Unlocked iPhones to be sold in Germany

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007 by Sigma

To be in compliance with a court ruling, Deutsche Telekom announced today that they will immediately start selling an unlocked iPhone without contract for 999 euro (US $1,477). The iPhone will still be sold, as before, with 2 year contract for 399 euro ($US $590).
Bloomberg reports that customers who purchased the iPhone in Germany after November 19th may have their iPhone unlocked for free. Existing German iPhone customers can reportedly also receive the unlock for a fee.
Prior to this, the only unlocked iPhones in existence have been “hacked” with 3rd party applications. This introduces legitimate unlocked iPhones into the marketplace that will presumably withstand future iPhone software updates.

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BBC introduces iPhone-friendly podcast site

Saturday, November 17th, 2007 by Sigma

The idea of Listening to live podcasts on your iPhone is pretty awesome; I think it’s possibly the closest you can get to filling the void left by live radio. And the BBC’s just made it even easier to do by introducing a nifty site for navigating much of their audio content with an iPhone-friendly site.By firing up Safari on your iPhone or iPod touch, you can just head over to BBC Podcasts, and you’ll be presented with several options for navigating the BBC’s content in an easy to use, iPhone-style hierarchical fashion. Browse by channel, by genre, or alphabetically. Selecting any podcast will show you a list of recent episodes, along with a short synopsis of each, and the ability to hit play right there and listen. Obviously, it works somewhat smoother on Wi-Fi than on EDGE, though according to the BBC Radio Labs, the team at the Beeb is working on tweaking the setup for EDGE. But if you ask me, it’s a very good start.

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iPhone: Ein Prosit

Saturday, November 10th, 2007 by Turbo

My German’s a bit rusty, as Humprhey Bogart remarks to Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca, but if you spreken sie deutsch a little better than me — it would be hard to do any worse — and have an interest in the iPhone launch over in Germany, head on over to MacWelt for a metric ton of iPhone coverage. There’s a photo galley of launch events in Munich and Cologne, though you’ll be restricted to thumbnail views. Still, it’s interesting to see how interest in the iPhone translates to other parts of the world. (We mentioned the U.K. coverage earlier.)

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iPhone timing, MythBusters style

Saturday, November 10th, 2007 by Turbo

myth.jpgIf you’ve watched the Discovery Channel for more than a few minutes, chances are you’ve come across the show MythBusters. In at, special-effects gurus Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman — previously seen pimping Intel’s Santa Rosa chipset at an event in San Francisco in May — test popular myths and urban legends (and, in the process, shoot and explode things on a regular basis).

Macs have made several cameos on the show in the past. But in a recent episode called “Trail Blazers”, Adam whips out an iPhone (complete with what appears to be Incase’s Leather Fitted Sleeve) and uses the Stopwatch function of the Clock app to time how long it takes for a 7-foot trail of gasoline to burn from one end to the other. That’s much cooler than my last use for the Stopwatch — figuring out how long it took me to walk home.

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First impressions: iPhone 1.1.2 goes global

Saturday, November 10th, 2007 by Turbo

iphonebattery.jpgAfter much speculation, iPhone 1.1.2 has been released—sort of. While it’s not yet appearing for everyone who runs the iPhone software update check in iTunes, you can snag the rather hefty 160MB file directly from Apple. To install, you’ll need to drop the ZIP file in your ~/Library/iTunes/iPhone Software Updates folder and then connect your iPhone and option-click the “Check for Updates” button; iTunes will give you a dialog box from which you can select the ZIP file and it’ll carry out the update as normal. Or you could just wait until it shows up in iTunes. Any moment now.

I’ve only been running 1.1.2 for a matter of minutes, but there are already a few new features. The biggest change, as predicted, is the International support, which you’ll finder under Settings -> General -> International. You can change the language of the entire phone into French, German, or Italian (wait, when is Italy getting the iPhone?); I changed it into French for kicks, so I could check my courriel. You can also enable four additional keyboard layouts: English (UK), French, German, and again the mysterious Italian; doing so puts a little globe icon next to the spacebar whenever the keyboard comes up. Tapping it will cycle through the keyboard layouts you’ve enabled. One nice touch I discovered was that if you toggle into the number/punctuation mode, it replaces the $ key with the appropriate currency symbol for your layout: £ for the UK, € for French, German, and Italian.

The International section also contains an “Asian Font” setting, in which you can pick either Chinese or Japanese (what, no Thai? Korean?). And “Region Format” lets you control how information like date, time, and phone numbers are formatted. You can choose from a bunch of different locales for each language. There’s still no built-in support for Arabic and Hebrew in Safari, though. Apparently some regions get more loving than others.

1.1.2 brings a couple of other small additions as well. The phone’s battery charge now shows up in iTunes, next to your phone icon under Deviccies (pictured above). And your custom ringtones—both those purchased through iTunes and those you transfer with software like Ambrosia’s iToner—now appear in their own “Custom” section of Settings -> Sounds -> Ringtones, above the “System” tones (and all of my iToner ringtones remained intact through the update).

The one downside to the update—which, in and of itself is actually a good thing—is that Apple has patched the TIFF exploit that could be used to jailbreak the phone and install third-party apps. All third-party apps disappeared along with the update. The good news is that iPhone hackers have already apparently cracked 1.1.2, so look for a new jailbreak procedure shortly.

The biggest question for me, which I’ve yet to answer, is whether 1.1.2 does anything about the much-discussed battery draining problems which seem to have plagued many an iPhone user. I’ll be checking it out in the next few days, and shall not rest (or recharge) until I’ve discovered the truth.

[via MacNN]

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