-pin dock connector. They’ve included USB (and sometimes FireWire) on Macs, flirted with HDMI on the latest Mac Mini, and now introduced Intel’s new 10Gbps Thuderbolt, but they’ve also introduced technology like AirPlay and now AirDrop in Mac OS X Lion, which may make HDMI as redundant to Apple’s future plans as the optical drive.

No PCI Express architecture means no Thunderbolt for iPhone, iPad?

Thunderbolt is a PCI Express and DisplayPort based technology, neither of which make sense on previous generation iOS devices and probably won’t in this year’s models either.

Likewise SD card slots. Apple puts them on MacBooks now but not iOS devices. Jonathan Ive has said they didn’t put anything on the original iPad that wouldn’t be used by most people most of the time. That’s why Apple provided a camera kit, ugly dongle though it may be, rather than SD card slot for iPad. Has iPad usage evolved to the point where most people would use an SD card slot most of the time? Probably not.

As many complaints as we get about Apple not providing USB, SD, HDMI, or now Thunderbolt we get just as many if not more about Apple still requiring iPad’s to tether to iTunes to activate, update, and sync. Could Apple take that wireless as well, with AirSync?

Apple TV’s recent iOS 4.1/4.2 update shows iOS can handle on-device software upgrades, but Apple TV is permanently plugged in and doesn’t require any media, apps, or other content to be backed up. If Apple is going to require power and/or backup before updating or syncing, neither of those functions will be going wireless any time soon. (Cloud backups of 64GB iPads just isn’t realistic with current on-device radios, bandwidth and bandwidth caps, and power sources.)

So while the future is clearly wireless, that future isn’t here yet and Apple hasn’t been the type of company to patch future holes with past technology.

Conclusion

While Apple is secretive they’re also cyclical and subject to the laws of physics and economics, which means they’re somewhat predictable. This year’s device will almost always be thinner and better than last year’s device at the same price point.

So, more of an iPhone 3GS-style update but remembering how much better that S made the 3G that’s certainly not a bad thing. And yes, that’s whether or not an iPad 3 (3,1) is coming in September.

Apple can always surprise us though, both in features and especially in details. We’ll find out for sure come Wednesday but until then those were my best guesses — what are yours?

imagining iPad 2. Again. is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


0 comments

Post a Comment