Over thousands of Crazy Facts,,,
Iphone/Itouch applications
PC tricks, Gadgets, PC help....
Free Download, Software, Applications and other stuff,,,,
About updating,,,

Today's Birthday

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Apple sued over iPhone 3G reception issues


An Alabama woman has filed a lawsuit against Apple, claiming the iPhone 3G's network is slower than advertised.

In a 10-page complaint filed Tuesday in the U.S District Court for Northern Alabama, Birmingham resident Jessica Alena Smith charged Apple with breach of express and implied warranty and unjust enrichment. Smith, who refers to the phone she purchased throughout the complaint as "Defective iPhone 3G," seeks class action status.

The lawsuit claims that Apple's iPhone 3G advertising campaign is misleading.

"Defendant intended for customers to believe its statements and representations about the Defective iPhone 3Gs, and to trust that the device was 'twice as fast at half the price'," the lawsuit says.

The charges in the lawsuit mirror widespread complaints about the iPhone 3G's reception that have spread across the Internet since Apple and AT&T released the successor to the original iPhone on July 11. Affected users have said the iPhone 3G will switch between 3G networks and EDGE networks even when the device is sitting still and that they will lose reception in the middle of a call while in a 3G-rich environment.

"Immediately after purchase, Plaintiff soon noticed that her internet connection, receipt and sending of e-mail, text messages and other data transfers were slower than expected and advertised," the lawsuit says.

After weeks of silence regarding the complaints, Apple finally acknowledged earlier this week that reception issues existed. An Apple spokesman told the Associated Press that the iPhone OS 2.0.2 software update was designed to provide "improved communication with 3G networks."

But Monday's update was labeled with the briefest of descriptions--"bug fixes"--making it difficult to know exactly what was addressed with the update.

The suit asks that Apple be ordered to repair or replace all defective devices and pay unspecified damages, interest, and attorney's fees.

ANDROID PHONE


The FCC has approved HTC’s ‘Dream’ phone, which will now be the first Android-based handset to hit the market, InfoWeek reports. It will support T-Mobile’s 3G network. (Let’s see if it handles 3G better than Apple and AT&T.)

Looks like it will have a “jog ball” (trackball?), 802.11b/g Wi-Fi and BlueTooth.

Meanwhile, Google released v. 0.9 of the Android SDK, PC Mag says. In this version: new home screen and UI changes, apps like clock, calculator, camera, music player, SMS messaging. Also new dev tools like a preview of XML layouts for Eclipse.

What’s missing: GTalk and Bluetooth.

Given the disparities between HTC Dream and Android SDK 0.9, it’s safe to say that “Android will likely improve greatly before HTC and T-Mobile debut the first phones to use Android in October, thanks in no small part to the OS’s openness toward third-party developers,” as PC Mag says.
Related Posts with Thumbnails