24/04/2017
HISTORY OF THE iPHONE [7]
-AUDIO & OUTPUT
The 3.5mm TRRS connector for the first five generations (original through 4S) after which time it was moved to the bottom left corner. The built-in Bluetooth 2x +EDR supports wireless earpieces and headphone which require the HSP profile stereo audio was added in the 3.0 update for hardware that supports A2DP. While non-sanctioned third party solution exist, the iPhone does not officially support the OBEX file transfer protocol. The lack of these profiles prevents iPhone users from exchanging multimedia files such as pictures, musics, apps and videos with other bluetooth enabled cellphones
-STORAGE
First iPhone- 4GB and 8GB, 16GB (Apple later discontinued the 4GB models)
iPhone 3G- 8GB, 16GB
iPhone 3Gs- 8GB, 16GB, 32GB
iPhone 4- 8GB, 16GB, 32GB
iPhone 4S- 16GB, 32GB, 64GB
iPhone 5 & 5S- 16GB, 32GB, 64GB
iPhone 5C- 8GB, 16GB, 32GB
iPhone 6 & 6S- 16GB, 64GB, 128GB
iPhone SE- 16GB & 64GB
iPhone 7 & 7plus- 32GB, 128GB, 256GB
-ACTIVATION
The iPhone normally prevents access to its media player and web features unless it has also been activated as a phone with an authorized carrier. On july 3, 2007, Jon L**h Johanson reported on his blog that he had succesfully bypassed this requirement and unlocked the iPhone's other features with a combination of custom software and modification of the iTunes binary. He published the software and offsets for others to use. Unlike the first generation iPhone, the iPhone 3G must be activated in the store in most countries. This makes the iPhone 3G more difficult, but not impossible to hack. The need for in-store activation, iPhone and iPod users upgrading to iPhone OS 2.0 caused a worldwide overload of Apple's servers. On july 11, 2008 the day in which both the iPhone 3G and iPod OS 2.0 update as well as mobileMe were released. After the update, the devices were required to connect to Apple's server to authenticate it, causing many devices to be temporily unsuable
+more to follow
Photo: iPhone 5C (series)
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