Sunday, December 5, 2010

Infinite Storage Capacity for iPhones

The iPhone 3G and iPhone have been and are available with storage capacities of 16 GB. Although many find the 16 GB is more than enough to store all your music, photos, emails, and a good part of their video collection, there are those out there with the libraries of media that can eclipse the iPhone 3G 16 GB of FlashMemory. For these people, 16 GB is a good compromise between portability and handset size and cost, but far from ideal storage capacity.

Apple patent application for iTunes remote media access to the iPhone

Not just a physical storage limit require users to choose andchoose that the media is transferred to the iPhone, but the transfer of 16 GB (or more) of the data (music, videos, photos) can be time consuming. Pairing the iPhone with just a few GB of data has proven to be longer than desirable.

To do this, Apple is trying to carry almost infinite storage capacity for your iPhone and iPhone 3G handsets. The measure would allow users to mass media to keep virtually all their media on their iPhones without having to pick and choose what music albums or videos make the cut in the iPhone's limited memory banks.



Progress in endless storage capacity was not built in flash memory technology or miniature hard drives, but rather a fundamental change in the way Apple handles media storage. A recent patent application has surfaced that the information technology that have the iPhone and iPhone 3G streaming media in real time, your desktop iTunes libraries.

"For example, a personal computer can be turned on and connected to the Internet to enable a portable device to access media stored on personal computers," according to Apple.

Instead of having massive iTunes library sitting on your home computer, inaccessible to iPhones in the wild versions, the future of iTunes and the iPhone's operating system may allow Mac users to stream media wirelessly through the air to your phone. The technology is based on keeping only the meta-data associated with the content of the media, sporting a significant footprint (1% or less of the size of media files total) smaller in memory iPhone flash. Metadata describes the attributes of a media file - but not the media content itself - the file size, title, artist, date created, etc.

The "light" metadata, in turn be represented on the iPhone as "virtual media items" representing all media stored on your home computer - playlist, video, photos and mobile games. With smaller file sizes, metadata, and media-storage items may increaseiPhone 100 times. The 16 GB iPhone may just be able to store 160 GB of media (or more) in the near future.

iphone cases
iphone 4 cases
"As a result, the user perceives that the virtual media items may be available in the [media player]," Apple said. "In this way, the virtual capacity of an electronic device can be increased."

The patent application also allows remote iTunes library. IPhone users could reorganize, add or delete the media in your iTunes library while away from your computer. And if the connection to the computer lost or degraded, the technology of remote control to pause or stop the transmission of data to preserve the integrity of media files. In addition, users of iPhone and iPod can do peer-to-peer communications device - the type of device to device communication, which popularized the Microsoft Zune.

"This type of communication can be referred to as" peer-to-peer interaction. In this regard, a mobile device can communicate directly with another mobile device "or" a plurality of other mobile devices, "Apple said." At the half point, a mobile device can communicate with one or more other electronic devices ( whether mobile or fixed) in the vicinity. Data exchange can be performed when communication is available. "

IPhone storage limit of 16 GB is likely to give way to a new storage limit of 32 GB Apple iPhone mid 3G upgrade cycle next year, so that users have a higher energy storage expected short-term. But in the long term, we could see remote media access to the stage to allow more storage capacity reaching hundreds of gigabytes.
The iPhone 3G and iPhone have been and are available with storage capacities of 16 GB. Although many find the 16 GB is more than enough to store all your music, photos, emails, and much of the iPhone 3G and iPhone have been and are available with storage capacities of 16 GB. Although many find the 16 GB is more than enough to store all your music, photos, emails, and a good part of their video collection, there are those out there with the libraries of media that can eclipse the iPhone 3G 16 GB of FlashMemory. For these people, 16 GB is a good compromise between portability and handset size and cost, but far from ideal storage capacity.

Apple patent application for iTunes remote media access to the iPhone

Not just a physical storage limit require users to choose andchoose that the media is transferred to the iPhone, but the transfer of 16 GB (or more) of the data (music, videos, photos) can be time consuming. Pairing the iPhone with just a few GB of data has proven to be longer than desirable.

To do this, Apple is trying to carry almost infinite storage capacity for your iPhone and iPhone 3G handsets. The measure would allow users to mass media to keep virtually all their media on their iPhones without having to pick and choose what music albums or videos make the cut in the iPhone's limited memory banks.



Progress in endless storage capacity was not built in flash memory technology or miniature hard drives, but rather a fundamental change in the way Apple handles media storage. A recent patent application has surfaced that the information technology that have the iPhone and iPhone 3G streaming media in real time, your desktop iTunes libraries.

"For example, a personal computer can be turned on and connected to the Internet to enable a portable device to access media stored on personal computers," according to Apple.

