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Apple iPhone 4


The iPhone 4 is the thinnest smartphone ever with all-new design, FaceTime video calling, Apple's stunning new Retina display, 5 megapixel camera and HD video recording.

APPLE IPHONE 4 SPECIFICATIONS

DISPLAY

  • Screen size: 3.5 inch (101.60 mm)
  • Resolution: Other
  • Type: LCD
  • Touch screen: Multi-touch (Capactive), Gesture

SIZE & WEIGHT

  • Height: 115.2 mm (4.84 inch)
  • Width: 58.6 mm (2.68 inch)
  • Depth: 9.3 mm (0.47 inch)
  • Weight: 137.0 g

CONNECTIVITY & WIRELESS

  • Wi-Fi: Yes (802.11b/g/n)
  • Wi-Fi Encryption: WEP, WPA, WPA2
  • Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR technology
  • Computer Sync supported: Yes

CAMERA

  • Resolution: 5.0 megapixels
  • Camera Features:
    • Records video
    • Auto focus
    • Digital zoom
    • Flash
    • Contact pictures
    • Geo-tagging (location)
  • Secondary Camera: Yes

OTHER FEATURES

  • Flight Mode: Yes

HARDWARE

  • CPU: 1000 MHz
  • USB: 2.0 [Charging]
  • Other

BATTERY & POWER

  • Talk time: 7 hours
  • Stand by time: 300 hours
  • AC adapter: Yes

CELLULAR NETWORK

  • Network Technology: GSM
  • CDMA Bands: 800, 1900
  • Data tethering: Yes

LOCATION SUPPORT

  • GPS (AGPS)
  • Cellular location
  • Wifi location
  • Compass

MESSAGING

  • SMS: Yes
  • MMS: Yes

INPUT

  • Type: Touchscreen
  • Predictive Text: Yes

MEDIA

  • Media Playback: Yes
  • Support Audio: AAC, AAC+, MP3, WAV
  • OTA (Streaming) Video: Streaming / internet
  • Support Video: h.264 / AVC, MPEG-4 (MP4), M4V

AUDIO AND VOICE

  • Audio / Headset Jack: Yes
  • Speaker phone: Yes
  • Voice dial: Yes

PERSONALIZATION

  • Custom Ringtones: Yes
  • Sound profiles: Yes
  • Vibrate mode: Yes
  • Multiple numbers per contact: Yes
  • Multiple languages: Yes (English, French, German, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, Korean, Japanese, Russian, Turkish, Ukrainian, Arabic, Thai, Czech, Greek, Hebrew, Indonesian, Malay, Romanian, Slovak, Croatian)

SENSORS

  • Accelerometer (motion)
  • Amient light
  • Gyroscope
  • Proximity

MEMORY

  • 16 GB built-in memory

ADDITIONAL INFO

Enterprise Mobility: Buy iPhone 4 Instead of iPhone 4S: 10 Reasons Why

After the Oct. 4 introduction of the iPhone 4S, Apple has been focusing much of its efforts on getting consumers to buy its latest handset. To make that sales pitch, Apple is focusing heavily on the device’s new dual-core processor and improved camera. Apple has also highlighted its new “wireless system” that should provide users with downlink speeds of 14.4M bps. Apple is hoping that the iPhone 4 will rapidly fade from buyers’ memories. The iPhone 4 smartphone that was once all the talk at Apple headquarters has now been relegated to the “obsolete” category because of the iPhone 4S. As one might expect, Apple is hoping most folks opt for its latest model, rather than the previous version of the device. But should they? Apple’s iPhone 4S certainly has a lot of attractive features. But the iPhone 4 remains a viable option for many customers. In some ways the iPhone 4 might even be a better bet for the average customer. This eWEEK slide show examines why many consumers might want to buy the iPhone 4 instead of the iPhone 4S.


