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Old 06-26-2007, 04:04 AM
Meg
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Default CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/ptech/0....ap/index.html

Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

Story Highlights• Long wait for Apple's iPhone almost over
• On sale at AT&T, Apple stores Friday for $499 and $599
• It's a cell phone, media player and wireless Web device
• Touch-screen display eliminates traditional buttons


SAN JOSE, California (AP) -- There's hype. There's hysteria. And there's
history.

The hype around Apple Inc.'s upcoming iPhone is abundantly clear. So is the
hysteria. But how the iPhone will leave its historical mark after Friday's
launch is to be seen.

Will the gadget -- which triples as a cell phone, iPod media player and a
wireless Web device -- be as "revolutionary" as Apple CEO Steve Jobs has
claimed?

Even if the product flops for some reason or stays limited to the high-end
corner of the smart phone market, the iPhone has already jolted the
industry, showing that it is not just the body and outwardly beauty of the
handset that counts, but what's inside.

Remember the television ads for the Motorola RAZR?

The commercials showed off the sexy, thin profile of the clamshell handset
and seduced more than 50 million people from 2004 to 2006 to buy it, making
it the most popular cell phone ever sold.

But people want more now. There are plenty of slim, ultra-thin options out
there, but not many make finding photos, saving phone contacts, picking up
voice mail and selecting ringtones insanely easy.

"This is the most anticipated phone since Alexander Graham Bell did his,"
said Michael Gartenberg, an industry analyst at JupiterResearch.

"Part of it is the fascination with Apple's products and how well they
design them, but it's also about how poor the design in software is in cell
phones now, and how much time Apple has spent working on this."

Apple's iPhone commercials show a finger swiping the touch screen display
to activate the home menu, and with one tap on the photo icon, up pops your
photos. Another icon zips over to your contacts.

Not a drop-down menu in sight.

"A few handset makers have been trying to make the phone simpler without
having to refer to a manual that's 18 times the size of the phone," said
Richard Doherty, president of The Envisioneering Group, a research company.
"But Apple is going for the moon here."

Oakland Web programmer David Stillman, 21, hopes to be the first of his
friends to own an iPhone.

Stillman, who has three Macintosh computers and two iPods, plans to trade
in his 2-year-old Sanyo phone for the high-end $599 iPhone if the
all-inclusive monthly charges come to less than $100. Apple and AT&T Inc.
-- the exclusive carrier for the iPhone -- have not yet disclosed the
service charges.

Stillman says the best iPhone features appear to be the simple access to
Google Inc.'s online maps and route directions and the intuitive user
interface, which allows for easy scrolling through a contact list, fast
searches through photo albums and quick callback for missed calls and
recently dialed numbers.

Also, instead of just listening to voicemail in the order received, Apple
has created what it calls "visual voicemail" for iPhone, an innovative way
to see the list of voice messages so users could quickly choose the one
they want to hear.

"The software is going to sell this phone -- it's going to be so easy and
obvious and will correct a lot of problems in other phones," said Stillman,
who was waiting for Apple's flagship retail store in San Francisco to open
Friday morning to do some shopping. "Other phones -- even Blackberries --
can do a million things but you can't figure out how to do anything on
them."

With its iPod players and Macintosh computers, the Cupertino-based company
has already cemented a reputation for making products that are intuitive
and easy to use. Other electronics makers have admitted that Apple has set
the bar there for those product categories.

Now Apple is promoting how easy it is to surf the Web on the iPhone.

Accessing the Web from a cell phone has improved over the years as carriers
have installed faster data networks, but the experience of surfing the
Internet, or completing tasks like pulling up Google Maps is still not as
easy as it should be, Gartenberg said.

Not many cell phones are designed to serve up the whole Web. The underlying
operating system either doesn't support it, or cellular carriers have
limited the access.

But cell phone makers are increasingly indicating that they want to improve
the user experience and not just their hardware designs, said Jon von
Tetzchner, chief executive of Opera Software ASA, a Norwegian maker of a
Web browser that has versions designed for use on mobile devices.

"Apple is lifting expectations on what you can get," von Tetzchner said.
"Anyone competing with them will have to match it."

The proof will come once the iPhone gets into users hands.

The all-touch screen device, which lacks a button keyboard, will force
users to get accustomed to typing messages on a virtual keyboard instead of
regular buttons.

The fact that it will be using a slower 2.5-generation network instead of a
3-G network might also hamper the experience of data transfers or Web
access, though Gartenberg noted that it's not just the bandwidth that
matters, but how well the handset's software is designed to optimize the
use of the bandwidth.

Many people are already clamoring for the gadget. More than 1 million
people have signed up with Apple and AT&T for more information.

Not everyone will be lining up, though, when the phones are made available
on Friday at 6 p.m. local time for each time zone.

San Francisco network administrator Scott Buzzard, 31, says he's not
tempted to trade in his Motorola Q -- a smart phone that the iPhone will be
competing with -- anytime soon. He says the iPhone's price is too high, and
Apple is inexperienced in the cellular market. His biggest worry is the
touch screen and the software that underpins it.

"It looks cool and Apple has historically made great products, but the
iPhone sounds too robust for its capacity -- they're packing too much into
a phone," Buzzard said while shopping at the CompUSA store in San
Francisco. "I don't want to be the early adopter on an untested product."




