5 things you didn’t know about the 3G iPhone

How fast is the iPhone? Touch-screen devices are often ruined by a delay when you press the on-screen, virtual buttons. Apple may solve this problem with its first-release product, but if it doesn’t, a persistent lag will degrade the user experience. Jobs said that the “iPhone runs OS X” and “desktop-class” applications. But will the [...]

  1. How fast is the iPhone? Touch-screen devices are often ruined by a delay when you press the on-screen, virtual buttons. Apple may solve this problem with its first-release product, but if it doesn’t, a persistent lag will degrade the user experience. Jobs said that the “iPhone runs OS X” and “desktop-class” applications. But will the OS and applications provide desktop-class performance? If so, Apple will have solved another problem nobody has ever been able to solve.
  2. Will the Apple iPhone support Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents? Jobs said you can synchronize the iPhone with e-mail–and he even pointed to IMAP support, including Microsoft Exchange–but what about attachments? Without support for standard office documents, the iPhone is a nonstarter for most business users.
  3. Will the iPhone scratch or peel? Previous Apple products, including some iPods and notebooks, had serious problems with scratching and peeling. People use and abuse their cell phones even more than they do other devices. Will Apple make the 3G iPhone rugged enough to avoid embarrassing blog write-ups about scratching, peeling, or other materials defects? Will the iPhone be too slippery to use without dropping?
  4. Will Apple be able to fill iPhone orders accurately? No doubt the iPhone is very expensive to manufacture, and, unlike the iPod, is a very complex device, electronically. In the first year of the device’s release, Apple could very easily overbuild, making far more than it can sell in a given period of time, or underbuild, failing to keep up with demand and creating long waits and frustrated customers.
  5. Will the iPhone really “change the world”? The iPod “changed the world” because everyone bought one. But will the iPhone’s price, Cingular-only support, lack of business usability, and other factors really make the iPhone just a niche luxury toy for the rich?

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08.12.08

As for the number 4, I’m almost sure that the buzz around the new iPhone 3g has been created by Apple artificially, the whole situation has been overhyped in order to create additional hysteria and increase the demand. I think they produce enough gadgets to keep up the real demand.

And one more thing you probably didn’t know about the new iPhone 3G. Instead of waiting in lines among other frustrated customers, you can go to Pikaba.com and win the gadget for free: http://www.pikaba.com/c/ContestRules.aspx?m

08.12.08

We were using the blackberry for business accounts but now the iPhone is supported by Microsoft Exchange I’ll soon try it out! With our service provider http://www.syncmymail.com/za//iphone_exchange.php it seems to be easy to set them up over active sync

08.12.08

Since the last time we chatted I have decided to try out Vodacom’s Exchange. Seems pretty good, more reliable than my previous supplier.

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