All You Need to Know About the UK iPhone [UPDATE]

Posted on January 1st, 2008


Beware, firmware 1.1.3 is out now which makes this document slightly outdated. I will soon add some more info once we know more.


Obviously I didn’t get a contract with my brand new iPhone, simply because I don’t have the budget to spend £35 a month on a contract. Maybe in the future I will buy a contract anyway, but for now I am basically stuck with my expensive Dutch contract. In other words: I had to hack my iPhone. With doing this I ran into some issues, which I will try to highlight in the following article, giving some reference for all you other people that are thinking of buying a UK iPhone.

Defining “UK iPhone”

Let’s start by quickly explaining what I mean with the “UK iPhone”. This is kind of important as there are different iPhones out there. With the UK iPhone I mean the iPhone that is currently (January 1st, 2008) sold in the UK that ships with the 1.1.2 firmware (see here to learn how to check firmware you have). iPhones shipped with this firmware Out Of the Box (commonly called OOB or OTB) ship with a new bootloader/baseband. This new bootloader has some repercussions that I will get to later.

Everything I will tell in this article might also hold for the US, German, or French 1.1.2 OOB phones, but I don’t know for sure because I don’t have these phones.

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Sigh… I Bought an iPhone….

Posted on December 30th, 2007

I know, I know, you all told me so: Even though I told everyone I wouldn’t get an Apple iPhone this year, I still did. I got some money as a tax return and was thinking of buying an iPod Touch 8GB. The iPod Touch is such a wonderful media device, and I thought it wasn’t hard to justify buying it. But then I noticed that the iPod Touch 16GB is only £70/€94 less affordable, which was actually still within my “budget”.

But if I could get an iPod Touch 16GB, then why would I not get an iPhone for that same price and hack it? Yes it has only 8GB of storage, but you do get a phone in return. I wouldn’t need 16GB right?

And this is how I justified my iPhone…. Still happy with it though!

My  iPhone

So there are some “ramifications” and “perks” that you get with an iPhone. Most of which I will get into later. For now I must say that yes, 8GB is really enough for me. And I am very happy to also get a phone integrated with the iPod, even though it was a lot of work to get the phone part to properly work with a prepaid sim. The best feature though that sets the iPod-on-iPhone experience apart from that on the iPod Touch is the ability to skip songs by “double clicking” the microphone in the headset. On the iPod Touch you can’t skip songs without the touchscreen.

Well, more later. I will especially explain some curiosities about the UK iPhone that ships wit Firmware 1.1.2 and the new bootloader at the moment.

Analyzing The New Macbook Keyboard

Posted on December 20th, 2007

As some of you might have noticed: the new 4th generation Macbook has a new keyboard layout which looks much like their standalone keyboards. The keyboard is still the same floating-keys concept, but Apple moved around some buttons and deleted some others. As I had an old Macbook and now have a 4th generation Macbook, I thought it would be nice to quickly walk through some of the mayor changes.

First lets take a look at the 2 keyboards (top is a old european version, bottom is the new UK version):

Macbook Keyboard Coparison

1 - F-Keys Switcheroo

One of the most obvious and possibly most disturbing changes are the new F-keys. The previous Macbooks (and the iBooks and Powerbooks before) had the brightness and volume controls on the first few F-keys, followed by the num-lock and monitor-switcher. The last few keys were reserved for most of the Expose and Dashboard features, although they had the obvious design flaw of not being labeled and therefore rarely discovered.

In the new keyboard Apple tried to fix this flaw by assigning some icons to some of these features including Dashboard. But instead of keeping the buttons in the same position, they started to move them around. Dashboard is now not on F12 but on F4, “Show all windows” is now on F3 instead of F9. To make things worse they actually left out some of the functions like F11 (move all windows to show desktop) in order to have room for some extra buttons to control media playback.

Now, there are some notes here. First of all the media playback buttons are actually handy, though a bit redundant as every Macbook comes with a remote. Secondly, all the old functions are still available under the Fn key, but presseing Fn+F11 is not a very handy combo to do with one hand.

2 - Losing Useless Keys

The second thing Apple did was to get rid of a whole bunch of useless keys. First of all the entire num-pad has gone. Num-pads tend to only work if all 9 keys are aligned in a neat grid, but as they weren’t on a Macbook it made them pretty useless. As Macbooks aren’t used by administrative junkies anyway it seemed reasonable to drop the entire num-pad rather than thinking of some more elaborate solution.

