Category: iphone

When I started to hear rumors about the iPhone5 earlier this year I was worried. I heard that Apple was definitely increasing the size of the screen. I always thought the iPhone had a great form factor for what people do with a smartphone. Here are my top 10 activities:

  1. Check Email
  2. Twitter
  3. Facebook
  4. iMessage
  5. Phone Calls
  6. Spotify
  7. Camera
  8. Foursquare
  9. Chrome
  10. Weather

Notice something missing from that list? Phone manufactures often tout the user experience of watching movies on some huge screen, but I never watch extended video clips on a phone. Sure, on occasion I will bring up a clip at restaurant, like showing my relatives a black bear eating from my father’s birdfeeder, but I don’t watch movies or TV from my phone. Laptops and tablets provide a superior video watching experience.

I see a lot of handset manufactures coming out with these huge bricklike phones that do nothing to help my top 10 use cases. Sure a bigger screen is nice, but its not nice when the phone can’t fit in your pocket and weighs ton.
iPhone5vGalaxy
With the iPhone5, my biggest fear did not come true. The footprint of the actual device is less than the iPhone4, even with the extended screen. Its noticeably thinner and lighter, which I really like. I also don’t have to bother with a bumper case since the antenna issue that plagued the iPhone4 is resolved.

While I’m not a fan of all the needless lawsuits going on in the smartphone industry, the prototype device pictures reminded me of the phone I used prior to the original iPhone.
Treo 650

I really loved my Treo 650, it was the first phone I owned that did e-mail well. You could even install “apps” and browse the web in a very limited fashion. It could definitely fit in your pocket, but it was a tight fit to say the least. It interesting to see the “bigger is better” smartphone trend. It reminds me of the SUV trend of the 90’s. At some point there will be a backlash.

Of all the phones I’ve owned over the years, probably the ultimate form factor for it’s time was the Nokia 8260.
Nokia 8260
The 8260 was an awesome phone considering it came out 12 years ago. It was absolutely tiny for the time, had great battery life, and an easy to use interface. Instead of looking to tablets for design inspiration, smartphone makers should spend some time with the Nokia 8260.

Looks like Apple is getting quite a bit of bad press, over its attempts to block 3rd party applications and sim unlocking by illegally invalidating warranties, and potentially bricking phones in future updates.

Apple and its CEO should be blamed for this situation.

Disallowing third party applications is simply idiotic, but its part of Apple’s ongoing effort to make its products proprietary, now that it has a monopoly. If Apple had the ipod market share in computers, it would use the same iphone model of locking developers out. When it comes to pushing the proprietary model, Apple is worse than Microsoft.

As far as unlocking is concerned, Apple chose to use an exclusive provider in order to get a bigger cut off the service plans. Apple’s greed created a situation where many people have no other choice but to unlock the iphone in order to use it with their provider.

Apple Locking Out Linux

I can’t believe there hasn’t been more of an uproar over this. Apple is deliberately locking out third party clients from accessing ipods for no reason. Apple has monopolistic market share numbers on portable music players and online music distribution. If behavior like this continues from Apple, steps should be taken from a regulatory level to get Apple to play nice.

iphone

As someone who has been chastised by Apple fanboy’s in the past for being “Anti-Apple,” saying I’m impressed with iPhone is an understatement. The iPhone is probably the most impressive electronic device I’ve purchased this decade. I can never recall a device where a company came in to a mature competitive marketplace, with an offering that makes every other manufacturer look incompetent.

A year ago I was having problems with my original Treo 650, and I went to the Cingular store to pick up a replacement. I looked at every smartphone on the market, and I ended up just buying another Treo 650. Even the newer Treo offerings were disappointing compared to the nearly two year old 650.

When I purchased the iPhone on Friday, it was the first phone since the original Treo that I coveted with a passion. The Treo was the first phone to do a good job checking real e-mail accounts, and the iPhone is basically bringing the desktop Internet and multimedia experience to the mobile phone.

Hardware
The iPhone is a lot thinner than your typical smartphone. Its not light, but it feels really solid. The screen is big, bright, and beautiful. The glass surface was a great choice, since its really easy to clean, and very scratch resistant. The only complaint I have about the hardware design of the iPhone is the lack of a removable battery. There is simply no excuse.

Phone
The actual phone functionality of the iPhone is really solid. The contacts list is really easy to browse, the recent/missed calls section is well thought out, and dialing is simple. The big paradigm shift with the iPhone is the much touted visual voicemail. You no longer get your voicemail, it comes to you.

Mail


The mail application does a great job of displaying and retrieving e-mail. If your a Mail.app user, account settings are automatically synchronized with the first sync. If you use other e-mail applications like Thunderbird, you’re out of luck.

