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iPhone Release Date Is June 29

willith writes "Apple has placed three iPhone commercials on their Web site today, and each ends with a tag: 'Coming June 29.' This puts to rest the question of when the thing will hit the streets, but there are still worries about allocation — AppleInsider is reporting that the supplies at Cingular/AT&T stores may be relatively tight." And some fanatic sites are already parsing the ads for such enigmas as the "mystery app."

515 comments

  1. Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by rueger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please, please, please Slashdot editors, can you have mercy and only post eight or ten fan boy raves about how amazingly wonderful their shiny new phones are, and how the iPhone is going to Change The Face of Communications in Our Lifetime?

    I mean, it's a phone for God's sake, not a cure for cancer.

    1. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by ratnerstar · · Score: 5, Funny

      Doesn't cure cancer? Apparently you're not familiar with the mystery app!

      --
      Just because you sold your soul to the devil that needn't make you a teetotaler. --The Devil and Daniel Webster
    2. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by cmeans · · Score: 0

      Actually, it's the Killer App! You'll never get cancer once you're dead.

    3. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 0

      It's the miracle app! It raises you from the dead and let you walk on water. Only Steve Jobs can pull that one off.

    4. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is the deal with you Mac fanatics? I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of a iPhone for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to copy a 17 Meg file from one folder on the hard drive to another folder. 20 minutes. At home, on my Razr, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this Mac, the same operation would take about 2 minutes. If that.

      In addition, during this file transfer, Netscape will not work. And everything else has ground to a halt. Even BBEdit Lite is straining to keep up as I type this.

      I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various Macs, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a Mac that has run faster than its Wintel counterpart, despite the Macs' faster chip architecture. My 486/66 with 8 megs of ram runs faster than this 300 mhz machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that the Macintosh is a superior machine.

      Mac addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use a Mac over other faster, cheaper, more stable systems.

    5. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by ceejayoz · · Score: 1, Insightful

      They're making up for panning the iPod as 'lame'.

    6. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by ajanp · · Score: 0

      I mean, it's a phone for God's sake, not a cure for cancer. Perhaps you should look over that summary again...
      1. A dramatic 'Coming June 29.' finale aimed to give people hope and urge them to hang on until the date arrives.
      2. Answering the question about "when the thing will hit he streets".
      3. Worries about allocation.
      4. "[Informant] is reporting that the supplies at [outlet] may be relatively tight."


      I'm pretty sure I could use that same description for the release of my miracle cancer cure... or the newest form of cocaine.

      --
      File Deletion is Murder.
    7. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 0

      Viva Kottke!

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    8. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Bamafan77 · · Score: 0

      I mean, it's a phone for God's sake, not a cure for cancer.
      This minor fact seems to be getting lost in the Slashdot hysteria. Yes, it's a neat phone, certainly. But it's...just...a...phone.

      Add to that, it's a closed platform too. I always love to see the congitive dissonance here when people bash TiVo for wanting to keep their platform closed, but defend Apple to the death when they do the same thing. (No doubt the mental gymnastics and word smithing used to defend this is...entertaining.)

      One thing is for sure though - Apple is basically nothing without Steve Jobs. You can see the reality distortion on Slashdot for all the proof you need. Woz was brilliant, but I'd be surprised if there weren't other people in the Bay Area doing work just as good at the same time as Woz. What allowed Apple to shine is Steve's ability to sell, even if he's occasionally a scumbag (though fanboys are convinced he's Christ reborn because he's a significant computer figure not named Bill Gates).

    9. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by omeomi · · Score: 0

      Apparently you're not familiar with the mystery app!

      It's probably something completely benign, like "Test Program 7" that one of the developers installed on an iPhone, and forgot to take off before that shot was filmed for the commercial...

    10. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by PenGun · · Score: 1

      Mac geeks is an oxymoron.

    11. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by semiotec · · Score: 1

      yeah, the editors got it wrong, it's not an "Enigma" app, it's an enema app...

    12. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Durandal64 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Indeed. Amit Singh has no geek credentials at all.

    13. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 1

      Unless Apple paid, you don't have too much to worry about from the editors.

      --
      I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
    14. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by jayratch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The iPhone is not going to change the face of communications, but it already shows some serious potential to restructure the wireless industry, and perhaps I dare say, it's about time.

      The US wireless market is such a strange beast that the vast majority of its users have very little clue how it works. In general, US phones are sold "subsidized" with 2 year contracts, or stripped down models sold "full price" with prepaid service. However, even the "subsidized" prices are, at many companies, not often an actual discount; very commonly, mid to high end phones are sold "at cost" (per obtainable wholesale prices) with two year contracts, and at a ridiculous markup without.

      The first area in which the iPhone is revolutionary is its abandonment of this strategy. While the phone is requiring the two year contract, the subsidy concept has been removed. The single line of fine print speaks volumes. "Use requires minimum new 2 year activation plan." The use of the word "use" in place of the word "price" indicates a reversal; whether or not this is good for the consumer remains to be seen, but the fact that the pricing is not related to the contract is inherently a benefit for customer understanding. It seems (anecdotally, working at a wireless store) that most customers have little to know comprehension of the subsidy system, and often "value" a piece of phone hardware at $50 or less, based on the price they paid. With fixed pricing, there may be two direct consumer benefits: first, no more confusing hardware pricing or rebates, no conditions, nothing to mail in, no questions. Second, replace or change your phone at any time, just like a computer, ipod, or appliance, without having to wait for your service obligation to be fulfilled enough to get another discount.

      Yeah, the price is higher. At the moment. The iPod was introduced at similar price; the iPod Nano 4 gb, closest in features to the original now sells for less than half the price the original was introduced with, and has better battery life, smaller size, color screen, and (in some opinions) a cleaner interface. Do we doubt that will happen with the iPhone?

      Phone "subsidies" are a scourge on the US wireless industry. Perhaps they should be more like cable boxes and modems, leased and owned by the telco's, or perhaps they should be more like landline phones, merely commoditized at all but the top end. A typical house phone sells for more and has less features than a typical cell phone, as it is.

      The other side of this coin, especially considering the possibility that the iPhone may be offered as a prepaid or hybrid, is that we may see this as the beginning of a new style of billing. Imagine a future in which per minute/per kilobyte bandwidth rates are lowered to a reasonable point, at the expense of all the "unlimited bundles" we sell now. Imagine if "a minute is a minute no matter what" but calls cost a penny a minute, data a dime a megabyte. It could happen, but only if the profit model of the industry changes. With Apple taking on an unprecedented hardware support role (in the standard consumer sphere; Vertu and B&O have done it before) it frees up the network/bandwidth providers to be just that. Utilities. Like water or electricity.

      I'm not saying that the iPhone will bring about all this in a single fell swoop. But contract independent pricing, profitable retail prices on smartphones, consumer friendly high end hardware, and distributed support costs, could spell the start of a real revolution in this particular backward industry.

      (By the way, does anyone here remember, from history, a time when power companies like Edison distributed and supported everything from the grid itself to the motors and lamps you ran on it? What broke that model?)

    15. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by jayratch · · Score: 1

      PS. I have utterly no intention of buying one, but I'm still extremely excited about it. I'm more leaning toward the Blackberry 8300 which, incidentally, costs less than a bad week's salary.

