Archive for the ‘iPhone4-ATT’ Category

ibattz iPhone extended Battery case, a dropSKIP top pick!
By Troy Saxton-Getty

Regardless of whether you choose iPhone or Android as your optimal mobile device one thing is certain, your battery life will almost always not be enough for your day to day activity.

We have tested countless battery extenders for mobile phones and many for months on end.

Although there are many options, nothing has been quite a sweet as the new ibattz power case for iPhone 4/4s.

It’s the one unit that has a removable battery, better yet, it’s a very common battery, a Nokia BP-4L. A base battery that adds 1500Mah to the back of your iPhone and when it runs low, simply slide the light weight back cover off and replace the battery with the additional second BP-4L which is included.

At first I was impressed with the box stating 3000Mah, but the reality is, thats both additional batteries, disappointing? actually initially yes, but after thinking about it and using it for several weeks to date, it is pretty darn cool that I can quickly swap a second (or third and so on if you purchase a few additional Nokia BP-4L Batteries)

The unit comes with a 4 blue LED charge/level indicator, a micro USB plug and the iPhone slips onto the case like a standard docking effort.  Additionally the case includes a silver and a red anodized sleeve, giving you two color choices.

The size is also one of the smallest and least thick of all of the extended battery cases. Unlike the Mophie Juice case which has a flimsy Micro USB, (we’ve broken 2 so far) the ibattz connector is well protected and solid.

That is 3000Mah of additional power in two small industry standard batteries.

The case is also rather small since they designed around the Nokia BP-4L which is ultra-slim.

If you look on the internet, you can find Nokia BP-4L replacements in higher capacity, such as 1800Mah.

Last, you can swap batteries without the phone needed a reboot or any special consideration. the battery pack keeps the iPhone topped off first, so there is zero issue with adding in your second or third battery.

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Our travel continues and even though we try to find a case for our iPhones that doesn’t take away from its elegance, power eventually becomes an issue.

We reviewed the none flip version of the MiLi power packs a few months back and this time took a swing at the spring/flip top. Here are our thoughts.

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The design is slimmer (it’s only the 1600mAh version) than the last one we reviewed and the back is flat. This makes for easier pocket usage and better resting on tables.

This version still has the power meter led on the side along with a button that lets you start charging or tell you how much juice is left.

For those that read often they’ll know that switching cases needs to be as easy as possible and the MiLi spring pack makes it a breeze. Simply flip back the top, slide in the phone, and lock the top closed. During a fall, it’s possible the case will open (only after initial impact) so will provide some protection but not a tremendous amount.

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For power and looks, this is getting closer (other than a new iPhone that can last 16 hours with real use – we dream) but there are some draw backs. There is no kick stand on this model. If you plan on using this in a plane to watch movies, you’ll need to hold it. That’s not the end of the world but it’s less convenient. In addition, it’s a mini USB charger that is needed so if you already have iPhone chargers in every room of your house (guilty as charged) you’ll need to get some new cables – ones comes in the box, as well.

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All in all, we’ll keep this case (we’re good at quickly liquidating after testing) and use it but understand why it might not be a fit for all. The good news here is that you can pick up one on eBay for about 50 bucks if you’re so inclined…not our used one this time, though. ;)

iPhone 4s vs. iPhone 4s – AT&T vs. Verizon – a real extended comparison
by Troy Saxton-Getty

(Org Published 8/24/2011 – Updated to include iPhone S model comparisons after two months of additional testing/use)

People who know me often ask me why I usually have two iPhone 4s’ with me most of the time. The answer is, one is AT&T and the other is Verizon.

As a long time fan of AT&T I was in line the night before the first iPhone was released and have picked up the new model each time it was released all the way to and including the second Verizon iPhone 4s model a few months ago.

The most frequent question obviously is which phone or carrier service is better…. ??

IPhone4s vs. iPhone4s - AT&T vs. Verizon

IPhone4s vs. iPhone4s - AT&T vs. Verizon

Better is such a subjective word… better how? It has taken a number of months of testing in-the-real-world to get to the hard and accurate facts.

The test environment: Hundreds of conference calls a month, sometimes calls lasting 5-8 hours, some with stock headphones, Dr. Dre Studio Beats, some without headphones, many linked to one of four car Bluetooth systems and quite a few with multiple Bluetooth headsets. (Jawbone, Bose and Motorola HS-10HD). Testing/use is primarily in three AT&T/Verizon markets – San Francisco, Silicon Valley, occasional east coast trips and San Diego (with several trips to various US markets as well as a few trips to Singapore and India). When on a conference call, generally, it is split between four different services giving a wide variety of volume and background noise levels and last, the same exact case on both phones, the basic bumper from Apple.

The past two months (and subsequent 6 months on non-S models from both carriers)  represents extremely heavy use equally divided between both AT&T and Verizon and here is what we have found.

