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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 06-11-2008, 07:51 PM
Ron
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Default Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted



http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 06-11-2008, 09:39 PM
Larry
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

Ron <ronclifford@peoplepc.com> wrote in
news:bq3054h7sas48slso0k5o9an4af5p6lcnr@4ax.com:

> http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html


I clicked on the App Store. Where's the apps??!!

I see one little monkey game, there's Twitter and a little map program for
the new GPS and the hokey keyboard toy.

If you go to the site on an iPhone do you get to see all the new apps
they've been working on for months since SDK 1.0 released? I'm shocked
this is just ONE page with a couple of "apps". Ebay isn't an app...Ebay is
SPAM!

Where are all the apps???


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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 06-11-2008, 11:56 PM
nospam
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABAACEE82CB8noonehomecom@208.49.80.253>, Larry
<noone@home.com> wrote:

> Ron <ronclifford@peoplepc.com> wrote in
> news:bq3054h7sas48slso0k5o9an4af5p6lcnr@4ax.com:
>
> > http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

>
> I clicked on the App Store. Where's the apps??!!


the store is not yet open.

it is expected to open in july, when version 2 firmware is released for
the current iphones (required to buy apps) along with the iphone 3g
(which ships with v2 firmware).

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  #4 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 12:39 AM
The Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

Ron <ronclifford@peoplepc.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:bq3054h7sas48slso0k5o9an4af5p6lcnr@4ax.com:

> http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html


I see they won't be touting battery life as a big draw. They still limit
the phone in choice of audio and video formats. And it still doen't have
true GPS. Average camera at best with no video recording. No card slot.
And no western skiing for the iPhone user (maximum operating altitude
10,000 ft.). Looks like a mediocre feature offering at best.



Also, how can the phone operate in a range of 32 to 95 degrees but not
operate in a range of -4 to 113 degrees? Must be more of the Apple Rocket
Science.

But I'll bet the "user-configurable maximum volume limit" will be a big
selling point. After all, who ever heard of a volume control on a cell
phone?

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  #5 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 02:51 AM
David Moyer
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABAACEE82CB8noonehomecom@208.49.80.253>,
Larry <noone@home.com> wrote:

> > http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

>
> I clicked on the App Store. Where's the apps??!!
>
> I see one little monkey game, there's Twitter and a little map program for
> the new GPS and the hokey keyboard toy.
>
> If you go to the site on an iPhone do you get to see all the new apps
> they've been working on for months since SDK 1.0 released? I'm shocked
> this is just ONE page with a couple of "apps". Ebay isn't an app...Ebay is
> SPAM!
>
> Where are all the apps???


haven't you even seen the Keynote? until you do, you won't understand
much about modern cell phones.

http://www.apple.com/quicktime/qtv/wwdc08/

the store "apps" won't be available until the phone is for sale. what a
concept!

so july 11th is when you can move up to an iphone.

in the meantime, here are 1,737 iphone apps to hold you over...

http://www.apple.com/webapps/

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  #6 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 03:43 AM
The Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer <meetme@world.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:meetme-3C4CD2.19512911062008@dialup-4.167.115.65.Dial1.Houston1.Leve
l3.net:

> In article <Xns9ABAACEE82CB8noonehomecom@208.49.80.253>,
> Larry <noone@home.com> wrote:
>
>> > http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

>>
>> I clicked on the App Store. Where's the apps??!!
>>
>> I see one little monkey game, there's Twitter and a little map
>> program for the new GPS and the hokey keyboard toy.
>>
>> If you go to the site on an iPhone do you get to see all the new apps
>> they've been working on for months since SDK 1.0 released? I'm
>> shocked this is just ONE page with a couple of "apps". Ebay isn't an
>> app...Ebay is SPAM!
>>
>> Where are all the apps???

>
> haven't you even seen the Keynote? until you do, you won't understand
> much about modern cell phones.
>


Modern cell phones have things like true GPS.

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  #7 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 06:39 AM
David Moyer
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABAD2D32D646bob@216.196.97.136>,
The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:

> > haven't you even seen the Keynote? until you do, you won't understand
> > much about modern cell phones.
> >

>
> Modern cell phones have things like true GPS.


and the 1.0 iPhone have the excellent WiFi positioning system via
Skyhook, and the 2.0 models have that and true GPS, so if you are
indoors or out, an iPhone will work... not so with most Cell Phone GPS
systems.

apple has the better system, that's for sure... it's just you are
jealous, that's all.

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  #8 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 12:36 PM
The Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer <meetme@world.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:meetme-C1C712.23394811062008@news.qwest.net:

> In article <Xns9ABAD2D32D646bob@216.196.97.136>,
> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>
>> > haven't you even seen the Keynote? until you do, you won't understand
>> > much about modern cell phones.
>> >

>>
>> Modern cell phones have things like true GPS.

>
> and the 1.0 iPhone have the excellent WiFi positioning system via
> Skyhook, and the 2.0 models have that and true GPS, so if you are
> indoors or out, an iPhone will work... not so with most Cell Phone GPS
> systems.
>


No- they don't use true GPS. It is Assisted GPS, which is inferior to the
real thing. Do your homework- the Apple Assisted GPS is network dependent
on either GSM or wifi.

