Showing posts with label iphone 4s. Show all posts

Mercedes announces Apple iPhone 4S & Siri Integration into New Models



Apple has often been called, for better and sometimes for worse, the luxury automobile of personal computers. Now it seems that metaphor has influenced reality as Mercedes-Benz has announced plans to integrate the iPhone and Siri's voice control functions into its new A-Class vehicle, according to a PSFK report.
The new A-Class vehicle will seamlessly merge iPhone 4S functions into the car's in-vehicle display via Daimler's Digital DriveStyle App and COMAND Online multimedia system. While docked in the car, the iPhone 4S will receive an automatic charge and offer access to the device's content as well as social networking applications, including Facebook and Twitter.
But the biggest win here for Apple is the fact that Mercedes-Benz is the first carmaker to offer Siri as a part of its voice control systems. Using Siri, drivers will be able to send SMS text messages and emails while traveling, check location and weather, schedule appointments on-the-go, as well as select from the full menu of music available on their iPhone 4S. This hands-free, mobile control of a device that many consider their primary computer gives us our first real glimpse at what traveling with a virtual assistant feels like.

This latest news may also explain why late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs seemed so closely tied to his famous license plate-free Mercedes-Benz – he may have been testing this integration out personally for the last couple years. According to reports, Jobs purchased a new Mercedes-Benz SL55 AMG about every six months to avoid getting plates, but the reasoning behind sticking with one car particular brand of vehicle, year in, year out, perhaps had just as much to do with research and development as it had to do with personal taste.
Although the first rollout of this iPhone 4S pairing is limited to the brand's A-Class vehicles, Mercedes-Benz plans to introduce the Apple integration in the B-, C- and E-Class vehicles starting this fall.

iPhone 4S and iPhone 4 both beat Nokia Lumia 800 in browser benchmarks

Despite Microsoft’s claims earlier this year that its Windows Phone 7.5 Mango gadget running IE 9 would beat out mobile Safari in browser benchmark tests, the latest video comparison uploaded by 359gsm shows quite the opposite. Placed side by side, the iPhone 4S and the iPhone 4 both beat out the Nokia Lumia 800.
The iPhone 4S can be seen significantly surpassing the Lumia 800 in performance in all tests, which include Browsermark tests, Speed Reading test, Sunspider, Acid3, and HTML5. The iPhone 4 also didn’t do too shabby, beating the Lumia 800 by a smaller margin in most of the browser tests.
The iPhone 4 is running iOS 4.3 while the iPhone 4S is running iOS 5. The tester notes that with the Speed Reading Test, iOS 5 on the iPhone 4 gives it a big boost up in speed. You can take a look at the video for yourself or catch the complete scores below. A higher number is better in most of the tests, except for the Sunspider Test where a lower number is better.
Nokia Lumia 800 – WP 7.5 (aka Mango)
iPhone 4S – iOS 5
Browsermark Test: Higher is better
iPhone 4 (iOS 4.3) – 37 503
Nokia Lumia 800 (WP7.5 aka Mango) – 30 452
iPhone 4S (iOS 5) – 86 702
Speed Reading Test:
iPhone 4 (iOS 4.3) – 2 fps (iPhone 4 with iOS 5.0 – around 37 fps)
Nokia Lumia 800 (WP7.5 aka Mango) – 40 fps
iPhone 4S (iOS 5) – 60 fps
Sunspider Test: Lower is better
iPhone 4 (iOS 4.3) – 4018.2 ms
Nokia Lumia 800 (WP7.5 aka Mango) – 7188.7 ms
iPhone 4S (iOS 5) – 2266 ms
Acid3 Test:
iPhone 4 (iOS 4.3) – 100/100
Nokia Lumia 800 (WP7.5 aka Mango) – 100/100
iPhone 4S (iOS 5) – 100/100
HTML5 Test:
iPhone 4 (iOS 4.3) – 210
Nokia Lumia 800 (WP7.5 aka Mango) – 141
iPhone 4S (iOS 5) – 296
iPhone remains the best gadget.