Battery Life:
Equally, the phones have a very close battery consumption and battery standby power usage, neither will make it a full day of hard core use without some supplemental charging, quite often we utilize any one of the battery charger products tested here at dropSKIP (see other articles on several battery charging and extending options). If you are a casual / normal non-business user, you can expect the batteries on either phone to make it most of the day. Voice calling is by far the toughest demand on either phone’s battery, on average vs. our entire suite of Android phones, the iPhone4s wins on battery longevity and speed of charging from empty. Our T-Mobile HTC HD7 comes very close in casual use but not on heavy voice calling days.. Winner? iPhone 4s perfect tie.

Voice Quality:
This measurement isn’t the same as reliability (dropping calls, time to connect to dial and seamless transitions while in motion are all not about voice quality)

This measurement is about audio sound quality of voice reception and transmission only, hands down AT&T has a much richer voice dynamic range, the voice quality is noticeably better on the AT&T phone for both listening and talking. The Verizon iPhone sound for both listening and talking is clearly less robust, most users will call the difference “tinnier” when compared (Look up the word if it doesn’t make sense to you). If we give you both phones on the same conference call, one in each ear, you will immediately hear the difference. Winner? AT&T iPhone 4s

Voice Reliability/Availability (Averaging all markets):
This is the golden measurement, dropped calls, signal enough to make and sustain a call. I went six months of using both phones equally to be damn sure of how I felt, due to availability of signal, often I would have only one clear choice and most of the time that was Verizon.

Verizon on the iPhone 4s is vastly superior to AT&T on call reliability. Most of us know the annoying spots that our iPhone drops a call if we take the same route repeatedly, like commuting to and from work. On a regular morning staff meeting one of our guys says ok, the AT&T iPhone is going to drop me right about “click” and we all laugh about it because it is part of the AT&T experience. Just to share some idea of the magnitude of the difference: on my typical morning commute of a bit more than 50 miles, The iPhone will drop me 3-7 times per drive (no less than 3 from Midtown SF to northeast San Jose. What is even funnier (ok, frustrating) is it happens constantly on the I-280 in the Bay area right by Apple’s HQ and Stanford, I often wonder how pissed off Apple employees are about this since a gazillion of them drive this way every day. Using the Verizon iPhone4s, over 6 months, same time of day, same commute, I’ve been dropped 3 times in 6 months… You do the math… Verizon, did I mention I love you for this? Each time I am on the AT&T iPhone for this commute and I am on critical business calls, the phone drops me at the most important or critical portion of the call, almost like it is just plain mocking me. AT&T, really? Did I mention the reason I am writing this article is because you have dropped me on my commute for the last time, in the immortal words of Steve Martin, I break with thee, I break with thee, I break with thee.

I have talked on a 6 hour conference call from Southern California to Northern California (non-stop) using the Verizon iPhone 4s and not drop the call, not even once. In fact, in the rare times that a call on the Verizon iPhone does drop, I am almost floored. Same 6 hour call on AT&T, I can expect a drop every 15-45 minutes and sometimes it drops over and over again right after you connect back to the conference call adding to the extreme frustration of everyone, including the “Troy has LEFT the call” Then, “Troy has JOINED the call.”
Verizon, you are the winner, hands down…although the passed 2 months using both S models, Verizon has dropped a few more calls then non-S models, this shouldn’t be the case, the S model’s have better antennas.

Data Speed(3G): (We don’t see that much of an improvement on data performance with the newer S models, they are faster but not even close to 4G speeds). Upon release, Apple showed improvements in AT&T’s 3G speed with the new S model but in-the-real-world, we aren’t seeing much of it.

According to Gizmodo’s Jesus Diaz
“The new iPhone4s (on AT&T only) can download at a theoretical maximum speed of 14.4Mbps, as opposed to the previous 7.2Mbps. That’s because it’s using HSPA+… on AT&T. (Key caveat, of course: That’s atheoretical max speed, and if your AT&T service is terrible now, don’t expect it to be magically a million times better and faster.)”

The full article from Gizmodo’s Jesus Diaz is below:

http://gizmodo.com/5846655/att-iphone-4s-will-be-faster-than-verizon-and-sprints

Although Verizon has better data coverage, it’s common to get wildly different results just based on your distance from the transmission point (the tower). Verizon offers the fastest consistent speed on the non-S model, AT&T tends to offer the fastest throughput if you get all the conditions right and only in a much more limited location choice. Both fall back to slower speeds using the previous technology and usually Verizon wins again on the slower fall back speeds. Data quality feel is more robust on the AT&T phone, as long as you have fairly high signal whereas Verizon wins overall for having consistent speed more of the time. Our only beef here, is Verizon data is not available while on a voice call, this might not seem like much of a big deal but more and more it’s a huge annoyance when you are on a voice call and someone asks you, “did you get the email I just sent with the presentation?” and if you are on Verizon, you didn’t. (This will change with 4G LTE on Verizon, but the iPhone 4s on Verizon is CDMA data). Even more frustrating is being on a call with the Verizon phone and you need to use Google maps, or something critical to your current mission of travel and it flat doesn’t work. I have to say, I am really frustrated with this. The longer you are on the call the longer it takes the phone to catch up on the data when you get off the call. I am talking about the pseudo lethargic response the Verizon iPhone 4s has right after you get off a multi-hour call and it’s busy catching up on the truck load of email that’s spooling up waiting for data to return to the Verizon iPhone.

