iPhone 4G/HD pic's leaked

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iPhone 4G/HD pic's leaked

Postby Behshad » Mon Apr 19, 2010 11:59 pm

- Removable battery cover*
- Glass backing (yes that's right, the same un-scratchable glass that the screen is protected by, no more ridiculous scratches and dirt allover your back)**
- Beautiful aluminum siding.
- I liked the volume rocker too, but I think the introduction of these new buttons means they might be user-programmable.***
- Camera flash.
- Front-facing Camera.
- Hot-swappable MicroSIM, compatible with iPad and leaves more room for better components.****


Notes:
* You may wonder if production units will actually have a removable battery, because there is still an external SIM ejection mechanism. Why is this? Because the SIM slot and battery are too close together, and having to remove the battery would make it a drag to put your MicroSIM into your 3G iPad that Apple is hoping you will buy.

** Check out Update 2 on the engadget post:
iPhone 4G: proof -- Engadget
I'm incredibly excited about this. Sure it might smudge, but you can wipe that off with just about anything. Lets see you wipe off the scratches allover the back of your 3GS with your t-shirt... Ain't happening.

*** The reason I believe these buttons might be user-programmable is simply because it is no longer a Rocker. I think Apple didn't like the idea of the rocker being treated as two separate buttons, so they created this design solution so that it will not be awkward to use the programmable buttons. Also, we lost some functionality with iPhone OS 4.0, like home button programmability. For that reason, I believe this may be making up for that.

**** You might think: "No way, Apple and AT&T would never allow it", but let me put it to you this way. A lot of users might want to tether the iPad to their iPhone, however Apple knows AT&T isn't going to allow tethering any time soon. This is Apple's hardware solution to AT&T's hogging ways, and since the SIM is hot-swappable you will get an on-device 3G experience rather than a less reliable tethering experience which also drains your phone's battery. Apple knows you do not want to pay 2 bills for i-Internet, so this is their solution.

These are all just theories. You might think "This is not like Apple".. But just look at this phone. Look at how open the design has become, and these policies seem much more realistic. Apple is making a big change for the better. They want to silence the critics.







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Postby Ehwmatt » Tue Apr 20, 2010 12:07 am

Cool... now more brokeass Democrats than ever will be purchasing this phone now in lieu of food and shelter :lol: :lol:
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Postby Behshad » Tue Apr 20, 2010 12:15 am

Ehwmatt wrote:Cool... now more brokeass Democrats than ever will be purchasing this phone now in lieu of food and shelter :lol: :lol:


As opposed to the brokeass Republicans choosing Androids with its "instand Wic App" ? :twisted: :lol:
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Postby Ehwmatt » Tue Apr 20, 2010 12:17 am

Behshad wrote:
Ehwmatt wrote:Cool... now more brokeass Democrats than ever will be purchasing this phone now in lieu of food and shelter :lol: :lol:


As opposed to the brokeass Republicans choosing Androids with its "instand Wic App" ? :twisted: :lol:


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:lol: :lol:

Is that even an iPhone ? can't even tell
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Postby Behshad » Tue Apr 20, 2010 12:19 am

Ehwmatt wrote:
Behshad wrote:
Ehwmatt wrote:Cool... now more brokeass Democrats than ever will be purchasing this phone now in lieu of food and shelter :lol: :lol:


As opposed to the brokeass Republicans choosing Androids with its "instant Wic App" ? :twisted: :lol:


Image

:lol: :lol:

Is that even an iPhone ? can't even tell


Nope, looks like a Nokia 7260 :) :wink:
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Postby Jeremey » Tue Apr 20, 2010 12:49 am

The Engadget photos are fake, they are a Japanese knock off.
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Postby Behshad » Tue Apr 20, 2010 1:09 am

Jeremey wrote:The Engadget photos are fake, they are a Japanese knock off.


