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Brian DipertEDN Senior Technical Editor Brian Dipert exposes, analyzes and
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Monday, June 15, 2009

Apple's iPhone 3G S: Presenting Its Secret Specs

Jun 15 2009 10:41PM | Permalink |Comments (15) |


While I was traipsing around Taiwan last week, Apple rolled out (among other things) the long-rumored latest iteration in its iPhone family back here in the States. By virtue of its evolutionary-versus-revolutionary nature, the iPhone 3G S hardware specs aren't as eye-popping as, say, those of the Palm Pre. But considering that 'S' supposedly stands for speed, the company clearly made some enhancements beyond the device's first- and second-generation forbearers.

Apple was forthright with some of the 'speed' details, specifically the iPhone 3G S's support for the 7.2 Mbps flavor of UMTS/HSPA, even if the company's sole US carrier partner, AT&T, is a laggard in this regard. Apple's website explicitly mentions only HSDPA support, but since the prior-generation iPhone 3G reportedly handled higher upstream bandwidth HSUPA, I'd be surprised if this design doesn't also comprehend it. However, as with the 2nd-generation iPod touch (which bumped the CPU clock to 532 MHz, from 412 MHz on its first-generation predecessor along with the first two iPhone generations), Apple was mum on several other notable silicon improvements this time around.

Courtesy of an inadvertent slip by the Netherlands division of T-Mobile, we know that the iPhone 3G S contains a 600 MHz CPU and twice the DRAM of its precursor (now 256 Mbytes). And the claims of Anand's anonymous contacts (curses, well-connected Anand! Just kidding...) further open the kimono, indicating that Apple's made yet another ARM CPU evolution (to a Samsung-implemented Cortex-A8 core...the Cortex-A8 in the Palm Pre comes from Texas Instruments) as well as migrating to a next-generation Imagination Technologies PowerVR SGX graphics core with hardware support for v2 of the OpenGL ES API.

Questions:

  • Why is Apple being so hush-hush about its design enhancements? I don't have a good answer for this one, and I welcome your theories. I mean, c'mon...Anand had his hands on one within hours of its public unveiling, and you gotta know that folks like iFixit and phoneWreck aren't far behind. Apple might try to hide suppliers and part numbers behind Apple logo and cryptic part number stamps, but a bit of developer code will reveal any remaining secrets that an electron microscope doesn't uncover.
  • Will developers code exclusively for OpenGL ES v2, thereby fragmenting the App Store? This one I'm much more certain about....no friggin' way, at least for now. Developers code for the largest possible potential audience, for obvious business upside reasons. Just as coders didn't flock to Windows Vista-only DirectX v10, no developer in his or her right mind would craft software that'll only run on an iPhone 3G S...until its and its iPhone and iPod touch descendents achieve critical market mass, that is. Although it might be possible to write programs that, in the absence of OpenGL v2 hardware acceleration, support API calls via software emulation, the resultant performance impact on OpenGL v1.1-only hardware would likely be prohibitive. What might happen, though, is that just as with games and other graphics-intensive PC applications, the code would ascertain what hardware it's running on and appropriately scale its capabilities (graphics richness, frame rate, etc) in response. Again, I'd appreciate reader feedback here.

Reader Comments



at 6/16/2009 10:22:34 AM, RR said:
Be sure to check out the iPhone 3G S repair guide at:

www.rapidrepair.com/guides/iphone-3g-s-repair/iphone-3g-s-dissasembly-repair-guide.html



at 6/17/2009 1:29:55 PM, Siliconcarne... said:
Brian, my first thought would be to look at Icera and their acquisition of Sirific Wireless's receive diversity technology for 7.2 and 10Mbps HSDPA. During an Intel Dev Conference, I seem to remember someone mentioning that Sirific met with Apple prior to the first-gen iPhone coming out.



at 6/18/2009 2:01:30 PM, noSpecs said:
Maybe the reason they aren't releasing specs is because they might want to cost reduce the device later without telling anyone.

If you say you have a 600Mhz processor but then you come out with a silent "3gs rev 2" hardware which uses a slightly different processor running at 500Mhz but benching at the same performance... most consumers would consider that acceptable and not care. But if you said you had a 600Mhz processor, then you rev is with a 500mhz processor (even if its just as fast) there will be an uproar and lawsuits.







at 6/18/2009 2:12:53 PM, Pete said:
Siliconcarne: Everyone is talking to everyone in this business (as in many other)...

I would guess that Apple has left IFX (their solution was not mature enough for their high-volume needs and IFX does not have the muscles or the roadmap to support them enough) and gone for Qualcomm as platform provider.

I would be surprised to see Icera here, I think they learnt their lesson from going with IFX (ie supplier with a too narrow scope and roadmap).

Ciao,
Pete



at 6/18/2009 2:21:51 PM, Brian Dipert said:
Dear noSpecs, excellent point!



at 6/18/2009 8:49:26 PM, Baskaran said:
Revealing your spec in full can make competitors copy you ideas. Copying ideas is a biggest threat unless you have the product in the shelves ready to sell. Apple clearly understands this.

I agree there are plenty of hardware options out there - from reference platforms to working prototypes by spending few hundreds of dollars. But all of them do not have a capable OS like what apple has. Rest of them have to do the catchup game for 10 years to reach what Apple is today.




at 6/18/2009 11:29:29 PM, Sens said:
Why would the average consumer care about the specs as long as the gadget does what the manufacturer says it should? Most of the other manufacturers adopt a price differentiation strategy and come out with a slew of slightly tweaked parts and get their margins based on the difference but Apple's marketing strategy is clearly not following the std. approach and their success shows that techies need to move on from counting Hertz & bits and focus on application performance benchmarks instead for comparisons. Admittedly, this is more difficult but somehow consumers seem to be happy without having to bother with this and I guess that's what matters in the end.



at 6/19/2009 1:48:29 AM, Robert said:
Rolls Royce never stated how much power their cars had. They simply said "enough". Maybe Apple just sees themselves as the Rolls Royce amongst the cell phone variety...



at 6/19/2009 11:48:48 AM, Dougie09 said:
Could it be that Apple (rumored to have over 100 program team members working to develop telemedicine capability and apps based on the iPhone platform) is "preparing" for a later "telemedicine engine"?



at 6/19/2009 12:17:04 PM, ProbablyMissingSomething said:
OK - I think i read it all.

What I'd read i cannot see where iPhone is moving to the 21st century by adding the, now ancient history feature of tethering. Is this still omitted?




at 6/19/2009 12:25:12 PM, Brian Dipert said:
Dear ProbablyMissingSomething, iPhone firmware v3 supports tethering, if the carrier supports it. AT&T doesn't (yet) officially support tethering.



at 6/22/2009 6:52:03 AM, hyman said:
Apple is a company around user experience, not tech specs. That's what people love their products for: Ease of use with little to no technical knowledge. So why should they scare people off with detailed tech specs that only nerds are interested in?



at 6/24/2009 7:42:14 PM, ken said:
Keeping specs a secret is an enticement to techies that just need to know what they are. The excitement of being able to discovers the "good" when they are hard to get is a real reward. This builds excitement and passion in the techie world and sells phones.



at 7/4/2009 4:51:23 PM, bmitol said:
So, do they have an app for not dropping calls yet?



at 7/6/2009 1:38:43 PM, gzim said:
who can give me the code for the iphone pls

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