    16. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by empaler · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hell, the first iPhone prototypes went back in time and raised Jesus from the dead.

      Too bad they didn't come back with pictures of Zombie Jesus...

      (*ducks*)

    17. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Merusdraconis · · Score: 1

      No, based on precedent the Slashdot editors should post how its feature set is not as good as the competition and how it's doomed to fail.

    18. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Philipek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I agree. Macs suck. In need of a new PC I went to a mac store in Warsaw yesterday to check them out. The sales assistant informed me that as yet there is no localisation hence no Polish language kit. Yes, a mac store in POLAND selling computers that aren't available in POLISH. That's good marketing. Anyway, I asked him when this "feature" is going to appear and was told "probably in the next OS, which I think is due in November, though I am not sure"... it just gets better. Still, undaunted the mac salesman proceeded to ask me about the system I currently use. When I told him Linux he proceeded to show me that macs too have a terminal. Wow.

      Basically I can get a computer that costs twice the going rate with no localisation and its best feature is the terminal, the one thing mac fanboys winge most about when you mention Linux...

    19. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by daBass · · Score: 1, Interesting

      if it is slow copying files, you are probably running Vista disguised as Mac OS 8!

      (I know, they really do look very similar)

    20. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by cjdkoh · · Score: 1

      Well, because it's got the word Apple on it. Insane brand loyalty, like my deranged unwillingness to use an NVidea graphics card despite not having any bad experiences with them.

    21. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Philipek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Indeed, the lowest form of wit, well done to you sir. Bet you're very proud of yourself. And maybe you consider this an inappropriate place for said rant, but it is valid to me. I am not going to get a piece of kit, be it iPhone, iMac, iWhatever if it doesn't come in my local language. So if I need a mac to get the most out of iTunes, and I can't get a mac in my local tongue, then I am not going to get a mac am I? In which case the benefit of the iPhone (iTunes) is negated, thus making it an overpriced paperweight as far as I am concerned. Which was the point I so miserably failed to make earlier... but that's what typing on a hangover does. And please don't go on about this being an American product - if Apple didn't want to flog Poles computers they wouldn't have a Polish website (iTunes redirects to the UK before you ask) and Apple stores in Warsaw, would they?

    22. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      if Apple didn't want to flog Poles computers they wouldn't have a Polish website (iTunes redirects to the UK before you ask) and Apple stores in Warsaw, would they?

      Apple, Inc. doesn't have any stores in Poland. Only US, Canada, UK, and Japan. Whatever shop you were in wasn't an Apple store.

    23. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by statusbar · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is just a phone... But it is a hell of a lot better than any of the phones I have used. I hate my Sony-Ericsson phone and I hate my RAZR. The user interfaces are all backwards. I can list 15 major usability problems with both phones. None of the other phones that I've looked at are much better. The iPhone will win out just because it doesn't suck as much as everything else.

      --jeffk++

      --
      ipv6 is my vpn
    24. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by G-funk · · Score: 1

      How is that a good deal? You get to pay full price for the phone, and you get the joys of a 2 year contract? It's fucking obscene! I'd sure as hell not have bought my mac if I'd had to sign up for 2 years of "Brand X" broadband to get it.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    25. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this just about says it all:

      http://www.acs.appstate.edu/~cg47742/comics/partic ulates/index.php?i=3 (www.particulatecomics.com)

    26. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What are you, retarded? iTunes runs on Windows too you know, you don't need a Mac to use an iPod or iPhone!

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    27. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Bugmage · · Score: 1

      apple breeds ignorance for technology, and they make a killing off of it How can you trust a company like that, my friend upgraded his computer with more ram and a bigger hd off newegg, sent it in to get a piece of plastic on the handrest replaced because it was dirty, and they tried to bill him for a new hd and ram stick because it wasn't apple certified even though it was completely unrelated, what scammers, I feel sorry for the people who talk up their ass and have brand loyalty to apple MacOS is ok,Ill give you that, go go linux go, but please buy a normal computer and install MacOS on it instead of wasting your money -With my pda I can fit close to 3000 songs on a 4 gig sd card using ogg vorbis compression and it sounds great(fkmP3s), even on my car stereo -play full movie files without conversion, gaming on the go, gps, the only thing it doesn't do is cell, but it does skype -I use a cheap gophone for cell crap -and also I bought a small 4gig(real) mp3 player off ebay that also plays ogg vobis movies(color screen) ebooks and radio and cost $65, again way better than low end apple mp3 player and compare the price of a macbook to the hardware of a evenly priced normal laptop and you can get wayy better hware for the same price, and then just install macOS on it Good job for apple getting the stupid people rounded together under one cause, but they shouldn't rip them off

    28. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by monomania · · Score: 1

      No, not "just..". Even if it wasn't a phone, it would be a good product. A widescreen Video iPod. An internet device with full browser (in the palm of my hand) that can work even when you're not in WiFi-land. A text message applicance. And as for phone (if you want to add that in) it's a phone with a better addresbook/voicemail interface than anything out there. For me, the fact I can take calls on it is just a bonus.

    29. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by GanjaManja · · Score: 1

      This is like being pissed that some people like a souped up Honda over a BMW. Who gives a crap? It's a bloody computer, and that's all. use what you like and leave everyone else alone.

      I loved the way windoze people, back in highschool, would take it upon themsleves to rag on someone who used + liked Macs, as soon as the word slipped that you used one. It really boggled me that, without any provocation of my own, someone would start telling me all about why one computer is better... I'm sorry, I don't care what type of computer you use. Maybe those were just the geeks in my highschool, but I found that really stupid.

      since you asked for reasons:
      Personally, I like a computer on which you can actually fix the problems that occur. I know too many computer folk that simply got used to reformatting AND reinstalling an entire computer system/accompanying software. I think that's a crappy big problem if that's considered "fixing". I've never done that, not even back with Mac's system 7.0. And I didn't have to decode any cryptic hex crap from hidden "registry's". It just makes sense. That' really my only reason.
      I know how to use both, and have done similar stuff with both, and find that one is much more sensical and intuitive.

    30. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poor new slashdoters have a hard time adjusting to all cliche sarcastic comments we have running here!

      Don't mod him down to oblivion, give him a chance, in a few months time, he will be writing 1....2....3...., in soveit russia, etc. jokes here.

    31. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1

      I mean, it's a phone for God's sake, not a cure for cancer.

      Happily for the credit card companies, it won't cure ennui, either.

    32. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      can you have mercy and only post eight or ten fan boy raves about how amazingly wonderful their shiny new phones are
      And at the same, dear editors, please post only eight or ten anti-Apple zealots' raves about how the iPhone "too expensive", "breaks easily" (substitute with "smudges and/or scratches easily") and "doesn't offer 3G". And make sure you include another 50 posts by people who own the Shintuko Zenotron 50xx3sr4g phone and have been doing these things for 10 years already! oh nevermind, that was the first 50 posts. My bad.
    33. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Eh, the first generation iPods were pretty lame. iTunes was still in its infancy and the thing was way overpriced for what it did. Granted, the prices stay pretty high over time, but the feature set improved and more importantly, iTunes got a lot of work. Those other music players mentioned back in the day did have much better hardware, but none of them realized that the hardware was only half of the equation and as a result their crappy music management systems got p0wned by Apple.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    34. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by rueger · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... responding to myself here.

