Read Gibson's analysis and you will understand that this is really a very marginal problem. If one has good signal strength it won't matter how you hold the phone. If your signal strength is about to go over a cliff, anything you do can potentially push you over. One of those things is touching the phone in a particular spot.

They have already sold 2,000,000 of the new phones so even a 1 in a million problem will have a couple of hits.

Back when I used to listen to a radio while commuting I knew to stand in specific spots on the train platform. Moving even a few inches would lose the signal.

It is not magic, it is physics.

On Jun 28, 2010, at 6:06 PM, [email protected] wrote:
Thanks for the information.  However, that is not really the issue
with the iPhone.  The issue is that the new iPhone places the antenna,
or active portions of it, where it can easily come into direct contact
with the hand of the user.


*************************************************************************
**  List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy  **
**  policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/  **
*************************************************************************

Reply via email to