Showing posts with label ipod touch. Show all posts

Apple iPhone to get A5X Processor, 1GB RAM, & New iPod touch Seeded Internally as per REPORT


With the iPad release cycle well and truly behind us for another year, the focus of the tech industry is now firmly toward the Cupertino company’s other big iDevice release, which is, of course, the next iPhone.
Information has been scarce hitherto, however information gathered by the folks of 9to5macsuggests Apple is already internally testing a next-gen iPhone. Although the design is expected to eventually deviate from the current iPhone 4(S) form factor, the prototypes are shelled to look identical to the current range – throwing the eager tech world off the scent.

It seems a foregone conclusion that the next iPhone will include LTE, as implemented within its larger cousin released last month. We can never be 100% certain – particularly with an unannounced Apple product, but if there was no 4G on the fruit company’s sixth iPhone installment, it would be one of the most puzzling moves in tech history.



According to the report, the iPhone prototype is being used primarily to test an A5X chip. Benchmarked as boasting 1GB of RAM, it would speed up an already responsive device, although as the report also correctly points out, the new A5X processor in the new iPad was created especially for the resource-hogging Retina display, so, as-is, wouldn’t really bring much to an iPhone.
Therefore, the iPhone prototypes house a modified iteration of the A5X’s S5L8945Xarchitecture. It’s currently operating under the N96 codename – similar to the N95 name used in the run up to the release last October of the iPhone 4S. As with last time, the name isn’t likely to be used at brand level – no less since Nokia has used that name on a past device.



Meanwhile, the iPod touch hasn’t seen upgrades – cosmetic or otherwise – since 2010, and the future has looked bleak for Apple’s "iPhone without the ‘phone’ part". However, as my colleague Oliver has pointed out, it’s an important product for those looking for an iOS experience on a budget.


An internal iOS 5.1 build contains a file which suggests Apple is plotting a fifth-gen touch, currently being referred to as iPod 5,1 internally. The current iPod is internally known as 4,1, which suggests some significant changes. Being such a target for the causal gamer, the chances of a dual-core processor like the one seen in the current iPhone 4S would seem a realistic implementation.


Souce - [ redmondpie.com ]

iOS 5.1 now available for download for iPhone 4S , 4 and 3GS and iPod touch (4G)

Apple announced the new iPad today along with a new Apple TV. Along with these announcements came the news that iOS 5.1 is finally rolling out today to compatible devices. While the update is still not showing up in iTunes , it is available through OTA (Over The Air).  Make sure you back up your device before updating it. One good news for iPhone 4S users is that battery life is reportedly improved with this update. We observed the same in a beta build. Good news for folks in India and in other countries where 3G coverage is spotty is that the 3G toggle is back (we will confirm this in a bit)

Here is the change log for the iOS 5.1 update

Opera launches Opera Mini Next for Apple iPhone, iPod touch and iPad (Requires iOS 3.0 or later),Android, BlackBerry, Symbian and Java phones

Opera has launched Opera Mini Next, a new Opera Mini app that enables users preview the new features in upcoming release of Opera Mini that is still under development. The Opera Mini Next, version 7 has Smart Page, unlimited speed dials and more. This is a separate app, so you can use Opera Mini Next alongside the regular release of Opera Mini.



What's New in Version 7


  • Added support for more than 9 Speed Dials
  • Added support for platform dictionary
  • Added support for uploading files
  • Added zoom setting
  • Improved traffic compression on iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S
  • Fixed session restore not keeping tabs when relaunching
  • Updated to dark keyboard to match Opera UI
  • Various bug fixes





