Monday, October 15, 2007

My experiences with the iPhone

I finally bought an iPhone! Here are list of pros and cons that I have experienced thus far.

Pros

  • Mobile Safari web browser using Wi-Fi or EDGE. You can surf the web just as on a desktop, or you can go to iPhone specific sites that really customize the web browsing experience.
  • Everything you can find in an iPod, plus a mobile phone.
  • The thin form factor and profile is elegant and makes it feel like you're holding something luxurious.
  • Photos taken from camera are surprisingly good. Viewing photos on an iPhone is a joy.
  • Syncing all your songs, podcasts, photos, contacts, and calendar with iTunes is a breeze and brain-dead easy.
  • Wi-Fi Music Store. This is really a long time coming. Basically, if you happen to be at a coffee shop (i.e. StarBucks), and you like a song thats playing there, you can connect to the Wi-Fi Music Store and purchase it on the spot. To me, thats the future of how people will discover new music instead of traditionally on the radio.
  • An active iPhone hacker community.
Cons
  • No GPS. The Google Maps application is great, but without GPS you need a copilot with you when you are driving in order for it to work. Plus, it doesn't cache any of the maps. So if you are in an area without any network connectivity, you are pretty much hosed.
  • No wireless sync. This is something that Zune2 got right.
  • Can't record video.
  • No real 3rd party apps (no access to local storage and other advanced hardware features). UPDATE: See later post about Steve Jobs change of heart.
  • No disk mode. Basically, you can't use it as a flash drive as you used to be able to do with the iPod video.
  • Have to pay an extra $0.99 for a ringtone version of a song that you purchased at the iTunes store already. Ringtone maker won't work with MP3s or AAC files that you ripped from CDs.
  • No external battery. Must recharge.
  • Headphone jack is not compatible with other head phone makers. Duh!
  • Locked only to AT&T service provider for 2 years. There is a simple work-around to choose the Go-Phone Prepaid plans that have no contract obligations. Just make sure to call 611 to cancel automatic monthly refills, and you'll have a really expensive Go-Phone in your hands.
  • Apple and AT&T are becoming NOT so consumer-friendly. Just lookup the all the bad rap they are getting with their intentional "bricking" of iPhones and the really bad AT&T customer service.
Ok. There are more cons than pros, but that's the price you pay for being an Apple fanboy. For an alternative smartphone go check out the Nokia N95 8GB version. At the moment, its not available in North America and the price tag is $200 more than an iPhone.

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