Winner: AT&T iPhone 4s, love the data, love it more when it works when we are talking on the Phone.

Data Availability:
Availability means – Consistent data access in more places, more reliably and with reasonable speed. IMHO, Verizon wins when it comes to having data access in more places than AT&T. (in the domestic US Only) AT&T will often make you think you have data due to the icon representation of bars and 3G, but when you go to use it, often times it struggles. On the Verizon iPhone 4s, the indicators are much more reliable and so is the data availability. Looking at the two month (and subsequent 6 months with non-S models)  average in all markets, road trips, airports, freeways and private plane flight – Verizon domestically smokes AT&T.

Winner: Verizon iPhone 4s

International:
CDMA is not a world standard, Verizon is limited to the US Market and a few other countries where CDMA is used, AT&T uses GSM which is the global standard with over 85% global market share. All bets are off with 4G LTE, which allows Verizon to overcome the CDMA issue.

If you travel, you almost always can get AT&T voice and most of the time data access worldwide. However, it comes at at cost that is sometimes staggering. AT&T offers some help here, they have global partners who have roaming agreements and if you pick a plan in advance for voice, text and data, you can save a wad of dough vs hoping for the best and paying the full freight. We have some amazing horror stories here, 10k phone bills for a few weeks of travel and use without pre-authorizing a plan with AT&T.

If you are in a country often, you are better to get an in-country phone, they can be rented from a group of providers who offer very reasonable plans. However, you won’t have your personal phone number and whatever you do, don’t call forward your mobile to the international number of your in-country phone.

Winner? AT&T Clearly the only international option.

General observations:
If you talk a bunch and you are in a strong AT&T market, you might be just fine with AT&T. But, if you move about, travel domestically and/or are on conference calls a bunch for work, Verizon is clearly the hands down winner. If you are spending money for some form of HotSpot, both AT&T and Verizon offer this via the iPhone 4s, and both are pretty reliable, however Verizon wins in our extended testing. If you talk on the phone and need to check email, use an app that requires data like Google Maps, the web browser or email, AT&T is your only option on the iPhone 4s.

Siri is fantastic on both carrier models, however it goof’s up just about equally on both carrier models as well, in our use, maybe a tiny bit more on Verizon.

iMessage, new to ios5 works equally well but we noticed something fun and revealing due to Verizon’s inability to send data when on a voice call. iMessage uses data mode for message sending/receiving, when both iOS devices have iOS5 or newer, the color of the message bubble is blue, if you send the message as text and not iMessage format it is green (like all iPhone text previous to iMessage). If you are having a conversation on iMessage with someone and the text is blue and all of the sudden the next message is green (text mode) they have Verizon as a carrier and they are now on the phone in voice mode.

I noticed this when texting via iMessage to a friend who has a new iphone, all of the sudden messages from a certain point forward were sent as text and were green, She confirmed that was the time she answered a voice call in her car. Some further testing shows this theory to be perfectly accurate. iMessage will try to send the message via data, if it fails a press on the failed message will get the iPhone to prompt you to “send as text?”, this is by design however it does show you if a person you are texting with has Verizon and if they are on the phone via voice or not..

Final conclusions:
Personally I have arrived at the conclusion I need both a Verizon and an AT&T iPhone 4s, in the testing of both of these amazing mobile phones, I’ve grown used to having both and don’t know if I would be happy giving one or the other up, it’s a perfect duo. Another nice thing to having both, you can look something up on one, for example, a conference call number and ID code buried in a calendar item while using the other phone to make the call, often you can’t cut and paste the calendar data so it becomes a pain in the butt to flip to the calendar, only to get back to the phone app and forget the dialing information.

I know, this isn’t reasonable and it’s down right ridiculous to have both, yea, I get it. If I had to pick it comes down to this, what do you do more of, talking or typing? If you talk a bunch, Verizon is your choice, if you text and use data more and talk less, AT&T is your choice. All of this assuming you have both options for signal at your house and work locations.

The voice difference is significantly better on Verizon when it comes to not getting pissed off from continuous dropped calls, it used to be funny and now I am really a Verizon fan regarding the iPhone 4s.

iPhone 4a vs. iPhone 4v – AT&T vs. Verizon – a real extended comparison
by Troy Saxton-Getty

People who know me often ask me why I usually have two iPhone 4′s with me most of the time. The answer is, one is AT&T and the other is Verizon.

As a long time fan of AT&T I was in line the night before the first iPhone was released and have picked up the new model each time it was released all the way to and including the first Verizon iPhone a bit over 6 months ago.

