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iOS4.3 for iPhone 3G

When is the iOS4.3 for iPhone 3G ready for download?
At all the scandinavian Apple websites it is written:
+iOS4.3 is the latest software update for iPhone.+
+And its available now, as a free download for iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS and iPhone 3. Read more->+

Here are the links where you can read it:
http://www.apple.com/no/iphone/
http://www.apple.com/dk/iphone/
http://www.apple.com/se/iphone/

iPhone 3G, iOS 4

Posted on Mar 10, 2011 10:14 PM

Reply
51 replies

Mar 11, 2011 3:36 AM in response to RunarJP

RunarJP wrote:

Here are the links where you can read it:
http://www.apple.com/no/iphone/
http://www.apple.com/dk/iphone/
http://www.apple.com/se/iphone/


I followed the links, but at the above pages, I cannot see anything about the statement you talking about. If you navigate the sites above and go to the pages where iOS4.3 is presented, there is clearly written the update is for the above mentioned devices.

[One example.|http://www.apple.com/dk/ios>

It means the iPhone 3G, iPod 2nd generation, and older models are officially left out.

Mar 11, 2011 12:05 PM in response to Mettur Man

Leaving it out in the cold? Such drama.

IMO, it was a mistake to provide iOS4.0 for the iPhone 3G to begin with. Multi-tasking with 3rd party apps is not supported along with a few other features that are supported with the 3GS and iPhone 4 with iOS4. The iPhone 3G has the same processor and RAM as the original iPhone. It doesn't have enough processor and RAM punch for iOS4, which has caused problems for some 3G owners with many ranting and whining about it here. Two years is a long time in the computer industry and especially in the cell phone industry - at least after Apple entered the market. Prior to that we pretty much saw the same old thing for the most part but there were new cell phone models released on a yearly basis with no updates provided for those phones.

If the 3G is not supported with 4.3 now, it won't be supported later. And the features you are probably interested in that are included with 4.3 for the iPhone 4 would not be compatible with the 3G anyway.

The iPhone 3G was released in the summer of 2008, which included iOS 2.0. The iPhone 3G was included with all iOS 2.0 updates, iOS 3.0 and all updates, and iOS 4.0 with limited features compared to 4.0 with the 3GS and iPhone 4 along with all 4.0 updates until 4.3.

Being left out in the cold? Not hardly, but hardware limitations will prevent a device from being included with a firmware update eventually, and the same with computers with major OS updates or upgrades. I venture to say the overwhelming majority of people get a new cell phone every two years or so.

Mar 11, 2011 12:54 PM in response to K4RGD

Android is coming on so strong because it is on dozens of different phones on all carriers and because it is a pretty good OS (and also Unix based). It also appeals to people who want much more control over the appearance and operation of their phones than Apple allows.

The down side is if you really want to see limited upgrading and older model phones being left out in the cold, look no further than Android.

Mar 11, 2011 1:31 PM in response to deggie

Interesting how all the replies to my comment come from iPhone4 users...

Also, there is an apparent argument in your reply, deggie:
"It also appeals to people who want much more control over the appearance and operation of their phones than Apple allows.
The down side is if you really want to see limited upgrading and older model phones being left out in the cold, look no further than Android."

Isn't Android open-source, making it more likely for updates that people want rather than what the company determines? I have loved my 3G, and would buy it again, had iOS4 not essentially bricked it, then to have the empty promises of 4.1 fixing the sluggishness, and the 4.2 bluetooth problems...

It seems to me that Apple is too focused on releasing new iPads and iPhones that they're losing track of what's important: retaining customers WHILE attracting new ones.

Mar 12, 2011 12:50 AM in response to K4RGD

Android has many advantages, of which the possibility of user customisation is one.

However, you should remember that the *handset makers* control what version of Android you have, what upgrades you get, and what additional extra software (good or bad) you have to use.

You can get round all that with the equivalent of j**breaking, but then your in the same position as an iPhone user - unsupported and at risk

iOS4.3 for iPhone 3G

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