Opera has launched Opera Mini Next, a new Opera Mini app that enables users preview the new features in upcoming release of Opera Mini that is still under development. The Opera Mini Next, version 7 has Smart Page, unlimited speed dials and more. This is a separate app, so you can use Opera Mini Next alongside the regular release of Opera Mini.
Features of Opera Mini Next v7.0

iPhone 4S cues up iOS 5, holds back iPod touch 5, iPod classic death


The good news regarding Apple’s decision to go with an iPhone 4S this month instead of finding a way to get an iPhone 5 to market in 2011 is that it hasn’t held up the launch of iOS 5. The operating system which should have come with the fifth generation iPhone has instead become a part of the iPhone 4S generation, including all of its features previewed in June along with the new Siri voice assistant feature. The bad news, at least for those who still care about the iPod, is that the entire iPod lineup appears to have been punted back by a year as a result. If there was to be an iPod touch 5 it likely would have mirrored the new hardware styling of the iPhone 5. Instead Apple has left the existing iPod touch 4 in place, spec for spec and feature for feature, with the singular exception of launching a white model. That move has in turn left the iPod touch stranded at a sixty-four gigabyte ceiling capacity (interestingly, now finally on par with the iPhone 4S and its new 64 GB ceiling), meaning that the iPod classic gets to live on another year. And there’s other fallout to the Apple lineup as well…

If it’s to be assumed that Apple product launches have been on the backburner of late as the company has had to deal with the transition to Tim Cook as CEO even as Steve Jobs was living out what Apple appears to now have known were his final days, then the company can be forgiven for serving up the iPhone 4S and very little else this month. But it’s worth pointing out that most Septembers have come with a full revamp of the iPod lineup, and this is the first year in half a decade that hasn’t happened. The iPod touch remains the same product. The iPod classic didn’t go away as a result, with its hundred and something gigabyte hard drive capacity the only reason it’s still on the market. The iPod nano, which was completely revamped last year, didn’t even get Apple’s usual off-year treatment in which the nano has traditionally seen cosmetic hardware changes in the years in which it wasn’t fully revamped. The iPod shuffle now enters its second identical year. Apple TV saw no hardware updates of any kind, a year after having seen its biggest (or smallest, based on physical shrinkage) revision to date. The iPad 3 or iPad 2S, which some expected would be spring in time for Christmas so the iPad could be positioned as a “new” generation heading into the holidays, never got a mention. Now it’s up to the iPhone 4S and iOS 5 to carry Apple’s momentum through at least the next season. And that’s actually a lot…
Siri voice recognition alone will sell a good number of iPhone 4S units, even to those who are upgrading from an identical-looking iPhone 4. Additionally, other iOS 5 features which have been extended to older iPhone models like the 4 and 3GS will run more slowly or a limited fashion on the comparatively outdated hardware, leading some to upgrade to a 4S who were quite adamant that they never would. Early iPhone 4S preorder sales figures point to a multitude of people not needing any convincing before buying. Overall, the iOS 5 feature set arguably brings more new major features and makes more fundamental changes to the iPhone experience than iOS 2 through iOS 4 combined. That makes the iPhone 4S, in a software sense, the biggest upgrade in iPhone history. And that’s a wave Apple will now attempt to ride through at least the end of the holidays, before regrouping in early 2012 with whatever comes next. 
Source - [ beatweek.com ]


iPhone 5 prerelease politics leave 3G enabled iPod touch 5 dangling

Another day, another round of political hand wringing over the iPhone 5 release date at Apple headquarters: the issues which made it miss its summer debut are still holding it back, and now it’s gumming up the works across the board. There’s an iPhone 4S in the works, either as a backup plan or as a less expensive sidekick, but it lies in waiting. iOS 5, the new operating system for the iPhone 5 along with existing products like the iPhone 4 and iPad 2, goes through eleventh billion rounds of beta testing because its developers have time to burn. And speaking of iOS 5, it’s also set to power the iPod touch 5, which has become the forgotten device amongst all the “Where the bleep is my iPhone 5?” posturing. For each of the past four years Apple has held a press event within the first two weeks of September to introduce, among other things, this year’s iPod touch model. That event didn’t take place within the traditional timeframe, leading to the conclusion that the only reason there’s no new iPod touch 5 on the market yet it because the iPhone 5 is still being held up for reasons Apple will never admit to. And yet the lack of public consternation brings into question just how many (or few) people are are actually looking forward to the next iPod touch. A number of reasons explain why, and many of them relate back to the nature of the iPhone 5 itself…