      How is that so many people can speak with so much authority about the features and ease of use of a product that hasn't been released, and which I'm sure they have only experienced in three count 'em three advertisements?

    35. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by cowscows · · Score: 1

      I think it's just because AT&T knows that they're going to have lines halfway around the block full of people dying to get their hands on this thing on release day. So why not bundle in a two year deal with it and make some extra money? And people are used to phones requiring a two year deal anyways, so it won't really get questioned much.

      Half a year from now, if demand has started to subside some, then they'll want to make it a better deal to get more people to buy it. Apple loves high-margin products, and as such probably has in the contract with AT&T that they can't sell the phone cheaper and subsidize it with a plan. A customer with no long term commitment is still better than no customer at all, so the plan requirements will hopefully go away.

      And then somewhere down the line, at least a year or so from now, Apple will release an upgraded version, and maybe even a cheaper "nano" version. Who knows how the pricing will work then.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    36. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      I always love to see the congitive dissonance here when people bash TiVo for wanting to keep their platform closed, but defend Apple to the death when they do the same thing. (No doubt the mental gymnastics and word smithing used to defend this is...entertaining.) You're making a bad assumption. The assumption you are making is that all Slashdotters are one person. Slashdot is large. Unlike Walt Whitman, Slashdot actually contains multitudes. You are also one of Slashdot's many members, expressing one opinion out of many. You think you're fighting some kind of huge crusade against Slashdot when in reality you are part of the very system you attack. You're pretty much the Slashdot equivalent of somebody who thinks that Hot Topic is rebellious.
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    37. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by dailyrev · · Score: 1

      I'm sitting with the guy with the 3 furry tails on this one, and I'd be considered a mac fanboy by most. The MacBook is a kickass laptop, Tiger's the best OS on the planet, Nike is the greatest slave labor machine on earth, the 13-month life span of the iPod is exactly measured to the ancient Mayan number representing supreme enlightenment; the tinny noise you hear coming out of iPod-heads on the subway is just like the smell of napalm in the morning; and I can't wait for that stock-dating spreadsheet app to come out with Leopard.

    38. Re:Editorial Request (Please Read on June 28th) by drifterusa · · Score: 1

      If you're interested in a cure for cancer, I wouldn't waste my time here.

  2. June 29? by atezun · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    They're really pushing that June release date aren't they?

    1. Re:June 29? by Tokerat · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      They waited because they know it's my birthday, and since I have been trolling /. and praising them over 8 years now, they thought the next revolution in communications technology of a lifetime forever would make me a nice present.

      ;-)

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    2. Re:June 29? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes June 29 is clearly in another month other than June. Outrageous I say!

      No outrageous is missing your public operating system deadline by more than 2 years.

    3. Re:June 29? by underwhelm · · Score: 1

      Are you afraid congress might change June to have only 28 days?

      --

      I don't need large brains to have a good time.

    4. Re:June 29? by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      I notice Apple has again delayed Leopard.

      But that couldn't be construed as "missing a deadline", could it? That might paint Apple in a negative light. Can't be having that. They didn't miss their deadline, they're "ensuring the user experience is optimal".

      Or some such deranged Apple-rose-colored-glasses bullshit.

    5. Re:June 29? by fdobbie · · Score: 1

      Again delayed Leopard? As far as I can tell, there has only been one delay to Leopard, from June to October.

    6. Re:June 29? by Teese · · Score: 1
      Depends on your definition of delayed, I guess:
      From Wikipedia (which is accurate from my recollection of events):

      Mac OS X v10.5 has been the subject of multiple delays. When first discussed in June 2005, Apple CEO Steve Jobs had stated that Apple intends to release Leopard at the end of 2006 or early 2007.[3] A year later, this was revised to "Spring 2007", and on April 12, 2007, Apple issued a statement that its release would be delayed until October 2007 because of the development of the iPhone.[4]

      If your definition of early 2007 includes Spring 2007, which it might, then it has not been delayed twice. And since they were intentionally vague on the first release date, you could give them the benefit of the doubt I suppose.

      It's at least debatable, not cut and dried.

      --
      "I'm a Genius!"*


      *Not an actual Genius
    7. Re:June 29? by nytes · · Score: 1

      They pushed it alright.

      IIRC, Jobs originally said it would be available in Spring of 2007, but June 29th is no longer Spring. So they've missed their original date by 8 or 9 (too lazy to look up the actual date of the solstice) days.

      --
      -- I have monkeys in my pants.
  3. Linux by Brando_Calrisean · · Score: 3, Funny

    Okay... but does it run Linux?

    --
    Don't call me a cowboy, and don't tell me to slow down!
    1. Re:Linux by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      What... The Mac console command line isn't good enough for you?

    2. Re:Linux by Wahlau.NET · · Score: 1

      I would prefer runing boot camp

      --
      8dee http://www.wahlau.net
    3. Re:Linux by mmontour · · Score: 1

      Okay... but does it run Linux? No, but this one does.
    4. Re:Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it runs BSD, it goes by the name of OS X

    5. Re:Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but I bet it will on June 30.

    6. Re:Linux by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Uh...I'd be willing to bet that you will not find a terminal app on an iPhone.

    7. Re:Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well not quite... it raids the BSD user-scape, but that is about it. Meaning, all it has from the BSD's that is similar is commands and tools. Everything else, Apple 'aquired' elsewhere or made themselves.

    8. Re:Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but it does run UNIX.

  4. Belive me by WillRobinson · · Score: 1

    They know how to deliver, the pipeline to the stores will be full.

    1. Re:Belive me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like the internet tubes...

  5. links by larry+bagina · · Score: 5, Informative
    the embedded video links kept dying on me a few seconds into the ads. Here are direct links to the videos:

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    1. Re:links by notanatheist · · Score: 1

      Now the only trouble is "can anybody get the audio on linux?" I have the same issues with the Transformers HD clips. Mplayer, Xine, and VLC only give me video. And parent FTW!! Thanks for the direct links.

    2. Re:links by Rufus211 · · Score: 1
      Do you have libfaad installed? All of the above have worked fine for years on apple stuff.

      Playing http://movies.apple.com/movies/us/apple/iphone/cal amari/apple-iphone-calamari_848x496.mov.
      ...
      ISO : File Type Major Brand: Original QuickTime
      Quicktime/MOV file format detected.
      ...
      ===
      Opening audio decoder: [faad] AAC (MPEG2/4 Advanced Audio Coding)
      AUDIO: 44100 Hz, 2 ch, s16le, 160.0 kbit/11.34% (ratio: 20000->176400)
      Selected audio codec: [faad] afm: faad (FAAD AAC (MPEG-2/MPEG-4 Audio) decoder)
      ===
      AO: [alsa] 48000Hz 2ch s16le (2 bytes per sample)
    3. Re:links by PWill · · Score: 0

      The video keep dying because Apple has a script that checks for QuickTime in your browser plugins list. If it is not there, it loads a div called "noqt" over the video. This div includes a link to "Download QT for free!" Yeah, we would if you would make a Linux version, morons.

      --
      A black cat crossing your path signifies that the animal is going somewhere.
    4. Re:links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ubuntu, with Easy Ubuntu. Works flawlessly.

      (Don't know if Automatix would work as well with a .mov file, but Easy Ubuntu, no problem).