Thats what some people think, but remember the very first spyshot of iPad that Engadget released?
There is a pic of THIS iphone in the corner,,,,even if not the final design, this is at least a prototype

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Gizmodo got their hands on that lost iPhone G4 (iPhone HD/iPhone 4G/etc) prototype purportedly lost then found in a San Jose bar and reported on extensively yesterday. They’ve given it a thorough, geektonic once-over and here’s the take away:

•Front-facing camera, bigger back camera with flash
•MicroSIM (like iPad)
•Higher res screen (exact dimensions unknown but could be the rumored 960×640)
•Potential second mic for noise cancellation
•All metal power, mute, and volume buttons

•Flat form-factor that’s more squared-off with an aluminum outer border

•Shiny glass/plastic (ceramic?) back
•Slightly smaller and 3 grams beefier than iPhone 3GS
•Battery is 16% bigger, made possible by shrinking everything else
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Postby Jeremey » Tue Apr 20, 2010 2:18 am

Macrumors now believes the pics ARE real,

http://www.macrumors.com/2010/04/18/new ... authentic/
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Postby Behshad » Tue Apr 20, 2010 2:21 am

Jeremey wrote:Macrumors now believes the pics ARE real,

http://www.macrumors.com/2010/04/18/new ... authentic/


Told ya , bro ;)

Theyre real, but not the actual final design ... I think it would be great if they allowed people to hotswap a micro-Sim between their iPhone/iPad !!
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Postby StevePerryHair » Tue Apr 20, 2010 2:35 am

And how much will this be? Can I upgrade to a 3GS for $100 when this comes out someday?? :lol:
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Postby Behshad » Tue Apr 20, 2010 2:41 am

StevePerryHair wrote:And how much will this be? Can I upgrade to a 3GS for $100 when this comes out someday?? :lol:


Pricing info will come out mid June :)
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Postby Rockindeano » Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:12 am

Ehwmatt wrote:
Behshad wrote:
Ehwmatt wrote:Cool... now more brokeass Democrats than ever will be purchasing this phone now in lieu of food and shelter :lol: :lol:


As opposed to the brokeass Republicans choosing Androids with its "instand Wic App" ? :twisted: :lol:


Image

:lol: :lol:

Is that even an iPhone ? can't even tell


That Secret Service agent looks a bit concerned.
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Postby Behshad » Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:15 am

Rockindeano wrote:
Ehwmatt wrote:
Behshad wrote:
Ehwmatt wrote:Cool... now more brokeass Democrats than ever will be purchasing this phone now in lieu of food and shelter :lol: :lol:


As opposed to the brokeass Republicans choosing Androids with its "instand Wic App" ? :twisted: :lol:


Image

:lol: :lol:

Is that even an iPhone ? can't even tell


That Secret Service agent looks a bit concerned.


Um, Thats the fry cook, :P :lol: shhh! ;)
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Postby Behshad » Wed Apr 21, 2010 4:18 am

And here comes the story behind how the new iPhone was lost & found and leaked !
********************************************************************




The Gourmet Haus Staudt. A nice place to enjoy good German lagers. And if you are an Apple Software Engineer named Gray Powell, it's also a nice place to make the honest mistake of losing the next-generation iPhone. UPDATED

Gray Powell—a North Carolina State University 2006 graduate and talented amateur photographer—is an Apple Software Engineer working on the iPhone Baseband Software, the little program that enables the iPhone to make calls. A dream job for a talented engineer like Powell, an Apple fan who always wanted to meet Steve Jobs.

On the night of March 18, he was enjoying the fine imported ales at Gourmet Haus Staudt, a nice German beer garden in Redwood City, California. He was happy. [UPDATED] After all, it was his birthday. He was turning 27 that very same day, and he was celebrating. The place was great. The beer was excellent. "I underestimated how good German beer is," he typed into the next-generation iPhone he was testing on the field, cleverly disguised as an iPhone 3GS. It was his last Facebook update from the secret iPhone. It was the last time he ever saw the iPhone, right before he abandoned it on bar stool, leaving to go home.


It a simple, honest mistake in the middle of celebration. Something that anyone, from Steve Jobs to Jonathan Ive, could have done. Knowing how ferocious and ruthless Apple is about product leaks, those beers may have turned out to be the bitterest of his life.

(Almost) Impenetrable Security
Until now, Apple's legendary security has always worked perfectly. Perhaps there was a blurry factory photo here, or some last-minute information strategically whispered to some friendly media there. But when it comes to the big stuff, everything is airtight. At their Cupertino campus, any gadget or computer that is worth protecting is behind armored doors, with security locks with codes that change every few minutes. Prototypes are bolted to desks. Hidden in these labs, hardware, software and industrial-design elves toil separately on the same devices, without really having the complete picture of the final product.

And hidden in every corner, the Apple secret police, a team of people with a single mission: To make sure nobody speaks. And if there's a leak, hunt down the traitor, and escort him out of the building. Using lockdowns and other fear tactics, these men in black are the last line of defense against any sneaky eyes. The Gran Jefe Steve trusts them to avoid Apple's worst nightmare: The leak of a strategic product that could cost them millions of dollars in free marketing promotion. One that would make them lose control of the product news cycle.