Shortly after its introduction, Steve Jobs quipped that the iPod touch was “training wheels for iPhone,” suggesting that the only reason the device was on the market was because Apple was expecting all iPhone lusters to switch over to AT&T and buy one when their contract was up. That happened in far less capacity than Apple must have expected, however, and it eventually had to relent and expand the iPhone to Verizon (this spring with the iPhone 4) and now Sprint (with the iPhone 5 release date). In the interim years, the iPod touch became the de facto other-pocket occupier for those on non-AT&T carriers who wanted a part of the iOS experience but were sticking with a phone they didn’t want from the carrier they did want rather than going with an AT&T iPhone. That meant Apple had to transform the iPod touch into something more than the crippled punchline it was in its initial iteration…


The first iPod touch had no volume buttons, no camera, no email client, and Jobs admitted it only had a web browser for the purpose of signing onto wifi networks so users could use the mobile iTunes Store (which launched the same day as the original iPod touch, something Jobs may have ultimately regretted). Rather than being the cheap starter-toy Apple envisioned it as buyers quickly transitioned over to the iPhone with their next purchase, the touch became a long term proposition for Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile holdouts. Eventually they demanded the product be improved, and slowly but surely, it gained feature parity with the iPhone – except the part where it had no access to any network based functionality beyond wifi, but that’s another story. What mattered is that, network-crippled or not, the iPod touch became an accidental full-fledged product line of its own over the years. But with the rise of the iPhone 5 on (nearly) ever carrier once its release date gets here, the iPod touch may actually see its end rather than seeing an iPod touch 5…


Such a move might be on the extreme side. There are, for instance, parents who buy the iPod touch for their kids specifically because it’s not a phone, which they don’t want their kid to have. But the rise of the 3G enabled iPad and iPad 2 shows the popularity of mobile-data-enabled mobile devices, as the 3G model now vastly outsells the wifi-only iPad. That leaves Apple with two options going forward. One is to build 3G (or 4G, as it may be) into the iPod touch 5 and include an optional monthly data plan with it, as is the case with the 3G iPad. The other is to offer a non-contract iPhone whose “phone” functionality is only active if activated, and have that replace the iPod touch. Whether this device would be an iPhone 5, or an iPhone 4S, or even a warmed over iPhone 4, is another story. But with the traditional launch date of the new iPod touch having come and gone with few expressing consternation over the matter, it points to the iPod touch (as it’s currently defined) perhaps having outlived its usefulness. Now comes the part where Apple rectifies that by either juicing up the touch or burying it. But we won’t get to find out which until the iPhone 5 itself is ready to dance. 


Source - [ beatweek.com ]

Overview: Current JailBreak Status Of iPhone, iPod touch And iPad





There are may things happening around there in the hacking community. One of the biggest concern that needs to be solved right now is the ‘untethered‘ exploit. And the hope to find the solution shifts towards two hackers who are known for their hard work – @i0n1c & @comex. While @i0n1c denied that he wouldn’t be working on any untethered JailBreak, we have expectations from @comex. Till now, all iDevices can be JailBroken until iOS 4.3.3 either using JailBreakMe or Redsn0w from DevTeam.



If you have upgraded to iOS 4.3.4 or iOS 4.3.5, probability for you to lose untether JailBreak has gone. Apple has permanently killed those system files which were earlier responsible for making ‘untether’ happen. Undoubtedly, iOS 5.0 final would have all those files inherited from iOS 4.3.5 which would make things difficult. However, hacking community would get the momentum once Apple seeds iOS 5.0 in September. This would not waste all the non implemented exploits and target majority of the Jailbreak seekers because recent public releases doesn’t have any tremendous improvements.
On the other side, Geohot seems to have shifted his focus somewhere else. From a  long time, we have not seen him into action. Also, @planetbeing, the person who unlocked iPhone 4 for the first time is in the same situation. Since then iPhone 4 unlock has been continuously possible through Pwnage tool. We respect his contribution and effort. What do you think about this Scenario?
Source - [ iphonehelp.in ]

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G Edition

The latest iPhone and iPod touch are nearly identical devices, ignoring the pesky reality that the latter isn't a phone. We can fix that. Here's how to turn your iPod touch into a viable (and cheaper) iPhone alternative out of the box.
Back in the day, turning your iPod touch into an iPhone required a jailbreak, but now, thanks to some wonderful apps and other tools, using your iPod touch as an iPhone alternative is a piece of cake.
How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G Edition
The iPhone and iPod touch have always been similar devices, but now that Apple's added a front-facing and regular camera to the iPod touch, they're practically identical. You can even make video calls on both devices. The only real missing feature is the phone. Thanks to VoIP (Voice over IP) apps like Skype and Line2 (see more details below), you don't even need to jailbreak to solve that problem.
Although it's easier than ever to use your iPod touch as a full-fledged iPhone, there's still a little work involved. You'll need the right apps and potentially some extra hardware. Let's take a look at your options and how you can work around the shortcomings of an iPod touch-turned-iPhone.

