vansmack
Joined: October 04, 2001 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 19725
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 14, 2007 at 09:17 AM UTC
#
Originally posted by anarchist:
how come it takes my pc 5 minutes to boot up and the mac takes less than 1 minute?
Because less than 30% of software made today can actually run on your Mac.
No PC I own takes 5 minutes to boot, but nonetheless, none boots as fast as a Mac. However, no Mac I own can do everything my PC does. They're getting closer though by finally adopting the Intel Chip.
Darth Ed
Joined: May 19, 2003 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 1159
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 14, 2007 at 04:08 PM UTC
#
Originally posted by vansmack:
Because less than 30% of software made today can actually run on your Mac.
Not true. There are multiple products for the Mac that allow you to run Windows software on an Intel Mac. Google the following search terms for more information: Parallels, VMware, Crossover, and "Boot Camp".
godsshoeshine
Joined: September 18, 2003 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 4826
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 14, 2007 at 04:47 PM UTC
#
we have a pc and a mac at home. nothing ever comes up that i can do on one and not the other
and my mac is around 6 years old
Brian_Walalce
Joined: May 16, 2005 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 1484
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 28, 2007 at 02:16 PM UTC
#
You're all sheep. It's almost like you're from NYC in your hipster "I have to have it NOW" consumer fetishism.
Maybe take all that time and effort and money you'd invest in an iphone and read a difficult book you've always wanted to…paint a picture…plant a tree…WRITE a difficult book…write a song…anything but drink Steve Jobs' Kool-Aid/flop sweat.
Brian
ratioci nation
Joined: November 22, 2002 at 06:01 AM UTC
Posts: 4463
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 28, 2007 at 02:18 PM UTC
#
Originally posted by Brian_Walalce:
You're all sheep. It's almost like you're from NYC in your hipster "I have to have it NOW" consumer fetishism.
Maybe take all that time and effort and money you'd invest in an iphone and read a difficult book you've always wanted to…paint a picture…plant a tree…WRITE a difficult book…write a song…anything but drink Steve Jobs' Kool-Aid/flop sweat.
Brian
you've changed my life
alex
Joined: October 07, 2003 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 950
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 28, 2007 at 02:24 PM UTC
#
Originally posted by Brian_Walalce:
You're all sheep. It's almost like you're from NYC in your hipster "I have to have it NOW" consumer fetishism.
Maybe take all that time and effort and money you'd invest in an iphone and read a difficult book you've always wanted to…paint a picture…plant a tree…WRITE a difficult book…write a song…anything but drink Steve Jobs' Kool-Aid/flop sweat.
Brian
shut up hippie
jdreagle
Joined: April 19, 2005 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 308
Re: Lessons from Apple
June 28, 2007 at 02:34 PM UTC
#
it is going to cost one how much up front and per month? huh?
http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/hughes/14081 for a first generation POS.
vansmack
Joined: October 04, 2001 at 05:01 AM UTC
Posts: 19725
Re: Lessons from Apple
July 17, 2007 at 09:54 PM UTC
#
It basically makes the iPhone an expensive PDA, but if they can crack the phone part so that it works in Europe, I can see a huge black market developing….
Hackers Close to Cracking iPhone
July 16, 2007
By Lisa Vaas
iPhone hackers are on the cusp of not only being able to write programs for the phone but also finding a way to cut the device's tether to Cingular's service plans.
According to one of the group of hackers who are working collaboratively via wiki and #iphone IRC channel, one of the last major hurdles has been the lack of a high-quality ARM assembler tailored for the iPhone. That missing link as of the afternoon of July 16 had been developed to the pre-alpha stage. Developers are at the point where they now have a working GNU debugger.
One of the first iPhone hacks came from Jon Lech Johansen, aka DVD Jon. A self-trained Norwegian software engineer, Johansen on July 3 announced on his blog that he had hacked a new, unactivated iPhone, managing to activate it without turning on AT&T Cingular phone service.
But although Johansen managed to get the iPod and Wi-Fi capabilities of an iPhone turned on with his hack, he couldn't get the device to work as a phone. "Stay tuned!" for that, Johansen said at the time.
It's now in fact impossible to buy an iPhone without a Cingular service plan attached to it, unless the buyer's credit is bad. In that case, Apple has prepaid service options.
The world of iPhone watchers has been bubbling with other tips on how to get out of paying Cingular for iPhone phone service; in order to "wreck" one's credit, for example, one suggestion is to enter 999-99-9999 as a Social Security number.
Other suggestions focus on getting out of Cingular's clutches without early termination fees. Wireless carriers impose early termination fees purportedly to recoup lost revenues from discounted or free phones they use to lure in new customers, but Apple has not discounted its pricey iPhone, which makes Cingular's $175 early termination fee particularly galling.
Given the above, the urge to unlock the iPhone is understandable.
It's also legal.
That point was made clear when the Library of Congress clarified the DMCA (Digital Millennium Copyright Act) in November 2006. Prior to this ruling, cell phone customers were often forced to either return or throw away old phones upon switching carriers because the DCMA was interpreted to mean that the old cell phone was actually the old carrier's property. The November 2006 ruling stipulated that the software that restricts consumers from accessing their phones' firmware wasn't based as much on copyright law as it was on the carriers' business models.
The United States is behind the times when it comes to the prevalence of unlocked cell phones, but it's not an entirely unknown concept. CompUSA has been selling them for months.
One of the major reasons to unlock the iPhone, as with any cell phone, is that when traveling outside the United States, consumers with unlocked phones can buy a pre-paid plan with a service provider in a given country and thus avoid a high-priced international service plan.
There are reasons why unlocking an iPhone is a bad idea, however. First, users who unlock their iPhones will lose proprietary iPhone features such as Visual Voicemail. Second, there's the early termination fee of $175 paid to Cingular unless service is cancelled within 30 days of purchase.
There are ways to get out of paying early termination fees, including selling the contract, enlisting in the military, moving out of coverage range or dying, each of which presents its own challenges, to say the least.