Another thing that was removed is the key that nobody ever understood the function of, namely the smaller return key that used to be next to the right Command key. Instead they replaced it with a second Option key, which makes sense. I would have rather seen a second ctrl key there actually, so that you can switch Spaces with one hand (Ctrl+arrow).

Talking about the arrow keys: they look a bit cleaner! Removing the home, end, page up and page down functions made sense as most common people never use them, and all the others know how to find them anyway. I always thought they were a bit odd because it never stated properly what modifier key to use in combination with those arrows keys to get those functions. Is it Command or Option?

Finally it seems the screen output switcher key that used to be on F6 has been removed. That key was pretty handy for switching between dual screen and clone mode when connecting a Macbook to an external monitor or beamer. I have no idea if this button secretly still works with that function. Can anyone tell me?

3 - “Fixing” the Capslock

Finally, Apple decided to give the new Macbook keyboard the same feature as they gave their normal keyboards: anti-accidental-CapsLock-prevention. The idea here is that most people never use the CapsLock but most of the time accidentally hit it when they didn’t want to. To solve this Apple made sure that this new key doesn’t turn on the CapsLock if you tap it very quickly. Only when your really press it and hold it will it turn on. Reinier noted that this obviously isn’t a real fix, but more of a dirty hack. A proper solution would be to replace the CapsLock in its entirety with something far more useful. Maybe a left-side return key?

Upgraded to a new MacbookNieuwe Macbook Laptop

Posted on December 19th, 2007


I had a few offers for my Macbook, but never enough money to pay the price difference between what I would get for my old Macbook and what I would have to pay for a new one. With a recent project I finally managed to get that difference covered so I sold my 1st generation Macbook (including the stickers), and bought a basic model 4th generation. I switched my custom bought 160GB Western Digital before I handed my old Macbook to my friend Amir.


Ik had al een paar aanbiedingen gekregen voor mn Macbook laptop, maar ik had nooit het geld om het prijsverschil tussen de verkoop van de oude en de aankoop van de nieuwe Macbook te kunnen overlappen. Door een recent projectje kon dit eindelijk wel, dus ik heb mn oude 1ste generatie Macbook verkocht (inclusief de stickers) en een nieuwe 4de generatie basis-model Macbook aangeschaft. Ik heb nog even snel mn 160GB harddisk uit mn oude Macbook gehaald en gewisselt met de harddisk uit de nieuwe Macbook, en toen heb ik mijn oude Macbook overgegeven aan mn vriend Amir.

New Macbook


My old Macbook was a 1.83Ghz CoreDuo with 2GB of Ram, a 160GB harddrive and a ComboDrive. I bought a new Macbook for £699(€980) and spend €80(£57) on upgrading the memory to 4GB. Al of this gave me the following upgrades:

- Wireless N (not that I have a router that supports that, but maybe in the future)
- 4GB of ram (+2 on the old 2GB)
- 1 year of full warranty (seriously worth a lot of money)
- 144MB Graphics card (vs 64MB)

Don’t have my 4GB or ram yet which makes it very slow at the moment using the standard 1GB. Macbooks really need at least 2GB of Ram. The 4GB will arrive at my parents’ place Wednesday, but I won’t be there before Thursday.


Mijn oude Macbook was een 1.83Ghz CoreDuo met 2GB aan geheugen, een 160GB harddisk en een ComboDrive. De nieuwe Macook heb ik gekocht voor £699(€980) plus nog eens €80(£57) voor het upgraden naar 4GB geheugen. Dit alles geeft me de volgende upgrades in mijn systeem:

- Wireless N (niet dat ik een systeem heb dat dit aankan, maar misschien in de toekomst)
- 4GB aan geheugen (2GB meer dan voorheen)
- 1 jaar volledige garantie (serieus veel geld waard!)
- 144MB Video geheugen (versus de 64MB in de oude Macbook)

Mijn 4Gb is nog niet binnen dus ik zit nu met 1GB te werken, wat de Macbook erg traag maakt. Macbooks hebben echt 2GB aan geheugen nodig minimaal om lekker te draaien. De 4GB komt vandaag al aan bij mn ouders maar ik ben morgen pas daar, dus ik zal een dagje moeten wachten.

How to run an EyeToy on Mac OS X

Posted on December 13th, 2007

So, I was trying to get my PS2 EyeToy to work on my G4 Mac Mini for a while now. I had done this a while back on a Windows machine and I loved it, so I was hoping it would be a breeze to get to work in Mac OS X. It took a while though to get it working, not because it was difficult to do or something, but simply because there was only one place on the whole internet that gave me an interesting link! So now I will try to make a more Google accessible blog post that can serve as a point to go to for everyone in the future.
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