> apple has the better system, that's for sure... it's just you are
> jealous, that's all.
>


Better than who, fanboi?

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  #9 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 02:13 PM
Larry
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote in
news:Xns9ABAB3B07C024bob@216.196.97.136:

> Ron <ronclifford@peoplepc.com> amazed us all with the following in
> news:bq3054h7sas48slso0k5o9an4af5p6lcnr@4ax.com:
>
>> http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

>
> I see they won't be touting battery life as a big draw. They still
> limit the phone in choice of audio and video formats. And it still
> doen't have true GPS. Average camera at best with no video recording.
> No card slot. And no western skiing for the iPhone user (maximum
> operating altitude 10,000 ft.). Looks like a mediocre feature
> offering at best.
>
>
>
> Also, how can the phone operate in a range of 32 to 95 degrees but not
> operate in a range of -4 to 113 degrees? Must be more of the Apple
> Rocket Science.
>
> But I'll bet the "user-configurable maximum volume limit" will be a
> big selling point. After all, who ever heard of a volume control on a
> cell phone?
>


I was also quite curious as to what "assisted GPS" means on a page that
is supposed to be the technical specifications of the device. Two words
is kinda vague. Either it really does have GPS or it doesn't. I thought
that is why the plastic case, because the GPS antenna MUST be somewhere
it can see the sky. The satellites are around 16,000 miles away and line
of sight. Any reflections, like operating a GPS receiver in a building
so the signal must bounce off something to get through the windows makes
the GPS fix very inaccurate because it's an analog system running on
timing and phase relationships between multiple signals. In a car, you'd
have to provide iPhone some kind of dash mounting bracket so it could see
UP into the sky, not with the car roof blocking the RF raining down on
it.

The temperature range is probably dependent on the LCD's capabilities,
not the phone. Too hot, the display turns black as the crystals melt.
Too cold and the crystals are so sluggish the display looks like slow
motion and will actually "freeze" at some low temperature. But, I
thought we'd gotten over most of that issue, especially in the cold.
Maybe they're afraid of the hot glue holding the cables on inside the
case melting.

Has anyone had iphone troubles because they forgot and left it in a car
in the hot sun? What did the display look like before it cooled back
off?

I cannot imagine ANY portable device needing a volume limit. All the
damned things, including my Nokia N800 Linux tablet, need MORE
AMPLIFICATION so you can hear it in a noisy place. Every one of these
devices needs a hardware-based audio compander (compressor-expander) to
provide proper audio levels because the source material is either driven
into distortion or is so low you NEVER have enough volume control range
to bring it up so you can hear it. Even internet broadcasters do a
HORRIBLE job of watching and adjusting their encoding levels to ensure
peak audio output without overdriving their encoders. Very few use
companders at the source, so the devices desparately need them at the
end. One of the reasons I didn't upgrade N800 to N810 is N810 has LESS
speakers, mounted on the sides, than N800's front mounted on either side
of the display. Sitting close enough to watch it, there is noticeable
stereo from the speakers. I don't sit on the side, where the N810 audio
comes out. The other reason was the loss of big SDHC memory cards, going
to a single microSD limited to 8GB. N800 has lots better storage.




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  #10 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 02:43 PM
Larry
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote in news:Xns9ABAD2D32D646bob@
216.196.97.136:

> Modern cell phones have things like true GPS.
>
>


I sorry, Bob, I disagree. Pick any GPS phone. Click to Menu and bring
up your GPS position. My ROKR Z6m is supposed to have GPS. There is a
GPS position subroutine in the test section you can bring up with the
secret code. It never shows anything. My V6 was the same way.

If the phones' GPS was installed, they'd be using it for a sales gimmick
and Lat/Long would be displayed on the home page to brag about it to you.

I think the reason it's not is purely physics. GPS birds are 16,000
miles away on a slice of 2.4 Ghz microwaves, which are line-of-sight,
period. To get a fix at all, the phone would HAVE to be IN YOUR HANDS,
OUTSIDE, with an UNOBSTRUCTED view of the sky from an antenna mounted on
the SKY SIDE, not pointing towards the ground from the back, of the unit.
GPS signals at ground level, even outside in the country, are very weak
requiring a fantastic receiver with an unobstructed antenna. They're not
going to make it, reliably, through the LCD or the keypad pointing up.
It's unobstructed antenna isn't on top because that's where the microSD
card slot is located.

Notice that on ANY handheld GPS there is an RF transparent plastic panel
about 2 X 3" above the display on the UPSIDE, when you're looking at it,
of the unit. The high gain 2.4 Ghz antenna is under that plastic. Where
is that on your sellphone....or your iphone? The display has a massive
grid of intersecting CONDUCTORS transparent to your sight, but NOT to 2.4
Ghz at -110 dbm. The antenna can't be there.

The antenna can't be on the back because the GPS signal doesn't bounce
off the sidewalk. Even if it did, the timing would be all screwed up as
you move the unit around making the fix move all over a 50' circle,
rendering the fix useless...especially for speed.

Nope...there's no antennas...so there can't be a GPS. I think it's a lie
for the druggies and Feds. You CANNOT pinpoint the position of the phone
as soon as you pass through the front door of the high rise building.
That's just fantasy. The last good fix it got was just outside the door.
That fix would be what the cops would see.