What You'll Need

What you need is actually kind of obvious, but here's a quick overview:
  • An iPod touch - We'll be concentrating on the latest (4G) hardware, but in most cases this guide will be applicable to any iPod touch.
  • A VoIP App - We've already mentioned Skype and Line2, but we'll take a look at additional options
  • A Constant Wi-Fi Connection - If you're looking to have a fancy home phone, your home Wi-Fi network will do just fine. We're going to take it a little further, however, and take a look at actually using your iPod touch no matter where you go.
  • Extra: An iPod-compatible Headset - Because the iPod touch isn't supposed to be a phone, you'll want to make sure you have a headset unless you don't mind always talking on speakerphone. Apple only includes earbuds, so you'll have to go out and buy a pair (of Apple's or anyone's, Bluetooth or wired). While you can technically use newer iPod touches without a headset, it's not designed to be a phone and a headset will make everything much better.
Once you've got it all, it's time to get started. Here's a quick list of what we're going to cover in case you want to jump to a particular section:
  1. Getting Phone and SMS Service
  2. Maintaining Constant Connectivity
  3. Other Options (Jailbreaking, etc.)
  4. Is It Worth It? Pros and Cons

Getting Phone and SMS Service

Your iPod touch isn't meant to have phone service, but thanks to a number of ambitious software developers, you have a few options for making Wi-Fi calls on your iPhone. The most obvious choice is Skype, but there are better options. Here's a look at a few, including what we think works best.

Great for International Calling: Skype

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionThe great thing about Skype: You can make free calls to other Skype users. While maybe not the best overall phone substitute, you can utilize Skype's more limited VoIP features for absolutely no money. Costs come in when you want a real phone number people can dial, or you want to call out, but it really works the best when you're going Skype-to-Skype. In my tests, reliability varied quite a bit. When Skype maintained a call, the quality was quite good. Strangely, despite offering Skype plenty of bandwidth, I'd sometimes cut out during calls and not realize it and others would become tinny and incomprehensible without any network issues. This remained consistent on various Wi-Fi networks. Although it happened more often when calling an actual phone number, the problem still occurred with other Skype users. When Skype works well, however, it works very well, but without consistent results it's hard to recommend it as your primary phone application. Also, while Skype can handle text messaging just fine, it is a little expensive ($0.112 per message at the time of this writing). Since the app is free, however, it's certainly worth installing on your iPod touch as a no-risk option.
How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionSkype via the iTunes App Store

Most Versatile: Fring

Fring was the first-to-market app with various features like VoIP calling, video chat over 3G, and more. What's great about Fring is that it works with all kinds of communication tools you probably already use. Got a GTalk account? Great! It'll work. Do you subscribe to a service that uses SIP(Session Initiation Protocol, or more basically a protocol that makes two-way communication possible)? You're covered! While Fring won't offer you SMS text messages, you can communicate through several instant messaging services (AIM, MSN, ICQ, etc.) as well as social networks (Twitter and Facebook). Call quality is pretty good, and if you have a SIP account you can actually use it as a phone app. The nice thing about Fring is that it gives you a lot of choice. What you pay depends on the services you choose. Although your needs will dictate whether it's the right "phone" app for you and your iPod touch, it's certainly a usable option.

