Turning an iPod Touch Into an iPhone 175
David Burnett recommends an eWeek article on the leading contenders to make an iPhone out of an iPod Touch. Of course your newly phone-capable iTouch needs no activation and no binding carrier contract, just Wi-Fi. One of the companies working in this space, JaJah, is bundling the software with back-end services such as billing, so that carriers — or anyone really — can offer free-calling iTouch phones.
"Just needs wifi" (Score:5, Insightful)
Ya thats nice, but haven't you noticed that open/free wifi is starting to become more and more scarce? If you cant just whip it out at anytime and make a call, its rather limited in its usefulness.
It would be worse then it was when having a cell phone back in the old days when coverage was spotty at best and you were paying for that privilege.
Re:"Just needs wifi" (Score:4, Funny)
Oh I can just whip it out anywhere I feel like it.
I'll whip it good.
*ahem* Now its time to read TFA, to find out what the hell you're talking about.
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Not here, its becoming less and less common every time i scan.
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Even paid wifi is becoming scarce here... with 3G being so prevalent and laptops being offered cheap/free with 3G dongles the use of wifi is dropping.. there's no money in running a hotspot any more. Both starbucks have shut down their Wifi and the only one left is Costa Coffee at £5/hour.
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Paid wifi is dying because they charge too damn much for it! I bought an unlocked $250 3G dongle because it would pay for itself on a two week trip.
The traditional telco model of paying off your infrastructure after 6 months of service and making pure profit until the end of days is why high speed internet is such a mess in the first place. These paid providers need to switch to a pricing model where they keep closer to a 30% margin over operating costs or they will become completely irrelevant.
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A) Making it easier for someone to listen in on your call,
B) Kill the battery life and
C) Not make it into a reliable phone.
If you can't dial 911 in a jiffy in an area that cell phones can cover just as well, then it's useless for emergency situations. Then again, I don't think that this was what the article was attempting to advocate.
Re:"Just needs wifi" (Score:5, Funny)
They should do this with the Zune, because not only can you whip it out, you can squirt other people too!
Scarce wifi? Not really. (Score:2)
Ya thats nice, but haven't you noticed that open/free wifi is starting to become more and more scarce? If you cant just whip it out at anytime and make a call, its rather limited in its usefulness....
Ah, not sure what you're finding as scarce, but the simple fact that you see a set of golden arches every 1/2 mile across the US, McWifi pretty much laid a good blanket across my area. Not to mention coffee shops, malls, gas stations, most major restaurants, they all seem to be offering it now.
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I thought mcdonalds had abandoned that project? Of the 3 in this town only 1 ever got it, and that never worked... it brought up a login page but the routing was fubar. They eventually gave up a few months back.
Re:Scarce wifi? Not really. (Score:4, Interesting)
Yeah right. Try finding a McDonalds between Harrisburg and circa Uniontown PA, along the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76). Out in the mountains it's hard to get just a "normal" cellphone signal, much less Wifi. I think some of ye who make comments like "a McDonalds every 1/2 mile" never leave further than 25 miles from the city. Try driving across North America sometime and you'll see LOTS and LOTS of open space, with, shocking, no technology. I named the PA Turnpike. There's also the wide-open stretch between Richmond and Charlotte. Or the isolated Interstate 81 corridor... which could be nicknamed Redneck Alley.
Off-topic:
How do I get my Iphone, Ilaptop, Iwhatever to receive Shoutcast radio while I'm driving in my car? I was thinking maybe I could cancel my satellite Sirius-XM and just go with "free" internet radio.
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Well, I listen to http://di.fm/ [di.fm] premium stream on my Windows Mobile phone while driving. It's as simple as going to www.di.fm and selecting mp3, wma, or aac. If you are a premium subscriber, you can login and get your premium options. The thing plays using Windows Media player.
I would expect syncing up a PLS file from Shoutcast would enable similar functionality on the Apple platform.
I can also listen to SiriusXM on my phone. :)
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Download the free shoutcast app:
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=299647180&mt=8 [apple.com]
Get a Tunebase-FM
http://catalog.belkin.com/IWCatProductPage.process?Product_Id=257270 [belkin.com]
Load up shoutcast (or whatever other streaming radio app, there are probably hundreds by now), stick your phone on the tunebase (or other charging fm transmitter), pick/tune a proper frequency.
Done. I personally use last.fm and the tunebase, but it works anywhere there is coverage.
Streaming Audio (Score:2)
Re:Scarce wifi? Not really. (Score:4, Informative)
No, King of Prussia is named for the bar that the town grew up around. The bar was named for Fredrick the Great (aka "Frederick the Queer"), some say in the hope of attracting the business of Prussian mercenaries encamped at nearby Valley Forge.
