Jim,
I've always been leery of anything connected to any port on an iPhone other than the headphone jack. The idea of something like the square reader just bothers me. The first time someone swipes
a card, I'd be worried about it breaking off in any port. I'd much rather see a sled-based product used for any kind of badge or credit card swiping or inserting. Yes, I know that makes it bulky but I don't want to have to replace my phone!!
On Sep 13, 2012, at 9:53 AM, Jim Thomas < email@hidden> wrote:
Peter,
Thanks, I didn't notice that until now. Any card reader that isn't a "case" design would pretty much depend on that connection being sturdy enough to hold a reader and rugged enough to not snap off with a little pressure. Looking closer, I do see that it
does look like it might be just that.
My only other complaint:
$30 for a Lightning-to-30 adapter seems a bit steep, though not unexpected.
---Jim
On 9/13/12 11:36 AM, Link, Peter R. wrote:
Jim,
Look closely at the image of the connector in the keynote and you'll see indentations. These should actually hold the plug in the phone better than the spring clip of the 30-pin. As for grabbing
it, I think it will work better because it has less real-estate to break.
On Sep 13, 2012, at 9:27 AM, Jim Thomas < email@hidden> wrote:
My only question is about the stability/ruggedness of the "Lightning" connector. Though I understand it and think it's pretty cool, the 30-pin had a lot more real estate to 'grab' with.
---Jim
On 9/13/12 10:52 AM, Taylor Armstrong wrote:
What does any of this discussion have to do with "Fed" business? I see mostly talk of personal purchases... anyone want to bring it back on topic with discussion of iOS 6 and/or iPhone 5 hardware and how it affects Federal Government
usage?
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Fed-talk mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to
email@hidden
Peter Link
Cyber Security Analyst
Cyber Security Program
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
PO Box 808, L-315
Livermore, CA 94551-0808
email@hidden
Peter Link
Cyber Security Analyst
Cyber Security Program
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
PO Box 808, L-315
Livermore, CA 94551-0808
email@hidden
|