The Next Day : iPhone Hangover
Well folks, here I am one day after the iPhone 3G’s release with my opinions on the hardware overall. I could go into a long drawn out review about the individual components, the sleek design, and the awesome feeling it was knowing that my iPhone worked while most of the consumers in the United States had, in the words of Pink Floyd, “Another Brick in the Wall”.
Having already been an iPod Touch owner, I was fully used to having a full-screen touch-only device to play my media as well as browse the web, check email and view Google Maps. With the iPhone 3G, i have gained both cell phone functionality, SMS text messages and GPS. These additional features, honestly, are weird getting used to.
Sure, I have used cell phones, that’s not the weird part. What is weird is having everything rolled up together like this. The iPhone right now doesn’t feel like “My Cell Phone”. That could just be natural though, as getting new devices that are as personal as that is always a transition. Switching iPods is one thing, but switching to a much more functional device with a different form-factor than my previous cell phone takes some adjustment in daily usage.
I am not in an area that has the 3G data network, and with the closest place to me that has 3G being about 300 miles away, I don’t think I will be testing that any time soon. However, what I can test is the AppStore, which anyone running an iPhone or iPod Touch with the 2.0 software has access to. So far I have downloaded both free and for-pay apps including Twitterific, FaceBook, Remote, SplashMoney and AquaForest.
The quality of these apps ranges from awesome to just plain “meh”. Example: The Hotels.com app is nothing more than a glorified version of their iPhone-specific website. The only reason, it seems, that it is an app rather than just run it all via the website is it’s ability to get your current location via GPS. Other applications like PayPal, just plain work. Log into PayPal via this app using your password (+ security key string if you have the PayPal keyfob) and you can view your account’s balance as well as send money.
The current issue I see with the third party applications is that they seem to reboot the iPhone every so often for no reason that I can see. I have not hacked/jailbroke/unlocked the device so incompatiability or bugs tied to any of those can be ruled out. My thought, the reboots could be an iPhone API issue, and as such will most likely be fixed in a firmware patch. If they are app-specific issues, Apple also provides developers with the ability to push out update notifications.
All in all I am quite happy with this purchase. Next up on the adjenda will be the second part of this story: “The Next Month: iPhone BILL Hangover”