    5. Re:links by minus_273 · · Score: 0

      There are people here asking what the big deal about OSX is. This thread is a good example of why i switched from linux to a mac

      --
      The war with islam is a war on the beast
      The war on terror is a war for peace
    6. Re:links by dwater · · Score: 1

      I'm using FF on XP and all I get is the audio :|

      --
      Max.
    7. Re:links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you sir. Wasn't payting attention to 'faad' AAC since I thought it was covered by 'faac'.

    8. Re:links by tonicblue · · Score: 1

      I know I'm gonna get flamed for this but, "whose innovative" issues and "so what" arguments aside, it does look shit hot and I know many people who would buy it and many people who could benefit from it. I can do quite a bit of that on my XDA but it doesn't look half as cool and isn't half as smooth and quick as that.

      'tis a tad expensive though.

      --
      $ cat /home/tonic/sig
      cat: /home/tonic/sig: No such file or directory
    9. Re:links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe you had adblock turned on in firefox, disable it and refresh, that did the trick for me.

  6. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I couldn't care less about the iPhone. It's too little too late and the Helio Ocean owns it anyways.

  7. Stupid commercials by acoustix · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Has anyone seen the iPhone commercial where someone is looking for a seafood restaurant, does a search, clicks on the restaurant on the map, sees the info, and clicks the phone number to call the restaurant? How is that innovative? I've been able to do that on my blackberry for over 3 years now.

    Nick

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    1. Re:Stupid commercials by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      How is that innovative? I've been able to do that on my blackberry for over 3 years now.

      But but... it's not Apple!

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    2. Re:Stupid commercials by Tickletaint · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's innovative because the Blackberry is a fucking pain to use.

      --
      Make Slashdot readable! See journal.
    3. Re:Stupid commercials by Basehart · · Score: 1

      Who's saying it's innovative?

    4. Re:Stupid commercials by cmoney · · Score: 4, Informative

      Wait you've been able to watch Pirates of the Caribbean, got the feeling to eat calamari, look up seafood in Google maps and then make a call to the restaurant? All on your Blackberry, 3 years ago?

      I'm not saying it's a new innovation but leaving out select details kinda kills your argument.

    5. Re:Stupid commercials by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1, Redundant

      What movie were you watching on your Blackberry that got you in the mood for seafood?

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    6. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you watch movies on your blackberry? Do the movies adjust to widescreen format when you rotate your blackberry?

    7. Re:Stupid commercials by lachesis-jp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But with the iPhone your mom can too... That's what makes it different.

    8. Re:Stupid commercials by Mr2001 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, the only new part of that is being able to watch a DRM'd copy of Pirates of Caribbean that you paid $10 to download. Lots of phones have been able to play 3GP movies for a while now, as well as accessing the web for local searches and phone call links (albeit without Google Maps's ajaxy goodness).

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    9. Re:Stupid commercials by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      "Wait you've been able to watch Pirates of the Caribbean, got the feeling to eat calamari, look up seafood in Google maps and then make a call to the restaurant? All on your Blackberry, 3 years ago?"

      How long have Treos been available?

      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    10. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what way?

    11. Re:Stupid commercials by Coolnat2004 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the iPhone automatically tells Google Maps where your current location (via GPS) is, and finds things nearest there?

    12. Re:Stupid commercials by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      Jobs is quick to point out, "But the iPod's got a new hat."

      --
      What?
    13. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't white!

    14. Re:Stupid commercials by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      Sorry, no GPS in the iPhone.

      Love that "seafood" keyboard demo. That's as easy as they could make it look?

    15. Re:Stupid commercials by beathyate · · Score: 2, Funny

      OK, that's just impossible man. Dead Man's Chest came out last year. So you couldn't have done that 3 years ago.

      *ducks*

    16. Re:Stupid commercials by beathyate · · Score: 1

      Yeah but... who gets the feeling to eat calamari after watching Pirates of the Caribean anyways...?

    17. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pirates of the Caribbean, calamari, and google maps! More Apple inovations!

    18. Re:Stupid commercials by nine-times · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, the only new part of that is being able to watch a DRM'd copy of Pirates of Caribbean that you paid $10 to download

      Are you trying to make this sound bad? I mean, I know that writing the word "DRM" around here is like dropping chum in water filled with sharks-- people go crazy-- but hell, that sounds pretty convenient to me.

      Of course, the iPhone will be able to play non-DRMed movies, so if you wanted you could go to Best Buy, spend $25 on Pirates of the Caribbean, use Handbrake to rip it as mp4, and put that on your iPhone. I mean, if you want, you have that option. Still, it sounds mighty convenient to be able to, if you like, buy Pirates for $10 and copy it to your iPhone, the whole process taking a little longer than however long you can download it over your internet connection, and being ready to go without leaving your house.

      Yeah, yeah, I get it, "...but DRM is bad and $10 is too expensive!" Well you don't HAVE TO buy it from Apple, but you have that option, and I don't see anyone else giving such an elegant solution. I'll tell you, if you'd told me a couple years ago that in 2007 I'd be able to buy movies online, download them, and copy it to a hybrid iPod/phone/PDA-- showing me how easy the whole process is, how small and thin the iPhone would be-- I'm not sure I'd have believed you. I'd say, "Yeah, sure, and I'll probably have a flying car too!"

      In summary: Where's my flying car?!

    19. Re:Stupid commercials by phulegart · · Score: 1

      here is a link claiming to be the world's first Treo 650 pictures.

      http://gizmodo.com/archives/worlds-first-treo-650- pictures-020352.php

      From aug 26th, 2004

      --
      "I love deadlines. I love the whooshing sound they make as they fly by." -D. Adams
    20. Re:Stupid commercials by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      In certain situations/locations, triangulation from Cell bases can be more effective than GPS in determining your location. Hell, people are doing it with wifi. Maybe the iPhone will have an accelerometer, so you set the phone from a known location and it keeps track of itself after that (I doubt this, but it's an interesting idea).

      GPS is not the only geo location technology out there.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    21. Re:Stupid commercials by Gothic_Walrus · · Score: 2, Funny

      if you wanted you could go to Best Buy, spend $25 on Pirates of the Caribbean...

      Oh please. Unless you're getting the Blu-Ray version (completely unnecessary if you're downsampling to iPod quality), you're almost guaranteed to find it for fifteen bucks or less at one of the chain stores, possibly quite a bit less if you buy it on sale.

      So...um, yeah. I don't know what the point of pointing that out was, but take that! >_>

      --
      Goo goo g'joob.
    22. Re:Stupid commercials by localman · · Score: 1

      It may not be innovative, but it's the first time I've seen anything like that demoed. Sounds like somebody at Blackberry has been doing a pretty poor job of marketing their product :/

    23. Re:Stupid commercials by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Of course, the iPhone will be able to play non-DRMed movies, so if you wanted you could go to Best Buy, spend $25 on Pirates of the Caribbean, use Handbrake to rip it as mp4, and put that on your iPhone. I can do that right now. I can go to Best Buy and buy a DVD--which, in case you haven't checked lately, only costs a couple bucks more than the iTunes version and includes bonus features Apple won't give you--and then use DVDFab to put it on my phone.

