2010-08-13

iBand Aid says you don’t need no stinkin’ case
Posted by MobiG @ 2:03 pm

You want to fix the antenna issue on your iPhone 4, but you aren’t a fan of cases and have no fear of breaking your device? iBand Aid is available in multiple colors and is a little sticker that you can put over the antenna area.

ibandaid sg 460x500

The sticker prevents your skin from touching the antenna area and making the antenna not work. You can get one in the normal beige Band Aid color as well as green, silver, black, blue, pink, and white. My daughter will be mad; all 5-year-olds know that only Sponge Bob Band Aids will fix a booboo.

A single iBand Aid pack will set you back $4.95 and includes all colors. Five packs will cost you $19.80 and dealers can get 160 of the things for $489.90. You could buy a case of real Band Aids and some scissors for a fraction of that price.


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2010-07-29

Motorola takes another shot at the iPhone 4, says Droid X is ‘no jacket required’
Posted by MobiG @ 5:29 am

Well this is getting good. Motorola was one of the first to take a subtle swipe at Apple’s iPhone 4 antenna dilemma with an ad saying you could hold the Droid X “any way you like,” Apple came right back with a video purportedly showing the Droid X suffering similar attenuation issues when held in the right hand, and now Moto’s responded with this cheeky ad that plays off Apple’s free iPhone case solution by saying the Droid X can make calls “without a bulky phone jacket.” Yeah, it’s pretty good — particularly because unlike most other phones, we haven’t been able to death grip the Droid X with any noticeable effect on 3G reception. (Although, truth be told, we can drop the WiFi signal by a few bars pretty easily.) Either way, we’re certainly enjoying this little slice of swagger from Moto — check a larger version after the break.

Continue reading Motorola takes another shot at the iPhone 4, says Droid X is ‘no jacket required’

Motorola takes another shot at the iPhone 4, says Droid X is ‘no jacket required’ originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Jul 2010 20:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2010-07-28

Best Buy to offer free invisibleSHIELD 4fix to aggravated iPhone 4 owners
Posted by MobiG @ 7:53 pm

It’s hard to say for certain what exactly this flyer means, but it sure looks as if at least some iPhone 4 owners will be able to snatch a free invisibleSHIELD 4fix (valued at $9.99 or so) from their local Best Buy. Based on a number of tips that we’ve received, we’re getting the impression that the yellow-tagged retailer could be handing out (and installing) completely free side coverings for any iPhone 4 owner that waltzes into a store, presumably as a proactive measure to fend off returns or to upsell consumers on an entire invisibleSHIELD / separate case. Nothing about this notice makes clear that you actually have to buy your iPhone 4 from Best Buy in order to take advantage, but we probably wouldn’t waste a lunch break giving this a go without a verbal confirmation from your local store manager. Until it’s made official, of course.

Update: We’ve heard from another tipster that the deal is indeed legitimate, and it’s for any human with an iPhone 4, not just those who purchased their phone from Best Buy. We’d recommend calling your local store to double check, but things are looking up.

Update 2: Ah, so we’ve finally received the full skinny from another tipster. The offer only applies to those who purchased their iPhone 4 from Best Buy / Best Buy Mobile or for Best Buy Reward Zone members. Granted, it’s pretty easy to sign up for the aforementioned reward program, but those are the stipulations. The official BB name for the product you’ll be getting is the Zagg SideShield, which would cost you $9.99 otherwise.

[Thanks, Anonymous]

Continue reading Best Buy to offer free invisibleSHIELD 4fix to aggravated iPhone 4 owners

Best Buy to offer free invisibleSHIELD 4fix to aggravated iPhone 4 owners originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Jul 2010 10:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2010-07-23

Apple starts refunding Bumper purchases automagically
Posted by MobiG @ 10:32 am

Automatic refunds, or so the email says. We’ve been on the receiving end of a deluge of tips this morning pointing out that Apple has begun funneling cash back into its users’ pockets — a most unusual event, to be sure — to live up to its retroactive promise of free Bumpers for all (who buy their iPhone 4 before September 30). If the particular wording is to be trusted, that should mean that even those who haven’t yet bothered to put in a claim, but did purchase a Bumper, will find themselves enriched in due course. Apple estimates this bandaid solution to its antenna problems will cost $175 million in real cash money, but we suspect the biggest price to pay will be in the form of pride and reputation.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Apple starts refunding Bumper purchases automagically originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Jul 2010 01:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2010-07-21

Apple shows Nokia’s N97 Mini can be force choked, too (video)
Posted by MobiG @ 8:21 am

Nokia claims it always prioritizes antenna performance over physical design, and we’ll take them at their word, but that apparently didn’t exempt one Espoo handset from Apple’s grip of doom. Here’s the Nokia N97 Mini going down for the count, from a full seven bars to two. Of course, Apple doesn’t mention whether calls or data drop when the handset’s held this way. Video after the break.

[Thanks, Lyndon W.]

