1) Don't forget brightness, though I would love to be able to speak these commands to Siri, too.
2) The Verizon iPhone 4 didn't have the option to turn off '3G' either. Even though that's not a real issue for a CDMA network I have to wonder if the reason for the exclusion is a limitation of the MDM66x0 chip. I say this because that's when this feature went away, not when Apple introduces to LTE to have an "Enable 4G" toggle switch.
Well I am glad to see there is going to be a fix. I just got three new iPhone 4s for the family tonight. I was a little concerned about this but I figured it was an iOS 5 problem that would get fixed soon. Interesting that it doesn't seem to impact my iPad2.
Well I am glad to see there is going to be a fix. I just got three new iPhone 4s for the family tonight. I was a little concerned about this but I figured it was an iOS 5 problem that would get fixed soon. Interesting that it doesn't seem to impact my iPad2.
AnandTech points out the baseband (cellular modem) firmware was updated from 1.0.11 to 1.0.12. That tells me that it might be a problem with the MDM6610 chipset which is why it's only seems to be affecting the 4S.
That said, pretty much every review I've read is showing right around the same battery life as the iPhone 4 and right inline with Apple's stated times. That tells me this issue is not affecting every iPhone 4S user. I say user because it could be a universal 4S problem with the MDM6610 that is only affected by certain network environments.
On my iPhone 4 there have been no battery issues with iOS 5, but tons of others:
Calendar app freezes & crashes first time it is launched, every time
Music app freezes every third tap of the menu or so
There is a 2-3 second delay after shaking to shuffle
Maps is so slow to load on the go it is all but unusuable
Messages freezes when first using it
Basically, just like when iOS 4 came out and I installed it on my iPhone 3G, it became useless. The issues with my iPhone 4 and iOS 5 are not quite as bad, but enough that the phone is no longer something I want to use.
Oh, and half of YouTube videos have never worked on any iPhone I've ever used, and basically in Safari on my MacBook Pro either...by not working I consider if the video takes longer to load then its actual run time, that's a fail.
There's another bug in iOS 5 with the Music app when it changes to Cover Flow mode, the app crashes. Bunch of posts on the Apple forums...hopefully that bug will be fixed soon.
AnandTech points out the baseband (cellular modem) firmware was updated from 1.0.11 to 1.0.12. That tells me that it might be a problem with the MDM6610 chipset which is why it's only seems to be affecting the 4S.
That said, pretty much every review I've read is showing right around the same battery life as the iPhone 4 and right inline with Apple's stated times. That tells me this issue is not affecting every iPhone 4S user. I say user because it could be a universal 4S problem with the MDM6610 that is only affected by certain network environments.
Thanks I will check that out. Only had it in my hands since 8pm tonight so I will see how it goes. I decided to go with Verizon because they have better coverage in NE Georgia. On the Apple Community forum they were making it sound like the end of the world was near. I haven't run into too many people having a problem.
This is the first update I would seriously not doing. I've just upgraded from the 3G and the improvement is beyond words. My battery lasts 3 days with reasonable use and the maps app actually works!
. That tells me this issue is not affecting every iPhone 4S user. I say user because it could be a universal 4S problem with the MDM6610 that is only affected by certain network environments.
ISTM that every one of these wacky problems Apple encounters with the iPhone are limited to certain phones, and not all phones. I wonder if it is because they source parts form different manufacturers.
Many of the reported problems seem to affect subsets of users, and most of them seem to affect a minority of users. Every time Apple releases a new iPhone, it seems that some vocal minority has a huge problem.
Could it be attributed to specific alternative parts used when the mainline supplier has run dry? Maybe the mainline part skews towards one end of a too-wide tolerance, while a minority of products get one which is at the extreme other end of the tolerance?
ISTM that every one of these wacky problems Apple encounters with the iPhone are limited to certain phones, and not all phones. I wonder if it is because they source parts form different manufacturers.
Many of the reported problems seem to affect subsets of users, and most of them seem to affect a minority of users. Every time Apple releases a new iPhone, it seems that some vocal minority has a huge problem.
