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Myiphone7

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Nov 18, 2010
848
0
The iPhone 5 has no AT&T signs. Was wondering if AT&T has a contact that says you can't since others do.
 

Goodeye

macrumors 6502a
Jan 30, 2009
750
274
Apple had that agreement when ATT was the only carrier.

Mind you Apple has that agreement with all the Carriers as none of them have carrier branding on the device.
(At least in the US)
 

jrodsep

macrumors 6502
Jun 29, 2010
390
5
It's not AT&T, Verizon or Sprint. It's Apple that doesn't permit any carrier branding. A good move IMHO. Just look at the abomination that is the Galaxy Note 2 on Verizon.
 

justinxtreme

macrumors newbie
Dec 7, 2009
13
0
Orlando, FL
Yes, back in 2006 Apple had an exclusive contract with Cingular that included letting Apple have full control with the software and hardware development which is developed in-house.

Those terms still exist today when Apple makes a deal with cellular carriers to carry their mobile devices, it's one of the terms they have to agree with. They only get to modify a few things (like their own Phone menu at the very bottom of Settings > Phone)
 

Radiating

macrumors 65816
Dec 29, 2011
1,018
7
This is a good move by Apple, carrier branding is disgusting and horrible and nobody wants it.
 

Daveoc64

macrumors 601
Jan 16, 2008
4,074
92
Bristol, UK
People often overlook that iOS contains a lot of features designed to give carriers remote control over features (like Voicemail, MMS, Tethering, Facetime etc.) that no other OS or device has.
 

vastoholic

macrumors 68000
Jan 28, 2009
1,957
1
Tulsa, OK
People often overlook that iOS contains a lot of features designed to give carriers remote control over features (like Voicemail, MMS, Tethering, Facetime etc.) that no other OS or device has.

Those features are controlled by the carrier on all devices. What do you mean allow remote control?
 

aristobrat

macrumors G5
Oct 14, 2005
12,292
1,403
iOS allows carriers to control whether certain features and settings are enabled or visible on a per-account basis.

No other device has that sort of control.
Don't know if this is the same, but when I used to travel overseas (Hong Kong) with my Verizon Blackberry, the Maps application would disappear when I was roaming on a HK network, and reappear the minute I arrived back in the US.
 

vastoholic

macrumors 68000
Jan 28, 2009
1,957
1
Tulsa, OK
iOS allows carriers to control whether certain features and settings are enabled or visible on a per-account basis.

No other device has that sort of control.

So on an Android or Windows phone you can tether all you want even though you don't have a tethering plan? I'm trying to follow you here. Those are all services (minus FaceTime) that are provided by the carrier and not apple. Of course they will have control over it.
The tethering option is visible on my phone even though I don't have a tethering plan.
The messaging application is always going to be there on every iPhone and unless you expressly tell your provider to disable texts, you can still use it without a plan, you'll just be charged more.
Visual Voicemail again is carrier specific. Either they support it, or they don't. The voicemail tab doesn't disappear or become greyed out if your carrier doesn't support Visual Voicemail. It just behaves like old cell phones where you have dial in and listen to messages in a row.
 

scaredpoet

macrumors 604
Apr 6, 2007
6,627
342
iOS allows carriers to control whether certain features and settings are enabled or visible on a per-account basis.

No other device has that sort of control.

No other device HAD most of these features before. And when they ultimately did gain those features, yes, the carriers were/are able to exert the same level of control... while still being able to plaster their logo all over the place on those other devices, and add their bloatware.
 

Newman88

macrumors newbie
Jun 29, 2010
6
0
To me it's like free advertising for them. No different when buying a car, the dealer slaps a sticker on the back of the car and now you are advertising for them.
 

Gav2k

macrumors G3
Jul 24, 2009
9,216
1,608
Don't know if this is the same, but when I used to travel overseas (Hong Kong) with my Verizon Blackberry, the Maps application would disappear when I was roaming on a HK network, and reappear the minute I arrived back in the US.

That's because most the region isn't mapped do to government limitations.

The carrier file is what the post above is referring too. Carriers select and deselect what they require.
 

aristobrat

macrumors G5
Oct 14, 2005
12,292
1,403
That's because most the region isn't mapped do to government limitations.

The carrier file is what the post above is referring too. Carriers select and deselect what they require.
The employees that lived in Hong Kong and had local phones had working Blackberry maps, so it doesn't seem like a government limitation.

FWIW, it looks like carriers can select/deselect at least the Blackberry maps program. AT&T used to deselect it, by default.

http://supportforums.blackberry.com/t5/BlackBerry-Bold/Blackberry-Maps-and-ATT/td-p/263747
 

Gav2k

macrumors G3
Jul 24, 2009
9,216
1,608
The employees that lived in Hong Kong and had local phones had working Blackberry maps, so it doesn't seem like a government limitation.

FWIW, it looks like carriers can select/deselect at least the Blackberry maps program. AT&T used to deselect it, by default.

http://supportforums.blackberry.com/t5/BlackBerry-Bold/Blackberry-Maps-and-ATT/td-p/263747

Sorry I think you miss understood what I was saying. Korea, china and Russia wouldn't allow google to do a satalite or mapping sweep. Mapping has changed for the most part satalite sweeps are limited.
 

Nermal

Moderator
Staff member
Dec 7, 2002
20,632
3,987
New Zealand
This is a good move by Apple, carrier branding is disgusting and horrible and nobody wants it.

Actually, some people do want it; there's a thread on these very forums where people are customising their "carrier logo" and putting an AT&T globe etc there.

1q1y74.jpg
 

Daveoc64

macrumors 601
Jan 16, 2008
4,074
92
Bristol, UK
So on an Android or Windows phone you can tether all you want even though you don't have a tethering plan?

Yes, because the carrier has no method in the phone's software to prevent you doing it.

Windows Phone does have the same sort of tethering restriction, but Android doesn't.

If the carrier wants to stop you tethering with Android, they need to enforce the contract terms - charge you more, slow your connection speed, block anything they think is tethering etc.

iOS will check whether or not the feature is allowed on your account when you try and use it. Not all carriers actually do that (because it requires additional work at their end). This is very different to what carriers do on other devices - they don't have that sort of ongoing control over the device. You might find a carrier branded handset simply has the Tethering feature disabled, but AT&T has the power to disable it on any iPhone in the world with their SIM inserted (even if it's unlocked).

I'm trying to follow you here. Those are all services (minus FaceTime) that are provided by the carrier and not apple. Of course they will have control over it.

There's a distinction between you being contractually unable to do something and not being able to do it technically.


The important distinction here is that the iPhone was designed around AT&T's business needs - it was designed so that AT&T could control certain features on the device, while keeping Apple happy by not having any branding or carrier bloatware.

The by-product of this is that the system Apple created is a little "too good" from a consumer perspective.
 

DMH3006

macrumors regular
Jun 16, 2011
231
0
That feature control is mostly in the US,here(Portugal,Europe) if the network supports it you get it,tethering for example doesn't cost you a penny more if you keep it under your data limit.
 

dictoresno

macrumors 601
Apr 30, 2012
4,495
631
NJ
Don't know if this is the same, but when I used to travel overseas (Hong Kong) with my Verizon Blackberry, the Maps application would disappear when I was roaming on a HK network, and reappear the minute I arrived back in the US.

The maps application was carrier controlled by service books. They were carrier pushed and controlled what apps you could use and see. When you traveled and your phone couldn't connect with the Verizon network, it couldn't get the service book it needed to run the maps app. This was evident in the US with AT&T blackberry devices. They blocked out blackberry maps app via missing service book, forcing people to use paid AT&T maps. It sucked.
 
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