Continue reading Apple shows Nokia’s N97 Mini can be force choked, too (video)

Apple shows Nokia’s N97 Mini can be force choked, too (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 23:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2010-07-20

Antenna-aid bandages your iPhone 4 reception issue, hopes for role in next Eminem video
Posted by MobiG @ 10:29 pm

Oh, Steve — you should’ve known better. You show up and remove a laptop from a manila envelope, and Earth’s most creative go and create a case fashioned out of one. You go and suggest that Eminem could “come out with a band-aid that goes over the corner” of your controversial iPhone 4, and well… this happens. You could wait for a free case, or you could buy six of these Antenna-aids for five bucks. The choice is obvious.

Antenna-aid bandages your iPhone 4 reception issue, hopes for role in next Eminem video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 13:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung joins the crowd, rejects Apple’s Omnia 2 antenna claims
Posted by MobiG @ 6:31 pm
Samsung joins the crowd, rejects Apple's Omnia 2 antenna claims

RIM and Nokia aren’t the only ones saying “WTF Steve!?” after last Friday’s press conference attempted to draw the competition into the Antennagate saga. Samsung has issued its own choice reaction about supposed problems with the Omnia 2, though this one is somewhat less sternly worded than the others:

The antenna is located at the bottom of the Omnia 2 phone, while iPhone’s antenna is on the lower left side of the device. Our design keeps the distance between a hand and an antenna. We have fully conducted field tests before the rollout of smartphones. Reception problems have not happened so far, and there is no room for such problems to happen in the future.

Why is Samsung being rather more polite? Because it’s full of really nice people? Or, is it because the iPhone 4 is stuffed with Samsung memory chips? We’ll let your level of cynicism be your guide here.

Samsung joins the crowd, rejects Apple’s Omnia 2 antenna claims originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Jul 2010 09:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2010-07-18

HTC fires back at Apple antenna demo with percentage pew-pew
Posted by MobiG @ 5:08 am

Apple’s Friday press conference may have left a bad taste in some rival handset manufacturer’s mouths, but not all of them are taking Cupertino’s derision of their devices seriously — HTC’s Droid Eris was arguably the most affected by the grip of doom, its bars dropping to zilch when held, but the Taiwanese company’s keeping any controversial opinions to itself for now. Instead, it’s sharing a simple percentage to help clear the air. Whereas Apple claimed over 0.55 percent of customers called AppleCare with reception-related complaints, HTC’s Eric Lin told Pocket-lint the Droid Eris technical support rate was 0.016 percent, nearly thirty-four times lower — though even with a seven-month head start, we have to wonder if the Eris sold close to three million by the time Verizon brought the axe down.

HTC fires back at Apple antenna demo with percentage pew-pew originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Jul 2010 20:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2010-07-17

Inside Apple’s Antenna Design and Test Labs
Posted by MobiG @ 10:29 pm

Hardly had our liveblog finished when Apple sprung the second half of their iPhone 4 antenna event, the “show” companion to Steve Jobs’ presentation “tell”. SlashGear was among eleven journalists and analysts – both print and online – to be taken around the company’s wireless lab, formerly one of the best kept secrets on the Cupertino campus, and now a multi-million test facility featuring custom hardware, fake brains and kit that wouldn’t look out of place in a sci-fi film. Read on for full details of our tour.

100714k lab test photos 12 EI f 540x337

Apple wasn’t joking when it said the lab was secret; our tour marked the first time a group of outsiders were allowed through the doors, and even the company’s employees generally can’t get a glimpse inside. Our guide for the morning was Ruben Caballero, one of Apple’s senior wireless engineers and the subject of the Bloomberg antenna warning “leak” which Jobs bluntly described as “total bullshit” during his keynote. According to Caballero, the test facility is unique by virtue of its full sixteen anechoic chambers, each costing around $1.2m. They’re staffed by forty engineers, physicists, electromagnetic specialists and other experts, between them holding a few walls’ worth of PhD certificates.

That uniqueness – and the presence of multiple black cloth-clad prototypes – meant we weren’t allowed to shoot video or photos; the images you see here are from Apple’s own stock. Meanwhile the complexity (and expense) stems from the sheer amount of wireless connectivity companies are now packing into their devices, each demanding their own testing and tweaking. The “black labs” are the first step to eventual wireless certification, and while that final stage is the responsibility of third-parties like the FCC, there’s a whole lot of work to be done before a device like the iPhone 4 is ready for external consideration.

With each anechoic chamber responsible for testing a different aspect of wireless performance, each differs in some unusual and distinct way. From an initial concept design, Apple starts with passive testing with radios simply slotted into hardware mock-ups – “junk in the trunk” as Caballero put it – as the prototypes are refined. Initially the testing is passive, that is, the device is isolated in a “dead” space and its performance tested from every angle. No small part of the expense involved with each chamber is in isolating it from wireless interference. Walls, ceiling and floor are bristling with foam spikes and ridges, carefully designed to make them radio-neutral. The Euroshield doors are similarly complex, ensuring no external signals get in and nothing inside the room escapes detection.