But the fact is that there's no perfect security. Not when humans are involved. Humans that can lose things. You know, like the next generation iPhone.

Lost and Found
Apple security's mighty walls fell on the midnight of Thursday, March 18. At that time, Powell was at Gourmet Haus Staudt, just 20 miles from the company's Infinite Loop headquarters, having his fun. Around him, other groups of people were sharing the jolly atmosphere, and plenty of the golden liquid.

The person who eventually ended up with the lost iPhone was sitting next to Powell. He was drinking with a friend too. He noticed Powell on the stool next to him but didn't think twice about him at the time. Not until Powell had already left the bar, and a random really drunk guy—who'd been sitting on the other side of Powell—returned from the bathroom to his own stool.

The Random Really Drunk Guy pointed at the iPhone sitting on the stool, the precious prototype left by the young Apple engineer.

"Hey man, is that your iPhone?" asked Random Really Drunk Guy.

"Hmmm, what?" replied the person who ended up with the iPhone. "No, no, it isn't mine."

"Ooooh, I guess it's your friend's then," referring to a friend who at the time was in the bathroom. "Here, take it," said the Random Really Drunk Guy, handing it to him. "You don't want to lose it." After that, the Random Really Drunk Guy also left the bar.

The person who ended up with the iPhone asked around, but nobody claimed it. He thought about that young guy sitting next to him, so he and his friend stayed there for some time, waiting. Powell never came back.

During that time, he played with it. It seemed like a normal iPhone. "I thought it was just an iPhone 3GS," he told me in a telephone interview. "It just looked like one. I tried the camera, but it crashed three times." The iPhone didn't seem to have any special features, just two bar codes stuck on its back: 8800601pex1 and N90_DVT_GE4X_0493. Next to the volume keys there was another sticker: iPhone SWE-L200221. Apart from that, just six pages of applications. One of them was Facebook. And there, on the Facebook screen, was the Apple engineer, Gray Powell.


Thinking about returning the phone the next day, he left. When he woke up after the hazy night, the phone was dead. Bricked remotely, through MobileMe, the service Apple provides to track and wipe out lost iPhones. It was only then that he realized that there was something strange that iPhone. The exterior didn't feel right and there was a camera on the front. After tinkering with it, he managed to open the fake 3GS.

There it was, a shiny thing, completely different from everything that came before.

He reached for a phone and called a lot of Apple numbers and tried to find someone who was at least willing to transfer his call to the right person, but no luck. No one took him seriously and all he got for his troubles was a ticket number.

He thought that eventually the ticket would move up high enough and that he would receive a call back, but his phone never rang. What should he be expected to do then? Walk into an Apple store and give the shiny, new device to a 20-year-old who might just end up selling it on eBay?

The Aftermath
Weeks later, Gizmodo got it. It was the real thing. Once we saw it inside and out, there was no doubt about it. We learnt about this story, but we didn't know for sure it was Powell's phone until today, when we contacted him via his phone.

Gray Powell: Hello?

John Herrman: Is this Gray?

G: Yeah.

J: Hi, this is John Herrman from Gizmodo.com.

G: Hey!

J: You work at Apple, right?

G: Um, I mean I can't really talk too much right now.

J: I understand. We have a device, and we think that maybe you misplaced it at a bar, and we would like to give it back.

G: Yeah, I forwarded your email [asking him if it was his iPhone], someone should be contacting you.

J: OK.

G: Can I send this phone number along?

J: [Contact information]

He sounded tired and broken. But at least he's alive, and apparently may still be working at Apple—as he should be. After all, it's just a fucking iPhone and mistakes can happen to everyone—Gray Powell, Phil Schiller, you, me, and Steve Jobs.

The only real mistake would be to fire Gray in the name of Apple's legendary impenetrable security, breached by the power of German beer and one single human error.
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Postby Don » Wed Apr 21, 2010 4:23 am

So, Apple wiped the phone OTA? Is that something they do for all lost/stolen phones or does the customer have to request that?
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Postby Behshad » Wed Apr 21, 2010 4:30 am

Gunbot wrote:So, Apple wiped the phone OTA? Is that something they do for all lost/stolen phones or does the customer have to request that?


If you have MobileMe, you can do it yourself :)
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