iPhone issues caused by power chip?

By Tom Krazit, CNET News.com
29 August 2008 11:37 AM
Tags: 3g, apple, at&t, iphone, issues, steve jobs, 2.0.2, problem

Another plausible scenario for the iPhone 3G reception problems primarily experienced in the US has emerged: it's related to faulty power-control software.

RoughlyDrafted reported Thursday in the US that a source within AT&T blamed "faulty" power-control software inside the iPhone 3G for the dropped calls and poor reception that owners have been experiencing since the device was released in July. Widespread problems have not been reported in Australia.

In short, the iPhone 3G demands too much power, more than is necessary, from a local cell tower to maintain a connection, and when multiple iPhones try to connect to the same tower, the problem snowballs.

The iPhone OS 2.0.2 software update was designed to fix this power-control problem, according to RoughlyDrafted's source. However, the source believed that the problems would not go away entirely until all iPhone 3G owners, or at least quite a few, upgraded to the 2.0.2 software:

In a mixed environment where users are running 2.0, 2.0.1, and 2.0.2, the power control problems of 2.0 and 2.0.1 will affect the 2.0.2 users. It is not the network that was at fault but the interaction of the bad power control algorithm in 2.0 and 2.0.1 software and the network that is at fault. The sooner everybody is running 2.0.2 software, so the theory goes, the better things will be.

This would explain why the problems were more pervasive in populated areas with lots of iPhone 3G early adopters, such as San Francisco, Chicago, and New York. It would explain why those who updated to the 2.0.2 software didn't see improvements across the board. And it would explain why the problems are being reported around the world, not just on AT&T's network.

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Talkback 3 comments

    The iPhone is a pretty toy with no power Lord Watchdog -- 30/08/08

    People will soon discover the iPhone for what it really is, a toy jam packed with gimmicks and a childish brightly coloured interface but no power and no feature set that a businessman would find useful.

    HTC all the way!

    It's a widespread issue in Australia Mustafa Ozel -- 02/09/08 (in reply to #320110948)

    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=7785167&#7785167

    http://forums.mactalk.com.au/47/53900-merged-3g-iphone-reception-problems-worldwide-19.html#post599626

    iPhone is well design Smartphone Kenan Isik -- 02/09/08 (in reply to #320110948)

    I used Windows Mobile based smartphones long time. HTC or something else, they are all based on Windows Mobile. It wasn't a great user experience. Even Symbian OS much better than WM. iPhone is 2 years ahead from its competitors. It's a great platform but needs more business tools but it's all happening.

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