How Verizon knocks you back to the dial-up modem times

February 9th, 2011 | by | hardware, internet, iphone

Feb
09

I just thought about the iPhone 4 now being available on Verizon and all the buzz going on in the US about switching over from AT&T.

Maybe I don’t get CDMA right… but if I do: have you ever thought about, how Verizon knocks you way back to the times when we all used dial-up modems to get online?
Think back. What happened when you were surfing the web or, “worse”, downloading a file and a call came in? Right: the internet connection was dropped immediately because the incoming call had priority.

This was not a real problem if you lived alone (you could easily unplug the phone when you needed to be online), but if you were living with family, this could become a real hassle.

Now, as far as I can see, Verizon, using CDMA, knocks you back a good 10-15 years by giving you the exact same experience. Not only that you cannot and will never be able to have a phone call and check your mails or visit a website at the same time. No, if you’re downloading an App/Movie/Album or doing something else online via “3G”, an incoming call will terminate that connection immediately. There won’t even be a question “Take Call / Stay Online”, you’re not even left with a choice.
And you certainly cannot unplug the phone (App) on your iPhone as you could have done with that real landline phone back than.

I don’t really know if this is important to anyone willing to switch… it just crossed my mind and I wanted to share that thought. :)

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Does the iPhone 3G(S) Jailbreak drain battery like crazy?

November 2nd, 2009 | by | apple, hacking, iphone

Nov
02

Well, I won’t tease you: yes, it does!
I recently decided to jailbreak my iPhone 3G(S) for the first time – having plenty of experience doing so with my old iPhones (3G and classic) and the iPhones and iPod Touches of firends and friends of friends.

I used the “official” jailbreaking method, provided by the DevTeam: Pwnage Tool.
Almost directly after jailbreaking the iPhone I had the impression, that I could watch the battery indicator fall.
After two days, the battery was running on empty. Although I had it plugged into my Mac several times in order to synchronize it. I hardly ever plug the iPhone in to actually charge the battery. I do so in order to sync it and it gets charged “accidentally”.
This tactic worked well ever since I got my 3G(S), so that this experience really left me… bewildered.

And it made me setup this experiment:
Step 1: I un-jailbreaked the iPhone again, setting it up as if it were a new device (meaning: I did not use the backup iTunes created earlier, when asked).

Step 2: The experiment started on last monday, 8 a.m. after having the iPhone plugged into the wall socked for about 6 hours – completely charged.
I used the iPhone no different then before: I’m listening to the iPod for about 2-3 hours per day, receive between 40 and sixty mails via “push” (Google Exchange) and about 30 “other” push notifications (Boxcar, …) and use it as an actual phone for somewhat between 5 and 10 minutes per day. As described above: I don’t explicitly charge the iPhone. I sync it with iTunes and leave it plugged in a couple of minutes while doing so.

Step 3: On tuesday evening, the iPhone was charged to about 40% and I entered phase 2 of the experiment: jailbreaking it again.

Step 4: Again, I used Pwnage Tool to jailbreak my iPhone. Again, I charged it for almost exactly 6 hours (wall socket) and then started using it as usual until thursday evening. At least that was what I had planned. At 4 p.m. on thursday the battery was totally drained and the iPhone decided to go bye-bye.

Step 5: I decided to re-do the test in a shorter version over the next (now: last) weekend using a slightly different setup: I disabled all push services and disabled my mail account on the iPhone.
Saturday was going to be the “Steve day”, Sunday the “jailbreak day”.
To cut a long story short: after a testing period of 20 hours on each day and almost exactly identical usage, the iPhone had about 19% higher battery charge level on the “Steve day”.

I dare not to say if this is what everyone will always experience when jailbreaking the iPhone 3G(S) – but this is what I got.
As of today, the iPhone is still jailbroken. However, what do I really get from it (things I really want/use): xGPS as a zero-cost alternative to buying Navigon and/or waiting for Google’s navigation solution… and… well… the hope for a tool that re-enables the tethering option in a non-scary way. So I guess, I’ll wander back to steve-land this evening…

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