Rumor: New iPhone Called ‘iPhone Video’?

picture-20A screenshot purporting to depict an unpublished version of AT&T’s support web site reveals an item called “iPhone Video,” which could perhaps be the name of the next-generation iPhone.

The screenshot (right), sent to The Unofficial Apple Weblog by an anonymous tipster, shows a drop-down menu of iPhone model choices, and “iPhone Video” appears beneath “iPhone 3G.” The model name corroborates with rumors that the next-generation iPhone will include an improved camera with video-recording capability.

iPhone Video. Sounds like a reasonable name, but not sure if we buy it. Then again, MacBook Air was kind of a funky name, and that turned out to be real. Your thoughts? And while we’re at it, what would you like the next-gen iPhone to be called?

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3rd Gen iPhone Rumor Round-Up — A Visual Guide

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TGRblog has a created this very clean, simple guide to the rumors floating around the third iteration of the iPhone. They even used Gadget Lab as a source for several of the data points. But man, less than a 50% chance of an OLED screen? Get a box of crayolas and color me disappointed.

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(TGRblog via Flavorpill)


Where to Buy Your Palm Pre

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The reviews are in and the consensus is that the Palm Pre is a stunning device and a worthy competitor to the iPhone, despite drawbacks such as a tiny keyboard, short battery life, and a sparsely-populated App Catalog.

The phone will be available exclusively on the Sprint network starting June 6 and is priced at $200, after a $100 mail-in rebate, when you commit to a two-year contract with Sprint.

If you want to buy one, here’s where to find the Palm Pre:

And if you buy from Best Buy or RadioShack you don’t have to mail in your rebate. At these stores, the rebate is instantly deducted at the register.

Sprint is trying to manage expectations around the Pre. Lynn Fox, a company spokesperson told the New York Times that Sprint doesn’t expect long lines at its stores because the Pre is no iPhone. “We are not like Apple,”  she said.

So how excited are you about the Palm Pre? Will you stand in line to get it? Vote in the poll below and let us know.





  • Yes: I will be lining up this weekend for it
  • Yes: When my contract runs out
  • No: It isn’t perfect. The battery life sucks and, dude, where are the apps?
  • No: Palm What?
Created on Jun 4, 2009

Photo: Palm Pre (Jim Merithew/Wired.com)


Does Walt Mossberg Already Have the Third-Gen iPhone?

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A sentence in Walt Mossberg’s review of the Palm Pre suggests the Wall Street Journal columnist already has his hands on Apple’s next iPhone.

“Whether the Pre is better than the iPhone depends on your personal preferences, though I’d note that the new iPhone to be unveiled next week will have lots of added features that could alter those calculations,” Mossberg wrote in his review.

One interpretation is Mossberg could be speculating about the next iPhone based on rumors. But it’s worth noting Mossberg got his hands on an early test unit of the original iPhone in June 2007 — weeks before its official release. So it’s more likely Mossberg is alluding to the third-gen iPhone sitting on his desk, which he can’t yet write about in full detail.

If Mossberg does indeed have a third-generation iPhone, that means he also knows when the new handset will be announced — next week at the Worldwide Developers Conference, the sentence suggests. We’re placing our bets on that happening.

Did Walt Mossberg Just Confirm The New iPhone Is Going To Be Announced Next Week? [InformationWeek]

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Photo: djevents/Flickr


Video: Hands On With the Palm Pre

You’ve read the review. You’ve dived deep into the news articles. But what is the Palm Pre really like? Check out this video where we take a magnifying glass to Pre’s features and show you how the little device aggregates data from your online life, utilizes the WebOS to create “cards” and even syncs with iTunes. We even mention some of the phone’s pratfalls. Watch out for that borderline atrocious battery life!


Cellphone Seatbelt Holster Promises Safety, Delivers Dorkiness

handshomepicWhat is it with people using the term PDA for cellphone? First, it happened on the usually super-accurate (and excellent) TV show Criminal Minds. Twice. And now it’s on the pitch-page of some trashy accessory maker. “Securely Holds ANY Cell Phone (Flip, Slide, PDA)” says Universal Cell Wrap.

Along with such nonsensical nomenclature, the product itself doesn’t look much better. A Velcro and clear-plastic sleeve wraps around your cell (or PDA) and clips to your seatbelt, holding the handset somewhere between shoulder and nipple. This, according to the blurb, lets you “drive hands-free without bluetooth, wires or earpieces.”

