iOS 6 Streaming Bug Sends Data Usage Skyrocketing 98
MojoKid writes "iOS 6, by all appearances, has a streaming problem. This is separate from the network issues that led Verizon to state that it wouldn't bill people for overages that were caused by spotty Wi-Fi connectivity. The issue has been detailed at PRX.org with information on how the team saw a huge spike in bandwidth usage after the release of iOS 6, and then carefully tested the behavior of devices and its own app to narrow the possible cause. In one case, the playback of a single 30MB episode caused the transfer of over 100MB of data. It is believed that the issue was solved with the release of iOS 6.0.1, but anecdotal evidence from readers points to continued incidents of high data usage, even after updating. If you own an iPhone 5 or upgraded to iOS 6 on an older device, it is strongly recommend to check your usage over the past two months, update to iOS 6.0.1, and plan for a lengthy discussion with your carrier if it turns out your data use went through the roof."
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I'm not an investing whiz, but can one bet on AAPL's stock tanking? I bet the insiders and big shareholders are preparing to, and if you are holding AAPL stock, so should you. Cash out your mutual funds and other investments while you can, cuz shit gonna take a big nosedive.
-- Ethanol-fueled
Re: Sounds like they're watching everything now. (Score:2)
Don't forget about the big investors shaking the tree on sure events. Reference book "Escape from America", a moderately useful guide for expat gonna-bes. Investor saw news of revolution in Rhodesia, and realized that -- I think the metal was Molybdenum -- would rise sharply in price, so he bought heavily on leverage, and then watched the price drop 15% before taking off like crazy. The stop loss call wiped him out. He asked his broker what happened, and his broker said that the really big investors al
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How can Apple's stock tank? They are the only players in the smartphone and tablet market for the most part. In fact, all they have to do is introduce a new device and they just created a new ecosystem. Stock goes low, out comes a phablet.
That's weird, I'm almost certain that I heard about a competitor to Apple in the mobile device space:
http://www.businessinsider.com/mobile-market-share-2012-11 [businessinsider.com]
In the US, Apple's market share is stronger. According to Comscore, Android had 53% of the market in September, as compared to Apple's 34%.
In the short term, Apple has nothing to fear, they have plenty of money in the bank, but they need to keep coming out with innovative, game changing devices - incremental updates of their existing product line isn't going to fend off the competition. And they need to avoid more Apple Maps type blunders - don't ship a product until it's done.
It dips again, they make a server grade appliance similar to the XServe except with an iOS version running server apps
I
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In the short term, Apple has nothing to fear, they have plenty of money in the bank, but they need to keep coming out with innovative, game changing devices...
Tim Cook can't do it. He wears the black turtleneck, but he doesn't fill it.
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>In the US
I'm not agreeing or disagreeing with your point but the US is a tiny part of the global mobile phone market. You could have 0% US market share but have a ton elsewhere and you would still be rolling in money.
Surely you could have clicked through the article I linked to before making your irrelevant point, Apple is doing even worse in the global market... from TFA:
In the third quarter, IDC reports, Android sales accounted for a staggering 75% of the smartphone market. Apple sales, meanwhile, accounted for only 15%. Android is still gaining share rapidly, so Apple's share may shrink even further.
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otherwise they would already be doing what you are suggesting
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The simplest explanation
I think you meant "stupidest."
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Well done (Score:1, Funny)
I am glad that there are such rigorous QC controls in place at Apple to protect Customers from issues like this. I am also glad to see that the issue was corrected so quickly, with Apple being upfront with customers about the issue, and working with carriers to correct it.
It's examples like this that make it easy to clearly identify why using Apple products is such a good idea, for all involved.
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I get them with Nexus.
And a lot more.
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Apple cultists (Score:5, Funny)
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Exactly, and the perverted criminal competition has changed the landscape all around to make Apple Maps look bad.
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Remember ios 2.0 ? They released that one for 10$
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Don't worry, it's all part of Apple Innovation. You must be using the phone wrong or something. You'll be able to buy a patch soon.
... and by "patch," we of course mean the iPhone 6.
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Don't worry, it's all part of Apple Innovation. You must be using the phone wrong or something. You'll be able to buy a patch soon.
No, it is exactly the way AT&T and Verizon want it.
iOS Reality vs. the distortedonline mob discussion (Score:5, Insightful)
Feel free to accuse me of lying, but my data usage is actually dramatically LOWER on iPhone 5 than it was on the iPhone4. I am now able to use Pandora, whereas I couldn't before on iPhone4/iOS5. I have also had no problems with iOS6 Maps---in fact iOS6 Maps uses WAY less data than the intentionally crippled Google Maps, which would download bitmap instead of vector graphics and chomp through my data usage like a monster.
I don't mean to argue that Apple isn't an evil company and I recognize that iOS6 has some glaring problems that affect a significant minority of people. But, the truth is, for a vast majority of people, all is well in iOS land.
The disconnect between the reality of the experience for actual iPhone users and the way it gets reported online is massive---it's like two different universes. Walled garden aside, the actual experience with the iPhone is quite good. Whether you buy into the walled garden or not depends on whether there are iOS-exclusive apps you value over your right to tweak and pirate (which, let's be frank, that's what the "freedom" of Android is all about in the USA---sideloading pirated apps and futzing with widgets. In China and other freedom-restricted places, I agree sideloading could have real freedom-related importance).
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When it comes to telecommunications, the USA and Canada are third-world countries.
