I'd be ok if apple sued the shirts off Gawkers back. They deliberately bought merchandise they knew didn't belong to the seller.
I'd be surprised if they
didn't.
Apple alleges that it was stolen. Gizmodo isn't releasing the name of the person they "purchased" it from, but Apple is, no doubt, keen to know. The only way to find that out is to file a police report, and have the police prosecute so they can get that information. Plus they have a pretty good history of legally strong arming people into giving out information on leaks. It's one of the reasons so few leaks come out of Apple these days - it's not because they run a tight ship, but because they vigorously pursued those leaks a decade ago, and now people are pretty reluctant to do that.
---------- Post added at 04:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:42 PM ----------
I think the whole thing is a marketing ploy. Even the letter asking it back.
Verizon already talking about 4G so Apple is not the first.
I figured the name meant 4G as in 4th generation phone, not frequency spectrum[/QUOTE]
The iPhone 3G was named due to the main feature - it worked on the faster 3G networks, and was in fact the second generation iPhone. The iPhone 3GS has a faster radio, so while it's still 3G cellular, it can transfer data a bit faster than the 3G - and it's the third generation iPhone.
If they do name it the 4G, then it'll be because it runs on the 4G cellular network (assuming it does) - not because it's the fourth generation, although that will be a nice coincidence.
Apple has not been a big early adopter - and 4G networks are still in the very early stages. The original iPhone came out when 3G was available, but they chose the significantly slower edge anyway.
If they choose to support 4G, which I and most others suspect they will, it'll be mainly to relieve congestion on AT&T's network. Since your data will take less time to transmit at faster speeds it takes less airtime, allowing more people to share the same cellular bandwidth.
I don't know that they'll release it on Verizon yet though. I think they had to bend AT&T over a barrel to get them to agree to an unlimited $30/mo iPad data plan, and I suspect the carrot was longer exclusivity for the iPhone.
Either way - I've got a 3GS and I'm going to have a hard time resisting the upgrade if they have improved it significantly...