Source - [ slashgear.com ]

Apple Ignores iPhone 4S Audio Problem, Faces Backlash


An ongoing and widespread audio problem with Apple’s iPhone 4S has its customers growing angry. The issue has gone unacknowledged since just after the phone’s release in October 2011.
Owners of a new iPhone 4S are finding that some outgoing calls have no audio. The person they call can hear them, but the caller can’t hear the recipient - no ringing, nothing. The issue seems to compound around use of Apple’s included hands-free setup.
Right now, 108 pages of customer complaints sit ignored on the Apple Support Communities forum. The page has been viewed over 150,000 times.
The iPhone owners are clearly surprised and in some cases enraged that an Apple issue can have so many pages - and continue to grow - without a response of any kind from Apple.
After languishing for three months, customers on Apple’s Support forum are starting to call their situation “Audiogate.”
October 17 was the first post for the issue - three days after the phone hit stores.
You can see the whole mess at iPhone 4S - Outgoing call no audio on the Apple Support boards. Astonishingly the issue has never been addressed, with new complaints being added daily from customers around the world - and over 1,500 people have posted with the issue.
Today an exasperated customer writes,
Three of us in my family have a brand new iPhone 4S from Sprint and ALL have the same issue — no audio and microphone does not work when using the included earphones/hands-free setup.
This seems to be a VERY common problem on the 4S judging from this thread and the three brand new phones we have. It’s a MAJOR problem given that the law requires hands free use of mobile phones in several states including California and New York!
APPLE, PLEASE ACKNOWLEDGE AND FIX THIS ISSUE.
Why isn’t Apple taking their calls?
People in the support forum have tried everything they can to fix the issue, becoming their own audiogate support group. Many have returned their gadgets - iPhones. A significant number of customers report they still have the same outgoing audio problem with the new iPhone 4S they receive as a replacement.
On average the problem is that some outgoing calls have no audio - some claim one in ten calls, others claim infrequency as little as one in fifty.
The problem is being reported on networks around the globe, including Sprint, AT&T, Verizon, and even Vodafone UK, Vodafone Spain, T-Mobile Poland, Sonera Finland, Comcel Columbia and Fido Canada.
Another poster explains,
I’ve been playing around with the problem a bit. It seems as though plugging headphones into the phone and THEN trying to make a phone call injects chaos into the system.
When I do such, my speakerphone button apparently thinks it’s on, then off, then on, then off and then repeats the process until the phone app freezes.
The large group has been comparing notes on fixes for months; the general opinion is that the problem is software related. Many of them believe that Siri is to blame.
One user reports being able to reproduce the issue with the following:
1) Use Siri.  Raise to speak or home button press.  Doesn’t seem to matter. When Siri is done answering you, press the home button.
2) Make a call. If its acting up, you will have no audio from the handset until you toggle the speaker phone button. Then the audio from the handset comes back.
I can get a failure about 1 out of every 7 calls after a Siri activation. Once it fails it usually fails for 2 or 3 calls in a row.
Handing out a new iPhone 4S can’t be a cost effective solution, and customers are becoming suspicious. A recent comment from today explains,
Update - I took it to the Genius Bar in San Francisco, and the first time around was told that it was likely a software issue or possible an earphone issue, so they wiped my phone and gave me new headphones, and handed me back the phone.
As soon as that was done, I tried again and had the same exact issue. I immediately demonstrated it for them, they took it back, and then said that they don’t know how to resolve it so they gave me a new phone.
Interesting that the first time they seemed to say they couldn’t replicate the issue and that the software refresh should fix things, but immediately when I replicated it for them they were pretty quick about just handing me a new phone, no questions asked.
Let’s hope they address and solve audiogate before the Apple Support Communities thread page count climbs any higher.
I also hope they get around to addressing Safari’s serious - and currently unanswered - IOS 5 caching issue

Users report SIM card issues with Apple's iPhone 4S and iOS 5.0.1

Some owners of Apple's new iPhone 4S have been hit with SIM card error messages, even if they are connected to a CDMA carrier that does not use SIM cards.

One reader contacted AppleInsider on Thursday to share their frustrations with error messages that read "Invalid SIM" and "SIM Failure" on their iPhone 4S. This person said the errors began occurring after they updated to iOS 5.0.1, though other users posting on Apple's official Support Communities website, in a thread with more than 30,000 views to date, have experienced similar problems since the iPhone 4S first went on sale in October.

"This problem can only be solved when you reboot your iPhone," the person, who is an AT&T customer, wrote in an e-mail. "Everything else fails -- restore, removal of the SIM, etc."

When users experience a SIM-card-related error, basic functions including making phone calls, sending text messages, and using mobile data become unavailable, as the handset cannot make a connection with the wireless data provider.