If you are anything like my ex-flatmate (not the yoga-hippy, but a different, even louder one), this might just work. In fact, this chap shouts so loud into the phone that you wonder if he needs one at all to be heard across town. A cellphone far from the mouth would therefore be perfect for him, and coupled with loudspeaker mode would possibly be the most annoying thing ever. For normal people, though, I imagine constant stooping to put the mouth nearer the handset, and some fumbling around to make and take calls — imagine trying to navigate the contacts list when the phone is on your shoulder.

The Universal Cell Wrap might comply with the letter of car-phone laws, but the spirit is quite clearly violated. $30.

Product page [Universal Cell Wrap]


Jitterbug J: Simple, Feature-Free Phone Gets More Features

jitterbugJ-j-j-jiterbug! You put the boom-boom into my heart / You send my soul sky high when your lovin’ starts.

So wrote the great literary poet George Michael, in his magnum opus “Wake Me Up Before You Go Go”, penned and performed in 1984. At the time, Michael was unaware that, a mere quarter century later, there would be a telephone celebrating his genius and at the same time easy to use for his 45-year-old fingers. It’s name? The Jitterbug J, the stuttering initial of the original song moved to the end of the name to better suit the mouths of ageing denture-wearers.

The Jitterbug J is a an upgrade to the super-simple Jitterbug phone, a cellphone which does almost nothing but make calls. Despite some problems with the original (a software bug meant that 911 calls wouldn’t work — oops) the Jitterbug was apparently popular enough to inspire a sequel. However, even the Jitterbug has suffered from mission creep, with new features being added to a handset sold on having almost none.

What’s new? You can now customize ringtones and change the color of the screen, you can choose from a library of pre-written text messages (sample message: “Get off my lawn you damn kids!”) ,use a calendar, and access the Live Nurse, a real nurse waiting for your call.

There are some hardware differences, too. Bigger buttons, speakerphone switches on the front face of the phone and a better battery. Contract-free plans start at $15 per month and go up, although if grandma is burning through 1500 minutes a month, you might want to consider buying her an iPhone.

Product page [J-j-j-jitterbug]


What to Expect From Apple at WWDC 2009

wwdc
Even without Steve Jobs emceeing, this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference sold out in record time. Hopes are running high for products that the secretive corporation will unveil at the conference next week. Rumors about new iPhones, upgraded MacBooks and a highly anticipated touchscreen tablet abound, and there’s even gossip about a possible partnership with Verizon.

But as wonderful as all those items sound, they remain unconfirmed by Apple. And frankly, some of the rumors sound too good to be true.

What should we realistically expect? The following is a list of everything Wired.com has heard about WWDC, accompanied by our analysis on which rumored announcements will or will not become a reality.

New iPhones

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There’s a pile of evidence in the blogosphere suggesting Apple will release a lackluster upgrade for its popular iPhone. Likely features include a digital compass, processor and memory upgrades, an improved digital camera with auto-focus and video-recording capabilities, and other minor improvements.

These hardware enhancements don’t add up to much. Instead, Apple seems to be training most of its focus on the previously-announced iPhone 3.0 — a major upgrade to the operating system that will add in-app commerce, tethering, live streaming, the ability to integrate apps with external accessories and push notification, along with a variety of other features such as cut-and-paste.

We’re confident that Apple will introduce an iPhone upgrade at WWDC — it would be a perfectly logical move because Apple announced the current iPhone 3G at WWDC 2008. Also, it would be ideal for Apple to unveil the iPhone at the event so it can hold WWDC sessions on any new hardware APIs (the rumored digital compass, for example).

The latest iPhone-related rumor involves Apple adding a 4-GB model to the line. We’re skeptical about this, because Apple already killed the 4-GB model introduced with the original iPhone just two months after its release in June 2007. Would many people buy one, even if it only costs $100?

It’s more likely that Apple will add a 32-GB model to the iPhone family, because that’d be the next step up from the current 8-GB and 16-GB models.

(See which specific features we predict will appear in the next iPhone in our earlier story “Rumor Round-Up: Everything We’ve Heard About the Next iPhone.”)

No Verizon Deal

verizon
BusinessWeek in April reported hearing from two sources “familiar with the matter” that Apple was working with Verizon on two new iPhones, which could be available as soon as this summer. This would be great news for Verizon customers unwilling to switch to AT&T, the exclusive U.S. carrier for the iPhone.

