Friday, January 01st, 2010 | Author: Kalle

With my previous praise for the iPhone, I must of course balance it with some flak. You know me, I’m big on the balance stuff. After all, I did play a Seeker*.

Anyway, the iPhone does not love linux. I knew this though. And this isn’t so much me complaining that the iPhone doesn’t love linux, as it is me marvelling at the grotesqueness of it all.

Look at what I am forced to do, in order to install “apps” from the Apple store onto my iPhone — and no, this is not about jailbreaking the phone, although you might think it is considering all the steps:

1. I have to get Windows or Mac OS. Yep. I read about iTunes in Wine (Windows emulation in linux) and heard it was “garbage”. I do this. I put Windows back on my lap top. For my iPhone. Because it is my master.

2. I have to install iTunes. I do this. Whilst asking myself “why must I…?” I do this. Obediently.

3. I have to confirm my Apple Account, FROM INTERNET EXPLORER. Hang on a minute here.
- I get an email to my gmail address,
- with a confirmation link,
- and clicking it in Firefox
- gives me the Apple “download iTunes for free!!!11111oneneone” page …
- and then when I open iTunes
- I get the “you have not validated your account — please check your email and follow the confirmation link” …
- so finally after many laps of chasing my own ass,
- I try the confirmation link in IE
- and voilá.
Beau-fucking-tit-ful. Welcome to Apple Computing. We come in peace from the 1990’s. We mean you no harm.

Thus, finally, I can get on with installing apps on my iPhone. Great hardware, by the way, pity about its maker.

*) Only a select few understand that one and it has nothing to do with Harry Potter.

Category: Hardware
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10 Responses

  1. Bummer, sounds like a bit of a run-around there.

    Unfortunately I have no idea about this side of owning an iPhone, as I haven’t run Windows since 2001, and haven’t run Linux as a desktop since 2003 (but still do on all of my servers). I just plugged it into my Mac and it worked. *shrug*. :)

    On a (slightly-)related topic, I downloaded “App Store Expense Manager” and gave myself a shock; that I’ve spent £173 on iPhone applications, including £72 on foreign language dictionaries! Still, well worth it, and still a fraction of what my (now little-used, thanks to the “Japanese” app) Casio EX-Word cost me a year or two ago.

  2. I have a Mac too, but my brother is hogging it at the moment, or I’d just use that. The downside of being out of the country for years at a time is that people tend to not easily wanna hand back stuff they “borrowed” from you those years ago. :P

    As for the Apple store, I’m up at ~80 yen or so so far. *grin* Not anywhere close to where you are and hopefully that will remain so. Though I might grab that Japanese app one of these days. It still pocks at me…

  3. Wow, well it says something that you’d go through *all* of that hassle/punishment rather than fight to get your Mac back. You’re mad! ;)

    Definitely check out that app; I guarantee you won’t regret it, as it is superb – the best of all of my dictionaries (I also have Collins Pro and SlovEd). Especially as you likely have the 3GS model, which also negates any speed quibbles I have with all the dictionaries on my 3G.

    Finally, to aid you in increasing your spending (haha), if you’re a Google Reader user, check out “Byline”.

  4. *laughs* Well, considering I may be doing iPhone development here in the near future, I may benefit from checking out what is possible on the phone, even if it costs me a little so maybe I’ll bite the bullet. :)

    As for the Mac — you don’t know my brother, or you’d understand. ;) Besides, my lap top was basically just a repository of my main desktop. Wiping it clean wasn’t that big a deal in the long run. And installing XP again was kind of amusing actually. I walked back and forth between the spot where I’d put the lap top (the eth cord was too short so it was standing on a chair by my door) and every time I’d click either one of 1) “reboot”, 2) “Start > Windows Update > Standard update” or 3) “I agree, Install” repeatedly. Luckily I was hungry that night so I went to the kitchen back and forth a lot. :P

  5. Why don’t you just download apps from the app store icon on your iphone and use your cellular connection? I rarely, if ever, use itunes anymore, unless adding in music….

  6. That’s the thing though. The phone requires that I use an iTunes store account before it lets me download apps, and since I had none I had to create one, and in the creation process, I am forced to go into iTunes to activate it … believe me, I have no intention of using iTunes ever again. Though I have a feeling I will be required to do so if I ever want to upgrade the iPhone firmware.

  7. Don’t forget that iTunes also automatically takes a backup of your iPhone every time you connect it with a cable. That way if you lose the phone or it needs repairing, iTunes can restore everything from the backup.

    Also assuming you don’t subscribe to MobileMe (which gives you over-the-air ‘push’ syncing), iTunes also keeps your contacts, calendar, bookmarks etc in sync between PC/Mac and iPhone when you connect it with a cable. I keep hoping that eventually Apple will bring out wireless syncing (like Zune), but I guess that they won’t, as it’s one of the (few) benefits of subscribing to MobileMe.

  8. Oh. That’s nice, yeah. I guess I’ll have to start nudging the brother about getting me my Mac back…

  9. Heheh Seeker…don’t stray from the path or the path may stray from you ;) lol almost forgot about those days :D We were much better than Potter could ever be! (esp. after I took charge)

  10. LOL! Damn. *twitch*

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