Instead of having massive iTunes library sitting on your home computer, inaccessible to iPhones in the wild versions, the future of iTunes and the iPhone's operating system may allow Mac users to stream media wirelessly through the air to your phone. The technology is based on keeping only the meta-data associated with the content of the media, sporting a significant footprint (1% or less of the size of media files total) smaller in memory iPhone flash. Metadata describes the attributes of a media file - but not the media content itself - the file size, title, artist, date created, etc.

The "light" metadata, in turn be represented on the iPhone as "virtual media items" representing all media stored on your home computer - playlist, video, photos and mobile games. With smaller file sizes, metadata, and media-storage items may increaseiPhone 100 times. The 16 GB iPhone may just be able to store 160 GB of media (or more) in the near future.

"As a result, the user perceives that the virtual media items may be available in the [media player]," Apple said. "In this way, the virtual capacity of an electronic device can be increased."

The patent application also allows remote iTunes library. IPhone users could reorganize, add or delete the media in your iTunes library while away from your computer. And if the connection to the computer lost or degraded, the technology of remote control to pause or stop the transmission of data to preserve the integrity of media files. In addition, users of iPhone and iPod can do peer-to-peer communications device - the type of device to device communication, which popularized the Microsoft Zune.

"This type of communication can be referred to as" peer-to-peer interaction. In this regard, a mobile device can communicate directly with another mobile device "or" a plurality of other mobile devices, "Apple said." At the half point, a mobile device can communicate with one or more other electronic devices ( whether mobile or fixed) in the vicinity. Data exchange can be performed when communication is available. "

IPhone storage limit of 16 GB is likely to give way to a new storage limit of 32 GB Apple iPhone mid 3G upgrade cycle next year, so that users have a higher energy storage expected short-term. But in the long term, we could see remote media access to the stage to allow more storage capacity reaching hundreds of gigabytes.


Apple patent application for iTunes remote media access to the iPhone

Not just a physical storage limit require users to choose andchoose that the media is transferred to the iPhone, but the transfer of 16 GB (or more) of the data (music, videos, photos) can be time consuming. Pairing the iPhone with just a few GB of data has proven to be longer than desirable.

To do this, Apple is trying to carry almost infinite storage capacity for your iPhone and iPhone 3G handsets. The measure would allow users to mass media to keep virtually all their media on their iPhones without having to pick and choose what music albums or videos make the cut in the iPhone's limited memory banks.



Progress in endless storage capacity was not built in flash memory technology or miniature hard drives, but rather a fundamental change in the way Apple handles media storage. A recent patent application has surfaced that the information technology that have the iPhone and iPhone 3G streaming media in real time, your desktop iTunes libraries.

"For example, a personal computer can be turned on and connected to the Internet to enable a portable device to access media stored on personal computers," according to Apple.

Instead of having massive iTunes library sitting on your home computer, inaccessible to iPhones in the wild versions, the future of iTunes and the iPhone's operating system may allow Mac users to stream media wirelessly through the air to your phone. The technology is based on keeping only the meta-data associated with the content of the media, sporting a significant footprint (1% or less of the size of media files total) smaller in memory iPhone flash. Metadata describes the attributes of a media file - but not the media content itself - the file size, title, artist, date created, etc.

The "light" metadata, in turn be represented on the iPhone as "virtual media items" representing all media stored on your home computer - playlist, video, photos and mobile games. With smaller file sizes, metadata, and media-storage items may increaseiPhone 100 times. The 16 GB iPhone may just be able to store 160 GB of media (or more) in the near future.

"As a result, the user perceives that the virtual media items may be available in the [media player]," Apple said. "In this way, the virtual capacity of an electronic device can be increased."

The patent application also allows remote iTunes library. IPhone users could reorganize, add or delete the media in your iTunes library while away from your computer. And if the connection to the computer lost or degraded, the technology of remote control to pause or stop the transmission of data to preserve the integrity of media files. In addition, users of iPhone and iPod can do peer-to-peer communications device - the type of device to device communication, which popularized the Microsoft Zune.

"This type of communication can be referred to as" peer-to-peer interaction. In this regard, a mobile device can communicate directly with another mobile device "or" a plurality of other mobile devices, "Apple said." At the point in half a point, a mobile device can communicate with one or more other electronic devices (whether mobile or fixed) in the vicinity. Data exchange can be performed when communication is available. "

IPhone storage limit of 16 GB is likely to give way to a new storage limit of 32 GB Apple iPhone mid 3G upgrade cycle next year, so that users have a higher energy storage expected short-term. But in the long term, we could see remote media access to the stage to allow more storage capacity reaching hundreds of gigabytes.

No comments:

Post a Comment