There Is No Design Advantage

When one compares the iPhone 4 to the iPhone 4S, they’ll quickly find that the smartphones have the same, basic designs. They feature glass backs, a 3.5-inch Retina Display, and both rear- and front-facing cameras. The iPhone 4S’ sales pitch would be stronger if it had significantly updated design. But it doesn’t. That could be enough for some folks to opt for the iPhone 4 instead.
  • More slideshows

Apple iPhone 4: Full review


In the three years since the first iPhone went on sale, the mobile landscape has changed irrevocably. Most phones now offer apps, internet browsing, social-networking widgets and email, while the higher-end smart phones continue to innovate around speed, features and build quality. That means Apple has an increasingly difficult job on its hands; responding to the innovations of the chasing pack while turning out a new handset every year.
The iPhone 4 is this year’s effort, and overall, it’s a corker. Not everyone will be a fan of the iPhone’s new industrial look and feel, which has done away with the shapely, curved edges of the iPhone 3G and 3GS in favour of a more functional, practical design. But I think iPhone 4 feels like a truly premium product, on a par with expensive designer handsets such as those made by Vertu.
It’s slimmer than its predecessors, and now features a glass shell made from the same super-strong aluminosilicate material used for helicopter windscreens, which makes it tough and scratch-resistant. The stainless steel band that runs around the middle of the iPhone, like the buttercream filling in a particularly delicious Victoria sponge, not only helps strengthen the overall construction, but is also part of the iPhone’s cellular and Wi-Fi antennas.
The difference in screen quality between iPhone 4 and previous models is acute. The new iPhone’s special “retina display” has four times the resolution of the iPhone 3GS, and Apple claims the pixels are so small that they can’t be detected by the human eye. That means that icons, text and pictures are pin-sharp on iPhone 4, with crisp, defined edges. Colours are luscious and seem to pop out of the screen, while whites appear brighter, and blacks take on a deep, inky hue. In short, it’s the kind of screen performance you’d expect from an AMOLED display, but Apple has somehow managed it with a simple backlit LCD screen. Where this display really comes in to its own – more than with photos, more than with movies, more, even than with web pages – is with ebooks. The iPhone 4 supports iBooks, Apple’s own ebook reader software, and the pages of Winnie the Pooh are rendered with a clarity and precision you simply do not find on any other device, not even an iPad.
There are plenty of other hardware improvements, too, including a five-megapixel camera with LED flash that’s capable of taking some great shots in lowlight conditions. And the iPhone 4 can also capture high-definition 720p video at 30 frames per second. The makers of the Flip range of camcorders should be very worried indeed; videos shot on the iPhone 4 look fantastic, with good colour balance, while a version of iMovie for the iPhone makes it incredibly easy to edit clips using the iPhone and create a pleasing, professional video ready for sharing. The new A4 processor ensures everything zips along, and the bigger battery makes a world of difference – not once, in the time that I have been testing the iPhone 4, have I had to give it a lunchtime boost.
The improved battery life and nippier performance prove crucial for one of iPhone 4’s most hotly-anticipated features – multitasking. It’s worth noting that it’s not really multitasking in the strictest sense, because not every app will be able to work fully in the background; Apple is allowing some apps, such as music-streaming services, to continue playing while users open other applications, but true multitasking is restricted because of the potentially catastrophic impact on battery life. So that means that Twitter and Facebook, for instance, do not continue pulling down real-time updates even as you work on an email or browse a web page. Instead, they are “paused” when you switch between apps; if you return to an app, you can pick up exactly where you left off.
Multitasking is not just restricted to iPhone 4 – it’s part of the iOS4 software update available to existing iPhone 3GS users. The new operating system brings some welcome new features to the iPhone range, including the ability to organise apps in to “folders”. You can have a maximum of 12 apps in a single folder, which means some apps, such as games, may have to be subdivided by genre (puzzle, shooter etc). Annoyingly, all of the folders look the same on the iPhone’s Home screen – you can’t choose an app logo to represent the whole folder, so there’s a lot of squinting at the screen while you try to see which folder is which.
One feature of iPhone 4 that Apple has been pushing hard is FaceTime, its video-calling app. The iPhone 4 has a front-facing VGA camera, which can be used to make video calls to other iPhone 4 users over a Wi-Fi network. Video calling has never really taken off in Europe, mainly because it offered such an awful user experience, but FaceTime really is dramatically different. It’s easy to use, for starters – you can start with a FaceTime call, or switch to FaceTime midway through a conversation, at the touch of a button. The iPhone 4’s top-notch screen provides a really clear picture, while its dual microphones and noise-cancelling capabilities ensure good audio that remains in sync with the video. It’s a shame the service is restricted to iPhone 4 users and that it works only on Wi-Fi, though Apple hopes that will change in time. It’s also giving away its FaceTime technology to other mobile phone makers, which could really help to increase uptake of this solid video-calling app.
The iPhone 4 has its flaws. I wish the Home screen had a different look and feel that tied in with the device’s new industrial design; perhaps something more akin to the user interface on Microsoft’s forthcoming range of Windows Phone 7 handsets. And it would also be great if it supported “widgets”, so that I could see, at a glance, what my most recent email or text message is, a real-time weather forecast for my locale, or even the latest stock prices.
But overall, the iPhone 4 is an excellent, beautifully built device that cements Apple’s position as the leading smartphone maker. Upgrading to iPhone 4 won’t come cheap, though – buying the handset SIM-free from Apple will cost at least £499, and you’re still looking at a substantial outlay on the handset if you buy it on contract from a network operator. If you own an iPhone 3G, or are simply in the market for a new phone, then upgrading to iPhone 4 is a no-brainer. But if you’ve got an iPhone 3GS and are still in contract, don’t rush to upgrade; instead, install the new iOS4 update on your handset and put the new software through its paces.
After all, this time next year, Apple will have a new handset for us to drool over.

