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Best Buy Supports Earth Day
With Earth Day next week, April 22, all the major retailers are getting involved in one way or another.
Bring in your old cellphone to Best Buy next week and get $25 off the purchase of a new phone. If you are buying a phone priced at $0 you will receive a $25 store credit for accessories. The $25 accessory credit must be used at the time of purchase and no cash will be given back if the accessory is less than $25. The trade-in program is only available for new contracts, contract renewals, and upgrades. Thus prepaid phones are not eligible. Trade-in incentives are only valid from April 17, 2009 – April 23, 2009 and must be done in-store. Check out all the trade-in incentives online. live_strong
Cricket Scores the Hint
Boy does this fully QWERTY slider sure get around. Bell and MetroPCS released the Hint earlier and now its available through Cricket. Cricket’s Motorola Hint is selling for $229.99 after a $20 web discount. Of course the Hint features a full QWERTY keyboard, 2.0 MP camera, video capture, and music player.
More at Cricket. live_strong Review: Case-Mate Barely There Case for iPhone 3G
The Case-Mate Barely There case for the iPhone 3G, available for $19.95 from the TiPb iPhone Store, is designed to accomplish several things:
How well does it hit these targets, and what if anything could it do better? Find out in our review…
I’m not a huge fan of cases. More often than not, my iPhone goes commando in my pocket. Well, almost. I have a sticker-skin on it to protect from minor scratches since the plastic iPhone 3G backing is so prone to them. I do worry, however, that one day I’ll drop my pride and joy and that same plastic backing will chip or crack on me. Living with that fear in the back of my mind is what drove me to try out a few options, starting with one that’s as close to naked as a hard case can be. DesignCase-Mate’s Barely There case comes in a rainbow of colors. Enough to make the latest gen iPod nano jealous. Case the rainbow. Seriously. Black, white, red, orange, purple, pink, and blue are your options. Being somewhat stalwart and sedate myself, I went with black. It covers the back and sides of the iPhone 3G, with cutouts at the corners to increase flexibility and aid in getting it on or off. Cutouts are also provided for the controls, speaker, mic, and dock port, and a hole is cut in the back so the big Apple logo on the iPhone can represent. Fandom rejoice. Everyone else scratch your heads and hope nothing spears it right in that target spot. For the front, in lieu of armor, Case-Mate provides a fairly typical screen protector. UsabilitySlide your iPhone in, volume buttons first, and the other side flexes and snaps into place securing your iPhone in its protective shell. Simple, direct, easy. Win. For the screen protector — it’s a screen protector. Clean thoroughly. Apply carefully. Squeegee down deliberately. day in, day out, the case just does what it’s supposed to from that point on — protect your iPhone from the abuse of casual use. Living up to it’s name, it often times felt like it really was barely there, adding nothing appreciable to the in-pocket experience, and even giving a tiny bit of extra, and appreciated, heft in-hand. It’s not coated in soft-touch, so there’s really no added security when it comes to actually preventing drops, but it feels tough enough to survive a pretty good whack. And hey, if you break it, at least you’re only out an Andrew Jackson and not the heap of Ben Franklins a new iPhone would cost you. Of course, the front is covered with only a thin plastic film, so while you still get the scratch protection, dropping it face down will offer nothing in the way of similar impact resistance. Problems? A couple minor ones to start, mostly to do with fit and finish. The edges in the corners were left a tad sharp. Don’t get me wrong, nothing skin-piercing here, just enough to give you an annoying poke. A little extra rounding off in the factory would have been appreciated. Likewise — and I preface this by saying I have a sticker-skin on top of my iPhone 3G which might have caused just a millimeter or so of extra girth, creating the problem — plastic interiors make me to worry about cases causing scratches as much as they prevent them. I saw some depressions on my sticker-skin. No idea if that would have translated to anything on a bare iPhone back, but a little more inside finish at the factory would be reassuring here as well. Being a complete and single unit case, it’s not compatible with all dock-port accessories. Anything slim and at the end of a long cable, like the standard USB sync that comes with the iPhone, should do you fine. Any kind of cradle, however, will almost certainly require you to remove the case first. Lastly, the added size, even while minimal, will of course make it incompatible with some holsters and pouches. Without a belt-clip option, this case seems pretty much targeted at people like me — those who prefer not to have cases or case-like trappings at all. Again, just like the product name promises — this case is barely there. ConclusionFor those who prefer nothing to come between them and our iPhones, the Case-Mate Barely There case is definitely worth a look. In the eternal compromise that comes between comfort and protection, Case-Mate strikes an excellent balance. And, since Apple in its infinitely looped wisdom only offers the iPhone 3G in black and white models, the Case-Mate is also a great way to splash some color on your unit while keeping things lean and still getting some added peace of mind. Pros
Cons
TiPb Accessory Review Rating
This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. Review: Case-Mate Barely There Case for iPhone 3G Shock! Disbelief! Amazon MP3 and Walmart ALSO Raise MP3 Prices!
Stop me if you’ve heard this one before. Apple announces in January that iTunes will switch from fixed pricing ($0.99) to variable pricing ($1.29, $0.99, $0.69) on music singles in April. Reports follow that show Apple was forced to concede on variable pricing — something long demanded by the music labels — in exchange for getting permission to provide over the air (OTA) music downloads via the 3G and EDGE networks on the iPhone. (Whether that concession was ultimately good or bad for consumers we’ll argue another day). April comes, and just as Apple says, variable pricing hits the US iTunes Store. And the interwebs darn near ’splodes in crazy. Apple is the devil. Amazon is cheaper. People will flock to MP3. Here’s a great way to switch over to buying from some store that is other! The sun sets, the furor spreads, a new day dawns and — Boom! — we find out Amazon MP3 and Walmart are — surprise surprise — also raising prices. Shocked. Shocked are we to find out gouging is going on by Big Media! [via Macworld] This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. Shock! Disbelief! Amazon MP3 and Walmart ALSO Raise MP3 Prices! Apple Sued Over Multi-Touch Patents
We all know Steve Jobs sculpted the iPhone from unicorn tears through a sheer act of singular will and hutzpah — along with buying FingerWorks and winning a glove-full of multi-touch patents of their own along the way (which may or may not still result in several rounds of pugilism with Palm’s Pre). But who knew they might not have done enough? Elan Microelectronics of Taiwan, that’s who. Elan claims the iPhone, iPod touch, and Macbooks — basically everything featuring multi-touch functionality — is in violation of their patents, and they’ve filed suit in Apple’s home turf of San Francisco to prove it. (No word yet of litigation friendly Texas will sue over not being the venue of choice…) A previous lawsuit from Elan against a company called Synaptics, who counter-sued resulted in a dismissal and cross-licensing agreement. This time? We’re calling Apple wins by (frenzied) tap-out due to guillotine choke near the end of the second round. Anyone got the popcorn, hot dogs, and spicy drink? This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store. Apple Sued Over Multi-Touch Patents
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