The Turnpike comes though here too...
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I also live in a city, but I leave it once in awhile to go exploring the rest of the continent, like those parts classified "rural" by the Census Bureau. It's similar to how you leave your parents to explore...the...outside...
Oh. I forgot. This is slashdot.
(ducks spitball)
Re:"Just needs wifi" (Score:5, Insightful)
Really depends on what your definition of "limited". Of course you're not going to be able to use it everywhere, but if you want that, that's what cell phones are for.
Not everyone wants (or needs) to be available to take a call all the time. The main times I want to be around a phone is at work (where there's wifi) and at home (where they're also wifi). Anywhere else that happens to have free wifi (like my local coffee shop) is a bonus. For me this would allow me to use the phone 90% of the time where I am normally. That would be enough for me and I wouldn't find it limiting at all.
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Good enough. (Score:3, Interesting)
It wouldn't be as convenient as a an iPhone, but it would me much more convenient than finding a pay phone (remember those?) and much cheaper than the convenience of a cell phone.
It wouldn't be worse than an "old days" cellphone with limited coverage because you wouldn't be paying for the (false) perception of convenience. You could, conceivably, get the same shitty service for free.
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Add WiMax or cell-wifi bridge (Score:4, Insightful)
I'll give 'em credit for following the idea of using a WiFi mobile device with VoIP, but that's really not particularly revolutionary. What's needed next is WiMax or a small portable cell-WiFi bridge. If the bandwidth's high enough (EVDO rev a is almost there), then you have affordable unlimited talk and data...
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We have them available in aus, a wireless router with a 3g (using telstras NextG) modem built in, just add power and you have your own portable hot-spot anywhere*.
*being limited by telstras NextG network of course, which, without a good aerial on the sucker, will be rather limiting.
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They have them for any ISP. Linksys WRT54G3G will work with almost any PCMCIA based 3g modem (works with all providers in AU, theyupdate often).
There's ones by netcomm that work with any USB 3g dongle as well.
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>...but that's really not particularly revolutionary
You're right. I've been running Skype on my Windows Mobile phone for years.
But it sucks. Jitter, low battery life, poor quality, problems with WIFI on the mobile requiring a reboot, limited range.
Now mind you, I love Skype. It works great on my PC and Macbook. Just not on my mobile device. And from the reviews I've seen of other Skype WIFI phones, I wouldn't be much better off on those.
What would be revolutionary is if they could offer VoIP on th
Something is missing... (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm wondering the same.
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using iPhone without a carrier?has the pieces then (Score:2)
I forgot whether you can walk out of the store without an ATT contract these days.
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The second generation of iPod touch has the option to plug in a headset with a microphone, and it also has a speaker. Who cares about the old thing you still lug around? :P
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True. I have a first generation iPod Touch and it hasn't got a mic. However, people have managed to get an external mic working with it, just google for touchmod, these guys have done awesome stuff! They also have made a VOIP client for the Touch, quite some time ago.
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You need this:
http://store.apple.com/us/product/MB770G/A?fnode=MTY1NDA3NA&mco=MTgwNDU3Mw [apple.com]
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I had assumed that they at least supported the iPhone headphones that have an inline mic. That wouldn't be ideal, but it would get the job done.
If this usage picks up, I would really hope that Apple would put enough bluetooth support to support headsets.
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http://www.google.com/search?q=ipod+touch+microphone [google.com]
Re:Something is missing... (Score:5, Informative)
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Even better, install a voice to text app off iTunes (Synthesised Mobile Speech). That way you can have the benefit of cheap VoIP calls but it's also usable in noisy situations. There is also a lower latency but proprietary version called Mobile Sythesised Networking which is quite popular.
Alternatively you could just buy a Nokia E71 and install Fring on it.
Phillip.
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Open high speed wireless networks (Score:5, Insightful)
This is why I really hope we get some actually *open* wireless Internet built as a result of the analog TV spectrum being reallocated. I was very disappointed that the government didn't adopt the openness rules recommended by Google in the auction.
Imagine how great it would be to not be beholden to cell carriers, but to be able to buy any kind of Internet device you want, and use it as a phone if you want. It would open up competition between hardware manufacturers and service providers. Competition is good.