      But here's the kicker: my phone is smaller and thinner than the iPhone, it has 3G data connectivity, it has a QWERTY keyboard with buttons I can actually feel, it has voice dictation in case I don't feel like typing, it has GPS for navigation, it can download purchased songs over the air instead of syncing with a PC, and it still only cost me about one-tenth of the iPhone's price tag.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    24. Re:Stupid commercials by MaXMC · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What phone do you have?

      I really want to know.

    25. Re:Stupid commercials by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Yeah yeah, woo whoo. Where can you buy a legal copy online that you can download to your phone?

      I'm not denying that your device can have it's advantages, but if you're going to pretend that there's nothing neat or cool or better than the iPhone then you're being biased.

    26. Re:Stupid commercials by Stevecrox · · Score: 1

      Umm Microsoft PPC's could do that three years ago, ok I don't think Google Maps was around then but I could google a resturant find its location and make a phone call to it with a few clicks of a pen, my phone from three years ago also had windows media player which (if you had a big enough memory card) can play video files that you make, if you owned the original priates of the carribean DVD and it was legal to rip it to xvid/divx where you are, you could conceivably watch pirates of the caribbean (the second wasn't out three years ok) get hungry so open internet explorer (and connect through GPRS, or Wifi if it were availiable and you had a WiFi phone/card) choose local listings on the google page enter "calamari restaurant" and your location in the second box then magically a series of sites will appear with phone numbers I believe the local listing options has been on google for 3 years.

      Right now I have a O2 XDA Mini S, I happen to have "Snatch" on the 2GB memory card while watching this I'm connected to my homes wifi network. While watching the film I have a sudden need for Calamari so without using the pen I've just done the above google returned a resturant called "The Oyster Shack" about 1 mile from my current position with the phone number on the screen, pressing the down arrow selects the number clicking the central button opens up a screen with "Verify the nubmer is correct" with the nubmer and the options to "call" or "menu" (which includes add to contacts, send a text message and cancel.) My current phone was released about a year ago the phone mentioned above (which required a pen to do the same thing) is a Orange m500 (the Orange m1000 could also do this and is about 4 years old.)

      I pretty certain that any Windows Mobile 2002 (and newer) PPC has the capability to do the above as long as a web service's like google maps or just Google's local listings feature have been able to do what was described. Windows Mobile 5 devices have a nice UI which can be used with one hand without the need for a pen (although unless you have my HTC model with a built in keyboard you will need a pen to enter text.)

    27. Re:Stupid commercials by jrockway · · Score: 1

      > Maybe the iPhone will have an accelerometer, so you set the phone from a known location and it keeps track of itself after that.

      You're thinking of the wiiPhone.

      --
      My other car is first.
    28. Re:Stupid commercials by danimrich · · Score: 1

      Movies on Cellphones are not that new. Back in 2005 I remember watching an episode of The Black Adder on my Nokia 6230i. The phone even came with software that converted mpeg files to a mobile-friendly format and the picture quality was ok.

      --
      where's all that Karma?
    29. Re:Stupid commercials by x102output · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As always Apple proves they are the masters of interface. I absolutely LOVE my blackberry pearl. It can do all those things shown in that video. I use google maps all the time to locate places and call them. I'm hooked on the whole blackberry bandwagon. What the iPhone does in functionality, is absolutely nothing new at all. Us blackberry and nokia owners know this. But apple has taken all these ideas and made the best interface for it. As easy as my blackberry is to use, it still perplexes anyone who picks it up off the table. my only gripe with the iPhone will be lack of tactile feedback for dialing a phone number.....but with all phones these days, dialing phone numbers is the function least paid attention too. you only need to dial a number once, and from then on you just click on it or a name representing it. phone number dialing will become what "installing a new program" is like to computer users. Just like the iPod, apple is doing what they have always done best: interface. While the nerds cry about restrictive lock-in, lack of things to tinker with, etc, etc.....apple's only business is interface. They are a company that excels at interfacing humans with technology. and it amazes me that they seem to be of the very few electronic companies that 'get it'. example: the touch-sensitive click wheel and solid case housing is WHAT made the ipod. nothing more. While some of us prefer the GUI's of Windows and the many from Linux, and even for us command-line junkies.....you will see hand held electronics become even more interface driven then the desktop market. Apple may be able to steal a couple consumers with a fancy pretty GUI on the desktop field, but in hand held electronics people care more about interface then any other technology....and it may not exactly be a conscious thing either. the ratio of slick interface to feature set will ALWAYS be high. We can even joke that this is true with most people's preference to sexual partners. this is why apple has such a "religion" hold over people. People appreciate that apple builds products that try to understand you more then how well they can answer your request. Zip ahead into the future when computers will be dancing around the line of "human". who you think is gonna be the "hip" thing to like and the "square". I'm guessing that the most complex part of the iPhone (the electronic guts inside of it!) was probably the last thing that was being designed. It seems to me that apple started with the outside and brain stormed human INPUT. You are going to be holding this in your pocket everyday, so it makes sense that most people want a companion then just a tool.

    30. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah yeah, woo whoo. Where can you buy a legal copy online that you can download to your phone?

      Right here.
    31. Re:Stupid commercials by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Show me your $59 phone please. Otherwise shut up and leave.

    32. Re:Stupid commercials by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Depends on the movie. Usually when I go to Best Buy, new releases are right around $20. Look at their website, and you'll see a lot of movies saying something like:

      List Price: $29.95
      Our Price: $19.99

      Old movies, yeah, you might be able to get them for $5-$10. But at this moment, Best Buy is selling a copy of "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" (the movie in question) with a list price of $34.99 with Best Buy's price of $26.99.

    33. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not that you are able to do it, but that you are able to do it easily and intuitively, with a graphically rich display.

      Like many things Apple, the functions it performs aren't groundbreaking but the way you do them is. are. whatever.

    34. Re:Stupid commercials by dloose · · Score: 1

      Do you want a pat on the back? Ok, here ya go: Nice fucking job, dude! Way to buy that cell phone! You totally stuck it to the man! There. Now will you shut up?

    35. Re:Stupid commercials by gnasher719 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      '' I've been able to do that on my blackberry for over 3 years now. ''

      Apple builds stuff for people who appreciate the tiny difference between "I've been able to do that for over 3 years now" and "I've been doing this for over 3 years now".

    36. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You had me going up until I read your "one-tenth" argument. At which point I just laughed at you for trying too hard.

    37. Re:Stupid commercials by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      It's a Samsung SCH-U740. I did have to sign up for a 2-year contract to get that price... but as I understand it, the iPhone price we've all seen also requires a 2-year contract.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    38. Re:Stupid commercials by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Here you go. I paid $50 for it, but now that I think about it, that price included an extra discount you can't get as a new customer - but $129 is still a lot cheaper than the iPhone.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    39. Re:Stupid commercials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aww, is the fanboy sad because someone deflated his iPhone stiffy?

    40. Re:Stupid commercials by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      You're right, I can't download a legal copy of the movie online and transfer it to my phone (for which I blame the DRM, not the phone).

      I can, however, drive to Best Buy and buy the PotC: Dead Man's Chest DVD for $14.99, exactly the same price that Apple charges for the downloadable version. I'll get slightly better video quality, as well as special features, and I could be there and back in half an hour... which is just about as long as it'd take to download the movie at 4-5 Mbps.