Our thoughts? Not happening — not anytime soon, at least. Verizon CEO Ivan Seidenberg told the Wall Street Journal he expects Apple to consider sharing the iPhone with Verizon in 2010 — when Verizon begins deploying its fourth-generation network. If Apple is indeed interested in working with Verizon, there is no incentive to make this announcement in mid-2009 — especially when Apple can stretch out the negotiations to shake more money out of its carrier partners. Also, historically Apple does not enjoy making announcements about products until they are finalized.

Also, Apple said in late April it has no plans to change its exclusive relationship with AT&T. Flip-flopping on that statement about six weeks later would make that a blatant lie, wouldn’t it? If any deal happens between Verizon and Apple, we expect it to happen no sooner than 2010.

No Touchscreen Tablet


As much as you might want one now, we don’t see this launching at WWDC. We agree with analyst Gene Munster’s arguments for why an Apple tablet is likely to appear no sooner than 2010. The strongest point raised is that Apple purchased chip company PA Semi in 2008, and Steve Jobs said the purpose of the acquisition was to develop iPhone and iPod chips. Also, Apple has recently been hiring chip designers.

It’s reasonable to infer Apple would wait to introduce its newly developed mobile processor with the release of a highly anticipated touchscreen tablet. There’s no indication this is happening anytime soon.

Incremental Upgrades for MacBook Family


9 to 5 Mac reported a rumor that Apple will roll out incremental upgrades to its unibody MacBooks. We buy that. Apple typically refreshes its notebooks every seven months, and the last upgrades were released in October. WWDC would be an opportune event to announce new MacBooks.

More Details on iPhone 3.0, Mac OS X Snow Leopard Operating Systems

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We saved the most obvious for last. Apple said in a press release that it plans to preview new features and APIs for its next-generation operating systems iPhone 3.0 and Mac OS X Snow Leopard. For iPhone, expect Apple to lay out the final roadmap for the iPhone 3.0 software developer kit, speaking more extensively on the features we previously wrote about. For Snow Leopard, Apple will likely nerd out about the OS’ optimization for supporting multi-core processors (i.e., Grand Central).

Agree, disagree or have anything to add? Comment with your WWDC predictions below.

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Photos: Adam Jackson/Flickr, Jon Snyder/Wired.com, Incendiary Mind/Flickr, blakie/Flickr, vernhart/Flickr, macnerd93/Flickr


Times Reviewer: Palm Pre ‘Elegant,’ ‘Stunning’

An Indian website has published a draft of the New York Times‘ Palm Pre review, three days before the Pre’s scheduled June 6 release date.

UPDATE 7pm Pacific: Most major media outlets have now published their official reviews of the Palm Pre. Wired’s Steven Levy found it to be a good-looking, intuitive, capable, powerful phone. Battery life is dreadfully short, but he reports that multitasking rules: Wired.com Product Reviews: Multitasking Pre Brims With Power, Potential

Times tech writer David Pogue confirmed to Wired.com that the review, published on the Hyderabad-based Financial Chronicle website, is his.

Although it’s an early draft, it’s clear that Pogue likes the phone. He calls it “an elegant, joyous, multitouch smartphone that seems intended to be ‘iPhone, remixed.’” With the screen turned off, its hardware reminds him of a “stunning, featureless talisman.” On, the webOS operating system is “gorgeous, fluid and exciting.” He likes its removable battery. And his conclusion makes it clear he’s all over it:

So do the Pre’s perks (beautiful hardware and software, compact size, keyboard, swappable battery, flash, multitasking, calendar consolidation) outweigh its weak spots (battery life, slow program opening, ringer volume, Sprint network)? Oh, yes indeedy. Especially when you consider that last weak spot might be going away. Verizon Wireless has announced that it will carry the Pre ‘‘in the next six months or so.’’ Can you imagine how great that will be? One of the world’s best phones on the best U.S. cell network? If the story of Palm’s rise from the ashes really is like a movie plot, then that twist will give it one heck of a happy ending.

It’s not clear how this review wound up being published so early, but readers on Twitter are already all over the story.


Mobile Chipsets: WTF Are Atom, Tegra and Snapdragon?

Low-power processors aren’t just for netbooks: These computers-on-a-chip are going to be powering our smartphones and other diminutive gadgets in the forseeable future. So what’s the difference between the Atoms, Snapdragons and Tegras of the world?