The most frequent question obviously is which phone or carrier service is better…. ??

Better is such a subjective word… better how? It has taken a number of months of testing in-the-real-world to get to the hard and accurate facts.

The test environment: Hundreds of conference calls a month, sometimes calls lasting 5-8 hours, some with stock headphones, some without, many linked to one of four car Bluetooth systems and quite a few with multiple Bluetooth headsets. (Jawbone, Bose and Motorola HS-10HD). Testing/use is primarily in three AT&T/Verizon markets – San Francisco, Silicon Valley, occasional east coast trips and San Diego (with several trips to various US markets as well as a few trips to Singapore and India). When on a conference call, generally, it is split between four different services giving a wide variety of volume and background noise levels and last, the same exact case on both phones, the basic bumper from Apple.

The past six months represents extremely heavy use equally divided between both AT&T and Verizon and here is what we have found.

Battery Life:
Equally, the phones have a very close battery consumption and battery standby power usage, neither will make it a full day of hard core use without some supplemental charging, quite often we utilize any one of the battery charger products tested here at dropSKIP (see other articles on several battery charging and extending options). If you are a casual / normal non-business user, you can expect the batteries on either phone to make it most of the day. Voice calling is by far the toughest demand on either phone’s battery, on average vs. our entire suite of Android phones, the iPhone4 wins on battery longevity. Our T-Mobile HTC HD7 comes very close in casual use but not on heavy voice calling days.. Winner? iPhone 4 perfect tie.

Voice Quality:
This measurement isn’t the same as reliability (dropping calls, time to connect to dial and seamless transitions while in motion are all not about voice quality)

This measurement is about audio sound quality of voice reception and transmission only, hands down AT&T has a much richer voice dynamic range, the voice quality is noticeably better on the AT&T phone for both listening and talking. The Verizon iPhone sound for both listening and talking is clearly less robust, most users will call the difference “tinnier” when compared (Look up the word if it doesn’t make sense to you). If we give you both phones on the same conference call, one in each ear, you will immediately hear the difference. Winner? AT&T iPhone 4

Voice Reliability/Availability (Averaging all markets):
This is the golden measurement, dropped calls, signal enough to make and sustain a call. I went six months of using both phones equally to be damn sure of how I felt, due to availability of signal, often I would have only one clear choice and most of the time that was Verizon.

Verizon on the iPhone 4 is vastly superior to AT&T on call reliability. Most of us know the annoying spots that our iPhone drops a call if we take the same route repeatedly, like commuting to and from work. On a regular morning staff meeting one of our guys says ok, the AT&T iPhone is going to drop me right about “click” and we all laugh about it because it is part of the AT&T experience. Just to share some idea of the magnitude of the difference: on my typical morning commute of a bit more than 50 miles, The iPhone will drop me 3-7 times per drive (no less than 3 from Midtown SF to northeast San Jose. What is even funnier (ok, frustrating) is it happens constantly on the I-280 in the Bay area right by Apple’s HQ and Stanford, I often wonder how pissed off Apple employees are about this since a gazillion of them drive this way every day. Using the Verizon iPhone4, over 6 months, same time of day, same commute, I’ve been dropped 3 times in 6 months… You do the math… Verizon, did I mention I love you for this? Each time I am on the AT&T iPhone for this commute and I am on critical business calls, the phone drops me at the most important or critical portion of the call, almost like it is just plain mocking me. AT&T, really? Did I mention the reason I am writing this article is because you have dropped me on my commute for the last time, in the immortal words of Steve Martin, I break with thee, I break with thee, I break with thee.

I have talked on a 6 hour conference call from Southern California to Northern California (non-stop) using the Verizon iPhone 4 and not drop the call, not even once. In fact, in the rare times that a call on the Verizon iPhone does drop, I am almost floored. Same 6 hour call on AT&T, I can expect a drop every 15-45 minutes and sometimes it drops over and over again right after you connect back to the conference call adding to the extreme frustration of everyone, including the “Troy has LEFT the call” Then, “Troy has JOINED the call.”
Verizon, you are the winner, hands down…

Data Speed(3G):
Although Verizon has better data coverage, it’s common to get wildly different results just based on your distance from the transmission point (the tower). Verizon offers the fastest consistent speed, AT&T tends to offer the fastest throughput if you get all the conditions right and only in a much more limited location choice. Both fall back to slower speeds using the previous technology and usually Verizon wins again on the slower fall back speeds. Data quality feel is more robust on the AT&T phone, as long as you have fairly high signal whereas Verizon wins overall for having consistent speed more of the time. Our only beef here, is Verizon data is not available while on a voice call, this might not seem like much of a big deal but more and more it’s a huge annoyance when you are on a voice call and someone asks you, “did you get the email I just sent with the presentation?” and if you are on Verizon, you didn’t. (This will change with 4G LTE on Verizon, but the iPhone 4 on Verizon is CDMA data). Even more frustrating is being on a call with the Verizon phone and you need to use Google maps, or something critical to your current mission of travel and it flat doesn’t work. I have to say, I am really frustrated with this. The longer you are on the call the longer it takes the phone to catch up on the data when you get off the call. I am talking about the pseudo lethargic response the Verizon iPhone 4 has right after you get off a multi-hour call and it’s busy catching up on the truck load of email that’s spooling up waiting for data to return to the Verizon iPhone.

