Apple solves antenna problem with web page
by Justin Horn on Jul 16th, 2010 @ 4:11 pmAfter reading this new web page about antenna design on Apple’s website my iPhone suddenly stopped losing signal!
Obviously I’m joking, but like I said in my previous post, this how Apple is really trying the solve the problem. Ignore the facts that show iPhone 4 suffers worse attenuation than any other cell phone and try to blend in with the normal attenuation crowd. Too bad most of the people I talk to about this issue are good at “Where’s Waldo Apple?”.
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Antenna Issue, iPhone 4
My one big issue with Apple’s response to iPhone 4 antenna issue
by Justin Horn on Jul 16th, 2010 @ 2:26 pmMy big problem with their explanation is that it misses the fact that the iPhone 4 suffers worse attenuation, with less touching, than any other phone out there. They back up their claim with a bunch of videos of other phones dropping bars in the death grip, just like the iPhone. I back up my claim by looking at the chart from AnandTech above. You can see the iPhone 4 when held naturally (not death grip) drops almost twice as much actual signal strength compared to the Nexus One.
Until Apple releases a video of another phone siting on a desk, being touched with one finger, and severely degrading signal, their statement will stand in my eyes as an excuse, rather than fact.
What bugs me even more, one awesome reporter (this was Ryan from GDGT - @ryan) directly asked them about the concern I brought up here, but was given a non-answer (via Ars Live blog):
Q: Your demo shows a vise grip on the phone to make the bars drop, but online we’ve seen that you can touch with a single finger.
A: Your body is a pretty effective signal absorber on any phone when you make contact with that phone, its performance is less than its free space performance.
With the amount of money on the line, I guess Apple can’t really admit their antenna design causes worse attenuation than the rest of the industry. There only option here was to ignore this fact and try to blend in with the rest of the attenuation crowd. With that said, I’m glad they are giving away free bumpers and third party cases…it’s a quick, cheap, solution to the problem.
I’ll guarantee you this…similar looking design or not, the iPhone 5 will not have the same issue.
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iPhone 4 iOS 4.1 beta, dB to bar mapping exposed
by Justin Horn on Jul 15th, 2010 @ 1:49 pmWhile the software update obviously does not and cannot address the design of the antenna itself – or make the drop from holding the phone any less – it does change the way the issue is perceived among users. The result is that most iPhone users will see fewer bars disappear when they hold the iPhone 4 in a bare hand. The side effect is that the iPhone now displays fewer bars in most places, and users that haven’t been reporting signal in dBm will time see the – perhaps a bit shocking – reality of locations previously denoted as having excellent signal.
Interestingly enough, Apple has indeed changed the heights of bars 1, 2, and 3. They’re taller, and the result is that the relative heights are no longer linear, but rather a tad exponential looking. It’s a mind trick that Apple no doubt hopes will make the signal look better. If the bars are taller, they must denote stronger signal, right?
Even with Apple’s “magicalness”, they still can’t fix hardware issues with software alone.
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Nike+ over the air sync returns in iOS 4.1 beta
by Justin Horn on Jul 15th, 2010 @ 9:52 amWe were all disappointed when this functionality was removed from the iOS 4 beta before final release. Not a big surprise as iOS 4 Nike+ is the buggiest I’ve ever seen, so I’m sure it was an easy decision to cut it. Hopefully now they’ve worked out all their bugs and this update is going to stick till the final iOS 4.1 final release. Like iOS 4 beta the over the air sync isn’t yet functioning, when trying to sync it pops up an error saying the service isn’t available. We’ll try again next beta and hopefully can fully test this!
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Full AVRCP finally coming in iOS 4.1
by Justin Horn on Jul 15th, 2010 @ 9:32 amWe been asking for this one for a long, long time. iOS 4.1 beta 1 has now added skip forward and back. Prior to this release the iPhone only supported volume pause / play, volume for me, was always controlled bye the headset itself.
Hopefully this makes it to the final release.
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As expected, software update does nothing for antenna issue
by Justin Horn on Jul 14th, 2010 @ 8:49 pmFinally got iOS 4.1 installed and I’m “stunned” to see this update didn’t magically fix a hardware issue. The only difference now is instead of dropping from 5 bars to 1, I start at 3.
Here are the results from my quick speed test.
On desk
1 Mbps download / 1 Mbps upload / 200 ms latency
In hand (left side covered)
Failed over and over. Tried with both Speedtest.net and FCC app
Thanks Apple!
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Antenna Issue, iOS 4.1, iPhone 4