More Sellphone bullshit.

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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 03:12 PM
Larry
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer <meetme@world.com> wrote in news:meetme-C1C712.23394811062008
@news.qwest.net:

> and the 1.0 iPhone have the excellent WiFi positioning system via
> Skyhook, and the 2.0 models have that and true GPS, so if you are
> indoors or out, an iPhone will work... not so with most Cell Phone GPS
> systems.
>
>


Dream.........and the dream comes true..........
Dream.........it's the thing to do..............
(play the song while reading this)

GPS DOESN'T WORK INDOORS!.....IT'S IMPOSSIBLE....

How can you triangulate from WiFi when you have NO IDEA WHERE THE WIFI
BASE IS AND THE WIFI DOESN'T SUPPORT TRIANGULATION?.....Impossible.

The phones are, ON PURPOSE, so weak they don't cause more than 1 or two
towers to hear them....the reason SELLphone companies keep turning the
damned power down...3 watt to 600mw to 300mw to 200mw to 150mw...as the
system has more and more SMALL footprint cells turning off the BIG
footprint cells the AMPS system used to increase users/sq mi and profits.

To triangulate the position of an RF transmitter, you need at LEAST TWO
good LOPs (Lines of Position) from TWO separate, KNOWN locations with
STEERABLE antennas Sellphone towers DON'T have. A Sellphone tower has 3
PANEL antennas, each covering a little more than 120 degrees. The system
can tell you WITHIN 150-170 degrees, which direction a user is in because
it can see he's better on antenna 2 than 1 or 3. He's, sort of, THAT
WAY> as opposed to ^that way or <that way. Now, if by some magic, we've
installed REALLY NEW equipment that can send him out a PULSE and have him
RETURN the pulse, which I don't think Sellphone companies have, we could
determine how FAR out into this WIDE ARC from the tower he is located,
making each sector he's being heard in have a 150 degree ARC of position.
IF 3 towers had a good 150 degree ARC at some timed distance, and those
arcs intersected, that's where he'd be in OPEN COUNTRY. That fix would
be "fairly accurate" IF we knew the EXACT time it took for the cheap
Sellphone to turn that pulse around, different for every one, I'm sure.
But, alas, he's IN THE CITY where most of the customers are located....in
canyons of REFLECTING buildings causing MULTIPATH PROPAGATION DELAYS
between this wonderful Supersell and that user. His signal is BOUNCING
AROUND off these objects, making any timing-based, TACAN-like pulsing-
pulse-returning based system virtually USELESS...because the PATH
distance to him is FAR longer than the ACTUAL distance to him, at the
speed of light.

If you're interested in the TRUTH about the effects of multipath on radio
direction finding, the Canadian military has a gift for you:
http://stinet.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTR...51&Location=U2
&doc=GetTRDoc.pdf

This report is about VHF RDF. The higher you go in frequency, the WORSE
the effects of multipath propagation, especially in cities where there
are thousands of reflecting surfaces around, becomes. Notice how UHF TV
has LOTS more ghosts than VHF TV. Ghosts on analog TV signals is caused
by multipath signals reaching your receiver bouncing off things.

Have you ever used an AM band pocket radio's loopstick antenna to RDF the
station? It's so low in frequency, and the station runs so much power,
RDF is easy and fun. Tune in a station over 10 miles away on the AM, not
FM, band. With the radio standing upright, turn the radio on a vertical
axis until you find the NULL of the loopstick antenna, which is the line
of the ferrite core of the little radio's antenna, out the narrow sides
of the case, in most radios. This gives you a LOP, a line of position.
The station can be anywhere along that line. Now, move to a new position
a long way from the first position and plot another LOP on that signal
null the same way. Use a roadmap and plot them. Where they intersect is
the station transmitter. Because you have LINES of position, not ARCS of
position like a Sellphone system would have to have, you only need two
LOPs to find the station. We used to find U-boats that way from loop
antennas mounted on destroyer and cruiser ships in WW2. There's few
reflecting surfaces at sea.

Don't believe every hype Sellphone or Government bureaucrats tell you.
It's nonsense. As you can see from this Canadian military report, RDF is
very hard to accomplish under the best of conditions. Finding a
Sellphone inside a building where no GPS signal can go using RDF
techniques is DAMNED NEAR IMPOSSIBLE to accomplish with any usable
accuracy.

Sellphones AREN'T clairvoyant or some kind of black magic.....

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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 03:13 PM
David Moyer
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABB638CBFC31noonehomecom@208.49.80.253>,
Larry <noone@home.com> wrote:

