WelshBloke
Lifer
- Jan 12, 2005
- 32,434
- 10,563
- 136
... you only get one set of fingerprints.
Says who? I'm building up a collection now.
... you only get one set of fingerprints.
I know you're joking but it doesn't actually work with severed fingers.
Just a quick mobile update.
9 million units sold! Yowza.
Ironically this mobile update comes to you via Android.
This weekend they sold 2.5X the number Blackberry did in the entire last quarter, including all of the BB7 models.Yeah I saw the 9m sold.
Very curious what the breakdown is between 5S/5C.
Apple hit 5m iPhone 5's the first weekend. Even if this is a 60/40 or 70/30 split between the C and the S it's still pretty impressive for three days worth of sales.
200 million devices already running iOS7. That is crazy too...
I think it benefits them more to make sure everyone updates quickly. Just $0.99 would mean a lot of people would refuse to upgrade.Apple would have made a killing if they charged 99 cents for ios7!
Some fun back-of-the-napkin math: Apple said it was going to notch 700 million iOS devices sold by October. Over 200 million people are using iOS 7. That means that 29 percent of all iOS devices ever sold are already running the latest software. Reduce that to devices that actually support iOS 7 and the figure is even higher.
I'd expect KitKat to reach that kind of figure by late 2014... maybe.
Some fun back-of-the-napkin math: Apple said it was going to notch 700 million iOS devices sold by October. Over 200 million people are using iOS 7. That means that 29 percent of all iOS devices ever sold are already running the latest software. Reduce that to devices that actually support iOS 7 and the figure is even higher.
I'd expect KitKat to reach that kind of figure by late 2014... maybe.
If this thread was in the Apple subforum I'd leave this alone but here I feel the need to remind people:
You won't need Kitkat to get most of the new features and updates for core apps. Google has long since brought new features straight to apps, so no waiting a whole year or relying on OS versions. But I understand that this fact will continue to be ignored by those who try to fit every peg through an iOS shaped hole.
Yep, but US only. Or at least not in Canada.For anyone that might be interested. I noticed in the Apple Store App this morning that you can now order a phone for pickup at an apple store.
If they're in stock anyways.
Yep, but US only. Or at least not in Canada.
Personal Pickup is not currently an available option in Canada. If you'd like to check inventory at a local store, I'd recommend contacting or visiting that location.
If this thread was in the Apple subforum I'd leave this alone but here I feel the need to remind people:
You won't need Kitkat to get most of the new features and updates for core apps. Google has long since brought new features straight to apps, so no waiting a whole year or relying on OS versions. But I understand that this fact will continue to be ignored by those who try to fit every peg through an iOS shaped hole.
What exactly would doing such a thing on an Apple device achieve?Honestly, in my mind, this is just about the strongest point Android has for it right now.
If I were in charge of iOS 7 the first thing I would have done is decoupled the apps from the OS.
What exactly would doing such a thing on an Apple device achieve?
Or is it that Apple users can't get updates for "stock" apps(Maps, Search, Calendar, etc...) until their next iOS "x" iteration updates?
If so, then wow...that's pretty bad and I see your point.
Apple already has had partial decoupling. They keep the full feature set for the new iOS version, but point updates get partial updates.
This was more common on Mac OS X though. For example, Safari often gets many of the speed upgrades in the last iteration of an OS, that the new version of Safari gets for the new OS.
And of course, you can download Google Maps for iOS 6 or 7.
Perhaps from that one perspective, but overall I think iOS's upgrade policies are far better than Android's.That still isn't as good as what Google is doing with Android.
Perhaps from that one perspective, but overall I think iOS's upgrade policies are far better than Android's.
After the weekend, in just a few days, over 200 million iDevices are now on iOS 7.