Archive | June, 2010

The 12-hour iPhone 4 wait game

June 29, 2010

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So after my AT&T pre-order debacle, I decided to get my butt up early to jump in the line to try to acquire an iPhone 4. Let’s go through the day.

I woke up at 2:55 AM, five minutes before my alarm, jumped out of bed and got dressed. I gathered the items I would need. These items include my Zune, headphones, my iPhone 3GS and my Mophie Juice Pack Air, since I knew I would need the extra battery. One thing I didn’t bring, but should have, was my iPad; next time I definitely will bring my iPad. Surprisingly, it only took me about 15 minutes to get to the nearest Apple Store. On a normal day, it would take somewhere between 25 and 30 minutes to get there.

When I got there, they had two different lines, the reservation and the non-reservation line. The reservation line had about 25 people in it, while the non-reservation line had about 125 people ALREADY in line at 3:20AM. The first person was already in line at 2:30PM on June 23rd. Having been in the iPhone 3G line, I figured 125 walk-ins would ALL get iPhones.

So we began waiting… Around 6:30AM they started making everybody clump closer together. Those who had tents—yes, actual tents—packed them up and the line shrunk to about 1/2 the size, yet the same number of people.

The waiting game began. With the store opening at 7:00AM, I expected a 5-hour wait. Why five hours, you may ask? Well, I knew AT&T would have activation issues and it would take a while to get through both the reservation and non-reservation groups, with reservations going through faster than the walk-ins. We heard that there were about 900 reservations at this store alone. So, the group around me (there were about 8 of us) did become a bit worried about it, but not too much so.

So we waited and moved a bit, and waited and moved some more, and waited and waited. Once we were somewhat close to the Apple store, say maybe 25 people behind the first person, we had an Apple store employee come out and inform us that there were not enough phones for the walk-in group and they were going to start passing out ‘claim tickets’.

The ‘claim ticket’ system was a good one, except for one flaw. The flaw being that the only way to get a phone was to have somebody from the reservation line either change their mind or not qualify for a phone. This was the most excruciating part of the whole day. There was a stretch of time, probably two hours, when we didn’t move at all. We just sat and waited. Part of the hold up was due to AT&T’s activation servers being slow and Apple not just letting people take their phones once they had paid for them.

Around 11:00 AM, Apple started asking individuals if they wanted to be added to the ‘priority list’. The priority list, as explained by the Apple employees, was a store-specific list that would allow those who were in line to be emailed when a phone was available and ready for them to pickup in the store. Once emailed you would have 24 hours to pick up the phone. Just to be on the safe side, most of those in line did add themselves to the priority list.

Around 11:30 AM, we were close enough to the front of the line that we decided to wait it out. There was a group of three, of the original eight, who decided to bail because they didn’t think they would get a phone and they had other places to be and other things to do, like work.

Sometime between 11:00 AM and 12:30 PM Apple got something that everybody who was still standing in line was really hoping for: a shipment of iPhones. They received both 16GB and 32GB phones. We know it was between these times because we saw four different delivery trucks deliver items to the Apple store; we speculated but our suspicions were confirmed around 1:15 PM.

That’s when one of the Apple store employees came out with two thick stacks in his hand. They contained the oh-so-elusive ‘golden’ claim tickets. These weren’t small stacks either. The stacks must have been 50 of each 16GB and 32GB. By this time I was person number three in line, without a claim ticket. When the Apple employee came walking by, I asked for one 16GB (for my brother) and one 32GB (all mine). With my golden tickets in hand, next came the task of getting the pre-order cancelled that was placed through AT&T.

4733767580 e6e94141fe z The 12 hour iPhone 4 wait game

I tried calling the AT&T store to try and get a hold of somebody who could help me cancel the order. The first attempt got me nowhere. I waited for 10 minutes then tried again. Luckily someone picked up. I explained the situation, but he had an issue finding the pre-order. Once he found the pre-order, he had to do some checking to see if it had actually shipped. Fortunately it had yet to ship so he was able to cancel the order and reverse the upgrade on my line (which was the whole reason I was in the line instead of waiting at home). This did take about 15 minutes for them to complete. I, being skeptical, checked the Apple site to verify that I would be able to upgrade my phone. This made me excited to sit and get both phones.