Apple Antenna Design and Test Labs 3 540x395

The first test setup we observed, an iPad suspended in a long, tapering room, was described as establishing the baseline performance: what Apple can expect from the iPad in a perfectly neutral environment. Slowly rotating the full 360-degrees, in a process that can take in excess of 24 hours, in this specific setup the lower frequencies were being monitored; different bands are handled by different chambers. As for why the iPad – a shipping product – was still begin tested, Caballero said Apple is constantly looking to monitor and improve performance. Passive testing is followed by active measurements, the device on a Styrofoam pedestal and examined in different chambers with various combination of radios turned on to see how they co-exist; each individual test can take up to eight hours.

100714k lab test photos 07 EI f 540x337

As for the results, we obviously lack the engineering background to understand them fully, but Apple basically ends up with a 3D plot of the performance. Somewhat ironically the testing software runs in Windows XP, though Apple do use Macs to run the Microsoft OS. Designs and prototypes get refined and retested; Caballero told us the iPhone 4 was in testing for two years altogether before its launch.

Apple Antenna Design and Test Labs 2 540x445

After isolated passive and active measurement comes the attempts to balance real-world style use – with people actually touching, holding and generally using the devices – with the rigors of standardized testing. Both real employees and artificial body parts are used; we were shown a chamber engineers have nicknamed the Stargate, a huge loop packed with “multiprobe” sensors made by SATIMO. The employee sits in a rotating chair, holds the device – in this case an iPhone – as if using it, and then the potential interference from their body can be measured. What Caballero wouldn’t tell us is exactly how long this sort of testing goes on, beyond the general two year process for the iPhone 4.

100714k lab test photos 04 EI f 540x337

In a different lab, the Apple employee was put aside in favor of an array of artificial parts: special test heads filled with a custom mush that mimics the wave-mangling effect of a human brain. With the iPhone strapped in place, it’s back into the test chambers for a further cycle through the measurements. There are also a fair few artificial, foam hands made for Apple by CTIA – there are no standardized specifications for their design – which basically are used in the same way, attempting to pin down real-world use in a way that’s compatible with replicable tests.

Apple Antenna Design and Test Labs 540x338

It’s not only hands that Apple has commissioned; they also have a $20,000 artificial foot, studded with sensors underneath, that’s used to test the Cupertino company’s collaboration with Nike on the Nike+ exercise system. Apple even brought in grass to test its potential impact on wireless performance, attempting to replicate likely usage scenarios of the end product. A CT scanner, meanwhile, is used for non-intrusive examination of defective products – we were shown a 3D scan of an iPhone 4, which we thought would make a pretty good wallpaper for the smartphone – since, Caballero explained, merely opening up the chassis could impact a device’s electromagnetic performance and thus mask the true issue.

Finally, rather than carrying out all their testing on-site, Apple can take their prototypes out for field testing. A fleet of field validation vans – with suitably tinted windows to keep out prying eyes – can carry employees or artificial heads and hands, tracking wireless performance against GPS-pinpointed location. That data is then compared with what has come out of the chambers back at the lab.

You can’t accuse Apple of falling short when it comes to their investment – in terms of finance and time – in wireless testing. There’s a whole lot of precision equipment being used by a team of obviously skilled people, the same people we presume that were “working [their] butts off” in the 22 days since the iPhone 4′s release to get to grips with the antenna complaints. As Apple senior VP Bob Mansfield told us near the end of the tour, “there’s real engineering going on here”, and it’s that engineering investment that helps the company “make great products”.

In the end, something Steve Jobs said during his presentation stands out as perhaps the key take-away point. “X marks the spot” the slide said, Jobs adding that Apple made the antenna join point “very visible”. “Here’s where you touch it, everybody!” he laughed, and indeed a purposeful or accidental touch to the black line will make its mark on your signal strength. Apple is being upfront about the iPhone 4′s imperfections, they’ve showed us the exhaustive nature of their testing, and they’re offering a solution and a get-out clause for those dissatisfied all the same. If you still can’t live with it, then don’t buy it; just don’t presume it’s all down to shortcomings on the part of Apple’s engineers.

Video tour of Apple’s Antenna Design and Test Labs.


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Inside Apple’s ‘black lab’ wireless testing facilities
Posted by MobiG @ 8:04 am

It’s not surprising that after Apple finished explaining the iPhone 4 antenna issues to the press today, the company wanted to go one step further and say “yes, actually, we do test the hell out of these phones before we release them to the public.” Though Steve Jobs went over the lengthy and intensive kinds of radio evaluation that goes on at Apple’s headquarters, it didn’t seem to be enough for the folks in Cupertino. And that, we suspect, is why we were invited (along with a small group of other journalists) to take a brief tour of Apple’s Infinite Loop labs. Though we weren’t allowed to shoot video or take pictures, we can tell you about what we did — and what we didn’t — see and hear behind closed doors.

Continue reading Inside Apple’s ‘black lab’ wireless testing facilities

Inside Apple’s ‘black lab’ wireless testing facilities originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Jul 2010 23:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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