Neocell 3GS “Andale, Andale, Ariba!!”
The new Neocell 3GS. What can I say about it, but “andale, andale, ariba!!” Yeah baby. The speed of my new 32GB 3GS iPhone is so amazing. You have no idea how amazingly fast the speed is. Let’s start by comparing the speed of 2G / 3G.
We’ll take the old Neocell for example. Being jailbroken with OS 3.0, I couldn’t run Pandora in the background for very long without it crashing (closing in the background from running out of memory). And we’re talking about doing simple things, like typing in the WordPress app. In short, running a program in the background such as Pandora would crash in about two minutes or less… and if it didn’t crash, it’d make the system so sluggish while running something in the background it wasn’t even worth it.
Now we compare the same settings and systems for the Neocell 3GS. I’ve been running Pandora in the background 70% of the time I use the Neocell (including driving places) and Pandora hasn’t crashed once. Not one single time. I’ve even ran it in the backgound of some intensive applications. I’ve been running Pandora in the background while the Tomtom car navigation app runs with zero lag, as well as in the background to some video games, such as Geodefense. You heard me right… not once crash or even lag since I got the Neocell 3GS.
I can’t believe the speed this baby’s got. It’s amazing. Now, for those of you who have a 3GS and are jailbroken, don’t be temped to go out and load it up with all this jailbroken garbage like Winterboard of SBSettings (you heard me right). Having a 3GS is like upgrading from a truck to a sports car. Don’t go loading up that sports car with a trailer full of wood. That sports car will still be faster hauling wood than your truck was, but it’ll no longer be as fast as a sports car. Don’t go loading up your 3GS with jailbroken garbage, or you will make it no faster (even slower) than a non-jailbroken 2G or 3G iPhone.
Peace, J
I Got A Portable iPhone Boombox
Today I just bought a portable iPhone boombox, a Minimove by Memorex. So why’d I get it, and what’s my take on it (review)?
I got it because I’ve been eyein’ portable boombox-type devices since I got the first Neocell. The reason? Simple… for the ability to pump music out loud when out somewhere. The speakers of iPhones (especially the newer generations) are very impressive… but they can’t compete compared to an actual boombox or even small amplified speakers, for the simple fact that (of course) iPhones can’t translate bass frequencies.
So I’ve been wanting to get something that I can bring to the pool or to the beach (FYI, people who live in Florida never go to the beach) or bring with me if i know I’m goin’ somewhere with people. I mean, the new Neocell’s speaker’s very loud, but the loudest parts are the highs of a song, and if your far way or got something loud in the background, like wind from a car window, the only parts you can hear clearly are the highs. That, and if your out and about somewhere, you want something that can hold your iPhone upright and keep it safe. And not to mention, having a remote control is nice.
So what made me go with the Minimove? Well the price was nice… $50. That’s the first thing. I ain’t gonna’ pay **** for something if it’s near the $100 range. **** that. The next is, of course, battery power. It needs to be able to run on batteries, which this does (and plugs into the wall too). Then it comes to sound / loudness. I’ve tested out more expensive boomboxes, ones in the $70-$90 range, from places like Brookstone or whatever that place is called… and the Minimove sounds just as loud as them.
Those are the most important things, but then it comes down others. I’ll just start by what I dig about the Minimove. The looks for one… it’s gotta’ look good. Be a little funny to dock a $600-$700 sexy iPhone down into a boombox that looks cheap and crappy, ya know? I saw a boombox at Hhgregg or something (horrible store, full of comission hungry, lying salesmen) and it looked like something a child would use. It came in two colors, blue / white or pink / white. …Yeah… The Minimove looks like a countertop stereo, has a sexy build in handle that doesn’t shout “cheap portable device” and features digital buttons and a white LED back-lite screen. It honestly looks like a $100-$200 device.
Then there’s the way it docks. Some systems have a goofy method of docking and, worst, some boomboxes have a little adjuster thing that you gotta’ use to adjust the dock to your device. If the Minimove had that, I wouldn’t complain, but it doesn’t. It’s a top loading dock, like the standard iPhone dock, so all you gotta’ do is place it down there. It doesn’t really fall into place, like the iPhone dock does, but that’s because there are no sides to the dock. This is how they get away with having so many devices be able to dock into it. So, like I said, if you had to place your iPhone into it with one hand, let’s say while driving, it can be hard (no harder than any other boombox docks), but once it’s in, it says in pretty firm from side-to-side. But… because there’s no goofy adjusting device, your iPhone can fall out is the dock if the boombox gets tipped over or shaken up and down really hard (like if you were stupid and ran with it without securing your iPhone). Now here’s the deal… your gonna’ find the same issue with more than half the boomboxes out there. And those that do hold it more secure will also be much, much harder to dock… and may not even really dock right some of the time (I’ve tested out a lot of ****). So, as far as staying “in”, the Minimove is one of the best, but you do need to be careful in general with all boomboxes.
The remote is very, very nice. I’m really impressed with it. It’s the same quality of boomboxes costing $200 and more. And odd thing about the remote is that the bottom rests on a clip. It’s weird, until you realize “Oh, I can clip this onto things, including the power wire or my shirt.”. Very nice. The one thing it doesn’t have that some boomboxes costing more money have is a little storage area for the remote. But the fact it has a clip built into the remote more than makes up for it. The fact that this boombox, being the high quality it is, comes with a remote at all is surprising.
The buttons, controls and display are really nice. A lot of other boomboxes seem to have cheap feeling buttons and controls. Here’s one thing that is a bad thing about the Minimove… there’s a play / pause button on the remote, but none for the device itself. That’s really stupid.
Next is a really unexpected feature… EQ presets. Yeah, there are three or four EQ presets, including a flat setting.
It’s got an FM radio built in (not a feature I care about at all). Fortunately, all the controls for the radio are the same control buttons and nothing seperate. Some boomboxes add fugly, cheap looking radio controls. Most of the time, devices that have FM radio mess up the design / function of the device itself. What I’m talkin’ about is the antenna. Fortunately, the Minimove hides the antenna and retracts inside the body itself, and when it’s retracted, you can’t even tell it’s there. Good, keep that **** inside there.
It’s also got a line out (headphones) and line in, two very useful features. Wanna’ play audio through the speakers while using your iPhone? Simple, just connect it to the line in.
I’m really impressed with the Minimove. The only complaint is the lack of a play / pause button on the device itself. Other than that, I love everything.
Peace, J
I Respect The iTunes iPhone Backup
When it came time, after jailbreaking, to tell the new Neocell (iPhone 3GS 32GB) to “restore” data from the old Neocell (2G iPhone 16 GB), I had no idea how amazing the backup system from Apple was.
So here’s the deal, I had a backup from a first generation iPhone transfer over to a third generation iPhone. That’s a pretty big leap there. I figured it would try to reinstall apps (that are installed in iTunes) and all the content and settings of the apps would be blank. Nope… to my surprise, all the settings and files remained intact. Balance, for instance, contained all my balance data. Stanza not only still contained all my eBooks, it was still on the page of the eBook I was reading. The settings of all my gmail accounts stayed in there… it even brought over the hack I did to change the carrier name to “Neocell”.
I got a lotta’ respect for Apple… I don’t like their authorization (Nazi-like) system they got goin’ on, but the system of backuping up and transfering is great. Far better than anything Pocket PCs could have had.
Peace, J