> I sorry, Bob, I disagree. Pick any GPS phone. Click to Menu and bring
> up your GPS position. My ROKR Z6m is supposed to have GPS. There is a
> GPS position subroutine in the test section you can bring up with the
> secret code. It never shows anything. My V6 was the same way.
>
> If the phones' GPS was installed, they'd be using it for a sales gimmick
> and Lat/Long would be displayed on the home page to brag about it to you.
>
> I think the reason it's not is purely physics. GPS birds are 16,000
> miles away on a slice of 2.4 Ghz microwaves, which are line-of-sight,
> period. To get a fix at all, the phone would HAVE to be IN YOUR HANDS,
> OUTSIDE, with an UNOBSTRUCTED view of the sky from an antenna mounted on
> the SKY SIDE, not pointing towards the ground from the back, of the unit.
> GPS signals at ground level, even outside in the country, are very weak
> requiring a fantastic receiver with an unobstructed antenna. They're not
> going to make it, reliably, through the LCD or the keypad pointing up.
> It's unobstructed antenna isn't on top because that's where the microSD
> card slot is located.
>
> Notice that on ANY handheld GPS there is an RF transparent plastic panel
> about 2 X 3" above the display on the UPSIDE, when you're looking at it,
> of the unit. The high gain 2.4 Ghz antenna is under that plastic. Where
> is that on your sellphone....or your iphone? The display has a massive
> grid of intersecting CONDUCTORS transparent to your sight, but NOT to 2.4
> Ghz at -110 dbm. The antenna can't be there.
>
> The antenna can't be on the back because the GPS signal doesn't bounce
> off the sidewalk. Even if it did, the timing would be all screwed up as
> you move the unit around making the fix move all over a 50' circle,
> rendering the fix useless...especially for speed.
>
> Nope...there's no antennas...so there can't be a GPS. I think it's a lie
> for the druggies and Feds. You CANNOT pinpoint the position of the phone
> as soon as you pass through the front door of the high rise building.
> That's just fantasy. The last good fix it got was just outside the door.
> That fix would be what the cops would see.
>
> More Sellphone bullshit.


larry, please put yourself out of your own misery, WATCH the Keynote
since it explains all of that... (to huge applause by the way) learn
about skyhook and you'll understand why you can be indoors and still
have it work.

http://www.skyhookwireless.com/

bottom line it has true WPS & GPS

http://www.apple.com/quicktime/qtv/wwdc08/

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  #13 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 03:15 PM
David Moyer
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABB38F6A69BBbob@216.196.97.136>,
The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:

> No- they don't use true GPS. It is Assisted GPS, which is inferior to the
> real thing. Do your homework- the Apple Assisted GPS is network dependent
> on either GSM or wifi.


assisted just means it also has WPS, first cell phone to have it.

> > apple has the better system, that's for sure... it's just you are
> > jealous, that's all.

>
> Better than who, fanboi?


Garmin, TomTom, etc... those companies are now toast... at least in the
consumer space.

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  #14 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 03:46 PM
nospam
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABB38F6A69BBbob@216.196.97.136>, The Bob
<nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>
> No- they don't use true GPS. It is Assisted GPS, which is inferior to the
> real thing. Do your homework- the Apple Assisted GPS is network dependent
> on either GSM or wifi.


assisted gps is certainly not inferior to the real thing, nor is it
dependent on gsm or wifi.

assisted gps utilizes information from the cellular network when
available to assist in locating the device and obtaining a fix.
basically, the cell towers send enough information (ephemeris) for the
gps to quickly locate the satellites. outside of cell coverage areas,
it works as any gps would, possibly taking a minute or more to get a
lock.

assisted gps is not only common on mobile phones, but it also exists on
handheld gps devices. for example, gps units that use the sirf star
iii chipset, such as ones made by garmin and other companies, have
assisted gps.

it's an enhancement, and a very useful one.

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  #15 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 03:53 PM
nospam
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABB6B41EADE8noonehomecom@208.49.80.253>, Larry
<noone@home.com> wrote:
>
> GPS DOESN'T WORK INDOORS!.....IT'S IMPOSSIBLE....


it's very possible. some of the better gps devices (e.g., with the
sirf star iii chipset) do work indoors. i have even obtained a fix
inside a steel framed department store with one.

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  #16 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 04:08 PM
Steve Mackay
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer wrote:
> In article <Xns9ABB38F6A69BBbob@216.196.97.136>,
> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>
>> No- they don't use true GPS. It is Assisted GPS, which is inferior to the
>> real thing. Do your homework- the Apple Assisted GPS is network dependent
>> on either GSM or wifi.

>
> assisted just means it also has WPS, first cell phone to have it.
>
>>> apple has the better system, that's for sure... it's just you are
>>> jealous, that's all.

>> Better than who, fanboi?

>
> Garmin, TomTom, etc... those companies are now toast... at least in the
> consumer space.


You are *SUCH* a moron Oxford. You said that about Palm, and RIM when
the 1st iPhone came out.

The iPhone will *NEVER* have the accuracy, and routing capabilites of a
true GPS. There isn't enough romm in it for a properly accurate GPS
antenna or GPS chipset. It wont hold a candle to the SIRF III based GPSs.

