"And I've specifically pointed out the public security advantages of doing so." In his premier public speech as FCC chairman, Pai notes, he told that "you can make a status for activating chips on public security grounds alone." "I applaud those companies that have done the right thing with activating the FM chips in their phones," told Pai. Update: Apple has replied to Pai's request with the statement below, claiming that its generality recent models don't in reality have FM capability that exec Phil Schiller too noted in a tweet. iPhone seven and iPhone eight models don't have FM radio chips in them nor do they have antennas designed to backing FM signals, extremely it isn't possible to able FM reception in these products.
Apple would like to remind the FCC which it can't activate imaginary FM radios which iPhones don't have
Apple replied this day to FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai, who issued a statement which "urged" Apple to activate the FM chips which he claimed are in iPhones in the name of public safety. Apple hasn't even involved FM radio chips in iPhones since the iPhone 6s. It is extremely likely which the FCC endeed knew which the FM radio wasn't present in new iPhones. Basically, Apple can't switch on the FM radio in the iPhone 7, iPhone eight and iPhone X because they don't exist. And it can't switch on many older FM radio chips because the iPhone's hardware simply doesn't backing it.
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