Winner: AT&T iPhone 4, love the data, love it more when it works when we are talking on the Phone.

Data Availability:
Availability means – Consistent data access in more places, more reliably and with reasonable speed. IMHO, Verizon wins when it comes to having data access in more places than AT&T. (in the domestic US Only) AT&T will often make you think you have data due to the icon representation of bars and 3G, but when you go to use it, often times it struggles. On the Verizon iPhone 4, the indicators are much more reliable and so is the data availability. Looking at the six month average in all markets, road trips, airports, freeways and private plane flight – Verizon domestically smokes AT&T.

Winner: Verizon iPhone 4

International:
CDMA is not a world standard, Verizon is limited to the US Market and a few other countries where CDMA is used, AT&T uses GSM which is the global standard with over 85% global market share. All bets are off with 4G LTE, which allows Verizon to overcome the CDMA issue.

If you travel, you almost always can get AT&T voice and most of the time data access worldwide. However, it comes at at cost that is sometimes staggering. AT&T offers some help here, they have global partners who have roaming agreements and if you pick a plan in advance for voice, text and data, you can save a wad of dough vs hoping for the best and paying the full freight. We have some amazing horror stories here, 10k phone bills for a few weeks of travel and use without pre-authorizing a plan with AT&T.

If you are in a country often, you are better to get an in-country phone, they can be rented from a group of providers who offer very reasonable plans. However, you won’t have your personal phone number and whatever you do, don’t call forward your mobile to the international number of your in-country phone.

Winner? AT&T Clearly the only international option.

General observations:
If you talk a bunch and you are in a strong AT&T market, you might be just fine with AT&T. But, if you move about, travel domestically and/or are on conference calls a bunch for work, Verizon is clearly the hands down winner. If you are spending money for some form of HotSpot, both AT&T and Verizon offer this via the iPhone 4, and both are pretty reliable, however Verizon wins in our extended testing. If you talk on the phone and need to check email, use an app that requires data like Google Maps, the web browser or email, AT&T is your only option on the iPhone 4.

Final conclusions:
Personally I have arrived at the conclusion I need both a Verizon and an AT&T iPhone 4, in the testing of both of these amazing mobile phones, I’ve grown used to having both and don’t know if I would be happy giving one or the other up, it’s a perfect duo. Another nice thing to having both, you can look something up on one, for example, a conference call number and ID code buried in a calendar item while using the other phone to make the call, often you can’t cut and paste the calendar data so it becomes a pain in the butt to flip to the calendar, only to get back to the phone app and forget the dialing information.

I know, this isn’t reasonable and it’s down right ridiculous to have both, yea, I get it. If I had to pick it comes down to this, what do you do more of, talking or typing? If you talk a bunch, Verizon is your choice, if you text and use data more and talk less, AT&T is your choice. All of this assuming you have both options for signal at your house and work locations.

The voice difference is significantly better on Verizon when it comes to not getting pissed off from continuous dropped calls, it used to be funny and now I am really a Verizon fan regarding the iPhone 4.

My quest to find the perfect iPhone case continues (some who know me may just call this OCD).  I picked up the SOLAR Battery Case for iPhone 4 on eBay a week ago and gave it a trial run.  First, some background.  I love how my iPhone looks without a case – most of the time.  When I decide to buy one, I want it to either enhance the appearance or add utility.  In this case, it’s purely utilitarian.

SOLAR Battery Package - Front

The battery pack is a slider case.  This means that there is no difficult dressing procedure.  Simply slide your iPhone 4 into the case and you’re done.  The good news here is that you can easily use this only when you need juice.  The bad news is that the case offers no protection when dropped (unless you have the most amazing drop skip of your life).

SOLAR Battery Package - Back

When fully charged, the battery has 2400 mAh, not a bad charge for those flying between coasts on a regular basis.  It can be charged both by the sunlight and a mini USB port.  Having the battery pack charge your phone requires a manual double click of the only button on the device.  One push will activate the LEDs telling you the charge (1 – 4 bars).  Two clicks enables phone charging.  Holding the button down for 2 seconds turns off phone charging.  I’m still not certain I understand this feature since (as far as I can tell) the battery will charge itself and the iPhone simultaneously.  The case will also turn itself off automatically once the iPhone is fully charged, but it’s delayed.