The multitouch display and tilt sensor really shine in the mail application. I’ve used both Treo’s and Blackberries in the past, but the iPhone simply outclasses both devices when it comes to checking, viewing, and deleting e-mail. With a swipe of your finger, e-mail messages are deleted from the main INBOX view.

The main drawback to the e-mail program is using the onscreen keyboard to compose e-mail. The tactile feel of real keys on a Blackberry or Treo is far superior for e-mail composition.

Browser
Safari on the desktop is not even close to matching Firefox in terms of features and expandability. Steve Jobs is outright lying when he claims that Safari is the “most advanced web browser on the market.” However; the scaled down version of Safari on the iPhone is by far the best mobile phone browser. The multi touch input and tilt sensor make browsing on your phone a joy. My only annoyance with the iPhone’s browser, is the fact that it doesn’t synchronize bookmarks from Firefox. Some people complain about a lack of Flash, but I feel that Flash has no business being on my phone.

iphone browser

Music and Video
During the January keynote, Steve Jobs claimed that the iPhone was the best ipod ever. I nearly fell out of my chair laughing when I heard him make that comment. Steve Jobs is notorious for enthusiastically vomiting hyperbolic lies at such keynotes, while Macintosh fanboys take his word as gospel.

To my surprise, I have to agree with Steve, the iPhone is by far the most enjoyable interface for a portable music player. The cover interface really shines on the phone. Simply hold the iphone sideways to initiate the cover interface. I find the cover UI to be a fluff piece on the desktop, but its perfect for the portable.

There are drawbacks to the iPhone’s media interface. First off, there is only 7GB of storage or 3GB with the cheaper model. The OS really takes up about 1GB of the iPhone. If your trying to use this for playing full length movies, you might want to look elsewhere.

The YouTube application is really fun, and well implemented. Even on AT&T’s slow network, I’m usually only 15-30 seconds away from the time I hit play, to when it actually plays with no pause.

Photos
iphone photo

The photo application is really nice if your a Macintosh user. You can set it up to sync with iPhoto albums. I have it set to sync all my photos from the last 4 months. The multitouch display and tilt sensor provide an enjoyable photo browsing experience. Photos are automatically rezzed down, so they don’t take up too much space. Right now I have about 1000 photos taking up 650MB.

The camera is decent, but nothing spectacular. If you have really good light, the results are acceptable. If something is moving, moving at all, or its a little dark out, forget taking a photo with your iphone. The iphone camera also performs very poorly in fluorescent light.

Linus  and Lindsey

Other Applications
Maps: A nice UI for google maps, but for $600 I expect this device to come with a GPS.

Chat: SMS only, it looks like ichat, but there is no IM application in the iPhone. Quite dissapointing considering I’ve had AIM on my phone for 5 years.

Calendar: Syncs with iCal, but nothing else on the Mac.

Stocks, Calculator, Weather, Clock, Notes:
Similar functionality to the dashboard applets they resemble. I find the notes application to be a disappointment.

Overall
Best in Class features

  • Phone Interface
  • E-mail Checking
  • Music Playing
  • Web Browsing
  • Photo Browsing
  • The User Interface

Disappointments

  • No removable battery
  • No GPS
  • No SDK or third party applications.
  • No syncing with third party applications on the Mac.
  • No support for OGG or FLAC audio formats.
  • 8GB is simply not enough storage space.
  • If you actually use the iPhone to check e-mail and listen to songs throughout the day, the battery goes down fast.
  • E-mail composition with the on-screen keyboard is not close to matching the typical Treo or Blackberry experience.
  • Can’t send SMS photos taken with the camera.
  • Can’t SMS or e-mail contacts.
  • Can’t import vcards from within the phone.
  • Can’t ssh or VNC (re: no 3rd party apps)

Overall
The iPhone is the best cellphone on the market. There are plenty of other phones that have similar features. Nokia and Sony have produced media phones from 5+ years now. Where the iPhone blows the competition away is with the implementation of features. The multitouch interface and tilt sensor, combined with excellent UI design, makes the iPhone the undisputed king of mobile phones.

From a heavy e-mail user’s perspective, the iPhone excels at checking, reading, and deleting e-mail. It only fails, when it comes to e-mail composition. An onscreen keyoard with no tactile feel is never going to match the experience of a real keyboard.
I would recommend an iPhone if you:

  • Want the best cell phone music player.
  • Want to show off your photography.
  • Want to check your e-mail.
  • Want to browse the web with your phone.

I would NOT recommend the iPhone if you:

  • Want to take pictures with your phone.
  • Want to write lots of e-mail with your phone.
  • Want your phone to double as a movie player.
  • Want to use your phone as a navigation device.