Could it be attributed to specific alternative parts used when the mainline supplier has run dry? Maybe the mainline part skews towards one end of a too-wide tolerance, while a minority of products get one which is at the extreme other end of the tolerance?
Anybody have any info/opinions?
It could even be a variance within the same manufacturer. Take a wafer of CPUs, for instance. They are, for all intent and purposes, identical chips, but technically there are variances.
AnandTech has long speculated that Apple has sourced slightly more power efficient (in the case of the MBA) chips from Intel. This is simply isn't something you can do when you need dozens of millions per quarter, even if by the same manufacturer.
Now roll that into multi-manufacturers and you get an even more complex situation, like you mention.
To make the even more complex consider that you have two manufacturers for two different chips that work in conjunction. That's 4 different configurations: Chip 1A+Chip2A, Chip 2B+Chip2B, Chip 1A+Chip2B, & Chip2B+Chip2A. How many chips are in the iPhone?
We also can't rule out different assembly lines or plants for assembling the components on the logic board or SoC/PoPs. Sometimes I wonder these things ever work in the first place.
PS: Thanks for stopping with the annoying emoticon usage.
There's another bug in iOS 5 with the Music app when it changes to Cover Flow mode, the app crashes. Bunch of posts on the Apple forums...hopefully that bug will be fixed soon.
Probably a good ten to fifteen other bugs in the iPad version of the music app (iPhone version seems much better). I'm not encouraged that the music app isn't mentioned at all, they desperately need to make some BIG improvements to it asap.
I can't fathom that they actually had a meeting at Apple and came up with the decision NOT to include the same app. I'd like to have been there to hear the reasoning... \
Comments
1) Don't forget brightness, though I would love to be able to speak these commands to Siri, too.
2) The Verizon iPhone 4 didn't have the option to turn off '3G' either. Even though that's not a real issue for a CDMA network I have to wonder if the reason for the exclusion is a limitation of the MDM66x0 chip. I say this because that's when this feature went away, not when Apple introduces to LTE to have an "Enable 4G" toggle switch.
Well I am glad to see there is going to be a fix. I just got three new iPhone 4s for the family tonight. I was a little concerned about this but I figured it was an iOS 5 problem that would get fixed soon. Interesting that it doesn't seem to impact my iPad2.
Well I am glad to see there is going to be a fix. I just got three new iPhone 4s for the family tonight. I was a little concerned about this but I figured it was an iOS 5 problem that would get fixed soon. Interesting that it doesn't seem to impact my iPad2.
AnandTech points out the baseband (cellular modem) firmware was updated from 1.0.11 to 1.0.12. That tells me that it might be a problem with the MDM6610 chipset which is why it's only seems to be affecting the 4S.
That said, pretty much every review I've read is showing right around the same battery life as the iPhone 4 and right inline with Apple's stated times. That tells me this issue is not affecting every iPhone 4S user. I say user because it could be a universal 4S problem with the MDM6610 that is only affected by certain network environments.
On my iPhone 4 there have been no battery issues with iOS 5, but tons of others:
Calendar app freezes & crashes first time it is launched, every time
Music app freezes every third tap of the menu or so
There is a 2-3 second delay after shaking to shuffle
Maps is so slow to load on the go it is all but unusuable
Messages freezes when first using it
Basically, just like when iOS 4 came out and I installed it on my iPhone 3G, it became useless. The issues with my iPhone 4 and iOS 5 are not quite as bad, but enough that the phone is no longer something I want to use.
Oh, and half of YouTube videos have never worked on any iPhone I've ever used, and basically in Safari on my MacBook Pro either...by not working I consider if the video takes longer to load then its actual run time, that's a fail.
There's another bug in iOS 5 with the Music app when it changes to Cover Flow mode, the app crashes. Bunch of posts on the Apple forums...hopefully that bug will be fixed soon.
I want it repeated until ASCII colours, 000000 through FFFFFFF, are shown.
Hmm. That shouldn't be that hard of a C program to write.
I forgive almost all typos. What am I missing?
AnandTech points out the baseband (cellular modem) firmware was updated from 1.0.11 to 1.0.12. That tells me that it might be a problem with the MDM6610 chipset which is why it's only seems to be affecting the 4S.