Fring via the iTunes App Store

Best Option: Line2

Line2 is designed to be a complete phone application, and it delivers. The app itself is free to download and try, but after 30 days you'll need to pay $10/month. This might sound like a lot, but you're provided with unlimited calling in the US and Canada, as well as unlimited text messages. (Text messages work great, and the SMS app looks a little nicer even than the iPhone's default Messages app.) Compared to an iPhone plan, you're saving a ton of money. When you sign up for Line2, you'll get a number in any of their available area codes. If the area code you want is not available, you can always switch later when they add it. You can even port an existing number if you're ready to make that jump. Line2 also lets you forward calls to other numbers when you're not available or would just rather send the call elsewhere. Whenever someone calls, you have the option of hitting the Forwardbutton. Currently Line2 needs to be running, at least in the background, in order to notify you of incoming calls (which it does very nicely). If you do not have Line2 running, calls will be forwarded automatically (or sent to voicemail). It would be awesome if the app could send a push notification when it's not running, but backgrounding Line2 is an easy enough way to make sure your calls come in. Quitting it is also a nice way to avoid receiving a phone call. Overall, you get everything you really need out of phone service with Line2. Paying $10 a month is pretty reasonable if it's not in addition to your existing phone bill.

Line2 via the iTunes App Store

The Bottom Line

It's really not a bad idea to download each of these apps, as every one is free. While Line2 is our pick for best phone service and text messaging, if you need to make a cheap call outside of North America (or you simply do not live in North America), you'll want to have Skype. Fring is also useful for making various free calls through virtually any alternative service and provides you with social networking, so under the right circumstances it might be a better phone app for you. Regardless, it's good to have all three. They each have their own advantages and having them all will ensure you'll be able to make any kind of phone call for hardly any money.

Maintaining Constant Connectivity

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G Edition
If you're only using your iPod touch as a home phone, your home Wi-Fi network is really sufficient for handling any incoming calls. If you want to use your iPod touch as a phone outside of your house, however, you really only have two options. The first is accepting that you're at the mercy of free Wi-Fi and that phone calls are only going to come in when you're connected. On the plus side, pretty much everywhere you would want to receive a phone call has free Wi-Fi these days (at least in the US, anyway). On the downside, chances are your car isn't Wi-Fi-enabled. If you need to be able to make and receive calls from your car, a deserted parking lot, when you're out camping, or any location where Wi-Fi signals won't reach, you're going to need some sort of cellular data plan.
If you need constant connectivity, the easiest option is to subscribe for a data plan with a mobile hotspot, which will run you about $60 a month for 5GB (or unlimited, depending on the carrier) of data. Sprint offers the Overdrive, which (in some areas) can provide you with a 4G signal, and Verizon has their very popular MiFi (which only offers 3G). We're going to look at using the Verizon MiFi with the iPod touch in some real-world situations to see how it stacks up to true iPhone service.
Wait, why is this better?
$10 a month seems pretty reasonable for just Line2 phone service, but if you want constant connectivity, throwing in $70/month for the Verizon MiFi is a lot. How exactly is this better than just buying an iPhone? Well, if you get the cheapest, most limited plan the iPhone offers it's not—you'd actually be spending $10 more by getting a MiFi and using Line2 on your iPod touch. If you get AT&T's unlimited plan for iPhone, however, you'd save $45 per month by using a MiFi and Line2 on your iPod touch. Here's the breakdown:
How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G Edition
(Click to enlarge.)
How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G Edition
(Click to enlarge.)
If you don't use your iPhone that much and can stick to the bare minimum, this might not be worth it for you. If you need all the power of an unlimited plan but don't want to spend $115, pairing a cellular data hotspot with your iPod touch and using Line2 could be a great alternative. Let's take a look how this configuration worked in real-world scenarios.