To get a good test, I used the battery case for an entire day indoors and did everything I could to block light until it was out of juice (I was never able to get to 0 bars, but the device would immediately turn off when I plugged in my phone – I assume this was empty). The case has a small red LED that will light up when charging via sunlight.  I attempted to place the case on my home office desk (there is ample light in there, but it’s not direct) and received no indication of charge.  I then put it on my windowsill in as much light as is possible in my home and received some indication that it was charging.  I left the device for four hours and still had only 1 bar, but the device did not turn off when I put in my iPhone.  I then took the case on an outing to Target (as a side note, I should move closer to Target).  In the direct sunlight the LED lit up brightly.  Since I don’t tend to leave my electronics on my porch, I didn’t leave my case in the direct light for long.  I will say that in my car the light stayed bright red when there was light – that may be a good sign, but again…limited time in the car.

For my last test, I attempted to charge the device while on an airplane.  No dice.  I wasn’t in ‘direct’ sunlight, but it was bright and the LED did not light.

Verdict.  If you are planning on being outside quite a bit, you may be able to gain some charge from the sun on this battery pack.  If you are a heavy phone user, don’t bank on it.  That said, the case feels good in your hand and when charging with the USB cable charged in a little over an hour.  It has no kickstand, which makes it unwieldy on a plane.  If you are willing to overlook these weaknesses, and don’t mind spending about $30 bucks (or less when I put it back on eBay), go get one.  Personally, the MiLi PowerPack with 3000 mAh and the kick stand is a clear winner.

There are quite a few iPhone battery packs on the market these days. The traditional ones are either cases or external packs. The cases tend to be more convenient, but add bulk to the phone and are often difficult to remove quickly (for those that have docks or don’t need the extra battery life for the moment). The external packs are bulky and harder to transport and often need cables – not quite the best mobile tech.

Enter the case/dock. It’s both an iPhone case that serves as a battery pack/case and also as a dock. The one I picked up is MiLi’s 3000 mAh PowerPack 4.

The case has some bulk, but the majority is on the back making it easier to handle and retaining a good deal of the original form factor. The case is open at the top making for easy phone insertion and removing. This also provides easy access to all buttons. I like this feature for traveling. It won’t do well to protect your phone as it will easily slide out when dropped (not attempted as of this writing).

The case has a fold out stand that allows one to stand the phone vertically for docking or horizontally for movie viewing. A button on the side with a clear LED provides a quick status check on battery life. The button also enables charge mode. Once the phone is charged you’ll need to hit this button. If the phone is inserted (even fully charged) the charging starts.

A mini USB connector and cable are used to charge the case and sync. Most of us have at least a few of these lying around in case the one supplied isn’t long enough. The battery is about 2X that of the iPhone (3000 mAh) greatly extending usage and the case can be easily removed and stored when out of juice.

Retailing at around $99, it’s not a bad accessory for iPhone power users. If you have numerous devices to charge, you will be out of luck and may prefer a power block and cables. For the light traveler, it’s ideal.

If you have an iPhone4, you’ve probably noticed the great quality of the iPhone’s 5 megapixel camera, 720p HD video recording, with its great detail and color, along with the HD Retina display. Photos looks great on it! Though there will always be that photo that never looked great because of shaky hands, low-lighting, etc. The good news is there are huge amounts of apps on photo editing that I have used to drastically improve those photos, and share them between friends. My favorite app and one of the most popular called “Camera +” ($0.99) can show you how far the iPhone camera potential can go. You can use “anti-shake”, separate exposure and focus, along with being able to upload to: Facebook, Twitter, Picasa, Flickr, and of course, send through email. You can also edit the pictures for quick color temperature control, cropping, rotating, dramatic color effects, making your photos look very artistic.

If you want to go even further, try using apps like “Filterstorm” ($3.99), which is definitely a more advanced photo editing app. You can use the same tools that are on Photoshop like: curves, exposure, sharpness, white balance, rotate, adding borders, and there are even more details into more filters that are available.

These and many more apps really show the potential of photography on the iPhone4, where it becomes more of basic digital camera than a simple phone camera. I, as a digital photographer, really notice the quality difference when editing photos on computer applications like Photoshop, and have tested to see what an iPhone image zoomed in at 100% on Photoshop looks like, and well, the quality is exceptional for such a small device. You can’t compare it to a real professional camera such as ones by Nikon and Canon DSLRs, but if you’re really going for the photography aspect of a phone, the iPhone4 really has its potential!

When you get into the HD Video recording on the iPhone4, the story changes, the quality is much less. If you have recorded a well-lit outside video with an iPhone4 and have only viewed it on your phone’s screen, it’s deceiving. Thinking that this would keep me away from buying a separate video camera was wrong. When you view any of the videos on a computer screen or TV, the quality is very disappointing – grainy, loss of quality and sharpness, VERY shaky, audio is “okay”. So, while it says 720p HD, it’s true with the pixel amount, but the quality is just lame. If you’re outside on a sunny day and using a tripod, it will be good, but anything less than that is unexceptional to be called HD. One thing though, is that if you just keep the videos to be viewed on your phone, then it is perfectly fine, but I would recommend if you want a real HD camera, you can purchase a “Flip” cam, or a Sony “Bloggie”, which are inexpensive, portable, and produce great quality videos.