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And there's no technical or financial reason that what you propose couldn't be possible. The only roadblock is the cellular telcos throwing millions of dollars at congress-critters to protect their tightly-controlled market from competition.
interesting concept but (Score:2, Insightful)
Even so it this a reasonable solution. The iPod touch is a $200 gadget. One has to assume that some use outside of the spec are going to be used. For instance, if Apple is not saying it can support a microphone, then one assumes that feature cann
Re:interesting concept but (Score:5, Insightful)
There's one application where VOIP is significantly preferable to the standard cellular network: international calling. I can use a VOIP app to talk to my cousins in Australia for free; being able to walk around my house or sit at the local coffeeshop while doing so would be nice.
This isn't about style; it's about adding functionality to a nice little piece of hardware. My cell phone's practically an antique at this point, but I have no need to upgrade it because I don't talk on the phone much. My iPod is a great PDA; adding VOIP capability would just be icing on the cake.
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No microphone afaik, just a speaker.
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While this is an interesting exercise (that isn't totally unique, but interesting for an iPod), it shouldn't be a primary solution for someone who can only afford an iPod Touch.
Watch Apple crush this (Score:4, Informative)
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Apple is a mobile service provider now? Who did they buy, or did they just start putting up towers without FCC approval?
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They might as well be, as they're completely in bed with AT&T on the iPhone contract deal. Why sell one iTouch once, when you can sell an iPhone once, then also collect monthly kick-backs from AT&T on the contract?
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Someone better tell Optus to send AT&T and Apple monthly kickbacks for all the outright iphones they're selling then...
As a 2gen itouch owner... (Score:5, Interesting)
I love my ipod touch for cooking, I bring up the browser, look at a recipe, and its right there next to the stove. I love my ipod touch for games when i'm bored on the go. I love my ipod touch for movies on the go. I love my ipod touch for being 99.95% as useful as an iphone near a free wifi hotspot.
I also love that it can do all of the above without drawing one nano-watt from my real phone's battery.
PS. the ipod touch does not have a built in microphone or ear speaker, why kludge a microphone attachment onto a beautiful internet appliance/ebook reader/gaming device/portable movie device?
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Have fun when your frying pan spits grease onto your touch screen... ;)
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Mic? (Score:3, Funny)
I was fairly confused, even after i RTFA, about how you talk into an ipod touch, since they don't come with either a microphone or bluetooth.
Google helped me find this Lifehacker Article [lifehacker.com] that is way the hell more useful than the linked one. Basically you have to buy some sort of external mic that clips onto your touch, then use your headphones to listen to the call. To me, this awkwardness seems like sort of a deal breaker for the practically of an iPod TouchPhone.
If there were a way to hack a bluetooth module in there, it could be a whole different deal. You could talk using a handsfree bluetooth device, and in a brilliant circlejerk of redundancy, even tether your internet connection to a traditional cellphone with a data plan.
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I have an iPod touch, and it works just fine with the apple headphones [apple.com] that include a mic. I didn't want to shell out for another pair of headphones, so I use the ones that came free with my Blackberry (also includes a mic) and that works fine too. I believe the earlier generation iPod touch required an external mic attached to the dock connector but the current models can use any headphone/mic in a standard size jack.
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> If there were a way to hack a bluetooth module in there, it could be a whole different deal. You
> could talk using a handsfree bluetooth device, and in a brilliant circlejerk of redundancy, even
> tether your internet connection to a traditional cellphone with a data plan.
That wouldn't be a circlejerk it would be useful. Look at Nokia's Internet Tablet line, the same WiFi+BT combo.
Advantages:
1. You get to keep a cell phone, i.e. you don't have a *%^$ing PDA stuck to your ear.
2. You can lose the
Why not just buy a Nokia E71? (Score:2)
I have a Nokia E71 with Fring on there. It connects to Skype, any SIP provider (in my case FreeWorldDialup), I have a virtual number forwarded to my SIP account so I can be called from a normal phone and the caller pays local rates to my mobile no matter where I am in the world, and it logs me onto my MSN and ICQ accounts. The only thing it lacks is IRC!
Fantastic. And it's so small and light it makes the iPhone feel like a brick. The only reason I didn't and never will buy an iPhone is the proprietary lock-
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I've had an iTouch for about a year, and I really wanted it to be a good voip phone. I realized it's probably not gonna happen, because Apple in their infinite wisdom decided not to include a microphone and a speaker in my revision.
Now I'm going with the e71 instead, it's due to arrive within a week. I'm hoping Fring works well with skype in and skype out, then I will probably get just a data plan with it and skip voice all together. I'll still hang on to my iTouch for browsing and games.
When those android
Already there (Score:4, Interesting)
Already have the external mic kit for the Touch so that was the first bit. Got it from sparfun.com
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The *one* hitch (Score:2)
There's only one hitch: Without a Wi-Fi connection, the iTouch is still, well, an iTouch.