Signed,
a Canadian.
I'm in the US, and don't get billed for usage. (Score:2)
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What happens if you leave Austin?
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What happens if you leave Austin?
It's nationwide. Sprint network has a bunch of great deals. My daughter has iPhone 4s with unlimited data/text/calling for $50 a month
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wrong recipient (Score:1)
Why should the carrier care, the fault lies here with Apple, so a discussion with your local collection of badly geniuses is what you need.
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So if Hyundai lies about it's cars fuel efficiency, you go and discuss this at your gas station, right?
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So if Hyundai lies about it's cars fuel efficiency, you go and discuss this at your gas station, right?
Strike that. Reverse it.
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The carrier sells the product.
While it is an Apple bug. the Carrier wasn't diligent enough to check for that flaw, and they are selling a device that could rack up minutes without the user knowing. For the most part if Verizon doesn't charge for the excess they are the good guy. If they charged than they will be less trusted.
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Hate to respond to an AC, but as you don't seem to be trolling, and it is on topic...
The Verizon iPhone 5 is carrier unlocked. Straight out of the box. No tweaking required.
I'm not a Verizon customer, as it happens. I use an unlocked iPhone 4 on T-Mobile.
Federal plan, no limits (Score:1)
what about roaming? (Score:2)
what about roaming? roaming in Canada is like $2+ a meg.
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Rejoice - Apple broadcasts the world it sux (Score:2)
That headline is the mean interpretation of all Apple bashers, whereas the Apple fanboys will call it a glitch or a minor mishap.
Somewhere along the infamous, slippery path both may have delivered a relevant piece of an annoying truth.
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Who declared it a bug (Score:2)
Bypassing wifi too (Score:4, Interesting)
Has anyone else notice this issue?
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There is a setting I believe (I've only seen the s
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There is a setting I believe (I've only seen the screenshots - I didn't install iOS6) that enables iOS to use 3G if it detects the WiFi is bad. Could this be the case - your device has a terrible/slow/laggy WiFi connection and it decides using 3G would at least lead to a more stable internet connection?
I'll check for this setting. However, I don't think the WiFi connection is slow at all. The WiFi goes to a corporate network with 100 Mbps dedicated connection to the Internet both up and down. Something is definitely amiss. Btw, iOS 6.0.1 does not fix this issue.
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Not a new issue. (Score:2)
Ok, I have an extra iPhone just for development which I put on a pre-paid plan that charges 1 euro for every day you use the 3G network. I have used that kind of plan on Maemo/MeeGo and Symbian phones for years and I never had a charge while at home since I have a good WiFi network.
You are starting to see where I am going eh?
So, a couple of weeks after I added such a card on the iPhone, which was a bit more than a year ago (so we are talking about iOS 5), I disable the WiFi to do some testing with 3G. In co
Re:Not a new issue and Android did it too (Score:1)
My Samsung Galaxy S (Fascinate) does the same thing. Its a battery-saving behavior, but at least the Android phone had a setting to let the user control whether or not it disabled the WiFi comms when the screen is off for an extended period and the phone wasnt plugged in to the wall.
Go back two years when Android was really taking off and you'll see lots of user complaints about impossible overnight uses of their 3G data eating away their limited usage plan.
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iPhone has always done this (so definitely not an iOS 6 or iOS 5-specific thing). It's a battery-saving measure. Actually, don't most smartphones do this? (Apple or not)
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Give Apple a break. They wanted to test IOS 6, they really did, but they didn't have time because they were too busy launching patent thug lawsuits.
Whoa, looks like Apple sent some of its thugmods around. Sensitive about that thug thing much?
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Give Apple a break. They wanted to test IOS 6, they really did, but they didn't have time because they were too busy launching patent thug lawsuits.
Whoa, looks like Apple sent some of its thugmods around. Sensitive about that thug thing much?
Indeed, Apple thugs are definitely senstive about being called thugs. Here's a novel idea: don't be thugs and people might not call you thugs thugs.
Not so sure this is entirely iOS 6 related... (Score:2)
Alright, here's a data point that might throw a monkeywrench into this situation...
I have an ipod, still on 5.1.1, that I drive around all day connected to a verizon wifi hotspot thingy with a 3GB data plan. Usually, I download the couple of podcasts I listen to at home before work, but if I forget, I'll go ahead and download it out on the road, they run about 40 MB or so. The only other thing I do is a few emails, a few google searches, and the occasional look at facebook.
In the past, I would sometimes get
Post Steve Jobs? (Score:3)
First maps, then no YouTube app for the iPad and now this. Things aren't looking good for iOS post-Steve Jobs.
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The Google YouTube app is an iPhone app that doesn't work in landscape mode on the iPad.
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I don't think many people are being affected by this bug - some are, for sure, but it's not hugely wide-spread. I certainly haven't noticed anything odd going on with the data usage of the 3 iOS devices in this household since upgrading to iOS6.
The new maps does suck, that's for sure though. Not so much the app itself (the vector-based mapping engine is pretty awesome actually, much faster and lighter on data usage than the old bitmap maps) ... it's just the data that is terribly bad. Which is fixable, than
Apple's stance: It's AT&T's fault, no matter w (Score:1)
Are we sure about this? Jailbreakers affected? (Score:2)
Makes you think (Score:1)
How much bandwidth is wasted by buggy software (and by "buggy" I also mean super-inefficent borderline stupid codig) per year...?