One thing that is a major PRO for the iPhone’s video camera is that you can upload, edit, and share the video almost anywhere! You can edit the video as a quick trim in the camera app, or for free can get this app called “Splice”, which allows you to upload separate music tracks from your music library, add transitions, text, add effects like slow-motion, speed-up, crop, and trim. Then export in HD still. You can also, after video is finished, upload right from the phone to YouTube or send through email. You can only upload to YouTube in HD on wi-fi only, if your on 3G it will only allow you to upload in standard quality. But the upload is simple and fast. If you have the FaceBook app, you can upload HD video on Wi-Fi or 3G, but if on 3G it will take an extended period of time, drain more battery, and eat-up your data plan. If you purchases Apple’s own “iMovie” app, the editing goes even further with more options like adding photos, video, music, sounds, transitions, animations, and pre-made animated graphics. You will also be able to upload to YouTube, Facebook, vimeo, CNNiReport, or save to iTunes to edit later in the Mac’s “iMovie” computer application when you next sync your phone!

So while the iPhone4′s HD video camera isn’t the greatest, it’s extremely handy, and the pictures look amazing! Here are some sample photos that I took on the iPhone and edited only on the iPhone!

So anyone with a smart phone will probably at some point (if you haven’t already), run into a restriction with an App that requires WiFi and won’t work over your carrier’s 3G connection. In fact, even the iTunes and the Apple App Store won’t let you download over 3G if the file size is too large and you will promptly get a message telling you to use WiFi. Worse yet, FaceTime, the video calling tool available on iPhone4, iPad 2 and even a Mac will not run over the iPhone4 or iPad 2′s native 3G connection by design due to an agreement to block it with their respective carrier. (For now)

So tonight we spent a few hours testing FaceTime from our iPhone4′s (both Verizon & ATT), from our iPad 2 and FaceTime on our Macbook Air, all connected over a group of different WiFi hotspot devices to get us around this restriction. (You can also use this method to download files/movies/Audio/Apps larger then they allow over native 3G, iTunes too)

We called with FaceTime over each device and each WiFi Hotspot as well as received FaceTime calls on each, hoping this would give us a good understanding of video and audio quality as well as an understanding of what worked and what didn’t.

We tested the WiFi devices below in HotSpot Mode (meaning you can connect any WiFi device to them over WiFi only and these devices use 3G or 4G to connect you to the internet: (some of these devices will also let you connect to them via USB or Bluetooth for internet access, for this test, we used them all in WiFi mode)

iPhone4 (Verizon) in 3G Hotspot mode
iPhone4 (ATT) in 3G Hotspot mode (requires iOS 4.3)
MyFi 3G (Verizon) (5 connection dedicated Hotspot)
Atrix 4G (ATT) running in 4G Hotspot mode
Xoom Tablet 3G (Verizon) running in 3G Hotspot mode
(MyFi 4G Overdrive (Sprint) is traveling in Gill’s bag, so no testing with it, I suspect it will work just fine)

If we turned off the native 3G on the iPhone4 and iPad2 and connected to any home WiFi connection, FaceTime worked, of course it did, that is how it was meant to work, over your home WiFi and not over ATT or Verizon 3G/4G natively.

So we did exactly that, but turned off the home/office WiFi and made each device connect over each hotspot list above, FaceTime worked and connected every time, the video quality was decent considering the reduced connection speed of 3G/4G over home/work WiFi.

If you want to use FaceTime on the road, you need two devices, one for FaceTime the other to act as the WiFi Hotspot… It seems completely stupid to us or actually, maybe it is brilliant on their part, we haven’t really figured that part out.

Oh, did I mention, you can go iPhone4 to iPhone4 using your native 3G (same device) with the latest version of Skype with video, you can also go to/from a PC or MAC and iPhone4 as well, pretty flawlessly…

Tell me, if FaceTime won’t connect over your native 3G on iPhone4 or iPad2 and Skype will, why are we trying to use FaceTime? Thank you Skype! We hear an Android Skype version with video is coming soon too! Click here for more information on Skype Video for the iPhone4:

http://www.skype.com/intl/en-us/get-skype/on-your-mobile/download/iphone-for-skype/

It is finally time for me to weigh in on how the Verizon iPhone4 holds up head to head with the ATT iPhone4, I have been using the Verizon phone since early in the month so with the first month coming to a close, here are my initial thoughts, but first, here are some key points to the real-world testing.