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  #17 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 04:09 PM
Steve Mackay
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

Larry wrote:
> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote in
> news:Xns9ABAB3B07C024bob@216.196.97.136:
>
>> Ron <ronclifford@peoplepc.com> amazed us all with the following in
>> news:bq3054h7sas48slso0k5o9an4af5p6lcnr@4ax.com:
>>
>>> http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

>> I see they won't be touting battery life as a big draw. They still
>> limit the phone in choice of audio and video formats. And it still
>> doen't have true GPS. Average camera at best with no video recording.
>> No card slot. And no western skiing for the iPhone user (maximum
>> operating altitude 10,000 ft.). Looks like a mediocre feature
>> offering at best.
>>
>>
>>
>> Also, how can the phone operate in a range of 32 to 95 degrees but not
>> operate in a range of -4 to 113 degrees? Must be more of the Apple
>> Rocket Science.
>>
>> But I'll bet the "user-configurable maximum volume limit" will be a
>> big selling point. After all, who ever heard of a volume control on a
>> cell phone?
>>

>
> I was also quite curious as to what "assisted GPS" means on a page that
> is supposed to be the technical specifications of the device. Two words
> is kinda vague. Either it really does have GPS or it doesn't. I thought
> that is why the plastic case, because the GPS antenna MUST be somewhere
> it can see the sky. The satellites are around 16,000 miles away and line
> of sight. Any reflections, like operating a GPS receiver in a building
> so the signal must bounce off something to get through the windows makes
> the GPS fix very inaccurate because it's an analog system running on
> timing and phase relationships between multiple signals. In a car, you'd
> have to provide iPhone some kind of dash mounting bracket so it could see
> UP into the sky, not with the car roof blocking the RF raining down on
> it.
>
> The temperature range is probably dependent on the LCD's capabilities,
> not the phone. Too hot, the display turns black as the crystals melt.
> Too cold and the crystals are so sluggish the display looks like slow
> motion and will actually "freeze" at some low temperature. But, I
> thought we'd gotten over most of that issue, especially in the cold.
> Maybe they're afraid of the hot glue holding the cables on inside the
> case melting.
>
> Has anyone had iphone troubles because they forgot and left it in a car
> in the hot sun? What did the display look like before it cooled back
> off?


I've kept mine in the clear map display area of the tank bag on my
motorcycle. It got quite hot... The iphone shuts itself down after about
45 minutes under the map display(much like the heat from a car under there).


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  #18 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 04:25 PM
DevilsPGD
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In message <Xns9ABB638CBFC31noonehomecom@208.49.80.253> Larry
<noone@home.com> wrote:

>The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote in news:Xns9ABAD2D32D646bob@
>216.196.97.136:
>
>> Modern cell phones have things like true GPS.
>>
>>

>
>I sorry, Bob, I disagree. Pick any GPS phone.


Okay, I pick the AT&T TILT.

>Click to Menu and bring
>up your GPS position.


I don't have anything called "menu", but I do have a couple GPS capable
applications.

>My ROKR Z6m is supposed to have GPS. There is a
>GPS position subroutine in the test section you can bring up with the
>secret code. It never shows anything. My V6 was the same way.


Perhaps you need to pick better phones. I not only get a lat/long, but
I can see the time, nearby satellites and their relative strengths.

Oh, and I can pull and log the NMEA data too, should I be sufficiently
bored.

>Notice that on ANY handheld GPS there is an RF transparent plastic panel
>about 2 X 3" above the display on the UPSIDE, when you're looking at it,
>of the unit.


Perhaps you can point it out for me as there physically isn't 2" above
the display on my device:
http://www.68phone.com/wp-content/up...c-att-tilt.jpg

>Nope...there's no antennas...so there can't be a GPS. I think it's a lie
>for the druggies and Feds. You CANNOT pinpoint the position of the phone
>as soon as you pass through the front door of the high rise building.
>That's just fantasy. The last good fix it got was just outside the door.
>That fix would be what the cops would see.


It might be fantasy, but my QStar manages to figure out where I am from
inside in a hotel, with the last fix being in another country.

I've also fired it up downtown inside an office building, ground level,
while killing time waiting to meet someone. Last known fix was across
town, and was initially returned, but after around two minutes it
managed to get close, although it had me across the street and down the
block slightly initially.

But like you say, fantasy, must have been the last known location.

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  #19 (permalink)  
Old 06-12-2008, 04:25 PM
DevilsPGD
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In message <Xns9ABB6B41EADE8noonehomecom@208.49.80.253> Larry
<noone@home.com> wrote:

>David Moyer <meetme@world.com> wrote in news:meetme-C1C712.23394811062008
>@news.qwest.net:
>
>> and the 1.0 iPhone have the excellent WiFi positioning system via
>> Skyhook, and the 2.0 models have that and true GPS, so if you are
>> indoors or out, an iPhone will work... not so with most Cell Phone GPS
>> systems.
>>
>>

>
>Dream.........and the dream comes true..........
>Dream.........it's the thing to do..............
>(play the song while reading this)
>
>GPS DOESN'T WORK INDOORS!.....IT'S IMPOSSIBLE....


It can, depending on the signal strength you manage to receive, and your
receiver's sensitivity. The signal is obviously degraded, but if you're
near a window, it may be sufficient.

I have a QStar BT-Q1000 that gets a decent signal indoors and can manage
to pin-point my location when I arrive in a hotel a thousand miles from
where it was last turned on (so it's definitely not just caching a
previous location)

Several of the reviews mention this behaviour as well:
http://www.pocketnow.com/index.php?a...reviews&id=976 read
"In fact, I was able to receive a signal five feet from a window, inside
a brick building. The unit also logged while in a sealed backpack...
very convenient. "

When I use this GPS, I leave it in a compartment near the top of my
backpack.

>How can you triangulate from WiFi when you have NO IDEA WHERE THE WIFI
>BASE IS AND THE WIFI DOESN'T SUPPORT TRIANGULATION?.....Impossible.


