Apple responded today to FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, who issued a statement that "urged" Apple to activate the FM chips that he claimed are in iPhones in the name of public safety. The recent hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria were the hook for the reasoning. The only problem? Apple hasn't even included FM radio chips in iPhones since the iPhone 6s.
That's right, Pai called on Apple to activate radios that don't even exist.
As John Gruber astutely points out, the statement has the stink of trying to shift blame or attention off of the FCC's own response and readiness issues. Pai has been banging the drum for months now and it's been a talking point of the NAB for years. When ostensibly asked for comment by Bloomberg, National Association of Broadcasters spokesman Dennis Wharton said "The notion that Apple or anyone else would block this type of information is something that we find fairly troubling." Again, the radios do not exist in iPhones and haven't for over a year now.
(Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Sunday October 01 2017, @03:29AM
But, the "user experience" would be crappy - if you "held it wrong" even the emergency broadcast FM signals might not be received.
Anyone living in the hurricane's path have any problem with NOT receiving enough notification that the storm was coming? We certainly got more notification than anyone should ever need, including emergency notifications on our phones (not FM based).
🌻🌻 [google.com]