iPhone

So if you're at all familiar with my cellphone purchasing habits, you know that the question posed in my previous post was more rhetorical than anything: of course I had to get an iPhone. Yesterday my boss convinced me to ditch work early and go stand in line for an iPhone with him, so we did (and I obviously didn't have to worry about what the boss would think about leaving in the middle of the day). We were about #25 in line at the AT&T store (the Apple store already had 100+ people), and we had no problem getting 8GB models. Fortunately I had my DS and was able to play through a couple dungeons in Final Fantasy V while we waited, so it wasn't that bad. On the unfortunate side of things, once it was all done the stores did not sell out and had plenty of stock left over, so it was a waste of time to wait in line. Oh well.

Now that I have been playing with it for a while, I am glad that it appears to have been worth it (money-wise, if not time-wise). I expect to make heavy use of a lot of the features, so it might not be worth it for somebody who wouldn't. Since there are plenty of iPhones to go around, you might want to try out a friend's before getting your own if you're on the fence.

Here's my Good vs Bad list so far:

Good:

  • It really is as smooth and as fast as in the ads - they were using the real thing.
  • The EDGE data rate is not as bad as I expected. Google Maps is pretty usable, and I was even able to stream a YouTube video of David Hasselhof singing and dancing with almost no lag time for buffering. Safari can load yahoo.com from scratch in about 30 seconds, though repeat visits should improve a lot due to image caching.
  • The Google maps application absolutely rules. The turn-by-turn driving directions are particularly sweet. I will never have to print out directions to anything ever again.
  • Calendar & Contact syncing to Outlook works without problems - now I can check where & when my next meeting is at work without needing to go back to my computer.
  • Safari works as advertised - it really is a full-fledged web browser on the phone (minus Flash). This will get lots of use whenever I have to take the bus somewhere or am waiting in a restaurant.

Bad:

  • It took 45 minutes to activate the phone using iTunes, which bluescreened my computer once (it was probably an interaction with my sound card driver).
  • Transferring my phone number from T-Mobile pre-paid was a huge pain because I did not have a billing address for the old number (since there's no bill). Fortunately after calling AT&T a few times it eventually got worked out. (Though I never provided any identifying information other than my old phone number and the zip code where I bought the phone - apparently that's all it takes to steal a T-Mobile number from somebody..)
  • Exchange email syncing only works if the Exchange administrator has enabled IMAP over SSL, which no security-conscious IT administrator will do. No reading work email on the phone 🙁 (this may be a blessing in disguise though)
  • The IMAP mail client does not recognize any of my IMAP folders other than Inbox (such as Sent, Spam, Drafts, etc.). I think I can fix this though.
  • I cannot use my good headphones in the iPod jack because it is too small. David Pogue noted this in his column but it was unclear what he meant. Here's a picture:

iPhone headphone jack

Finally, here's a YouTube video of me using a few of the features (Google Maps, YouTube, Mail, Safari, iPod) if you want to get a feel for how they work (note that the phone was using WiFi in this video):

Posted on June 30, 2007
Comments (5) Trackbacks (0)
  1. Man, I love it.

    I don’t know if you may have caught this or not, but there’s a really exciting video (multiple ones, actually) about the future of computers.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_mBjOmq1kY

    I watched a show about this (I can’t recall the channel) but I was truly baffled. The iPhone appears to be a great big link to that next step. One of the most impressive features of this computer was that you can set your camera on it, and the pictures literally “spill out” onto the desktop, and you can just arrange them and resize them, etc. God, I love technology.

  2. Here’s the other vid I was watching! I guess the news IS good for something.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y38i21ROsl8

  3. Yep, I have seen those videos. Those things look totally cool, and the iPhone is definitely like a tiny primitive version of what they could be like. It’s so intuitive and easy to just point at something and grab it to stretch it. The full table-sized version costs about $10,000 right now, so it’ll be a few years before we even see one in real life. Plus, everything in the video that they set on the table (cameras, credit cards, etc) will need little barcodes on them (or chips or something), which would require tons of coordination between lots of different industries, which unfortunately I don’t see happening any time soon. But maybe when people see how cool the iPhone is that sort of stuff will get sped up.

  4. BTW this video is a pretty funny rebuttal of the hype around the Microsoft Surface thing, it’s hilarious:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZrr7AZ9nCY

  5. Hahaha. Pretty funny. A lot of people are saying they aren’t impressed by it, but I think it’s pretty great. Computers need some new innovations beyond just being slimmer and smaller all the time. That’s not to say I don’t love Apple’s work, they come up with some great ways to peak consumers’ interest and it’s still user-friendly. I just think the surface computing will be cool. I’d love to sit down in a restaurant at a table like that, and I’d love for the future to be really robotic, like a sci-fi movie.

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