      I'm not denying that the iPhone is slick and polished, but it's not revolutionary, and most of its features can be found elsewhere for a lower price. What sets it apart are a big screen, visual voice mail, a full-featured browser, and support for Apple's DRM instead of Microsoft's. Those are nice, but I don't think they're worth an extra $500, especially when you consider the features it doesn't have that cheaper phones do.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    41. Re:Stupid commercials by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Wow, looks like we have the first iPhone Killer...or maybe not.

  8. Cure for Cancer by Nymz · · Score: 0

    I mean, it's a phone for God's sake, not a cure for cancer.
    Are you sure? When Jobs was diagnoised with pancreatic cancer, he was told he had less than 6 months to live. Also, he's never over-hyped a product before.
    1. Re:Cure for Cancer by pasamio · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Jobs has never over hyped a product just like Gates has never over hyped a product. Remember those four pillars of Longhorn? Turns out that the Vista house only needed one pillar to stay up...both are sales people. Sales people hype. They can't do much else so let them hype.

      --
      I always wondered where this setting was...
  9. Wow!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here in Brazil the fanboys are crazy. They cant buy one.

  10. Ahead of schedule by one day! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    12:25 p.m.: Jobs says Apple is on track to ship iPhone in late June as planned.
    Walt: Like the last day of June?
    Jobs: (Laughs) Yeah, probably.

  11. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by NetJunkie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm not happy with my cellphone. I have a Treo 700w and I'm tired of it. I'm tired of resetting it at least once per day. I'm tired of a browser that won't actually show a properly rendered page. I'll be glad to get a cell phone with a well designed interface.

  12. I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wild by drsmithy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The two potentially big problems with it I see are:

    1. Lack of tactile feedback in the UI. I.e. you have to look at it and concentrate on the UI to use it.
    2. The fragility of the touch screen.

  13. They Don't want My Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently, they do not want my money.

    It is relatively easy to View Source, and cut and paste the URL to see the ads, but I have no idea why a company would want to make the potential customer do that.

    Here's the URL's for those that may want to purchase an iPhone despite Apple Marketing's attempts to prevent it:

    http://movies.apple.com/movies/us/apple/iphone/how _to/apple-iphone-how_to_848x496.mov
    http://movies.apple.com/movies/us/apple/iphone/cal amari/apple-iphone-calamari_640x496.mov
    http://movies.apple.com/movies/us/apple/iphone/nev er_been/apple-iphone-never_been_480x376.mov

    Sorry they are not all the same res, but I bet you can figure out how to get whatever resolution you want.

    1. Re:They Don't want My Money by Tickletaint · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the assumption is that if your browser, in the year 2007, is too broken to view embedded object tags, you probably don't have the money to spend.

      And if you're a dirty GNU/FSF type, Apple certainly doesn't want its stuff to be seen in public with you. Guilt by association and all that.

      --
      Make Slashdot readable! See journal.
    2. Re:They Don't want My Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their ad got confused on Safari... The mac browser used by more apple fan boys than any other.

  14. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by catwh0re · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Actually the switcher campaign were real people.. unlike this switcher campaign.

    As one /.'er said about the Microsoft Surface "if only it fitted in my shirt pocket.."

    I think you're being naive to think that it's hype alone which is fuelling this product launch. There is an actual demand for this kind of tech. Even Microsoft who gets hammered constantly on here, received huge praise for embracing touch interfaces. People want these devices, if you don't that's fine.. but you're going to be considered ignorant for thinking this is redundant technology. I for one have a specific hate for mobile phones today, they come across as utterly clueless to what is ease of use. I have no problem sitting there to learn their silly interfaces, I do have a problem for why they are evidently programmed lazily, excessively complicated to do simple actions, sluggish and with a status quo attitude. There has been minimal advancement in the mobile phone field. Even giant like nokia and sony just rehash their exact same interface across mobile phones. Crude evolutions from their decade old black and white devices. We have the tech now, it's about time a big player started making it widely available. (Unlike the LG Prada phone which, despite having a touch screen, seems to think that finger tips are 3px wide.)

  15. Traditional? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From TFA:

    However, there is an odd shot in the newly released "How- To" iPhone ad, where the screen goes from the traditional 11 icon view, to a new 12 icon view. (See below).

    It's a pet peeve of mine that people use the word "traditional" for things which were invented very very recently. Traditional things are generational things, handed down from one generation to another. You can't make it artificially, and you can't make it quickly.

    Reminds me of this brand new Irish Pub that just opened up down the road from me. As I am an alcoholic, I was right there belly to the bar on the SECOND day they were open. I was amazed to see that all the walls of the brand new bar were full of photographs of customers having good times with their friends, in this friendly neighborhood establishment. Amusingly, for a neighborhood bar, it was surprisingly inaccessible. You couldn't really walk to it, as there were no sidewalks, just rows and rows of parking spots. I wouldn't want to walk there anyway, because the traffic from the Bed Bath and Beyond next door is crazy.

    So, these photos were all over the walls of this pub, showing hundreds of people having an amazingly good time. I was really jealous of those people who showed up at this brand new bar, on the first day it was open. They were the lucky ones, having had the opportunity to both create tradition, and have a good time doing it too. But still, it was a good feeling to see that my neighborhood bar had created in just one day what some pubs in Ireland are apparently still working on after 300 years or more.

    I think that the new Irish bar next door really captured the tradition which my neighborhood strip mall holds in such high regard. I'm not sure that these little icons on a phone can measure up to that.

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    1. Re:Traditional? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a pet peeve of mine when people clearly understand the meaning of words but complain about their usage based on some strange idea that language is static and etymology must necessarily determine current understanding.

    2. Re:Traditional? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      That's the exact same pet peeve that I have. Some people never heard of a dictionary.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    3. Re:Traditional? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dictionaries record post-adoption usage, they don't define language.

      In any case, my Webster's Universal lists "Usual" as the 4th definition for "traditional" so let's just agree that your rant was totally useless and wrong and leave it at that.

    4. Re:Traditional? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Reminds me of this brand new Irish Pub that just opened up down the road from me.

      Oh, you mean the iPub?

    5. Re:Traditional? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      How about we agree that you are a moron? Word mean things, fool.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    6. Re:Traditional? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Words don't have intrinsic meaning, Randroid.

    7. Re:Traditional? by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 3, Funny

      I had to translate that into French, which has a committee that determines what words mean. Unlike whatever language you speak, French changes far more slowly. They informed me that the current specific meaning of the sentence you wrote as "Words don't have intrinsic meaning, Randroid." is rendered into French as this:

      "Profane MuthaFucka, I love to guzzle your cum all day long. I let it drizzle down my chin and use my fingers to push it back into my mouth, savoring its taste which is something between egg yolk and tabasco sauce."

      That's the difficulty of claiming that words don't mean anything, and definitions can be ignored because the language is fluid. You don't seem to realize that the language you are apparently using is SO fluid that as you were typing your sentence, the meanings of the words shifted to something which I find tremendously erotic.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  16. A low # of phones at each store is not the same... by Joe+The+Dragon · · Score: 1

    as other things like the xbox 360 and ps3 as you need to do paper work / sign up for cell phone service and that takes a lot longer then selling other things.
    also that will make selling them on ebay a lot harder. The I-phone may even have a forced data plan.