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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 06-26-2007, 05:05 AM
zeez
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

On Jun 25, 8:04 pm, meaga...@gmail.com (Meg) wrote:
> http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/ptech/0....ap/index.html
>
> Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'
>
> Story Highlights· Long wait for Apple's iPhone almost over
> · On sale at AT&T, Apple stores Friday for $499 and $599
> · It's a cell phone, media player and wireless Web device
> · Touch-screen display eliminates traditional bublahblahblah


Fuck, enough already.


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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 06-26-2007, 03:23 PM
Victor Eijkhout
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

Meg <meagan34@gmail.com> wrote:

> the gadget -- which triples as a cell phone, iPod media player and a
> wireless Web device -


Is everyone these days a chatter or downloader? Doesn't anyone produce
anymore?

In other words, is anything known about note taking applications or even
stuff like Pocket Quicken on the iPhone? I really need a replacement for
my Newton.

Victor.
--
Victor Eijkhout -- eijkhout at tacc utexas edu

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  #4 (permalink)  
Old 06-26-2007, 04:13 PM
balanco01@yahoo.com
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

On Jun 26, 7:23 am, s...@sig.for.address (Victor Eijkhout) wrote:
> Meg <meaga...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > the gadget -- which triples as a cell phone, iPod media player and a
> > wireless Web device -

>
> Is everyone these days a chatter or downloader? Doesn't anyone produce
> anymore?
>


a BIG AMEN to this! The only true current "geek" phones seem to be the
Blackberry and Treo, but
most of the phones I see these days are stuffed with Hollywood-style
crapware that want you
to buy buy buy. I have an old-unlocked Nokia 3100-b and a USB cable
for it, and I can load any kind of
phone Java-app I want on it. It even has an optional *detatchable
camera* (how come NO other phones
seem to have this?! That would be great for situations where you are
not allowed to bring a camera
phone, but you can still have a camera available otherwise.). *sigh*,
but this is just part of the trend
of the comp. industry in general. Comapnies seem to want people to be
"forever newbies", and
do nothing but consume and spend, and would love computers to become
yet another dumbed down
medium like television. :|



> In other words, is anything known about note taking applications or even
> stuff like Pocket Quicken on the iPhone? I really need a replacement for
> my Newton.
>



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  #5 (permalink)  
Old 06-29-2007, 01:09 AM
Johnny Borborigmi
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

On 2007-06-25 23:04:26 -0400, meagan34@gmail.com (Meg) said:

> http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/ptech/0....ap/index.html
>
> Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'



You know, I love Apple but I do not think this iPhone will do all that
great. Overpriced the main reason.

Over hyped. It'll be interesting the next week or 2......



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Old 06-29-2007, 01:55 AM
none
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

Johnny Borborigmi <growl@tummy.com> wrote:

> > http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/ptech/0....ap/index.html
> >
> > Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

>
> You know, I love Apple but I do not think this iPhone will do all that
> great. Overpriced the main reason.


yeah, but it's just $100 more than the first iPod, and does a TON more,
the resale value of this thing will be stellar! $2K easy on ebay in 2
weeks if they can't make enough...

so it's not like anyone is going to lose anything in the first year.
Sales will be 12-48 million in this first 18 months, so it will be
interesting to see where the actual number falls. It could be in the 60
million range, there is enough power behind it, but apple and the
(chinese slaves) probably can't build enough, so the price for getting
one simply rises.

> Over hyped. It'll be interesting the next week or 2......


yeah, haven't seen any hype yet and have been watching closely. most of
the articles are straight on, and apple has been almost benign about it.
no media event except for macowrld 6 months ago, just a few nicely
tailored videos... and some mellow, simple ads.

it should be a fun day tomorrow... expect lines to be long, just hope
enough phones are in the pipe to not make people showing up at 11:05 am,
being told, we are now sold out.

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  #7 (permalink)  
Old 06-29-2007, 02:09 AM
danny burstein
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

In <a-B5C0F5.18553928062007@mpls-nnrp-02.inet.qwest.net> none <a@b.com> writes:

>so it's not like anyone is going to lose anything in the first year.
>Sales will be 12-48 million in this first 18 months, so it will be
>interesting to see where the actual number falls. It could be in the 60
>million range, there is enough power behind it, but apple and the
>(chinese slaves) probably can't build enough, so the price for getting
>one simply rises.


Well, I guess we've found out where the former
Iraqi public information minister wound up.



--
__________________________________________________ ___
Knowledge may be power, but communications is the key
dannyb@panix.com
[to foil spammers, my address has been double rot-13 encoded]

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  #8 (permalink)  
Old 06-29-2007, 03:04 AM
SMS
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Default Re: CNN: Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

Johnny Borborigmi wrote:
> On 2007-06-25 23:04:26 -0400, meagan34@gmail.com (Meg) said:
>
>> http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/ptech/0....ap/index.html
>>
>> Prepare for the iPhone 'revolution'

>
>
> You know, I love Apple but I do not think this iPhone will do all that
> great. Overpriced the main reason.


It's only expensive if you consider it a phone. But if you want a
portable Wi-Fi web browser/MP3 player, that happens to have a phone,
then it's not overpriced. The phone part is the disappointment,
especially since you can't put in a prepaid SIM when traveling outside
the U.S., and of course as reviewers have pointed out, browsing the web
over AT&T's EDGE network is a painfully slow experience. The next
version of the iPhone will probably be 3G (HSDPA) and is well worth
waiting for, for those that can wait.

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