Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I own an iPhone 3G and I'm looking for a decent speaker / alarm clock for it. I am going to listen music in a mid-sized room, so I want nice quality speakers with solid bass. I also want to use it as an alarm clock, so it would be great if there is such a feature. The price can be low-mid to mid-high range. I was looking at the Klipsch iGroove SXT; it's powerful, slick and the reviews are good, but it doesn't have an alarm clock feature. It's no deal breaker if I can set it up from the iPhone, but I'm not sure. Thanks!"
Ummmmmm how is this news? I don't know of ANY ... ANY smartphone that does a proper wipe of data. Why are people talking like APPLE did wrong? I want someone to give me an example of a smartphone that does a proper NSA 3 pass wipe to ensure data cannot be recovered. NAME ONE. If they don't (and none of the phones do), then it is certain your data can be recovered. Blaming this on Apple only shows your ignorance.
Well, apparently it's news every time Windows has a zero-day attack even though every OS and software has it's holes and problems.
I'm not a MS fanboy by any means, but the bias that's always in Apple's favor really annoys me.
i think the point here is, this dude bought it directly from apple. apple didn't erase the data correctly. soooooo yes, apple did wrong.
BlackBerry (page 67):
http://na.blackberry.com/eng/deliverables/799/BlackBerry_Enterprise_Solution_Security_Technical_Overview%5B1%5D.pdf