My iPod Touch with Google Maps has this creepy habit of figuring out
where I am, it has nothing but wifi and IP address information to go on.

I've tested it on literally dozens of open wifi access points around
three different cities. The accuracy isn't comparable to turn by turn
GPS directions, but it's sufficient to find myself on a map.

>To triangulate the position of an RF transmitter, you need at LEAST TWO
>good LOPs (Lines of Position) from TWO separate, KNOWN locations with
>STEERABLE antennas Sellphone towers DON'T have.


They're actually called "cellphones".

As is shown by the iPod Touch (with no GPS and no cellphone support),
you actually don't need multiple points of reference to get a rough idea
of where you're located when relying on guessing your location based on
nearby wifi access points which have known locations. What surprises me
is the depth of information in the wifi location databases, but the
proof is in how well the service works.

For turn by turn directions, GPS is obviously better (I'd argue the only
option), but for finding my current location on a map close enough to
eyeball what is nearby or manually plan out a route, wifi-based location
is more then sufficient.

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  #20 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:09 AM
The Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer <meetme@world.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:meetme-C1C712.23394811062008@news.qwest.net:

> In article <Xns9ABAD2D32D646bob@216.196.97.136>,
> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>
>> > haven't you even seen the Keynote? until you do, you won't understand
>> > much about modern cell phones.
>> >

>>
>> Modern cell phones have things like true GPS.

>
> and the 1.0 iPhone have the excellent WiFi positioning system via
> Skyhook,


And how does that work for you in rural highways and interstates?


and the 2.0 models have that and true GPS,

No it won't- it will be a combination of wifi and tower trinagulation, not
true GPS. Apple doesn't even state that it will be true GPS.

so if you are
> indoors or out, an iPhone will work


My Blackberry (with true GPS) works just fine indorrs.

.... not so with most Cell Phone GPS
> systems.



No- not so with most American GPS cell phones. Most CDMA phones have true
GPS.

>
> apple has the better system, that's for sure...


How do you figure?

it's just you are
> jealous, that's all.
>


Jealous of what? A fnaboi tinker toy?

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  #21 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:13 AM
The Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

Larry <noone@home.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:Xns9ABB5FDA9330noonehomecom@208.49.80.253:

> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote in
> news:Xns9ABAB3B07C024bob@216.196.97.136:
>
>> Ron <ronclifford@peoplepc.com> amazed us all with the following in
>> news:bq3054h7sas48slso0k5o9an4af5p6lcnr@4ax.com:
>>
>>> http://www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html

>>
>> I see they won't be touting battery life as a big draw. They still
>> limit the phone in choice of audio and video formats. And it still
>> doen't have true GPS. Average camera at best with no video
>> recording.
>> No card slot. And no western skiing for the iPhone user (maximum
>> operating altitude 10,000 ft.). Looks like a mediocre feature
>> offering at best.
>>
>>
>>
>> Also, how can the phone operate in a range of 32 to 95 degrees but
>> not operate in a range of -4 to 113 degrees? Must be more of the
>> Apple Rocket Science.
>>
>> But I'll bet the "user-configurable maximum volume limit" will be a
>> big selling point. After all, who ever heard of a volume control on
>> a cell phone?
>>

>
> I was also quite curious as to what "assisted GPS" means on a page
> that is supposed to be the technical specifications of the device.
> Two words is kinda vague. Either it really does have GPS or it
> doesn't. I thought that is why the plastic case, because the GPS
> antenna MUST be somewhere it can see the sky. The satellites are
> around 16,000 miles away and line of sight. Any reflections, like
> operating a GPS receiver in a building so the signal must bounce off
> something to get through the windows makes the GPS fix very inaccurate
> because it's an analog system running on timing and phase
> relationships between multiple signals. In a car, you'd have to
> provide iPhone some kind of dash mounting bracket so it could see UP
> into the sky, not with the car roof blocking the RF raining down on
> it.
>
> The temperature range is probably dependent on the LCD's capabilities,
> not the phone. Too hot, the display turns black as the crystals melt.
> Too cold and the crystals are so sluggish the display looks like slow
> motion and will actually "freeze" at some low temperature. But, I
> thought we'd gotten over most of that issue, especially in the cold.
> Maybe they're afraid of the hot glue holding the cables on inside the
> case melting.
>
> Has anyone had iphone troubles because they forgot and left it in a
> car in the hot sun? What did the display look like before it cooled
> back off?
>
> I cannot imagine ANY portable device needing a volume limit. All the
> damned things, including my Nokia N800 Linux tablet, need MORE
> AMPLIFICATION so you can hear it in a noisy place. Every one of these
> devices needs a hardware-based audio compander (compressor-expander)
> to provide proper audio levels because the source material is either
> driven into distortion or is so low you NEVER have enough volume
> control range to bring it up so you can hear it. Even internet
> broadcasters do a HORRIBLE job of watching and adjusting their
> encoding levels to ensure peak audio output without overdriving their
> encoders. Very few use companders at the source, so the devices
> desparately need them at the end. One of the reasons I didn't upgrade
> N800 to N810 is N810 has LESS speakers, mounted on the sides, than
> N800's front mounted on either side of the display. Sitting close
> enough to watch it, there is noticeable stereo from the speakers. I
> don't sit on the side, where the N810 audio comes out. The other
> reason was the loss of big SDHC memory cards, going to a single
> microSD limited to 8GB. N800 has lots better storage.
>
>
>
>


Larry- I think you missed my point. For a "technical specification"
page from a major computing corporation, the page looks like it was
written by a five year old with all of the inaccuracies and vaguarities.