So now it was just an excited waiting game, which seemed to go by quicker, despite the fact that by this time it had already been 10 hours of waiting. We all just waited. Once inside it was setup quite nicely. As you walk into the store, there is the new iPhone 4 table. You can stand and play with the iPhone, or as I and another did, disconnect the iPhone 4 from power and charge your own iPhone. After sitting in line so long, we managed to lose all of our power, which was scary considering I had my Mophie Juice Pack and my iPhone was fully charged when I left.

I finally did get to have an Apple employee assist me with retrieving my iPhones. It didn’t take long during checkout. I only had to sign my name like, six times. Three for each phone. Total for two phones: $534.11, which is STILL cheaper than what I paid for my original iPhone, which was $537.68, although, granted, it’s only $3.57 less; plus, my brother has since paid for his phone.

There are a couple of things I wish Apple would have changed. First off is the ability to have those purchasing a phone be able to activate it at home, instead of having to do it in the Apple store. The part that took the longest is the activation with AT&T, which didn’t fully complete until I popped out the SIM cards and put them back in.

There are some other things to note as well. Throughout the day Apple had been passing out snacks and water. During the lunch time Apple provided pizza for everybody in line, if they wanted it. This gesture is entirely nice of them and not needed. My guess is that they were prepared for the temperature to be high and the humidity to be extreme making it completely uncomfortable.

Overall it was a good day. Yes, waiting for just about 12 hours did suck, but in the end I did end up getting the phones I wanted. The weather worked well for those of us who were waiting in the Chicagoland area. The best part, actually, were the people who were camped out with me for those long 12 hours, except for that idiot who tried to scalp a claim ticket just because he could.

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iPhone Tip – Free up memory and conserve battery life

June 29, 2010

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iPhone Tip Free up memory and conserve battery life Photo iPhone Tip   Free up memory and conserve battery lifeA feature that has been asked for by many of Apple’s iPhone customers is multitasking.  Apple gave it to us with the release of iOS 4. They have done a great job of implementing it.  I’ve been using it on my iPhone 4, and I love it.  It’s great that I can switch between applications seamlessly.  Just press twice on the home button, and voilà, I can see all my running applications.

Multitasking has an imminent downside as you already know.  When you have too many background processes running, your iPhone will tend to be sluggish, plus it will take a toll on the battery.  These two factors will affect the iPhone 3GS more than the iPhone 4; however, there is a simple way to close these running applications.  You will free up memory, and save on battery life.

IMG 0037 200x300 iPhone Tip   Free up memory and conserve battery lifeFollow these few simple steps:

  • Press twice on the Home button to reveal your running applications
  • Now swipe your finger on the row of applications from right to left to get to the end of the open applications.
  • Press and hold on the icon.  The icons will begin to jiggle, and they will have a red circle with a minus in the top left corner of the icon.
  • Press the red circle with the minus until all the applications are gone.

That’s it!  Now you have freed up memory on your iPhone as well as conserved the battery life.  You can check in from time to time and perform the above steps if you notice that your iPhone is becoming sluggish.  If all else fails, you can always reboot your iPhone to give it a new spring in its step.

Photo Credit: iPhone Multitarea Multitasking

 iPhone Tip   Free up memory and conserve battery life
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Apple Sells 1.7 Million iPhone 4s

June 29, 2010

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By now you’ve heard of the throngs of people eagerly anticipating their new iPhone 4. Many of you were probably in a line, whether it was a pre-order line or a ‘walk-in’ line. I know I was. Well, we were among the 1.7 million others who received their iPhone 4 within 72 hours of its initial release.

4744401106 df5432122e Apple Sells 1.7 Million iPhone 4s

This is considered the ‘most successful’ launch of any Apple product. The selling averages out to approximately 6.56 iPhone 4s every second during the first 72 hours. That’s astonishing considering that Apple sold one million iPads in 28 days.  Let us say that one million of these were sold in the United States. This would definitely account for some of the slowness experienced in activating iPhone 4s on the AT&T network.

The original iPhone took 73 days to sell one million, and the iPhone 3G took three days to hit one million. The iPhone 3GS also took three days to hit one million units sold. There is no doubt that the iPhone 4 has been a success.

Not to rain on the success of the iPhone 4, but Google is activating 160,000 Android handsets per day. This comes out to 4.8 Million handsets per month. I’m sure Apple cannot maintain the pace considering that any new orders for iPhone 4s are not shipping until mid-July, at the latest. Therefore, the likelihood of Apple maintaining the success of the iPhone 4 on a consistent basis is non-existent.

