Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Greenpeace attacks Apple over iPhone: Leads to lawsuit

Following report was published at http://www.pocket-lint.co.uk/ based on a report published by the Greenpeace. Greenpeace’s finding are available at their report;

View Greenpeace Report.

16 October 2007 7:41 GMT - Greenpeace has published a detailed report on the un-environmentally friendly qualities of Apple's iPhone, which has led to the company being sued.

The Center for Environmental Health is suing Apple based on the Greenpeace research. In California, products containing certain toxins or carcinogens must carry a warning label. The iPhone does not.

"In general what we try to do is encourage the manufacturers through a negotiated settlement to reduce the use of these chemicals", said Caroline Cox, a spokeswoman for the Center for Environmental Health. "That would be our goal with Apple."

Apple had announced earlier this year that all of its new products would be free from brominated flame retardants and the chlorinated plastic polyvinyl chloride by the end of 2008.

To see if Apple was keeping its promise on hazardous chemicals and materials, Greenpeace bought an iPhone in the States and had it analysed in laboratories in the UK.

The results revealed that the iPhone contains PVC and brominated flame retardants which Greenpeace says shows Apple is not making early progress towards its 2008 commitment to phase-out all uses of these materials, even in entirely new product lines.

"If Apple really wants to reinvent the phone, it needs to design out all hazardous substances and materials from its handsets and peripherals", states the report.

"Apple missed a key opportunity when it rolled out the iPhone in June. There is no reason why the iPhone could not have been made without toxins like vinyl plastics and brominated flame retardants as Nokia is already doing", said Rick Hind of Greenpeace.

STORY UPDATE : Apple has got in touch with Pocket-lint to give us a brief statement on this matter, which is as follows:

"Like all Apple products worldwide, iPhone complies with RoHS, the world's toughest restrictions on toxic substances in electronics. As we have said, Apple will voluntarily eliminate the use of PVC and BFRs by the end of 2008."

Friday, October 05, 2007

iSkoot - A cool tool to get connected with Skype

If you are having a mobile run with JAVA operating system then I have cool news for you.

You can run a Skype client on that and you can use all the functionalities including VOIP calls via your mobile phone.

As per the iSkoot, this new Skype client can be installed on the following devices;

Blackberry
7100
7200
7500
7700
8100 (Pearl)
8300 (Curve)
8700
8800

Palm
Treo 650
Treo 680
Treo 700p
Treo 700w
Treo 700wx
Treo 750 (Lennon)

Nokia
6680
6682
N73
N80
E61
E62

Motorola
RAZR V3
Q
Q8

Sony Ericsson
P1i
P990i
M600i
W950i

Samsung
Blackjack

AT&T (Cingular)
8125
8525

Hewlett-Packard
iPAQ hw 6910
iPAQ hw 6915
iPAQ hw 6920
iPAQ hw 6925
iPAQ hw 6940
iPAQ hw 6945
iPAQ hw 6960
iPAQ hw 6965

i-mate
k-jam
JASJAM

Sprint
PPC-6700
PPC-6800

T-Mobile
Dash
MDA-Touch
Wing

Other
WindowsMobile PocketPC
WindowsMobile Smartphone


As per the iSkoot FAQ, no need to stay close to Wi-Fi hotspot use this skype client. What you need is GPRS facility available on your mobile. I observed few issues with this tool. I hope that they will resolve those months to come. For the moment outsiders can see that you are online (after you login to the Skype through iSkoot); but they can not call you to skype client and it used to say that you are busy always (I faced this problem in iSkoot running on Motorola V3XX).

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