strredwolf: (Huh?)
[personal profile] strredwolf
Lets see if I can summarize the iPhone 4 "antennagate" press conference:

"Here's some sales stats, some videos of what we've achieved, where we tested it, it's not completely our fault, please don't kill us for it...

"Free cases next week, your pick from approved sources since we can't churn out bumpers fast enough; refunds for those who bought Apple bumpers.  Offer ends Sept 30th when we get more data and can digest it all.  Please upgrade to iOS 4.0.1 so you can get a more accurate view of signal coverage.  If it doesn't work, bring it back before the 30 days after purchase are up for a no-fee refund.

"And we're sorry.  We got a good tower here. We're fixing the proximity sensor in a later iOS release, and the white iphone later this month."
Want my take?
  • At the very least, Apple needed to push out the display fix.  Just the algorithm update would of worked, but they also needed a corporate bugfix for Exchange servers.  I swear they made the bars bigger for fun just to say it's digital Viagra.
  • The next step Apple needs to do is tap AT&T's data from the "Mark the Spot" app.  If the signal's weak, Apple should go over where it is weak and test it.  Get out of the *!$)@#*( office!!! And leave the case behind.

    There's some areas that are well known to be weak:  Leo Laporte's house, the Amtrak Northeast Corridor between BWI station and MARC Halethorpe station, and MTA Maryland Light Rail's Cherry Hill station.  Get with the needed parties, and start testing in real-world conditions.
  • Explore having the GSM antenna, when the Bluetooth antenna is bridged to it, act like a much longer GSM antenna.  If it turns out there's a better signal under the "Whole phone band is one antenna" model over the "2/3rds of the phone band" model, switch over and keep monitoring.
  • You're going to have an iPhone 4.1, a minor mod for the iPhone 4.  You'll also going to work on the iPhone 5, which will support LTE.  LTE is the future, and is where you'll be able to make more money by playing Verizon off of AT&T.

Date: 2010-07-21 02:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] strredwolf.livejournal.com
If they did, they should of said it. The way they're saying (and acting) now, it's like the press caught Steve with his pants down.
(Steve did say they're working their butts off, and look at him! No butt left! :D )

And no, LiveJournal only lets one browser stay logged in at a time, and I want it kept here at home. Don't like it? Complain to the Russians!

Date: 2010-07-21 07:41 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
The way I understand what they've said, they didn't think that it would bother people that much, or would be a serious issue in customers' normal, day to day use. ie: most people wouldn't hold it in a way that would cause a problem. What they've been working their butts off doing is making sure that it really is what they think it is, rather than some other production issue or other bug. If Apple were to say one thing now, and then it turned out there was a different problem, it would be *highly* embarrassing.

The only real question I have in all of this is, is there a reason they couldn't have put the seam on the bottom of the phone?

Date: 2010-07-21 10:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] strredwolf.livejournal.com
Good question. I would imagine it would need to be on the port to keep the current port arrangement, plus have software tweaks as the size of both antennas would of changed; but I'm not sure it would hold up to normal (ab)use.

Date: 2010-07-21 08:16 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I wouldn't at all be surprised if it would require some RF tuning tweaks. Antennas can reflect signal back to the transmitter. If they are the wrong geometry they can reflect back enough to damage the power amp. Essentially, the amp is pushing the signal one way and getting reflected back something it did earlier, out of phase, so it's fighting itself. Tuned circuits before an antenna are sometimes used to adjust for this in ham radio systems. Not sure what they do in cellular.

Also, regarding your previous belief that Apple missed this during their two years of design work on this antenna, here's what Jobs said:
"And so the iPhone antenna went through all of this. We tested it. We knew that if you gripped it in a certain way, the bars are going to go down a little bit, just like every smartphone. We didn’t think it’d be a big problem, because every smartphone has this issue."

Please do some basic research before you state things as if they are objective facts. Had you chosen to do a bit of basic research into what an anechoic chamber was, you would've been able to ask reasonable questions in your postings instead of adding misinformation.

Personally, I have one un-answered question about this: Did Apple realize how easily this grip could be reproduced, how many places it would be noticeable, and how significant it would look on the display?

Profile

strredwolf: (Default)
STrRedWolf

May 2020

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
1718 1920212223
24252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 18th, 2026 03:05 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios