[citation][nom]Houndsteeth[/nom]You know, we like to blame Apple and Steve for the problem with the iPhone...but tbh, the FCC and AT&T figure into this equation as well. The FCC regulates that the antenna cannot be too close to the brain, so the antenna is located at the bottom of the phone near the mouth piece, which is unfortunately where folks are going to be placing their hands.Since the antenna is part of the exposed metal frame, this means that when a hand is placed in the right way, the signal is interrupted by someone grounding out the antenna. Hence, the bumper goes a long way to eliminate this problem. So if you have an iPhone 4 and are worried about reception issues, get a bumper.As to the software update, I am willing to wait to see what Apple has to deliver. My history with them has been very good with regards to delivering fixes to known issues I have experienced directly with their hardware/software.[/citation]
Blame the FCC? If FCC regulations were to blame, every phone should experience the iPhone reception issue (which obviously doesn't exist, His Jobsness said it...). Last time I looked, other brands don't experience this issue. Older iPhones don't experience this issue. The iPhone 4 does. Odd...
Apple's update history is very good? How many security holes in MacOSX go unpatched for months, if not years? And besides, fixing a hardware issue with a software update? Now that'd be real magic. Maybe the iPhone is a magical device after all..