iPhone 3G Users Complain of Slowdown on Upgrade to iOS4

Some Apple 3G phone owners who upgraded to the new iOS4 operating system are facing buyer’s remorse. The upgrade has left their devices slow and struggling for breath, according to complaints on Apple’s users forum. “My iPhone 8Gb 3G is soooo slow after ‘upgrading’ to OS4,” says a user registered as George Stark on the […]

Some Apple 3G phone owners who upgraded to the new iOS4 operating system are facing buyer's remorse. The upgrade has left their devices slow and struggling for breath, according to complaints on Apple's users forum.

"My iPhone 8Gb 3G is soooo slow after 'upgrading' to OS4," says a user registered as George Stark on the Apple forum. "Unlocking the phone sometimes takes 5-10 seconds and the home screen icons literally stop converging halfway through and then 2 seconds later, finish off. Other things are ridiculously slow, such as opening and replying to texts. Good one Apple, maybe you want us all to upgrade to the iPhone 4 so that OS4 actually runs at a manageable speed?"

Apple is looking into the complaints.

"We are aware of these reports and we are investigating," a company spokeswoman told Wired.com

Apple rolled out iOS4 in June as a new version of the operating system that would introduce features such as multitasking, a unified inbox for e-mail and the ability to group apps into folders. iPhone users who had bough their devices in 2007, when the phone was first introduced, cannot run iOS 4 at all. But iPhone 3G users can upgrade to iOS4 though multitasking is not supported for these devices. iPhone 3GS and iPhone 4 are completely compatible with iOS 4.

But Apple's decision to make older iPhone models seems to have backfired. When Apple moved from iPhone 3G to iPhone 3GS, it introduced a faster processor in the latter. Remember all those company statement saying the 'S' in the 3GS stands for 'speed.'

The iPhone 3G has a 412 MHz ARM 11 chip, while the 3GS model uses a 600MHz ARM 11 processor. Clearly, the difference computing power seems to have an impact on how well the device can handle iOS4. The thread relating to iPhone 3G's slow performance on the iOS4 is 38 pages now and has more than 560 messages.

Those stuck with iPhone 3Gs running at glacial speeds, downgrading the OS to the iOS 3.1.3 may be an option. But as this tutorial shows it's not an easy process. The alternative is to do a factory reset on the device.

For Apple, the iOS4 woes on the iPhone 3G comes on the heel of 'Antennagate'--a widely publicized problem with the iPhone 4. Many iPhone 4 users have noticed that the device loses signal strength when gripped at a specific spot at the bottom left of the phone. Apple has responded to those complaints by offering its iPhone 4 users a free case.

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Photo: (twenty5pics/Flickr)