That said, pretty much every review I've read is showing right around the same battery life as the iPhone 4 and right inline with Apple's stated times. That tells me this issue is not affecting every iPhone 4S user. I say user because it could be a universal 4S problem with the MDM6610 that is only affected by certain network environments.
Thanks I will check that out. Only had it in my hands since 8pm tonight so I will see how it goes. I decided to go with Verizon because they have better coverage in NE Georgia. On the Apple Community forum they were making it sound like the end of the world was near. I haven't run into too many people having a problem.
I don't think you want to disable Auto Time... w/DST com in up this wknd!!
Let's hope Apple have finally gotten that figured out.
Love it!
I updated to this 5.0.1 and it did not change anything for me. 4S.
Given that you're not a developer, you wouldn't be expected to notice any change or be able to give any good input whatsoever.
Uninstall it.
Given that you're not a developer, you wouldn't be expected to notice any change or be able to give any good input whatsoever.
Uninstall it.
Please explain.
Whether I am a dev or not, the iDevice is still the same.
But please, do, explain.
Also, what is the difference between iOS 5 GM and iOS final? :>
. That tells me this issue is not affecting every iPhone 4S user. I say user because it could be a universal 4S problem with the MDM6610 that is only affected by certain network environments.
ISTM that every one of these wacky problems Apple encounters with the iPhone are limited to certain phones, and not all phones. I wonder if it is because they source parts form different manufacturers.
Many of the reported problems seem to affect subsets of users, and most of them seem to affect a minority of users. Every time Apple releases a new iPhone, it seems that some vocal minority has a huge problem.
Could it be attributed to specific alternative parts used when the mainline supplier has run dry? Maybe the mainline part skews towards one end of a too-wide tolerance, while a minority of products get one which is at the extreme other end of the tolerance?
Anybody have any info/opinions?
ISTM that every one of these wacky problems Apple encounters with the iPhone are limited to certain phones, and not all phones. I wonder if it is because they source parts form different manufacturers.
Many of the reported problems seem to affect subsets of users, and most of them seem to affect a minority of users. Every time Apple releases a new iPhone, it seems that some vocal minority has a huge problem.
Could it be attributed to specific alternative parts used when the mainline supplier has run dry? Maybe the mainline part skews towards one end of a too-wide tolerance, while a minority of products get one which is at the extreme other end of the tolerance?
Anybody have any info/opinions?
It could even be a variance within the same manufacturer. Take a wafer of CPUs, for instance. They are, for all intent and purposes, identical chips, but technically there are variances.
AnandTech has long speculated that Apple has sourced slightly more power efficient (in the case of the MBA) chips from Intel. This is simply isn't something you can do when you need dozens of millions per quarter, even if by the same manufacturer.
Now roll that into multi-manufacturers and you get an even more complex situation, like you mention.
To make the even more complex consider that you have two manufacturers for two different chips that work in conjunction. That's 4 different configurations: Chip 1A+Chip2A, Chip 2B+Chip2B, Chip 1A+Chip2B, & Chip2B+Chip2A. How many chips are in the iPhone?
We also can't rule out different assembly lines or plants for assembling the components on the logic board or SoC/PoPs. Sometimes I wonder these things ever work in the first place.
PS: Thanks for stopping with the annoying emoticon usage.
There's another bug in iOS 5 with the Music app when it changes to Cover Flow mode, the app crashes. Bunch of posts on the Apple forums...hopefully that bug will be fixed soon.
Probably a good ten to fifteen other bugs in the iPad version of the music app (iPhone version seems much better). I'm not encouraged that the music app isn't mentioned at all, they desperately need to make some BIG improvements to it asap.
Why would you want it?
That's not standard is it????
I can't fathom that they actually had a meeting at Apple and came up with the decision NOT to include the same app. I'd like to have been there to hear the reasoning... \
This is the first update I would seriously not doing. I've just upgraded from the 3G and the improvement is beyond words. ..
Love it!
I can't tell if you're living in the past or the future. You must be from Vancouver, BC or California.