  17. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Oh shit! You forgot to log out!

  18. Re:Wow. by Hugopig · · Score: 0

    No. Based on what the commercial I saw on TV today, it looks like the sort of thing where if you carry it in your pocket you'll find yourself hearing odd things, accidentally calling up random people in Kazakhstan and causing "White and Nerdy" to play at Volume 25 form your general direction every time you sneeze. And God Forbid you should trip and fall...

  19. I've already got a smart phone by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 0, Troll

    My xv6700 can already play mp3s, browse Google maps, take notes, record videos, etc. And it can do things that the iPhone can't: run custom apps, like Putty, so I can ssh into Linux boxes at work or at home. The iPhone may be better at some of these things. Although Apple-designed user interfaces aren't all that they're cracked up to be, I can easily imagine a UI that beats Windows Mobile on a phone.

    Honestly though, with laptops at $500 nowadays, there isn't much reason for these kinds of devices. The level of hype about the iPhone device is hugely overblown, more than for most Mac products.

    1. Re:I've already got a smart phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your review is basically, "No wireless. Less space than a Nomad. Lame."?

      I think it might be better to wait until it hits the streets before determining how good it is.

    2. Re:I've already got a smart phone by cmoney · · Score: 1

      True about laptop prices, but then I don't wanna have to lug around a 7 pound laptop while traveling through Europe for a few weeks when most of what I need to do can be accomplished on a phone (iPhone or whatever) or similar device (basic email, international sms and phone calls, access my contacts, pictures, internet, music, videos, etc.). (Although if the iPhone can't be unlocked, that'll be a major bill. Just got back from 2 weeks across the Mediterranean and my phone bill came out to $200 for data and phone calls!)

      Plus most people who are gonna buy this don't even know what putty, ssh or even linux is. It does what normal people need it to do, and it makes it easy to access those functions. This is not a device for the linux loving slashdot community. None of my "normal" friends care that they can install Java (or Brew) apps on their phones, they can barely get most of the functions working properly like syncing a contact list to a computer. Why do you think phone stores offer to copy your contacts to your new phone when you upgrade it?

    3. Re:I've already got a smart phone by sribe · · Score: 1

      Honestly though, with laptops at $500 nowadays, there isn't much reason for these kinds of devices.

      1) I'm 100% sure I would never want to ski with a 5lb laptop.

      2) I'm pretty sure I will never be in good enough shape to not mind carrying a 5lb laptop when I'm hiking above 12,000 feet.

      Granted, not everybody lives in a state (CO) where they can take off a day in the middle of the week and do such things, but I can. And the iPhone will just make it a little bit easier... (I sure hope it runs an SSH client. Please, please, please.)

    4. Re:I've already got a smart phone by cvas · · Score: 1

      Why do you people even respond? Seriously.

      Yay for you, you found a phone you like. Let's have a party. All you sound like is someone bitter that they didn't wait long enough and now can't get the new shiny gadget they wanted. And if you aren't bitter, why do you give enough of a crap to post a laundry list of how your phone stacks up? Are you selling vx6700s? Do you have a link so you can get commission?

      And a laptop? Did you ACTUALLY just suggest a LAPTOP as a reason not to have a certain PHONE? Do *I* have to make a laundry list with how utterly STUPID of a comparison that is, or can we just assume you weren't sober at the time? And PLEASE, for the love of GOD, don't respond with some argument about free WiFi, fast startup times if you use hibernate, or any of that shit. When I can carry the laptop without needing a bag or killing my arm, and I can walk around without doing a balancing act of touchpad usage / holding the LAPTOP in one HAND / not running into anything, THEN we can make that comparison.

    5. Re:I've already got a smart phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My xv6700 can already play mp3s, browse Google maps, take notes, record videos, etc.


      The functionality of the iPhone is already there in most other phones, the difference is that it's created by people who know how to design well and have good taste. My mom has no idea how to check SMSes on her phone because you have to press all sorts of weird buttons and view a tiny screen. There's a good chance that she'll be able to do it on an iPhone just because it has a decent UI.

      The same thing is true of OS X: it has mostly the same functionality as any other OS, it's just designed in a way that most things Just Work(tm).

      That's Apple's forte: design and goot taste.
    6. Re:I've already got a smart phone by Henry+V+.009 · · Score: 1

      You are somewhat excitable. Off your meds?

    7. Re:I've already got a smart phone by cvas · · Score: 1

      Being crazy doesn't make me wrong.

  20. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by furball · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I disagree about the fragility of the touch screen. If children's devices (Nintendo DS) can have a touch screen, I don't see why adult devices should be concerned about the fragility of such a thing.

    As for the tactile feedback, I think you're underestimating the UI mechanisms used to use the device. The most pressing activity on a phone is dialing. If you can solve the ease of dialing issue, you can make everything much easier. If you look at the demo of the Google map, you'll see what I'm talking about. It makes dialing easy. No current phone does this right now. None.

    About the only way this could get easier is if they start scanning your voice mail for phone numbers to associate with the visual voice mail .... hold on. I need to go write a business plan.

  21. Pacific Catch! by azav · · Score: 1

    Woo hoo! It is so sweet to see my old favorite local restaurant from SF (Pacific Catch) in one of the commercials!

    Man, I used to eat there twice a day sometimes.

    Mmmmm Hawiian Poke Tuna. Mmmmmmm. Sweet potato fries. Mmmmmmmm.

    MMMm.

    --
    - Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
    1. Re:Pacific Catch! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Mmmmm Hawiian Poke Tuna. Mmmmmmm"

      Keep your perverted sexual practices off SlashDot!

  22. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by MBraynard · · Score: 1

    And the lack of a platform that people can develop for freely. And the inability to swap cards so you can use whatever provider you want.

  23. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by furball · · Score: 1

    I don't think lack of a platform that people can develop for freely ever made a difference. The Motorola RAZR, a completely terrible phone, did not sell amazingly well because consumers looked at it and said, "Wow, this phone is amazing. It presents a platform that people can develop for freely."

    It sold really well because it was marketed well.

  24. Who farted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I did 'cause apple deserves at most that.

  25. You must be new here... by caitsith01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You're a brave poster, sir or madam.

    Never in the history of slashdot has one relatively ordinary product received so much publicity based on so little actual information. Honestly, it was better when this site wrote off the iPod as a doomed device :)

    Meanwhile, here is a guide to pro-Apple moderator psychology to help you cope through the savage moderation clusterf*ck your post will currently be experiencing:

    The Mind of the iMod:

    1. I love Apple blindly

    2. I will flame anyone who criticises Apple

    3. I will flame anyone who criticises anyone who praises Apple

    4. Because of 2 and 3 above, I can legitimately say that any post critical of Apple or Apple fan-boy-ism is "flame bait", as I myself will flame them

    5. Therefore, all posts critical of Apple will be moderated flame bait

    --
    Read Pynchon.
    1. Re:You must be new here... by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Never in the history of slashdot has one relatively ordinary product received so much publicity based on so little actual information. Remember "Ginger"? Nobody even knew what it was and people thought cities would be redesigned around what turned out to be an electric scooter.
      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    2. Re:You must be new here... by macron1 · · Score: 1

      the sound of the whooshes is deafening. (see here)

    3. Re:You must be new here... by His+Shadow · · Score: 1
      I see. So someone slagging all Apple users/supporters as mindless bots is "Insightful", but if I ask idiots to stop spewing their ignorance of a product they have no intention of buying, that's "Flamebait".

