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the next iPhone

Someone found a prototype in a bar.

7 Responses to “the next iPhone”

  1. Jake Says:

    I’m surprised Apple isn’t threatening Gizmodo with legal action, since it looks like they haven’t given it back, yet. That is, technically and morally (and probably legally), theft.

    Maybe a planned leak?

  2. Jake Says:

    Also: A front camera? If that’s true, why on earth didn’t they include it, with video conferencing software, in the iPad? That would have given them a rock solid lock on the padd* market right from the start – and given the iPad a huge boost in the business market, too. As it is, there are apparently businesses looking for ways to use the iPad (trying to create a need, rather than looking for an existing need that it might fill – which is probably not the best business practice, but I digress). Built in, portable videoconferencing ability would have locked the market by significantly improving on existing systems.

    I guess HP and Dell will fill that niche with their padd devices.

    (*PADD is probably a better term for these than tablets, which is already used for touchscreen notebooks. Besides, it make my inner geek happy.)

  3. Smince Says:

    Epic Apple employee FAIL…get drunk and leave your company’s future laying on the counter with release still months away. Clever disguise for the phone, though.

  4. mariner Says:

    I’m with Jake.

    This was planned, and it’s generating the intended buzz.

  5. ishida Says:

    Actually, Gawkker, Gizmodo’s parent company, has a great BIG chance of not only civil suits, but criminal suits for trafficking in stolen property, since they paid the thief of the forgotten phone, or even took in in their possession for that matter. If Apple decides to sue, it’s a given they will win. They could even face criminal charges and fines.

  6. Ian Argent Says:

    I feel bad for the guy who left his career on the floor of that bar. There’s no effing way he’s going to continue to receive paychecks drawn on Apple, and he’s unlikely to get new work after he violated an NDA like that. If he’s really unlucky His Steveness will be serving him with breach of contract.

    OTOH, how does a handmade prototype get issued to someone to carry in public anyway?

  7. Jake Says:

    New development – Apple called the cops.

    Police broke into the home of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen and confiscated four computers and two servers, the tech blog reports. Gizmodo broke the news last week about Apple’s next-generation iPhone, after paying a source who found it in a California bar $5,000 for the device.

    The officers were from the Rapid Enforcement Allied Computer Team (REACT), a California law enforcement group based in Silicon Valley. In the search warrant, which Gizmodo posted, REACT officers checked a box indicating that they were looking for property “used as a means of committing a felony.”

    Gizmodo is, of course, trying to claim the search warrant was illegal because of CA’s journalism shield laws.

Remember, I do this to entertain me, not you.

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