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Digg founder dishes iPhone specs

Tom Krazit Former Staff writer, CNET News
Tom Krazit writes about the ever-expanding world of Google, as the most prominent company on the Internet defends its search juggernaut while expanding into nearly anything it thinks possible. He has previously written about Apple, the traditional PC industry, and chip companies. E-mail Tom.
Tom Krazit
2 min read

Kevin Rose might be getting a phone call from Steve Jobs today.

In the latest episode of his weekly Diggnation podcast with Alex Albrecht, Rose claimed--in between swigs of what appears to be a 24-ounce bottle of the very tasty Racer 5 IPA from Bear Republic--to have the dirt on Apple Computer's cell phone/iPod device. There's no shortage of blogs and Apple watchers predicting the imminent arrival of the iPhone, but MacRumors.com notes that Rose accurately predicted the news from last January's Macworld and also called the iPod Nano, so we're willing to listen. Especially when it's this entertaining.

First of all, Rose doesn't call it the iPhone, just the "Apple phone." Its most distinguishing feature? "It's going to be small as s**t," the Digg founder said.

Apple will use two batteries in the phone, one for the music player and one for the phone, Rose said. That way, you can run down the battery on the music player but still be able to make and receive calls on the phone. It will have a slide-out keyboard for text messages or e-mail, and "touch screen on the outside," he said. Apple has filed for functionality on the sides of an iPod-like device.

Two versions are planned, a 4GB phone for $249 and an 8GB phone for $449, Rose said. The phone is also being made for both GSM and CDMA networks, he said, also claiming there was support for a third network called "Sprint PCS." We'll overlook this one, since Sprint uses CDMA technology, and guess that Rose might have been talking about Nextel's network, now owned by Sprint.

It sounds like Rose is expecting to hear the news officially from Apple in January, when the company will host Macworld in San Francisco. He seemed a little nervous about talking out of school about Apple's phone, asking Albrecht at one point, "Is that illegal when you say s**t like that?" Albrecht reassured him that if he didn't sign anything, it's probably cool.