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  #22 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:31 AM
The Bob
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer <meetme@world.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:meetme-445435.08155812062008@n003-000-000-000.static.ge.com:

> In article <Xns9ABB38F6A69BBbob@216.196.97.136>,
> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>
>> No- they don't use true GPS. It is Assisted GPS, which is inferior
>> to the real thing. Do your homework- the Apple Assisted GPS is
>> network dependent on either GSM or wifi.

>
> assisted just means it also has WPS, first cell phone to have it.


Really? According to Apple:

"iPhone 3G finds your location via GPS or by triangulating your position
using Wi-Fi and cellular towers."



>
>> > apple has the better system, that's for sure... it's just you are
>> > jealous, that's all.

>>
>> Better than who, fanboi?

>
> Garmin, TomTom, etc... those companies are now toast... at least in
> the consumer space.
>


Apple is not better- it will only work when on network. Garmin works
everywhere.

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  #23 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:39 AM
The Bob
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

The Bob <nospam@bob.com> amazed us all with the following in
news:Xns9ABBB2551DBC2bob@216.196.97.136:

> David Moyer <meetme@world.com> amazed us all with the following in
> news:meetme-445435.08155812062008@n003-000-000-000.static.ge.com:
>
>> In article <Xns9ABB38F6A69BBbob@216.196.97.136>,
>> The Bob <nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>>
>>> No- they don't use true GPS. It is Assisted GPS, which is inferior
>>> to the real thing. Do your homework- the Apple Assisted GPS is
>>> network dependent on either GSM or wifi.

>>
>> assisted just means it also has WPS, first cell phone to have it.

>
> Really? According to Apple:
>
> "iPhone 3G finds your location via GPS or by triangulating your position
> using Wi-Fi and cellular towers."
>
>
>


I should clarify my point here- if the iPhone had true GPS, it would have
no need for triangulating using networks, which is far less accurate..

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  #24 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:55 AM
Larry
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

David Moyer <meetme@world.com> wrote in news:meetme-CF5CDC.08130512062008
@n003-000-000-000.static.ge.com:

> larry, please put yourself out of your own misery, WATCH the Keynote
> since it explains all of that... (to huge applause by the way) learn
> about skyhook and you'll understand why you can be indoors and still
> have it work.
>
> http://www.skyhookwireless.com/
>
> bottom line it has true WPS & GPS
>
> http://www.apple.com/quicktime/qtv/wwdc08/
>


That goddamned sales meeting of fanbois didn't "explain" anything of the
sort. I'm still appalled he was giving 12-year-old kid explanations to a
room that was supposed to be full of developer professionals....and they
applauded the most stupid toys.

Show me where the GPS antenna is located on an Iphone and how that antenna
has a clear view of the sky in your 8th floor living room of the 24 story
building.

Bullshit....pure bullshit.


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  #25 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:57 AM
nospam
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABBB2551DBC2bob@216.196.97.136>, The Bob
<nospam@bob.com> wrote:

> Really? According to Apple:
>
> "iPhone 3G finds your location via GPS or by triangulating your position
> using Wi-Fi and cellular towers."


read it carefully. notice the word 'or' in the middle?

> Apple is not better- it will only work when on network. Garmin works
> everywhere.


that's totally false. the gps in the iphone does not require a network
connection.

if a cell connection is available, it can assist in obtaining a fix
(hence the name 'assisted gps'), or if it's not available, then the gps
functions as any other gps would, by using the gps satellites.

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  #26 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:59 AM
Larry
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Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

DevilsPGD <spam_narf_spam@crazyhat.net> wrote in
news:ugf254l3j8hggnq1b4vhdbn333dj56gq2u@4ax.com:

> But like you say, fantasy, must have been the last known location.
>
>


Right, thanks. If GPS could do what Sellphone vendors want....GARMIN, not
them, would have already been doing it.....and they're not because it's
physically IMPOSSIBLE.

Now, I CAN see the sleazy sellphone bastards bullshitting the customers
with some GPS app that gives them the lat/long of the towers, which does
have a GPS receiver in them because it is where the TIME set on your
sellphone display comes from. Look at a cell near you closely and you'll
see a little white dome antenna down on the building or near the base of
the tower feeding a small coax into the building. That's a GPS antenna,
just like the ones on someone's yacht.


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  #27 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 12:59 AM
The Bob
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Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid> amazed us all with the following in
news:120620081657218909%nospam@nospam.invalid:

> In article <Xns9ABBB2551DBC2bob@216.196.97.136>, The Bob
> <nospam@bob.com> wrote:
>
>> Really? According to Apple:
>>
>> "iPhone 3G finds your location via GPS or by triangulating your
>> position using Wi-Fi and cellular towers."

>
> read it carefully. notice the word 'or' in the middle?
>
>> Apple is not better- it will only work when on network. Garmin works
>> everywhere.

