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Today I had lunch with my brother. He doesn't know what the iPhone is (he's 47 yrs old), but didn't stop talking about sports for the entire meal.
Nothing gets people to talk like sports, politics and sex. Not even at the level Apple gets geeks to talk about Apple products :-)
It’s amazing how fast gossip passes through the blogosphere.
...?
Besides there are alot of haters out there that just love to spread these rumors about.
I say sit back relax have an expresso and enjoy life!
Again you show what a closed, myopic world you live in. I submit I could walk down the street and find more people willing to talk about B. Hussein Obama than Apple. Hell, I could find more people willing to talk about Bill Gates than Apple
I read about you on fakesteve.blogspot.com. It seems you have bought an iphone. Glad to know that, and I am reading your review.
I have a blog too: http://johnpmathew.blogspot.com. Do visit, when you get the time. Oh, I have posted a link to your blog.
:)
John
That's funny, whenever I go out, sports or politics is the top conversation topic. But then again, I hang out with normal folk. Not tech-geeks (even though I am one).
But that's not what you said. You made a blanket, broad statement. Now, if you view the world ONLY through a tech lens, then I understand. And at the same time feel sorry for you, because there's so much more out there.
Scoble, does this not fly in the face of your past statements that Apple didn't blog enough? Does this not put the lie to the notion that blogging is important for companies to do? Does this not undercut your entire premise regarding corporate blogging?
LayZ: my blog is implicitly about the tech industry. I don't care what Paris Hilton is doing this weekend. If you do, this won't be the blog for you.
Not a waste of money, but not perfect. Mine hangs a few times a day, and eats batteries. It's browser crashes intermittently and the keyboard is frankly worse than a blackberry.
All that said, you will have to pry it out of my cold, dead hand.
If you want a very functional phone with a keypad, save your money - there are better single-function phones. If all you want is email, get a Blackberry.
But this device is so much better if you use phone, email, and SMS. The SMS interface is very slow, but vastly superior to any other phone I know. The voicemail interface is incredible - all visual. You never have to call in and press arcane sequences of * and numbers. You pick the one you want to hear, listen to it, and delete the ones you don't want.
Prior to the iPhone, I hated voicemail. The systems from the phone vendors seem designed to use up minutes, not help you. Now I use it and SMS constantly.
As for battey life, it is critically bad. I cannot make it through even one day without recharging. And that is with a fresh battery.
My read from friends who have the iPhone is that if you are inclined to want something well-designed, you will ignore the not insignificant flaws. If you are inclined to find a simple phone better, you will likely find it to be a waste of money.
The keyboard, while definitely DIFFERENT than a blackberry (or a Dash, or an s710, which are my more recent experiences) once accustomed to it I wouldn't say it's inherently worse functionally in most cases. The autocorrect is really uncanny. The biggest issue is when the autocorrect doesn't kick in and then you need to type precisely for it to work right.
On battery life, if I leave WiFi on I get a day's use out of the phone in general - but I definitely need to recharge at least once per day. If I leave WiFi off - like last week when I was onsite with a client - I could easily make it through two days. I'm checking email every 15 minutes to give a reference point on usage. I probably spend 30 minutes or so a day on the phone.
One thing we do agree on - you'd have to fight me for it. My personal opinion is that the iPhone may turn out to be the most significant productivity device in recent memory once the Exchange sync is worked out.
Instructions
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Thanks