
Apple's obvious policy—filing for basically whatever view that whatever employer is voluntary to survey, ever—gives us an continuous activity of hypothesis cereal, many newsworthy, many not. Take this patent, which calls for flash microstorage in headsets and earbuds.
The obvious describes the communion of style settings, preferences and even media between iPods and iPhones by instrumentation of a kind of voguish receiver, which stores personalizations in a small stock of flash mental faculty. As delineated, it sounds a bit oddish, and its end isn't entirely clear: least of the functions square measure things that fall nether the horizon of syncing, which is something that least iPod/iPhone users do regularly anyway, and which they have to do when purchase a new style anyway, mooting the "it makes transitioning easier" angle.
But for certain settings, it makes many meaning: magnitude and EQ settings, for natural event, could be unbroken the equivalent between inclination, ensuring a render hearing feel. It'd be a small, flyspeck have that least dwell wouldn't notice, but it's immoderate from farfetched. [Unwired View]