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  1. #1
    Mark Crispin
    Guest
    Word is going around that the iPhone 3G has a Trusted Computing chip to
    detect tampering and thus disabling jailbreaking and SIM unlocking. All
    reported 2.0 unlocks are on iPhone 2G and iPod Touch.

    It will be interesting to see if the jailbreak community gets around this
    or not.

    I have a development iPod Touch 8G that I sacrificed to the 2.0 software,
    so with that I took a look around.

    Of the Apple bundled applications, the big change is in Mail, and that's
    in the Settings application. The interface in the Mail application itself
    is mostly the same. Add Account now allows Exchange, and .Mac is now
    called mobileme. There's support for Push, and for setting up polling.
    The IMAP support still sucks big time.

    The Calendar application finally allows you to manipulate multiple
    calendars (yay!) but still has the same idiotic limitations on recurrent
    events (boo!). It escapes me how they think this is a serious calendaring
    applicaton with those limitations.

    Still no task manager, although there are a couple of iTunes Store
    applications that offer that (but with no Exchange synchronization).

    The Contacts application is mostly unchanged, other than showing
    non-alphabetic names (e.g., in Japanese) under the "#" heading instead of
    under "123". Still sorts non-alphabetic names by Unicode codepoints
    instead of providing a mechanism (e.g., yomi in Japanese) to do it
    properly (as Microsoft does).

    Maps has some cosmetic changes, the default zoom level is a bit further
    out, and there's a new location query. Otherwise it's mostly the same.

    Calculator changes the shape of the buttons from round to rectangular and
    adds a change sign button. It's still just a basic calculator.

    Safari, YouTube (I always use MxTube), Stocks, Weather, Clock, and Notes
    seem largely unchanged. You still only have a choice of Google or Yahoo
    for search engine in Safari.

    With few exceptions, the Officially Approved iTunes Store Applications are
    a major yawn: crap like "flashlight", tip calculator, applications that
    duplicate web functionality (and won't work without an Internet
    connection), public domain ebooks at $1 each, public transit network maps
    & schedules, etc. Only a handful (e.g., the AOL software) are
    interesting. Many of the interesting applications have equivalent or
    superior choices in the Installer (jailbreak) community.

    Bottom line:

    If you upgrade to 2.0 or buy an iPhone 3G, you're trapped in Apple's
    walled garden with mediocre apps and enterprise features that are still
    several notches below what's on Windows Mobile or Blackberry. There will
    probably be a jailbreak soon for iPod Touch or iPhone 2G running 2.0, but
    iPhone 3G may be more difficult (or, Apple hopes, impossible).

    Unless you need the Exchange/Push services, there isn't much reason to
    upgrade an iPod Touch or iPhone 2G to 2.0. You'll have a much more
    functional device by jailbreaking 1.1.4 (e.g., using ZiPhone).

    -- Mark --

    http://panda.com/mrc
    Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to eat for lunch.
    Liberty is a well-armed sheep contesting the vote.



    See More: no jailbreak/unlock for iPhone 3G?




  2. #2
    nospam
    Guest

    Re: no jailbreak/unlock for iPhone 3G?

    In article <[email protected]>,
    Mark Crispin <[email protected]> wrote:

    > Word is going around that the iPhone 3G has a Trusted Computing chip to
    > detect tampering and thus disabling jailbreaking and SIM unlocking. All
    > reported 2.0 unlocks are on iPhone 2G and iPod Touch.


    source?

    > With few exceptions, the Officially Approved iTunes Store Applications are
    > a major yawn: crap like "flashlight", tip calculator, applications that
    > duplicate web functionality (and won't work without an Internet
    > connection), public domain ebooks at $1 each, public transit network maps
    > & schedules, etc. Only a handful (e.g., the AOL software) are
    > interesting. Many of the interesting applications have equivalent or
    > superior choices in the Installer (jailbreak) community.


    there's certainly a lot of crap, but there are some interesting apps
    too.

    > Unless you need the Exchange/Push services, there isn't much reason to
    > upgrade an iPod Touch or iPhone 2G to 2.0. You'll have a much more
    > functional device by jailbreaking 1.1.4 (e.g., using ZiPhone).


    there's a substantially larger selection from the apps store, and
    growing daily.



  3. #3
    Charles
    Guest

    Re: no jailbreak/unlock for iPhone 3G?

    In article <130720080011494492%[email protected]>, nospam
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    > there's a substantially larger selection from the apps store, and
    > growing daily.


    This is the start of a new platform. That is part of what is enticing
    me to get an iPhone. The expectation of what will follow. I expect the
    selection to grow and the applications to get better.

    --
    Charles



  4. #4
    4phun
    Guest

    Re: no jailbreak/unlock for iPhone 3G?

    On Jul 13, 9:08*am, Charles <[email protected]> wrote:
    > In article <130720080011494492%[email protected]>, nospam
    >
    > <[email protected]> wrote:
    > > there's a substantially larger selection from the apps store, and
    > > growing daily.

    >
    > This is the start of a new platform. That is part of what is enticing
    > me to get an iPhone. The expectation of what will follow. I expect the
    > selection to grow and the applications to get better.
    >
    > --
    > Charles


    I agree. Right now I feel that 30% of the AP store should be called
    the Apple CRAP store. Why Apple allowed some of those aps in makes
    little sense as that dog dung is an insult to their iPhone customers.






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