Which means it is not really a phone. It's just a wireless enabled device.
Re:an iphone that's missing 3g and edge (Score:5, Insightful)
in other words, a defective phone, only useful in areas where you trust the wifi connection.
Yeah, like the cordless phone you have sitting on the charger at home. Only it doesn't cost anything per month and doesn't necessarily need to be restricted to just working at home.
It sucks that it wouldn't help you much if you travel through time and space, but it's not exactly a lump of nothing, either.
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Re:an iphone that's missing 3g and edge (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:an iphone that's missing 3g and edge (Score:5, Insightful)
Shut down by Apple lawsuit in 3...2...1...
Lawsuit? There wont be any lawsuit... at least Apple wont be the one filing it. Apple has complete control of the iPod Touch through "The App Store". They simply wont allow these applications to be sold or downloaded.
What's that? Your going to find a way to put it on there without Apple's permission? A simple firmware upgrade will take care of that.
Re:an iphone that's missing 3g and edge (Score:4, Informative)
What's that? Your going to find a way to put it on there without Apple's permission? A simple firmware upgrade will take care of that.
Which is precisely why I've had a voip client on my iPhone that, in blatant disregard of Apple's Wifi only voip rules works on the cellular network, and has through the last several firmware updates...
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yes, it's just that simple!
Re:an iphone that's missing 3g and edge (Score:4, Insightful)
add a link and / or some instructions and earn some modpoints!
1) Jailbreak iPhone
2) Install any of the available SIP clients through Cydia
3) Profit!
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My VOIP phone works just fine during a power outage. Of course, I had my UPS up and running well before I bought a VOIP plan ... but considering how cheap you can get them these days, there's really no excuse not to have one. The savings on my phone bill within the first six months were more than enough to pay for a low-end UPS.
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Second, if you're really worried about availability, you could keep a spare battery pack around to plug into your router/ATA when you needed to make an emergency call -- most of them run at 5V or 12V DC, so it's trivial to make a backup that would last long enough for several emergency phone calls, would have weeks
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"Second, if you're really worried about availability, you could keep a spare battery pack around to plug into your router/ATA when you needed to make an emergency call -- most of them run at 5V or 12V DC, so it's trivial to make a backup that would last long enough for several emergency phone calls, would have weeks of standby time, and could left out-of-the-loop to avoid premature draining but still be easily switched on in an emergency, all for under $50. Not to mention the 12V power source and fuel-power
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Unless it's one of the new digital ones that Verizon and Cox Cable have rolled out (and no doubt many others) that use a battery backed cable modem to route phone traffic over the broadband network. The battery in ours is good for about 8 hours... tops. Doesn't really help in an emergency situation, and the last time we had one of those (Hurricane Isabelle), the cell towers came back up before the power did... if they went down at all. Unlike the phone lines, which around here are almost exclusively above g
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Really? You can buy them everywhere. I have one I picked up for $8 and keep it in case of a power outage.
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And I absolutely do not steal the 50-volt DC from British Telecom to run lighting during lengthy power cuts. No sir-ee! The fact that British phone boxes have lights running all day and night yet have no connection to the mains power grid never crossed my mind!
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Yeah, like the cordless phone you have sitting on the charger at home.
Does it also cost $30.00 with two handsets and extra charging station?
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Does your home telephone play games and music?
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Funnily enough, yes :p
Although only simple games and crappy music.
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Music for a phone keypad [sayyad.ca]
and another [storagereview.net]
it's full of them.
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So you're saying it's NOT "just like" the cordless phone sitting on the charger at home after all?
I'm sorry, I'll try to keep up, can try not changing direction so often?
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So you're saying it's NOT "just like" the cordless phone sitting on the charger at home after all?
Yeah, it does more than your cordless phone.
I'm sorry, I'll try to keep up, can try not changing direction so often?
Would it help if we used words with fewer syllables?
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Yeah, it does more than your cordless phone.
I would never have guessed that a product that cost more, did more. That's amazing.
Would it help if we used words with fewer syllables?
It would help if you could recognize sarcasm.
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No but the console I bought for another 30$ does, and does it better than an iPhone.
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Does it also cost $30.00 with two handsets and extra charging station?
No, but it doesn't cost you ~$300 a year, either.
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No, but it doesn't cost you ~$300 a year, either.
Your home internet service is free? Must be nice.
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So, then, a phone that works within 100 feet of a known base station.
That still doesn't turn it into an iPhone. That turns it into a tethered phone which won't help you out when you get lost driving.
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So here's how to turn your iPod Touch to an iPhone.
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...you'll be able to make outbound calls but not take random inbound calls.
Sounds like my kind of phone.