I commute 1400 miles a week on average, working in the San Francisco Bay Area , I drive regularly, fly commercial sometimes or often fly my own small airplane with car segments on both ends. Basically I repeat a similar trek every week and have been using the ATT iPhone4 as my primary working phone since it shipped. I know every place where the ATT iPhone4 drops my call, loses data signal, drops to EDGE from 3G and roughly what I can expect each week as I try to stay on 1-2 hour long conference calls while heading in and out of the Bay Area. Needless to say, I have a healthy understanding of the ATT dropped call frustration.

After a month of swapping the Verizon iPhone4 into my daily routine, this is what I have learned:

  • Verizon iPhone4 – very rarely drops calls, voice quality is a bit lower, “Tinnier” sound, good but less rich
  • Data is disabled during a call, text messaging works, but as soon as the call is over, the phone rushes to catch up on your push email backlog
  • Data service is solid in 3G mode, but slower then ATT quite a bit on both upload and download speeds and steps down in outlying areas to it’s slower 1xRTT speed rather smoothly
  • Data coverage and voice coverage are most of the time better on Verizon than ATT in the western states I have quite a bit of experience here with Verizon Mifi and other data cards
  • Tethering via Bluetooth, USB or WiFi hotspot works great
  • Some of my older iPhone4 cases don’t fit due to the mute button being slightly lower (yea yea!)
  • ———————-
  • ATT iPhone4 – drops calls quite a bit but the voice quality sounds richer then Verizon, more bass, fuller sound.
  • Data works perfectly while on voice calls while in 3G mode, if it steps down to EDGE or GPRS (slow and slower) this is no longer true and sometimes the data resets and causes the data service to hang when going in and out of outlying areas or limited coverage areas, Verizon gracefully handles this, often better then ATT.
  • Data service is very solid in 3G mode, considerably faster then Verizon but the 3G coverage area is not as large and if the signal is only a few bars, Verizon wins.
  • Tethering is offered in 2GB limits on the ATT iPhone, it’s not very well known, and works via Bluetooth or USB, but no “MiFi” like HotSpot. If you happened to be lucky enough to have UNLIMITED VOICE & DATA on ATT, to tether, you have to give up this older grandfathered contract offering.. (DON’T GIVE IT UP!)

I can talk for 400+ miles across California, (This holds true for much of my US experience as well) through mountains, valleys, rain or shine and the Verizon iPhone4 stays connected! After a month of conference call abuse while traveling, I think I might have totaled 3 dropped calls, in all, for nearly 30 days. This is my factual experience and I am not a very big fan of Verizon as a company, but the voice service speaks for itself.

On my ATT iPhone4 I drop a call 2-3 times alone just crossing the Bay Bridge and usually about once every 30-45 minutes during my commute, sometimes I drop calls every few minutes and it is really frustrating to me and the folks on the conference call. Most of us on the daily conference call regiment from across the US know exactly where our ATT iPhone4 call will drop, sometimes for fun, we actually count it down, “3-2-1, Goodbye”.

If you travel outside the US, you only really have one choice, the ATT iPhone4, it is a world standard and is easy to get working in most countries, sometimes the cost is outrages, your mileage will vary, check this out thoroughly before roaming on voice and data outside of the native ATT area.

As a general rule for day to day average call activity ATT works well with the exception of a few major cities, San Francisco being one of those cities where I can walk down the street on a call in the financial district and I will drop the call at least once, most of the time. If you talk on the phone, Verizon has already won this battle for me personally, if you use a bunch of data, multiple email accounts, browse the web and talk less, ATT might be a better choice for you. It is widely known about San Francisco and some other major US cities having real voice challenges with ATT. We haven’t had enough time with the Verizon iPhone4 to get all the dirt dished up. So for now, I will continue to use both iPhone4′s.

We hoped this was informative, real-world and was helpful to you, we would love to hear your comments and your own experiences.

I’m an iPhone case junkie.  I think it has to do with the fact that I actually like change and since I love my iPhone (we can debate this love in a future post) I have to mess with the look and feel and not the actual device.  The only thing that has gotten in the way of my case love has been the Apple iPhone docks.  If you have a case on your phone, you’re out of luck when using the Apple dock…and it goes to show that Apple doesn’t always have the best design.

Enter the Philips Sync & Charge Cable with FlexAdapt (http://bit.ly/doemfV). 

Philips Sync & Charge ready to be used.

It’s not too new of a product, but it’s one I neglected to pick up until recently.  Glad I did!  Not only does the stand allow for various syncing positions for your iPhone (or iPod),  it also has an extended power/data plug that reaches through most cases (including the standard Apple iPhone 4 bumpers – which don’t work on the Apple dock).  You can even mount the stand to a wall or side of a desk, for the creative ones out there.

iPhone 4 with bumper docked with Philips Sync & Charge

Overall, I’m pretty excited about this device.  Yes, I can change my iPhone charging position (lining it up with your monitor cannot be overrated) as needed but I can also, and more importantly, get back into collecting iPhone cases…and writing about them here!

Oh, and when my toddler pulls the cable and it falls to the floor with my iPhone, I’ll be able to give an appropriate dropSKIP rating, as well!