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<title>TidBITS: Initial iPhone impressions</title>
<link>http://emperor.tidbits.com/webx/tidbits-talk</link>
<description><![CDATA[Well, they're out at last. And what an impression they've made. I was on my<br>
way home from Tampa on Friday afternoon at around half past two, and I<br>
thought I'd stop in at the Apple Store, where I used to work. Already there<br>
was a queue outside the shop of around a couple of dozen, and then as many<br>
more outside the mall. I went home.<br>
<br>
The next afternoon, I dragged my wife over to the mall so we could have a<br>
look. We barely got into the shop  I remember working in the Apple Store on<br>
Black Friday and Christmas Eve of 2005, shortly after the video iPods were<br>
released, but I don't ever remember seeing the place that busy. But we<br>
managed to get some quality minutes with the iPhones, and we were duly<br>
impressed. We went home.<br>
<br>
And at home, we rehashed what we'd seen. And what we'd liked 侠which was<br>
plenty. Out came the trusty MacBook Pro, and on the MBP I whipped out a<br>
spreadsheet which spelled out quite clearly to my wife how we could, after<br>
all, afford an iPhone each, even with the rather usurious cancellation fees<br>
we'd have to pay T-Mobile. She bit. And so I went back to Tampa.<br>
<br>
I got there at around twenty to nine on Saturday evening; the crowds had<br>
barely abated. The staff appeared to be in constant motion, bringing box<br>
after box of what seemed to be an endless supply of iPhones. The shop was as<br>
busy as it had been shortly after lunch. I snagged my two iPhones and a<br>
hot-pink case for the wife (the black leather holster I'd seen earlier had<br>
sold out). I went home.<br>
<br>
Our phones came in rather spanking black bags made of stout card, with<br>
colour printing and silver gilting, this in stark contrast to the naff<br>
plastic shopping bags that AT&amp;T were handing out their (allegedly) very<br>
limited supply in. The packaging, as can be seen across the interweb, is<br>
really quite well done, as one would expect from Apple.<br>
<br>
The setup was trivially easy. My wife went first; we connected the phone to<br>
her Power Mac, and iTunes duly launched. We were walked through the steps<br>
for transferring her phone number from T-Mobile, and the process went off<br>
without a hitch. Then we did mine, and by the time we'd finished setting my<br>
new toy up, my wife had received a text message on her phone telling her<br>
that the transfer was complete. Within about a quarter of an hour, we could<br>
both make and receive calls.<br>
<br>
Since then, we've both synched our iPhones with our Macs, putting our<br>
contacts on 侠the contacts viewer is *so* far ahead of any other phone we've<br>
ever seen, including the RAZRs we've just migrated from, that this alone<br>
might just make it worth the price. Our home Airport network (802.11n) works<br>
a treat, with both phones finding it without any problems. We've since<br>
discovered that the EDGE connection is adequate, but far from brilliant, at<br>
least here in Clearwater, but I don't know that we'll rely on it that much.<br>
Sound quality through headphones is exactly what you'd expect an iPod to be,<br>
and while you'd never actually want to listen for terribly long this way,<br>
the built-in speaker (for speakerphone purposes, really) actually plays<br>
music. <br>
<br>
Phone sound quality is similarly fine, either through the phone itself or<br>
via the headphones (although hearing my wife's voice in *both* ears on the<br>
phone was a tiny bit odd). The speakerphone is a touch weak, but it's<br>
usable, I suppose. <br>
<br>
The YouTube feature has to be the biggest gimmick of all. I've pushed the<br>
button once, just to see what it does, but I doubt that I'll be pushing it<br>
very often 侠but then, I've never been the hugest YouTube fan anyway.<br>
<br>
The keyboard is OK 侠I'm typing this on my MBP, because I don't know I'd<br>
want to write this much on the 'phone, but I believe that I could write<br>
reasonably long emails and notes if I had to.<br>
<br>
The screen, of course, is gorgeous. Photos from my computer are brilliant<br>
and sharp, although the built-in camera (the second biggest gimmick) is,<br>
well, a phone camera.<br>
<br>
I've read criticisms about such things as no voice dialling, but I don't<br>
really miss that (although that *really* is a personal preference 侠I know a<br>
lot of people wanted it). I do wish that Apple had built GPS into the iPhone<br>
and yes, I know that it's my own fault for being an early adopter, that<br>
it'll have it by Christmas but, again, I can live without it, and I dare<br>
say it would have bumped the price up considerably.<br>
<br>
Overall, I'm glad I got my iPhone. I'm still not *entirely* sure that it's<br>
really worth the money I paid for them, but right now I'm enjoying it. It's<br>
an exceptionally well-designed and functional piece of kit, and it's<br>
certainly set the new standard for personal electronics.<br>
<br>
Anyone else got one?<br>
<br>
Steve<br>
<br>
<br>
]]></description>
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