The iPhone 4S is a "world phone," which means its redesigned antenna and internal components are compatible with both CDMA and GSM carriers. Micro SIM cards placed in the iPhone 4S are only used by GSM carriers to identify a subscriber and grant them access to a carrier's wireless network.

But while only GSM carriers, like AT&T in the U.S., use the micro SIM slot on the iPhone 4S, users on CDMA carriers, like Verizon and Sprint, have also reported experiencing SIM-card-related errors. iPhone 4S units sold through CDMA carriers come with a "roaming SIM" installed, which allows CDMA customers to roam worldwide on GSM networks.

"No service on my white 32 GB 4S on Verizon," user 'racyb' wrote in October. "Did a shutdown and reboot....it went into searching mode and finally found Verizon again after 1 minute. What is going on?"

Since the release of iOS 5.0.1 earlier this month, another thread at the Apple Support Communities website features more users who say the problems began occurring after they updated their iPhone 4S. Some say their iPhone displays full signal reception, yet error messages like "Call Failed" and "Invalid SIM" continue to display.

SIM Card


"Same problem here in Brazil," user 'GuiMedrado' wrote on Wednesday. "Bought my 4S - 32GB unlocked in Switzerland and couldnt' make it work after upgrading to 5.0.1. Any solution?"

The iOS 5.0.1 update was released earlier this month in an attempt to address battery life issues reported by some users. But some battery-related problems have remained, and Apple has publicly said it is still working to fix those issues.

One rumor this week claimed that Apple will issue a new update, iOS 5.0.2, no later than next week in a second attempt to improve battery life with iOS 5. There was no mention of any fixes for SIM card issues or error messages.


Source - [ appleinsider.com ]

iPhone 4S set to enter India


iPhone 4S
After creating a huge buzz in tech terrain with its grand debut in this half of the year, the iPhone 4S is ready to set foot in India. Aircel has announced that the next generation iPhone is scheduled to arrive next week, on November 25, while pre-orders for the same will begin from tomorrow.
Operating on the latest iOS 5 platform, the fresh Apple smartphone comes equipped with a 3.5-inch 960 x 640p widescreen multi-touch Retina display. Its ESP is the Siri functionality that is basically a voice activated assistant which lets users send messages, fix meetings, make phone calls and conduct other such functions by directly talking to the smartphone.
iPhone 4S
This device is already available in most countries including South Korea, Hong Kong, USA, UK, Australia, Poland, Portugal and Greece, among many others. The handset is embedded with an 8MP camera featuring a custom lens, larger aperture, advanced hybrid infrared filter and optics along with increased sensitivity and a face detection feature. The primary camera allows users to shoot videos in 1080p HD and the smartphone also sports a front facing VGA FaceTime camera.
The newest iPhone version is integrated with a dual core A5 chip processor which is expected to be responsible for speedier web browsing, convenient switching between apps and enhanced gaming as compared to the previous generation. It features world phone capabilities and lends support to multiple connectivity options such as Bluetooth 4.0, Wi-Fi, 3G and EDGE. Furthermore, the Apple smartphone offers talk time and standby time of up to 14 hours and 200 hours on 2G networks, respectively.
Although the Aircel page states the arrival date of the iPhone 4S to be November 25, no details regarding its price in India have been revealed. It can be registered for pre-order from tomorrow and will be available through authorized Airtel retail stores next week. At the same time, IBN Live says the price could be marked at Rs. 40,000 and over Rs. 50,000 for the 16GB and 64GB versions, respectively.

Source - [ mobiletor.com ]

