Major, minor iPhone upgrade problems and how to fix them
(Credit:
Apple, Inc.)
- Reset your iPhone by holding down the sleep and home buttons until the Apple logo appears.
- Restore your iPhone: In iTunes, click the Restore button under the Summary tab. Restoring the phone will erase contacts, calendars, photos, and other data on the phone, but will restore automatically backed-up information including text messages, notes, call history, contact favorites, sound settings, widget settings, etc.
However, some issues chronicled below persist:
Visual Voicemail wasn't accessible by many users from their iPhone 3G S after restoring from a previous model's backup. Users are required to reenter their voicemail pins when prompted by the iPhone 3G S. If you've forgotten your pin, you can reset it by taking the following steps:
- Log onto AT&T myWireless
- Click on Phone/Device
- Click on Reset Voicemail Password
- Press the Submit button
A text message is sent to your phone with a new Visual Voicemail password.
Passwords previously saved for numerous applications were reported lost in the transfer to the iPhone 3G S. Users had to reenter passwords for a number of apps, including (but not necessarily limited to) AIM, LogMeIn, Loopt, MySpace, Palringo, Sirius XM, Tweetie, and Wallet. (Wallet's database had to be recovered from MobileMe). The password recovery problem is likely attributable to the hardware change from a previous iPhone to the iPhone 3G S.)
Compass has to be reset periodically when it struggles with interference, which happens often enough that iPhone 3G S users are complaining about it. Apple offers some information about calibrating Compass on its Web site, as well as in a support document, iPhone 3G S: Re-calibrate Compass. These explain that the recalibration isn't always necessary; sometimes you need to just ignore the recalibration messages while Compass self adjusts.
Compass calibration message
(Credit: David Martin)The iPhone 3G S' Oleophobic screen coating is rumored to be incompatible with screen protectors, so we called several Apple stores to investigate and were told this isn't true. The sales associate said that we could come into any Apple store and purchase a screen protector for the iPhone 3G S. Protectors for the 3G should also work on the 3G S.
Duplicate Contacts are being reported by a number of users on Apple's discussion boards. We stumbled upon a nice explanation for and solution to this problem in this article: "About duplicate contacts and calendars on iPhone [OS] 3.0," via Mac OS X Hints.
Find My iPhone remembers all your devices, including the old iPhone that you just turned off when you upgraded to a new handset last weekend. MobileMe does not appear to support a mechanism that will allow you to remove the tracking of an iPhone or iPod Touch from Find My iPhone. We contacted Apple through MobileMe support via online chat and asked about this.
According to Apple tech support, removing a device from the list involves sending the device a Remote Wipe command. MobileMe will then attempt to send this command for up to two hours and if unable to contact the selected device, it is deleted from Find My iPhone. This information is contrary to the Apple support document, "MobileMe, iPhone OS 3.0: Troubleshooting Find My iPhone and Remote Wipe" which states:
Previously-owned iPhone/iPod Touch appears at me.com/account
If your iPhone/iPod Touch was configured with your MobileMe account, it may still appear when you log in to www.me.com/account, even if you no longer possess the iPhone/iPod Touch. Currently, a device is removed from your account page list only after it is successfully wiped. This article will be updated as more information becomes available.
Note: we think the last sentence points out that Apple is aware of this bug in Locate My iPhone and will announce a fix later. Following the advice given in the online chat wasn't successful. Nearly 12 hours later, the old iPhone 3G status is still pending a remote wipe in our test. We hope Apple will release a fix for this through the MobileMe Web site.
Wi-Fi connectivity and signal strength complaints have also cropped up after the iPhone OS 3.0 update: some users complain that their phones drop them from Wi-Fi unexpectedly, others that they can't connect at all. Some users have been able to resolve their connectivity problems by going to Settings > General > Reset > Reset Network Settings, while others complained that this simple fix does not work. In the latter case, a restore might be necessary.
Settings > General > Reset
(Credit: David Martin)Troubleshooting tips
Force Quit has changed in iPhone OS 3.0 for the iPhone 3G S but remains the same for older iPhones that do not support Voice Control. In order to force quit an application, you must:
- iPhone 2G/3G: Press and hold the Home button for a few seconds until the app quits. (Valid for iPhone OS 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0.)
- iPhone 3G S: Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the "Slide to power off" screen appears, then press and hold the Home button until the app quits (usually within 6 seconds).
Apple has recently updated the following support documents that might also be useful if you encounter problems with your iPhone:
- "iPhone Basic Troubleshooting"--some iPhone basic troubleshooting tips.
- "Troubleshooting applications purchased from the App Store"--Try the following troubleshooting steps on your iPhone or iPod Touch in order to resolve an application's issue.
- "Troubleshooting iPhone and iPod Touch contact and calendar syncing via USB on Windows"--If you're having difficulty syncing your contacts or calendars to iPhone or iPod Touch with iTunes for Windows via USB, this article can help. Note: this article does not apply to wireless syncing with Exchange ActiveSync or MobileMe.
Some users also might consider following the Apple iPhone Troubleshooting Assistant before calling AppleCare or visiting the local Genius Bar.
Tell us about your iPhone OS 3.0 or iPhone 3G S upgrade problems in the comments.

"Force Quit has changed in iPhone OS 3.0 for the iPhone 3G S but remains the same for older iPhones that do not support Voice Control. In order to force quit an application, you must:
* iPhone 2G/3G: Press and hold the Home button for a few seconds until the app quits. (Valid for iPhone OS 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0.)"
...is untrue. As he points out, the procedure for OS 3.0, for ALL iPhones, is:
"Press and hold the Sleep/Wake button until the "Slide to power off" screen appears, then press and hold the Home button until the app quits (usually within 6 seconds)."
This is worse than Microsoft's Vista denial.
Congrats, everybody, Apple finally hates us all equally.
If you really want to fix the issues your having, re-install os2.2.1. and wait for the next update.
I'm pretty sure you can continue to live without picture messaging and voice memo capablities for a bit longer.
Anyway, these problems are mostly due to people not doing a "backup and restore" when upgrading to the new OS. Apple should just make this the standard procedure in the first place. Would solve problems, though it takes twice as long.
an O.S Upgrade with over 300 new features is buggy task even on Windows Pcs let alone phones
So maybe it's slip up but Considering the device at hand and the fact that most owners love them
I'd say Apple is doing okay
plus I'd like to how many people actually had problems ? probably a small minority !
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I think I'm going to have to reset it and have it sync without restoring to get rid of this because some setting is making this functionality not work.
The Applestore gave me a new phone, with the earlier software on it. Without upgrading to 3.0, (and my new router), the signal is now PERFECT!. This is a MAJOR bug, and I won't be able to upgrade until I can verify that this has been addressed and fixed.
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by notovny
July 28, 2009 4:49 PM PDT
- I've got a second-generation iPod touch.on 3.0. The issue that irks me terribly is that, if a podcast, audiobook, or other audio item where the place is kept between session is played in iTunes. the place that is forevermore remembered is the iTunes bookmark. This can be extremely annoying if you listen to an audiobnook on the computer, go on a road trip and listen to two hours and fifteen minutes more in the car, and forget to make a note of this before resynching with iTunes so you can manually adjust it later.
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(23 Comments)Not as severe a problem as the others mentioned, but it nevertheless annoys the hell out of me.