Making Calls

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionLine2 was our app of choice for making 3G VoIP calls on the iPod touch. As a test, I drove from Pasadena to Hollywood, covering areas with both little and heavy traffic (which is about a 90 minute drive for those of you who aren't familiar with a standard Los Angeles Sunday afternoon). While not a scientific test, this provided a bunch of different situations to gauge how the MiFi handled making a VoIP call while moving long distances at various speeds. I spent some time on the highway, some time on the street, some time not moving at all, and ended up walking around outside for a few blocks as well. Basically, I tested out a variety of situations in which you'd enlist the MiFi for calls.
How did it perform? Both better and worse than an iPhone on AT&T.
How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionThe first two things I noticed about making VoIP calls over 3G: the call quality was muchbetter than an iPhone call (it's really a beautiful thing), but call lag was a little more prominent than it would be if the call was placed on a real iPhone. Dropped calls happened about as much as you'd expect from an iPhone, although they weren't quite as graceful. Where the iPhone notifies you (with three beeps) when a call is dropped, the iPod touch (using Line2) just pretended the call was still active even though the call had been lost. This isn't great when you're in a car because it requires that you look at the screen. On the other hand, the signal was only ever lost on the highway (whereas with an iPhone, in Los Angeles, it can happen virtually anywhere). When I wasn't roaming around as much, there were times where I couldn't hear the friend I was talking to and he couldn't hear me, but unlike an iPhone, the iPod touch (using Line2 and the Verizon MiFi) recovered in a few seconds and continued to work just fine.
The bottom line? For me, the iPod touch with a cellular data hot spot works about as well as an iPhone, and even better when you're not driving over large distances.

Other Considerations

There are three other things to worry about when using a cellular data hotspot as your means of connecting and calling: how data performs, battery life, and pocket-ability.
When connected to the MiFi, data performance on the iPod touch was excellent. It provided speeds that were as fast or faster than AT&T's network. More importantly, decent speed and connectivity was much more consistent. AT&T's network didn't always respond in some areas, but the MiFi performed admirably anywhere it went.
How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionBattery life, however, is a bit of a problem. The iPod touch will last you all day and then some, but the MiFi will not. If you're lucky, you'll get four hours out of the MiFi before it quits on you, and a little over three is more likely. On the plus side, you can purchase an extended battery to give you a day's worth of use, but that'll set you back an extra $100 and add a bit of bulk to the wonderfully slim MiFi. If you primarily use the MiFi in your car, however, you can always charge it with a USB adapter for your car's power port.
Another downside to using a MiFi for your connectivity is that you have to carry around and charge two devices. The advantage of having your connection separated from the iPod touch is that you can leave the iPod touch in your pocket and place the MiFi elsewhere, allowing you to get a better signal without having to adjust your position. The MiFi (with the standard battery) is also ridiculously slim. Combined with an iPod touch, they're about as thick as an iPhone in a case. This isn't necessarily the most elegant solution, and it's not without it's problems, but all of these sacrifices can save you a lot of money on your monthly cellphone bill, so they're worth some consideration.

Other Options

Using any of the great VoIP apps now available for iOS is definitely the easiest way to add phone service to your iPod touch, but it isn't the only way to do it.

Jailbreaking

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionOur original iPod touch to iPhone conversion required jailbreaking, and if you're looking for more control, jailbreaking's still a good option. Siphon SIP/VoIP, a jailbreak app installable via Cydia, is still the way to go. It's able to be integrated more closely with the OS than just a regular app (like previously mentioned Fring, its non-jailbreak competitor) and, as a result, tends to perform a bit faster. If you're cool with jailbreaking your iPod touch and have a SIP provider you want to use to make calls, Siphon is a good way to get that done.

The Apple Peel 520

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G EditionThe Apple Peel 520 is a Chinese-made device (just like your iPod touch!) that adds 3G data capabilities to your iPod touch. It also doubles as a padded case. You just snap in your iPod touch and use an existing data plan to get the job done. While it's not yet available anywhere but China, GoSolarUSA plans to bring the Apple Peel 520 to the United States. While using this device does require a jailbreak, it's as close as you'll get to truly turning your iPod touch into an iPhone.

Is It Worth It? Pros and Cons

How to Turn Your iPod touch into an iPhone: 4G Edition
Now that you know your options, the question is really this: is it worth it? Let's break it down:

Pros

  • You save a ton of money over paying for an iPhone (or any newer smartphone, really), whether you get a 3G data plan or not.
  • Dropped calls are about as frequent as they are on an iPhone.
  • Headset features work exactly the same as they do on the iPhone, so the experience feels very similar.
  • The high-end iPod touch offers twice the storage as the high-end iPhone (64GB vs. 32GB).
  • The iPod touch, bereft of a 3G radio, gets better battery life.
  • If you get a cellular data hotspot (like the Verizon MiFi), you can keep your iPod touch in your pocket while placing the MiFi elsewhere for a better signal.
  • A lack of cellular reception in your home is completely irrelevant since you can place your calls over Wi-Fi.

