StrikerObi
Member
Gary Whitta said:Why would you want the iPhone without the data plan anyway?
If you are often around a wi-fi source there's almost no need for EDGE... until you get lost in an area without coverage and need Google Maps...
Gary Whitta said:Why would you want the iPhone without the data plan anyway?
border said:Which is to say I can't download podcasts on-the-go? I guess I'll pass on this and wait for Rev2 then.
What about internet radio? Shouldn't it at least be possible to listen to it over the AT&T Cingular network? Or would you have to point the browser to a website that has an embedded Flash/Javascript player?
SuperPac said:I'm sure the lack of AIM/etc. is not going to hurt sales of the phone at all. I haven't seen any data, but I'd be surprised if the number of people who use AIM/Googletalk, etc. on their phones is very large compared to the number who Text.
Gary Whitta said:What's this I'm hearing now that the iPhone has no vibration feature? That's weird.
mrklaw said:they need a mobile itunes. How can you have an ipod, connected to the internet, and not be able to download podcasts directly?
Flo_Evans said:can you buy songs/shows thru the store on the thing?
StrikerObi said:Really, you could at least read one post in the tread. The post DIRECTLY ABOVE YOURS talks about how you can't do that.
SuperPac said:There're probably about a half-dozen-plus "how can you have a phone without [BLANK]" with the iPhone. These either matter to you and you won't buy or they don't matter and you will. What's the list look like...
- 3G
- IM client
- Flash support
- Mobile iTunes Store
- MMS (picture messaging)
- Custom/purchased ringtones
- GPS
etc. I'm sure others can continue the list.
Cool... first photo of the camera application.SuperPac said:
Chittagong said:OH NOES [URL="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118289311361649057.html.html?mod=technology_main_promo_left]Walt Mossber review sez iPhone doomed[/URL]
WSJ said:We have been testing the iPhone for two weeks, in multiple usage scenarios, in cities across the country. Our verdict is that, despite some flaws and feature omissions, the iPhone is, on balance, a beautiful and breakthrough handheld computer. Its software, especially, sets a new bar for the smart-phone industry, and its clever finger-touch interface, which dispenses with a stylus and most buttons, works well, though it sometimes adds steps to common functions.
The Apple phone combines intelligent voice calling, and a full-blown iPod, with a beautiful new interface for music and video playback. It offers the best Web browser we have seen on a smart phone, and robust email software. And it synchronizes easily and well with both Windows and Macintosh computers using Apple's iTunes software.
It has the largest and highest-resolution screen of any smart phone we've seen, and the most internal memory by far. Yet it is one of the thinnest smart phones available and offers impressive battery life, better than its key competitors claim.
It feels solid and comfortable in the hand and the way it displays photos, videos and Web pages on its gorgeous screen makes other smart phones look primitive.
The iPhone's most controversial feature, the omission of a physical keyboard in favor of a virtual keyboard on the screen, turned out in our tests to be a nonissue, despite our deep initial skepticism. After five days of use, Walt -- who did most of the testing for this review -- was able to type on it as quickly and accurately as he could on the Palm Treo he has used for years. This was partly because of smart software that corrects typing errors on the fly.
...
Missing features: The iPhone is missing some features common on some competitors. There's no instant messaging, only standard text messaging. While its two-megapixel camera took excellent pictures in our tests, it can't record video. Its otherwise excellent Web browser can't fully utilize some Web sites, because it doesn't yet support Adobe's Flash technology. Although the phone contains a complete iPod, you can't use your songs as ringtones. There aren't any games, nor is there any way to directly access Apple's iTunes Music Store.
Apple says it plans to add features to the phone over time, via free downloads, and hints that some of these holes may be filled.
Expectations for the iPhone have been so high that it can't possibly meet them all. It isn't for the average person who just wants a cheap, small phone for calling and texting. But, despite its network limitations, the iPhone is a whole new experience and a pleasure to use.
SuperPac said:
Pogue said:...
As it turns out, much of the hype and some of the criticisms are justified. The iPhone is revolutionary; it’s flawed. It’s substance; it’s style. It does things no phone has ever done before; it lacks features found even on the most basic phones.
...
The $500 and $600 models have 4 and 8 gigabytes of storage, respectively — room for about 825 or 1,825 songs. (In each case, 700 megabytes is occupied by the phone’s software.) That’s a lot of money; then again, the price includes a cellphone, video iPod, e-mail terminal, Web browser, camera, alarm clock, Palm-type organizer and one heck of a status symbol.
The phone is so sleek and thin, it makes Treos and BlackBerrys look obese. The glass gets smudgy—a sleeve wipes it clean—but it doesn’t scratch easily. I’ve walked around with an iPhone in my pocket for two weeks, naked and unprotected (the iPhone, that is, not me), and there’s not a mark on it.
But the bigger achievement is the software. It’s fast, beautiful, menu-free, and dead simple to operate. You can’t get lost, because the solitary physical button below the screen always opens the Home page, arrayed with icons for the iPhone’s 16 functions.
...
Making a call, though, can take as many as six steps: wake the phone, unlock its buttons, summon the Home screen, open the Phone program, view the Recent Calls or speed-dial list, and select a name. Call quality is only average, and depends on the strength of your AT&T signal.
E-mail is fantastic. Incoming messages are fully formatted, complete with graphics; you can even open (but not edit) Word, Excel and PDF documents.
The Web browser, though, is the real dazzler. This isn’t some stripped-down, claustrophobic My First Cellphone Browser; you get full Web layouts, fonts and all, shrunk to fit the screen. You scroll with a fingertip —much faster than scroll bars. You can double-tap to enlarge a block of text for reading, or rotate the screen 90 degrees, which rotates and magnifies the image to fill the wider view.
