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Filed under: Apple Corporate, Retail, Rumors, iPhone
Daily Finance is reporting today on the iPhone's pending release in China. We've been reporting on this gradual deal for a while now. Back in July it looked like the deal might be delayed until 2010, but earlier this month, Apple's VP of iPhone and iPod product marketing Greg Joswiak (among others) traveled to China to meet with China Unicom. Report: iPhone will drop in China on Friday originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Report: iPhone will drop in China on Friday originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 27 Aug 2009 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Like an old episode of Star Trek, Apple patents provide us with a look at many possible futures for the iPhone, some of which — but not all of which — may one day be ours. Cases in point, AppleInsider rounds up the latest batch from Cupertino:
Location-based home screen means a user would be presented with a dynamically generated Home Screen based on factors such as location (get off the plane, automagically be presented with local weather, maps, contacts, etc.)
Speech-to-text would take what you say into the iPhone and transcribe it into editable text (similar to what many 3rd party apps offer now).
Image transportation, where picture are automagically scaled and sent for display on a TV or similar external monitor.
Event-based contact lists, hosted server-side, that would allow access for event participants.
In-call file transfer would let users share a file with someone they’re already talking to on the phone.
Yeah, iPhone 4.0 is coming when again?
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

The iPod touch, iPod nano, and now it sounds like the hard-drive based iPod classic are all set to receive cameras, presumably at Apple’s September 9 music event. We’ve heard rumors of the iPod touch before, of course, and even the iPod nano, but the iPod classic as well?
That’s what Digitimes (via MacRumors) is reporting:
OmniVision will be the sole supplier of 3.2-megapixel CIS products for new iPod nano, iPod classic and iPod Touch models which will be launched in September, the sources indicated.
So, the take away — if these rumors pan out — is that those of you who want apps (touch), portability (nano) and now, massive storage capacity (classic) might all have uber-convenient picture snapping in your future.
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.
3.2 Megapixel Cameras Bound for iPod touch, iPod nano, and… iPod classic?
Nokia has announced a new, Maemo-powered N900 which our good friend Matt Miller of NokiaExperts.com is beaming about in an iPhone and Palm Pre competitive sort of way:
I have to say I have not been this excited about a Nokia product for quite some time and with the T-Mobile USA 3G support I will definitely be picking one up as soon as I can. The N900 fixes all that is wrong with the N97 and then throws on a slick Maemo UI and feature set that should have most any geek drooling.
32GB, OpenGL 2.0, ARM Cortex A8, 800×600 screen, 5mp camera… Pretty clear that Nokia is doing their usual hardware magic, many specs closely mirroring the iPhone 3GS, in fact (though what’s up with 1GB of application memory?!) And Maemo 5 UI…
Does this mean Nokia is abandoning Symbian on the high end for this hot new Debian Linux-based OS? Will they be able to really come up with a user experience that can take mind share away from the iPhone and Palm Pre? And will this device finally give them some sort of presence in the North American market?
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.
The Competition: Nokia Goes Maemo, Announces N900
Does the App Store represent a $2.5 billion a year economy, with 26.4 million iPhone users, 50% of whom pay for apps to the tune of $9.49 a month, or $125 million in August alone? That’s the story AdMob’s latest figures (via GigaOm) are telling, with 26.4 million iPod touch users, at 40% who pay, averaging $9.79 or $73 million rounding out Apple’s mobile platform.
Some other interesting metrics include iPhone users downloading 10 new apps a month, 18 for iPod touch. 8 apps are freebies for the iPhone’rs, 16 for iPod touch’ies.
Any wonder everyone and their carrier is trying to get into the App Store game?
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.
iPhone App Store $2.5 Billion a Year Business?
What’s your preferred touchscreen technology?(surveys)
Do you prefer the singular, solid piece of glass that is currently the iPhone screen, the big honking button/piezo electric multi-clicker that powers the BlackBerry Storm and its upcoming second edition, or do you yearn for the ability to customize haptics on your touch screen?
That’s the question our sibling site, CrackBerry.com asked yesterday and the one we’re repeating today. Since you’re reading TiPb, we expect you’re already super-elite when it comes to using the iPhone multitouch screen, so no explanation needed here.
For the first edition BlackBerry Storm, RIM floated a similar screen over a giant button that you had to press down every time you wanted to do something. It allowed separate navigation and execution, but arguably each at the expense of the other. With Storm 2 — well, nobody knows what they’re doing for sure (you can read CrackBerry Kevin’s guesses) but it appears you can click on multiple locations simultaneously, mitigating the linear process of the older model.
Since the BlackBerry Storm 2 has no “clickability” when off, Kevin wonders if users will be able to control how much “clickability” it has when on as well, potentially allowing it to be turn on, turned down, or turned up.
Given each of these options, are you happy with the iPhone screen input method as-is, or does the Storm’s way interest you?
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.
Poll: iPhone Screen, BlackBerry Storm Screen, or Both?
Apple’s on-again, off-again (on again, off-again, ad infinitum) negotiations to get the iPhone into China seem to be on again — we think. Honestly, it’s impossible to tell anymore so until an Apple exec actually announces it on stage (in September?) or we see millions of Chinese ditching their gray-market, WiFi-enabled international iPhones for state sanctioned China Unicom, we’ll just keep waiting (and waiting) and seeing…
Still, with a handset as popular as the iPhone and a market as HUGE as China, it really is only a matter of time.
[Via the Wall Street Journal]
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.
iPhone Ready for China Launch at Last? (Again?)