Cons

  • Despite being pretty close, phone features are not quite as seamless on the iPod touch as they are on the iPhone.
  • Dropped calls are not as obvious as they are on an iPhone, so it's not very easy to tell when you've lost someone without looking at the screen (bad for the car).
  • The iPod touch isn't built with the intention you'll use it as a phone, so you need to purchase a headset for it to really shine.
  • The iPod touch doesn't provide a GPS, so you will need to purchase an external GPS unit at an addition cost if you want to use it as a navigation device in your car (although you could try relying on Wi-Fi signal triangulation).
  • The iPod touch's camera isn't nearly as good as the iPhone 4's.
  • If you want to make calls using a cellular data hotspot (like the Verizon MiFi), you have to carry around two devices.
  • If you use a cellular data hotspot, its battery life is pretty poor (only up to four hours). While you can get an extended battery for your hotspot that'll last the day, it'll cost you around $100.
Whether or not you're ready to turn your iPod touch into an iPhone, it's encouraging to see how far our options have come. What used to be a pretty in-depth process is now as simple as making good use of the right apps. If you can't afford an iPhone contract or just don't want to, your iPod touch is now a worthy contender.

Have you turned your iPod touch into an iPhone and have some great tips to share? Let's hear 'em in the comments!
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DISCUSSION THREADS
Like others have mentioned, go for Virgin Mobile's MiFi. I've been using that with my iPod Touch since I'd first realized its potential last month, so here's my extra two cents:

Pros:
- This is THE best unlimited data and "voice" plan that you can get for $40 (I've coupled my iPod with the previously-mentioned-on-Lifehacker, "SipGate".)

- Even though you aren't offered true GPS, using a MiFi still gets you real time coordinates *most* of the time (we'll address the caveats below). The benefit of this is that you can still use the Maps application as a reference tool when driving (you won't get reliable turn-by-turn though) and you can still use location-aware apps like GPark and Gas Buddy.

- Not only will your iPod become an iPhone, but you'll always be able to connect another 4 devices at a time. Think the Droid X's ability to become a mobile hotspot minus the extra $30 a month Verizon charges for this same feature (plus, you won't get charged for the data like Verizon either.)

- There's no contract for either the MiFi or the iPod (obviously). The real benefit of this? No early termination fees.

Cons:
- The MiFi device runs HOT. Much hotter than I think electronics generally should. I won't be surprised if I have to buy another one a year from now after the components in this one die from the internal temperatures running this hot.

- As mentioned in the article, it only comes with a 4 hour battery life. You can extend this to 12 hours for $100 like it also mentions, but the one thing you need to realize is that it will doublehow thick the MiFi is - something to consider if you thought you were going to keep this warm device in your pocket all day (likely, it won't have to be on that often though if you're like me and are always near WiFi.)

- Since the iPod isn't designed for phone calls, its screen isn't designed to account for touching your face like an iPhone, so you may find yourself in situations where you accidentally tap the screen with your cheek in such a way that your VoIP app of choice may react funny (usually app developers account for this though.)

- Because 3G signal is much more limited than, say, edge or normal voice, you'll be fine in the city, but as soon as you find yourself driving through the country coverage is spotty at best. This means if you plan on roadtripping, you should still bring a dumbphone with you in case you should break down, and if you planned on using your iPod as a GPS you'll be out of luck.

- No "vibrate" option since iPod's don't come with anything like that built-in, so you'll have to get used to push notification sounds.

Ultimately this thing comes down to what kind of lifestyle you have. If you're like me and are always either at home or the office where there's constant WiFi, this could be perfect.

When I run errands, hang out with friends, or just wanna listen to Grooveshark or Pandora in the car I just flip the hotspot on and I'm good to go.

If you find yourself constantly on the road though or at the very least frequently out of the house, you're going to want to at least keep a dumphone on you at all times, and at that point you'll have three devices doing the job of one smartphone (but for a fraction of the cost sans contract.) 

Source - [ lifehacker.com ]
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