iPhone 4 Teardown


We stripped down the iPhone 4 to its basic components. Apple definitely spent time giving the phone a thorough makeover, meticulously changing every little facet. We are happy to splay the fruits of their labor for your enjoyment!
We have confirmed that the iPhone's A4 processor has 512 MB RAM, unlike the iPad's more limited 256 MB. This decision may have been made fairly late in Apple's development cycle, because early leaked prototype phones only had 256 MB.
Can't get enough? Follow @ifixit on Twitter.
You can also take a look at the the YouTube video slideshow of the teardown!
For more detailed technical information on the silicon inside the iPhone, be sure to check out Chipworks' in-depth analysis of the iPhone 4's components.

New IPhone 4 8GB Tempting Consumers To Buy Apple


Apple may be taking most of the recent mobile industry headlines with their recently released iPhone 4S but at the same time there has been an 8GB edition of the original iPhone 4 introduced to the market that has literally slipped underneath the radar.

The new addition to the iPhone 4 portfolio joins the 16GB and 32GB models with its new, smaller 8GB memory but aside from this difference it is exactly the same phone with all of the same great features and technology packed into the same iconic casing.

There are two main benefits for choosing the new iPhone 4 8GB edition over both the larger memory versions as well as the new iPhone 4S, the first is price, this new iPhone is significantly cheaper than any of the other available models and all that the consumer really loses out on is memory.

The second is that the expectation of the release of a new iPhone 5 which turned out to be the new iPhone 4S has many consumers a little disappointed, this is because the new 4S is offered in exactly the same casing as the entire iPhone 4 range.

This means that even the new iPhone 8GB looks exactly the same as the high specification 4S model and unless the phone is seen in action other would not know which model the user has.



These two plus points for the new 8GB edition iPhone are drawing many consumers to buying the new Apple iPhone 4 8GB as well as those currently using the older 3GS model to upgrade to the new format.

Sales of the iPhone 4 in all of its memory formats jumped significantly on the announcement of the new 4S partly down to the obvious hype surrounding Apple at the time but also due to the deals for these older fourth generation phones being heavily discounted by mobile phone retailers in order to make room for stocks of the new model.

It looks to be a very wise move by Apple to release this less expensive 8GB iPhone 4 at a time when money is tight for many families, the smaller memory will not worry those who do not store thousands of music tracks and apps and when the new iOS5 upgrade is released these users will be able to store remotely to the iCloud service which will free up extra memory.

Also, many consumers who have not considered buying Apple before because of the large price tag demanded for their products are now finding that the new iPhone 4 8GB is falling within their budget with a free phone offered for as little as £25 per month line rental.

For more information and the latest iPhone 4 deals or to have a look at the iPhone 4S deals as they are released please take a look at our website: Phones Limited.