WelshBloke
Lifer
- Jan 12, 2005
- 33,291
- 11,423
- 136
... You might enjoy changing batteries on the go, but I don't.
It's not obligatory though. The option to change the battery is nice.
... You might enjoy changing batteries on the go, but I don't.
If you are referring to the guy that said that it was a hassle to change it, I think he was referring to in phones that have removable batteries. Getting the phone booted back up and firing up your apps again, that sort of thing.
Plus having to carry the extra battery, or keeping them places. Why not just plug the sucker in? I never really got the spare battery idea I guess.
The crazy thing is, by the time that computers finally got fast enough that swapping batteries became almost a good idea, the battery life has gotten so good that you almost don't need to any more for most people. That and more and more systems have the battery sealed there as well.
What did they add? All I saw is a birds-eye type of feature, Bing has had that for a while.
Unless I missed something Apple has a long way till they catch up with Google Maps. Especially with the local data, 100M looks like a big number, but I'm certain Google has a lot more.
Ok but apple's 3D view is rendered using real imagery. Bing gives you a fixed aerial shot. You can't change perspective.
Even if what iOS offered was just a Bing clone, it's a step forward in that it provides Google's navigation along with aerial view. Satellite view is practically useless on Google Maps. I've never used it. Now street view I can find useful.
Another thing useful is offering alternatives. Useful as we commute a lot and go to places after work like happy hour. Want to know the different routes.
Anyway I wouldn't say Google Maps is lacking in any form, but I'm sure they'll step it up a notch. I just hope it's within this year.
I can't believe people are trying to say sealed battery is a good feature. It's definitely not no matter how much you tell yourself that. The only positive is thinner phone but that doesn't outweigh the negatives. Function over form. Something some Apple users can't seem to understand. HTC made terrible mistake with One X. Motorola same with Razr. Of course Apple always had the terrible sealed battery design.
OK, that's a deal killer. I have absolutely no reason to get an unlocked iPhone then. Subsidized phone it is.Ok, disappointed:
http://www.engadget.com/2012/09/12/apple-iphone-5-lte/
I understand the CDMA ones can get split off, but too bad AT&T and NA bands in general are split from the international one. I also thought the world is rolling with 2600 for LTE... not listed here at all.
Will this phone's 4G work on TMobiles $30 prepaid?
Maybe it was covered but I was working today and couldn't follow the event, but is there an OS specific feature exclusively for the iP5? Similar to Siri and the iP4?
Isn't T-mobile's plan to re-farm AWS for their LTE network, and use the GPRS bands for HSPA+?
Maybe it was covered but I was working today and couldn't follow the event, but is there an OS specific feature exclusively for the iP5? Similar to Siri and the iP4?
So how much is the 16gb version, non-contract? It doesn't list the price at Apple website. Only subsidized prices. Also, can you use cut regular sized simcard to the new nano sized or whatever the new smaller simcards are now called?
It doesn't appear that current SIMs can be cut down to the nano-sim that the 5 uses, kinda makes device swapping a lot more difficult.
lol at $30 proprietary dock converters that convert to another proprietary standard
http://gizmodo.com/5942710/fuck-that-goddamn-iphone-adapter-costs-30-bucks
Apple is not that only company that rapes you with high price of accessories. It's pretty much standard business practice for all companies. Google is guilty as well.
