Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!
Everybody sitting comfortably? Streaming quite nicely at the moment.
(Apple know theatre, the lighting makes me think we're watching MTV unplugged or something!)
Highly doubtful that iOS4 will make an appearance on the iPad, there have been no developer betas and this is a simple "feature addition", it's a merge of the iPad fork of iOS back into the mainline trunk. They might make a developer beta available, but even that would seem like a strange...
Then you need to use tinyumbrella to fake the apple authentication server with your saved shsh blob and then use iTunes to restore your local copy of 4.0.1. Job done.
You have your shsh blob, you can downgrade to 4.0.1 whenever you want, regardless of what version running.
You can't unless you saved your shsh blobs while apple were still signing 4.0.1.
If you didn't save it then you'll only be able to restore the current version which apple are signing, which is 4.0.2.
If you're sure you have authentication enabled then they either don't like the return address being set to your talk talk address and are rejecting it on the basis it looks like an external relay attempt or they're blanket blocking access for relays outside their network for authenticated...
And knowing somebody at apple puts you in exactly the same position as everybody outside that particular group in apple, hearsay, conjecture and Chinese whispers! I also know this because I also know somebody inside the iPod special applications group and It's more than their job is worth to...
No service is, but the bars aren't useful, they're just helping the propagation of something which has been wildly blown out of proportion, people see dropping bars and think that it's a problem, it isn't.
If you're dropping to no service, unlucky, all I can say that I can't reproduce this in...
Or more to the point, don't touch the phone there.
If it drops a couple of bars, it's not a problem, if you think they somehow relate to some useful metric then you're sadly mistaken. The only thing you need to be concerned with is if you have or don't have service.
Your phone sounds buggered.
I can reproduce a drop in signal by gripping the phone in the "death grip" manner, and I have poor signal where I work, but it doesn't cause me to go to "no service".
When I use the tube or go through a tunnel it takes a matter of seconds to regain signal.
The...
lol.
The antenna is at the bottom of the phone (and all candybar type phones) because your hand has a higher SAR limit than your head, Apple won't and can't move the antenna.
Words fail me.
http://www.malcolmsteward.co.uk/?p=2479
Especially given he's a journalist and "technology writer".
Though I do like the fact he's closed comments and deleted them with the following explanation:
Just to add to that, the cellular connection is only open long enough to start the facetime connection, once the facetime connection is made the cellular connection is dropped, both voice and video go over WiFi.
Always install natively using bootcamp, for the simple reason that Fusion (and I presume parallels) can boot the bootcamp partition as well. Best of both worlds, convenience of a virtual machine and the ability to run native all in the same installation.
There's also virtualbox which is a free...
It costs nothing to develop an app, you just need a mac and a developer account.
It costs £59/year if you want to run the app on real hardware and make it available through the iTunes store.
This is not a trivial application, it requires adding a whole load of stuff into vBulletin (as TapaTalk...
Re: using i phone abroad
Turn off cellular data if you're on iOS4, there is a bug in previous versions of the OS which means that it may actually use cellular data when roaming even if you have "data roaming" off.
The "completely turn off cellular data" feature was a new addition in iOS4...
There are some caveats to this (things I've noticed):
* If you haven't got a route currently planned, then it will disable the background GPS service when TomTom goes into the background.
* If you've arrived at your destination (i.e it's said, you have arrived) then it will automatically...
Ubuntu.
or if you really want to get to grips with the command line....
Ubuntu Server
(although you can cheat afterwards with "sudo apt-get install ubuntu-desktop" and give yourself a desktop gui)
We bought the magic trackpad at the weekend and it's fantastic, our mac mini is connected to the TV and controlling it with a mouse when in bed was a pain, the trackpad makes it much easier.
Thumbs up here.