iPhone 4S battery life problems: bug in location services suspected


Location services on iPhone 4S
System location services on iPhone 4S: using too much battery?
A flaw in Apple's location services system in its new iOS 5 software is increasingly suspected of being the cause of rapid battery drain for some owners of the iPhone 4S.
A growing number of people have found that the "Setting Time Zone" element of the Systems Services within the broader Location Services product seems to be operating even when there is no chance that the user would have moved to a different location or time zone. An icon beside the setting, which indicates whether it has been used in the past 24 hours, suggests that it is running repeatedly to access the phone's location even when there is no apparent reason to do so.
Location services can prompt large drains on any smartphone's battery: they use a combination of the Wi-Fi network name, where available, plus mobile mast data and GPS sensor input, to calculate the phone's position. The mobile mast data, for example, is usually calculated by comparing the strength of signals from the three nearest phone masts and triangulating against them. However if such a calculation is made too often, by polling the masts, it will begin to use battery power unnecessarily.
On iDownloadBlog, Oliver Haslam suggests: "it appears that iOS 5′s GM release introduced a bug that causes the Setting Time Zone function to keep the location tracking circuitry running constantly, draining battery power considerably. Switching it off may mean that your iPhone will no longer set its own time zone when you travel, but that's a small price to pay for having your iPhone last more than 12 hours on a full charge… We have tested this method on 4 different iPhone 4s handsets, including an iPhone 4 and an iPhone 3GS. All have reported drastically improved battery life after switching 'Setting Time Zone' off."
Some commenters have suggested they see little difference, but the purple icon beside the setting indicates that it is active - and for many people will have been active during the past 24 hours.
Apple's use of location services is deeply integrated into the iPhone 4S and iOS, but others have suggested that it is consuming too much battery power. "Two years working with dedicated GPS units taught me to be extremely careful with GPS settings: [it] kills battery very fast," David Hamilton, a web and Java consultant, remarked on Twitter.
Discussions on Apple's support boards are still raging over what specifically could be draining the battery so much more rapidly. Apple has not so far made any comment, but the Guardian reported on Friday that its engineers have begun contacting some people who have been reporting exceptionally rapid use.
The Guardian's own latest tests on an iPhone 4S found that it achieved 36 hours of battery life with a mixture of Wi-Fi, mobile data, and combined use, including 6 hours' using apps, phones, browsing and some location services. The majority of that included having the "Setting Time Zone" tab activated. There is no data yet from the ongoing tests about what effect disabling it has had.
• The "Setting Time Zone" setting can be found in Settings -> Location Services -> scroll to bottom to "System Services" -> Setting Time Zone.
Source - [ guardian.co.uk ]

What’s Really Killing Your iPhone 4S Battery?


Battery performance on the iPhone 4S isn't quite as good as it was on the iPhone 4. Some chalk it up to the more power hungry dual-core processor, which makes sense. Kind of.
But others are attributing the problems to early bugs related to iOS 5 power management, or the unnecessary use of GPS location services. According to the UK Register, people have been using the iOS app System Activity Monitor to try and diagnose what has caused the greatest (or abnormal) drain on their battery. Here's a list of the suspects:
• Corrupted iCloud contacts.
• A bug where apps enter a never ending crash loop.
• Using location services to change your timezone or to trigger reminders.
• iTunes wi-fi sync.
• Sending error reports to Apple
If your iPhone battery life seems egregiously poor, try tweaking some of these settings. If it still doesn't work, hopefully it's a problem Apple can fix with a software update. [The UK Register]

Source - [ gizmodo.com ]

The First Phone with Bluetooth 4.0 Technology - iPhone 4S


Bluetooth Smart Marks
Among the many novel technological features of the iPhone 4S like Siri and the A5 processor, one that's gotten little attention is that it's the first cell phone to feature Bluetooth 4.0, which makes the iPhone compatible with a whole new category of low-energy wireless devices. That means the phone will be able to talk to things like special thermometers and scales, which previously couldn't have Bluetooth technology since it consumed too much power.
Bluetooth 4.0, which was announced in April last year, expands wireless abilities to many different kinds of products. Now not only can your phone and laptop have wireless abilities, so can your wristwatch, medical bracelet, or anything you can think of that includes a battery. Since the low-power Bluetooth 4.0 radio sips power, devices that previously had to send their data only when connected manually can now do so over the air. All they need is a Bluetooth 4.0-compatible device, like the iPhone 4S and the newly announced Motorola Droid RAZR, on the other side.
Although Bluetooth 4.0 expands the definition of Bluetooth, it risks making things more confusing, since the spec actually includes two different kinds of devices. First, there are the low-energy devices that now have low-power Bluetooth radios. But they need to be designated separately from the traditional products—phones, tablets, and PCs, mainly—that those low-energy gadgets will talk to.
In the hopes of clarity, the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) today introduced what it calls "Smart Marks," two different labels for the two different classes of Bluetooth devices. Those low-power doodads will now be called Bluetooth Smart devices, while Bluetooth 4.0 devices like your cell phone fall into the category Bluetooth Smart Ready.
The main physical distinction is the radio. Bluetooth Smart devices will have just a single-mode low-power radio while the Smart Ready ones must have a dual-mode radio that does both low and normal power. In addition, a Smart Ready device must be capable of downloading new software to keep its Bluetooth profiles up to date. If it helps, think of the Smart Ready device as a mothership, while the Smart devices are shuttlecraft.
In addition to the iPhone 4S and Motorola RAZR, both the MacBook Air and the Mac Mini include Bluetooth 4.0. It's also on board the Acer Aspire Ultrabook and a few phones recently launched in Japan, the Bluetooth SIG said.
Source - [ pcmag.com ]