Article Via Apple

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iPhone 4 Unboxing Video

June 29, 2010

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iPhone 4 Unboxing Video Photo iPhone 4 Unboxing VideoI got my new iPhone 4 on Thursday morning, and later that day I made this iPhone 4 unboxing video with the assistance of my good friend Bill Schmidt.  He’s the one operating the camera, so thanks Bill. And now, on to the iPhone 4 unboxing video.

Photo Credit: iPhone 4 32GB: First Photo

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Offload movies from your iPhone 4 directly to your iPad

June 28, 2010

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iphone ipad 300x300 Offload movies from your iPhone 4 directly to your iPadHere’s an interesting tidbit for today. If you were lucky enough to get an iPad Camera Connection Kit when they launched a long side the iPad, you’re now able to directly offload your iPhone 4 videos directly to your iPad.

Is there anything this Camera Connection Kit can’t do? Christopher Breen has pointed out on Macworld that the iPad sees the iPhone as a regular digital camera. All you have to do is attached your iPhone dock connector directly to the iPad Camera Connection Kit, open up the Photos app on the iPhone and iPad, and click import on the iPad. Boom, movies on a bigger screen immediately.

Now, if only those iPad Camera Connection kits would ship some time in the next two months…

Article Via MacWorld

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Tip: Don’t restart after installing new software

June 28, 2010

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Installer TwoRestartsConflict 300x272 Tip: Dont restart after installing new softwareHave you ever installed an application only to have your entire work flow interrupted when the application asks you to restart your computer so the changes can take effect? Normally we don’t mind the quick reboot, but every now and then I get extremely annoyed. It usually happens when I’m knee deep in work, and have a couple of dozen things to save before I can actually restart.

Here’s a tip to circumvent that stupid popup.

Open the terminal.
Type, killall SystemUIServer

Just like that, parts of your system should restart, like the menubar, and you should have your application up and running without a reboot.

Thanks to Mitch Johnson for sending this one in.

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Safari Extensions to streamline your life

June 28, 2010

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safari logo 150x150 Safari Extensions to streamline your life
I’m a huge fan of Safari 5, and a big part of that is the extension support. I want to keep my life as simple as possible, and that extends to my web browsing as well.

So, here are some extensions that have the potential to really make your browsing experience amore streamlined:

Tumblr Notifier

A Safari Extension that alerts you of new posts in your Tumblr Dashboard.

Close Inactive Tabs

A toolbar button that closes the inactive tabs in the current window. It includes an option to also close inactive windows.

TabGroups Organizer

TabGroups Organizer is an extension for Apple Safari that allows to save all open tabs as a group and then reopen all with a click.

GMail Meeting Manager

Are you an avid Gmail user? The Gmail Widget is a small Firefox extension that allows you to use ScheduleOnce directly from Gmail.

Drag Drop Link to Tab

Just drag link anywhere on page to open in tab.

Bread Crumb URLs

When you are on a very long URL and want to move up one or more levels you need to manually edit the url on address bar. BreadcrumbUrls adds a bar to Safari showing all sub urls, click on sub url to immediately change location.

Article Via Safari Extensions

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Apple’s iPhone 4 costs $187.51 to build

June 28, 2010

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iPhone 4 shot 300x225 Apples iPhone 4 costs $187.51 to buildOutside of the original iPhone, the iPhone 4 is now the second most expensive iPhone to be created. Most of the additional costs are being attributed to the new display, A4 processor, and gyroscope.  The iPhone 4 is costing Apple Inc. $187.51 per handset.

That’s a little bit more than we expected it to be, but clearly the innovations this time around increased the cost of the device over the 3G and 3GS models.

There’s still healthy margins for Apple, but once you start chipping away at the profit with fixed and variable costs, the profit margins may be a little smaller than the last two versions of the phone. Don’t get us wrong though, Apple’s making a killing with the iPhone 4. Considering an unlocked iPhone 4 is selling in the UK for approximately $650, Apple might want to start thinking about selling their devices unlocked in all their markets.

Reports from over the weekend have Apple selling 1.7 million iPhones in three days. That’s a hefty number of phones, making the iPhone 4 Apple’s most successful product launch to date.

Article Via Electronista

Photo Credit Martin uit Utrecht

 Apples iPhone 4 costs $187.51 to build
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