>
> that's totally false. the gps in the iphone does not require a
> network connection.
>
> if a cell connection is available, it can assist in obtaining a fix
> (hence the name 'assisted gps'), or if it's not available, then the
> gps functions as any other gps would, by using the gps satellites.
>


GPS does not require assistance.

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  #28 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 01:11 AM
nospam
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

In article <Xns9ABBB7121ADCDbob@216.196.97.136>, The Bob
<nospam@bob.com> wrote:

> > if a cell connection is available, it can assist in obtaining a fix
> > (hence the name 'assisted gps'), or if it's not available, then the
> > gps functions as any other gps would, by using the gps satellites.

>
> GPS does not require assistance.


it doesn't 'require' it, but if there's a cell signal available, some
of the info that would normally be sent from the gps satellites can be
more reliably obtained from the cell towers, thereby dramatically
reducing the time to obtain a fix and/or maintaining a fix in weak
signal conditions.

<http://www.radio-electronics.com/inf...ocation_servic
es/assisted_gps.php>

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  #29 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 01:25 AM
Larry
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

Steve Mackay <steve_mackay@hotmail.com> wrote in news:48513c57$0$31736
$4c368faf@roadrunner.com:

> The iPhone will *NEVER* have the accuracy, and routing capabilites of a
> true GPS. There isn't enough romm in it for a properly accurate GPS
> antenna or GPS chipset. It wont hold a candle to the SIRF III based GPSs.
>
>


http://www.navigadget.com/index.php/...-now-official/

Here's the replacement for my LD-3W Nokia just came out with. Notice its
size in relation to the little suction cup it comes with....much thinner
than the LD-3w. There's not enough difference to warrant spending another
$100 for it, though. I've never seen a GPS receiver so sensitive and fast
as the LD-3w. It's a 12 channel, WAAS-satellite compensated, and the whole
front of it is an antenna array with a nice wide aperture. It'll put the
car in the exact parking space the blue dot location is in Maemo Mapper
with the Virtual Earth Satellite/mapping composite tiles. It's more
accurate than my Garmin $900 marine chartplotter!

Now it does aeronautical charts....(c;


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  #30 (permalink)  
Old 06-13-2008, 01:48 AM
Larry
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Technical Specs of iPhone 3G posted

nospam <nospam@nospam.invalid> wrote in news:120620081711330002%
nospam@nospam.invalid:

> it doesn't 'require' it, but if there's a cell signal available, some
> of the info that would normally be sent from the gps satellites can be
> more reliably obtained from the cell towers, thereby dramatically
> reducing the time to obtain a fix and/or maintaining a fix in weak
> signal conditions.
>
>


Totally false, a fantasy.

The GPS system is ANALOG, based on precise TIMING and the phase
relationship between the pulses generated by the birds and the physical
position of the receiver antenna.

GPS depends on having a DIRECT, unobstructed view from the receiver's
antenna to the maximum number of satellites over the horizon. Come see
the birds' positions:
http://science.nasa.gov/Realtime/jtr.../JTrack3D.html
Jtrack is a realtime Java app showing the exact location of every
satellite, dead or alive, orbiting the planet. Click and DRAG on it and
you'll move it in 3 dimensions. Click on one of the dots and Jtrack will
tell you what that bird's name and number is and draw you a 3D track of
its orbit.

Now, you'll notice very close to the earth, right on the edge of the
atmosphere, a cloud of LEO (low earth orbit) satellites like MIR and ISS
and the Shuttle if it's orbiting the earth and the Hubble Space Telescope
(close to the earth so it can be turned around to point at the planet for
fantastic optical spying they won't let you see.) Way out in a ring
directly over the plane of the equator are your geosynchronous satellites
for DTV, communications, DISH network and the tv systems across the
planet around 32,800 miles altitude...FAR FAR AWAY from anything Shuttle
is capable of visiting...the reason there's no repair missions.

Now, look at the cloud of birds about halfway in between these two orbit
clusters. I say cloud because they are all in very high angle orbits to
cover the polar regions and are very high in altitude so they remain over
your optical/radio horizon for very long periods of times because of
their high altitudes. Start clicking on these birds and you'll find a
group of military spy satellites, constellations of high polar
communications birds and the GPS system birds. When you find a GPS bird
in its constellation, note its very high altitude and very high angle
orbit, in relation to the equatorial rotation of the planet. This
insures there are many of the 24 birds in the constellation over the
horizon at any one time. It also makes sure there can be a few outages
with no appreciable change in GPS fix accuracy if we lose a few. This
orbit also makes it very hard for opposition countries to shoot them down
so far up....in spite of what the TV media says.

The exact position of every bird is very accurately known. Each bird
provides very accurate timing pulses from its cesium-beam frequency
standards fed to it from the ground, even with very accurate clock
timing. But, from WAY UP THERE, there ISN'T GOING TO BE ANY WAY for ANY
sellphone, even iPhones!!!, to receive a GPS signal through RF opaque
objects like BUILDINGS or WALLS or SHEET STEEL ROOF PLATES or even a
thick canopy of TREES, which absorb what tiny bit of RF that falls on
your spot on the planet surface into the noise....

THIS is why Sellphone GPS simply isn't going to work in your pocket
anywhere you happen to be.....THAT IS A PURE FANTASY!



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