IPhone 4S first for low-power Bluetooth


The iPhone 4S has a little-heralded feature that makes it unique among phones, at least for a while: It can talk to a new class of wireless devices, such as watches and heart-rate monitors.
The phone, which went on sale in the US on October 14, is the first to have a new type of Bluetooth chip that can connect using very little power. The chip uses so little power that it can go into devices that are powered only by a standard "button cell" battery common in watches. The battery can last for years.
Bluetooth Special Interest Group, the industry group behind Bluetooth, on Monday said these small devices will be labeled "Bluetooth Smart." More fully featured devices such as the iPhone that can communicate with them and with other, standard Bluetooth devices will be labeled "Bluetooth Smart Ready."
Casio of Japan has said it will introduce a watch in late December that's Bluetooth Smart. It will be able to link to a smartphone and alert the wearer to incoming emails and text messages by beeping and vibrating.
Sony Ericsson had a watch five years ago that used regular Bluetooth to do the same things the Casio watch will be able to do. But the Sony Ericsson watch weighed nearly half a pound because of its big, rechargeable battery, and it lasted only three weeks on a charge.
Nordic Semiconductor, a Norwegian company, has said that one of its Bluetooth Smart chips will go into a belt that measures its wearer's heart rate and relays it to a smartphone.
Other possible Bluetooth Smart devices include glucose sensors for diabetics and home-automation sensors that could, for instance, tell a phone if all the windows in the home are closed, said Suke Jawanda, chief marketing officer of the Bluetooth Special Interest Group.
Besides the iPhone, the soon-to-be-released Razr from Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc will also be Bluetooth Smart Ready, Jawanda said. It's a touchscreen smartphone that doesn't have much in common with the old clamshell Razrs.
A few laptops already are already Bluetooth Smart Ready.
Bluetooth Smart was developed by Nokia Corp, which called it "Wibree." It yielded the technology to the Bluetooth SIG in 2007 to spread its adoption.
Source - [ stuff.co.nz ]

Hacking Apple's Siri: Not So Easy


Hackers looking to port Apple's Siri digital assistant to iOS devices other than the iPhone 4S claim to have a rudimentary version of Siri running on the original iPad. Twitter user Jackoplane recently posted screenshots online showing Siri fully integrated into the iPad's operating system. The only problems is Siri can't do much on the iPad right now since most of Siri's processing takes place on Apple servers. Similar to the version of Siri on the iPhone 4 that hacker Steve Troughton-Smith had up and running earlier in October, the iPad doesn't appear to be able to interface with Apple's servers.
Photo Credit: Twitter user Jackoplane
But that may not be a long term problem, according to Jackoplane and his Siri hack partner Joshua Tucker. The pair are also working on porting Siri to the iPhone 4 and recently posted an FAQ online(Google Docs) that details their work.
The document hasn't been updated since Friday so there's no mention of the iPad port; however, the pair do claim to have figured out a method to fool Apple's servers into thinking an iPhone 4 is an iPhone 4S. The problem is the scheme appears to require a separate server that can intercept and modify data sent to and from Apple's servers. "Hosting this particular server to intercept [Siri] data...will be the venue for all users to use Siri without an iPhone 4S," according to the FAQ.
It's not clear if Jackoplane and Tucker are working with Troughton-Smith on the iPhone 4 port or if each team is working separately. Troughton-Smith recently said via Twitterthat he is still working on porting Siri to the iPhone 4, but would no longer be posting progress reports online until the project was finished.
There's no clear timetable for when hackers will get Siri working on the iPhone, iPad or any other device (Jackoplane and Tucker hope to get Siri working on all iOS devices including the iPhone 3GS), or how it would be released to the public.
In their FAQ, Jackoplane and Tucker say they are concerned about how their work could get them into legal trouble over infringing copyright on Apple's software. In an attempt to get around any copyright issues, the pair say some of the code used to power Siri is being rewritten.

Source - [ pcworld.com ]
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