...
So yes, the iPhone is amazing. But no, it’s not perfect.
sonycowboy said:Pogue is positive? It must be the end of the world.
capslock said:In the article he also says that the NYTimes homepage took almost a minute to show up with Edge, other websites even longer.
There’s no memory-card slot, no chat program, no voice dialing. You can’t install new programs from anyone but Apple; other companies can create only iPhone-tailored mini-programs on the Web. The browser can’t handle Java or Flash, which deprives you of millions of Web videos.
...
Then there’s the small matter of typing. Tapping the skinny little virtual keys on the screen is frustrating, especially at first.
...
Even so, text entry is not the iPhone’s strong suit. The BlackBerry won’t be going away anytime soon.
The bigger problem is the AT&T network. In a Consumer Reports study, AT&T’s signal ranked either last or second to last in 19 out of 20 major cities. My tests in five states bear this out. If Verizon’s slogan is, “Can you hear me now?” AT&T’s should be, “I’m losing you.”
Then there’s the Internet problem. When you’re in a Wi-Fi hot spot, going online is fast and satisfying.
But otherwise, you have to use AT&T’s ancient EDGE cellular network, which is excruciatingly slow. The New York Times’s home page takes 55 seconds to appear; Amazon.com, 100 seconds; Yahoo, two minutes. You almost ache for a dial-up modem.
These drawbacks may be deal-killers for some people. On the other hand, both the iPhone and its network will improve. Apple points out that unlike other cellphones, this one can and will be enhanced with free software updates. That’s good, because I encountered a couple of tiny bugs and one freeze. (There’s also a tantalizing empty space for a row of new icons on the Home screen.) A future iPhone model will be able to exploit AT&T’s newer, much faster data network, which is now available in 160 cities.
But even in version 1.0, the iPhone is still the most sophisticated, outlook-changing piece of electronics to come along in years. It does so many things so well, and so pleasurably, that you tend to forgive its foibles.
sonycowboy said:Pogue is positive? It must be the end of the world.
SuperPac said:Is he usually not?
I do kinda agree that it's too many steps to make a call. My current phone is flip phone open, dial number (or push and hold to speed-dial). I thought Apple was about SIMPLIFYING, man. Not making-more-difficult. Push sleep wake, unlock, bring up home, press phone...I'm already ZZzzz... But, the nice thing is that they can fix SOME of this through software updates. Unlike, as Steve said during the MWSF Keynote, other phones where you're locked to the number of buttons and interface. So I guess that's good. I'm sure they'll be tweaking quite a bit.
Newsweek's Steven Levy's review
SuperPac said:
That’s one reason why people, especially the tens of millions who love iPods, have been so eagerly awaiting the iPhone. “Everyone we talk to hates their phones—it’s universal,” Steve Jobs told me on a call to my iPhone a couple of days ago. (The control-freaky Apple CEO was just checking up to see how I was doing.)
But the bottom line is that the iPhone is a significant leap. It’s a superbly engineered, cleverly designed and imaginatively implemented approach to a problem that no one has cracked to date: merging a phone handset, an Internet navigator and a media player in a package where every component shines, and the features are welcoming rather than foreboding. The iPhone is the rare convergence device where things actually converge.
...
Bottom line: In a sense, the iPhone has already made its mark. Even those who never buy one will benefit from its advances, as competitors have already taken Apple’s achievements as a wake-up call to improve their own products. But for all its virtues, the iPhone is still a risky venture because it’s yet to be proven that, despite the wow factor, millions of people are ready to pay several hundred dollars more than the going rate for phones—and in some cases, paying even more to bail out of their current mobile contracts. There’s also a potential backlash from those sick of the hype. During our iPhone conversation, however, Jobs professed that he wasn’t concerned about inflated hopes, and certainly not whether he would meet his own projections of 10 million sold in 2008: “I think we’re going to blow away the expectations.”
Certainly all those people lining up to buy iPhones will find their investment worthwhile, if only for the delight they get from dazzling their friends. They will surely appreciate the iPhone’s features and the way they are intertwined to present a unified experience. But in the future—when the iPhone has more applications and offers more performance, with a lower price—buyers will find even more value. So smart consumers may well wait for that day. But meanwhile they can only look with envy as the person sitting next to them to them on the subway, or standing ahead of them in the Whole Foods line, is enjoying the phone that finally fulfills the promise of people-friendly palm-top communication and computing.
sonycowboy said:Urge rising. Wife likely to kill me. The slowness of the EDGE network is disappointing, but everything else seems fantastic. Better than I expected as I thought the JESUS phone stuff was going too far.
Christopher said:As of now I'm contract free!
but whoa 60 bucks a month? Holy shit even my Verizon plan sounds better than that. Eh...too much money for a touchpad phone and iPod, although if they make that kind of design for the next iPod I'm down.
cvxfreak said:I don't know a lot about EDGE, but can someone tell me just how slow it gets? If I wanted to browse NeoGAF on the thing, would it be unbearable?
Well, as a starting point, take these times as reported from their iPhone experience:cvxfreak said:I don't know a lot about EDGE, but can someone tell me just how slow it gets? If I wanted to browse NeoGAF on the thing, would it be unbearable?
Shogmaster said:
I routinely check out Neogaf and other forums on my cell phone with Opera Mini. Now that the beta for version #4 is out the whole experience is even smoother. This is with an Edge phone on T-mo's network btw.cvxfreak said:I don't know a lot about EDGE, but can someone tell me just how slow it gets? If I wanted to browse NeoGAF on the thing, would it be unbearable?