Intel Atom
The current reigning king of low-cost, low-power processors, Intel’s Atom flat-out dominates the netbook market. Its single- and dual-core processors are also some of the most powerful on our list, despite having abilities roughly equal to, in Intel’s own terms, a 2003-2004 vintage Celeron. Based on the x86 architecture, the Atom is capable of running full versions of Windows XP, Vista (though not all that well), and 7, as well as modern Linux distros and even Hackintosh. While it requires far less power than a full-power chip, it’s still more power-hungry than the ARM-based processors on our list, requiring about 2 watts on average. That’s why netbook battery life isn’t all that much longer than that of a normal laptop.

You can find the Atom in just about every netbook, including those from HP, Dell, Asus, Acer, Sony, Toshiba, MSI, and, well, everyone else. The 1.6GHz chip is the most popular at the moment, but Intel is definitely going to keep improving and upgrading the Atom line. However, you’re unlikely to catch an Atom in a handset; it’s low-power, yes, but low-power for a notebook. Battery life on an Atom handset would be pretty atrocious, which is why Intel’s sticking to netbooks for now.

Qualcomm Snapdragon
Based on ARM, which is a 32-bit processor architecture that powers just about every mobile phone (and various other peripherals, though never desktop computers) out there, Snapdragon isn’t competing directly with the Intel Atom—it’s not capable of running full versions of Windows (only Windows Mobile and Windows CE), it’s incredibly energy-efficient (requiring less than half a watt), and is designed for always-on use. In other words, this is the evolution of the mobile computing processor. It’s got great potential: Qualcomm is trumpeting battery life stretching past 10 hours, smooth 1080p video, support for GPS, 3G, and Bluetooth, and such efficiency that a Linux-based netbook can use Snapdragon without a fan or even a heat sink. Available in single core (1GHz) or dual-core (1.5GHz), it can be used in conjunction with Android, Linux, and various mobile OSes.

Unfortunately, Qualcomm is still holding onto the notion that people want MIDs, and is championing “smartbooks,” which are essentially smartphones with netbook bodies, like Asus’s announced-then-retracted Eee with Android. Snapdragon’s got promise, but we think that promise lies in super-powered handheld devices, not even more underpowered versions of already-underpowered netbooks.

We’re frankly not sure when we’ll see Snapdragon-based devices sold in the US. We’re sure Snapdragon will end up in smartphones at some point, as at least one Toshiba handset has been tentatively announced, but the only concrete demonstrations we’ve seen have been in MIDs, and Snapdragon themselves spend all their energy touting these “smartbooks.” Snapdragon’s Windows Mobile compatibility suggests we may see it roll out with Windows Mobile 7, if Tegra hasn’t snapped up all the good handsets.

Nvidia Tegra
Nvidia’s Tegra processor is very similar to Snapdragon—both are based on ARM architecture, so both are designed for even less intense applications than the Atom. Like Snapdragon, Tegra isn’t capable of running desktop versions of Windows, so it’s primarily targeted at Android and handheld OSes, especially forthcoming versions of Windows Mobile. What sets Tegra apart from Snapdragon is the Nvidia graphics pedigree: The company claims smooth 1080p video, like Snapdragon, but also hardware-accelerated Flash video and even respectable gaming (though no, you won’t be able to run Crysis). They also go even further than Qualcomm in their battery life claim, suggesting an absolutely insane 30 hours of HD video.

While Snapdragon tends to be loosely associated with Android, Tegra is an integral part of Microsoft’s plan for next-generation Windows Mobile devices. Instead of focusing on “smartbooks” and MIDs, which we think are part of a dead-end category, Tegra’s commitment to pocketable handhelds could spell success. We’ve seen proof-of-concept demonstrations of Tegra already, but its real commercial debut will come with Windows Mobile 7—and if WM7 doesn’t suck, Tegra could take off.

Others
We haven’t included certain other processors, especially VIA’s Nano, due to intent: The Nano requires lower power than full-scale processors, but at 25 watts, it’s not even really in the same league as Atom, let alone Snapdragon or Tegra. The VIA Nano is really targeted at non-portable green technology, and looks like it’ll do a good job—it outperformed Atom in Ars Technica’s excellent test, and stands up to moderate use with ease. AMD’s Puma (Turion X2) is in a similar boat: It’s certainly markedly more energy-efficient than AMD’s other offerings, but as it’s targeted at laptops (not netbooks) with a screen size greater than 12-inches, it’s not quite right for our list here.

These low-power processors aren’t just, as we so often think, crappier versions of “real” processors. They’ve got uses far beyond netbooks, especially in the near future as the gap between netbooks and smartphones narrows.

Still something you still wanna know? Send any questions about why your iPhone can’t play Crysis, how to tie a bow tie, or anything else to tips@gizmodo.com, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line.