      Welcome to Slashdot, I guess.

      --

      Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos

  26. Activation Plan by milamber3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Whoa, wait and minute. I thought that Apple made a big fuss about not allowing the Cell companies to lock users in to long term contracts with subsidized phones and that was why were were going to pay 500+ for the iPhone. The end of the commercial indicated we have to sign a 2 year minimum plan with AT&T. I certainly don't want to pay out the ass for this phone and still get locked into a company.

    1. Re:Activation Plan by fangorious · · Score: 2, Informative

      I thought that Apple made a big fuss about not allowing the Cell companies to lock users in to long term contracts with subsidized phones and that was why were were going to pay 500+ for the iPhone.

      They said it would carry a 2 year contract during the initial announcement at MacWorld in January. They did say no price subsidies, though. The running theory has been the combination of high purchase price and a 2 year contract must mean really cheap plans (like free unlimited data), but I doubt that will happen. I think the purchase price was chosen as a combination of the average prices of smart phones and ipods.

    2. Re:Activation Plan by nine-times · · Score: 1

      I don't remember him saying that. I remember vaguely that he implied, somewhere, that people didn't value their phones because, for all the money paid by customers and by cell carriers (as subsidies), the phones that you ended up with were still total crap.

      He said from the beginning that it was going to pay $500 for the iPhone, and that the price was for a 2 year contract. He just claimed that the phone would be worth it.

  27. Iphone is the next PS3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too expensive and too departed from it's original design. I just don't need a wannabe PDA mini multimedia gadget phone. I need a phone that is comfortable, gets good reception, has great battery life and is built for punishment.

    I have a funny feeling the iPhone won't be able to live up to the majority of those basic goal which most cell phone manufacturers have already met.

    The iPhone will be the gimicky phone of the city, but for actually making calls I can't see how it's even meant for that. Even the commercial bothers to list the phone feature as the last and least impressive looking thing the gadget can do. The interface seems smooth, just not for being used as a phone so much as some type of multimedia pda.

    This just isn't going to work. People want to make calls on their phones and no HAVE to get bluetooh for it to be comfortable. Plus the features in this gadget will never offset it's development time. The cell phone market is too fast paced for the iPhone to be anything but a trend. The money is in selling millions of units and securing a great model phone that can be used all over the globe. Cell phone sales profit margins are small, so unless AT&T actually thinks many people will change their service over just to get an iPhone I don't see how this could really work. Apple just put a lot of time and money into a product that can't even remotely sell as well as an iPod which more or less had no real competition. Apple isn't going to be able to hang in such a fast paced market when they are used to dictating their own pace in the market. That strategy isn't working for the iPod or their iTunes store. They benefiting from being one of the first easy to use hdd mp3 players with mass appeal, but beyond that Apple's marketing genius ends. iPhone is going to do even worse since it has competition already and Apple has no real foothold in the market as they did with the iPod.

    Look's like a cool device, though not really practical for today. I'd rather have something a little more functional and little less flashy. I think as MS has done with surface by just saying hey here is a new inpurt device and API to go along with it, now do what you will with it is a vastly better idea. Apple can't even open the iPhone to third party developers. In the end, who cares about a good product thats controlled by a stupid company. Like hey, thanks Apple for setting the standard, but too bad you couldn't actually profit enough to justify the entire new division cept as yet another way to wedge advertising and media into the consumer from yet another vendor.

    That's it really. The iPhone isn't technology, it's an infrastructure that Apple can provide media with and keep tightly controlled.

    1. Re:Iphone is the next PS3 by Lethyos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Too expensive and too departed from it's original design.

      $500 amortized over 24 months of the contract comes out to just under $21 a month. Considering typical monthly service plan fees, that is not so bad. I started off with a Treo 650 a few years ago for which I paid around $350 ($15 a month). Not so huge a difference.

      Care to share the original design with us?

      I just don't need a wannabe PDA mini multimedia gadget phone

      My advice then would be not to get one.

      I need a phone that is comfortable, gets good reception, has great battery life and is built for punishment.

      Oh, well yes. Assuming, of course, that the iPhone is uncomfortable, gets poor reception, has bad battery life, and is built for gentle handling. But wait, how can you know that assumption is true?

      The iPhone will be the gimicky phone of the city, but for actually making calls I can't see how it's even meant for that.

      I would suspect that, considering the built-in phone and software for managing contacts, making calls, and browsing voice mail, the device is meant for making calls.

      Even the commercial bothers to list the phone feature as the last and least impressive looking thing the gadget can do. The interface seems smooth, just not for being used as a phone so much as some type of multimedia pda.

      Maybe because they want to emphasize that it does more than make calls? Notice how car commercials focus on leather seats, powerful stereos, and sexy design? (Oh, and you can even drive with this!) So what if you could also call it a PDA. That is, very obviously, the whole point and the iPhone is entering the market of smartphones by improving on and building upon features already available in other products.

      This just isn't going to work.

      Okay, you are absolutely right. Apple better close-up shop.

      People want to make calls on their phones and no HAVE to get bluetooh for it to be comfortable.

      Where is your evidence for this? You must be in some position of privilege to have used the iPhone so much ahead the rest of us.

      The cell phone market is too fast paced for the iPhone to be anything but a trend.

      I might agree for the lower-end market where the phones are all but free and considered disposable. For smartphones, changes come much more slowly. My Treo 650 is pushing nearly four years now, yet there is little to distinguish it from cutting-edge models.

      The money is in selling millions of units and securing a great model phone that can be used all over the globe.

      And there is a good chance Apple will do just that: sell millions of units. We have no sales data yet. Can you guess why? And of all the most successful phones in the United States, how many can be used outside globally?

      Cell phone sales profit margins are small, so unless AT&T actually thinks many people will change their service over just to get an iPhone I don't see how this could really work.

      Mobile phones themselves usually have no profit. Most phones are subsidized by the carriers because the huge profit comes in offering over-priced service plans using an existing infrastructure at little to no extra cost.

      Apple just put a lot of time and money into a product that can't even remotely sell as well as an iPod which more or less had no real competition. Apple isn't going to be able to hang in such a fast paced market when they are used to dictating their own pace in the market. That strategy isn't working for the iPod or their iTunes store.

      Are you crazy or am

      --
      Why bother.
    2. Re:Iphone is the next PS3 by tknd · · Score: 1

      $500 amortized over 24 months of the contract comes out to just under $21 a month. Considering typical monthly service plan fees, that is not so bad. I started off with a Treo 650 a few years ago for which I paid around $350 ($15 a month). Not so huge a difference.

      You must be affluent or have a really bad sense of math/economics. With your argument you could probably convince yourself that anything amortized enough is cheap. Example: let's say the iphone2 costs $1000, well amortized across 4 years that's only $21 a month, that's not so bad. But Apple/Cingular/Att aren't going to give you a free no-interest loan for that sum of money, either you pay it up front or you will get charged some kind of interest (your total monthly payments will be higher than the upfront cost). If every loan could be amortized at zero interest, people would just put everything on loan and invest their money elsewhere.

      I paid zero dollars for my phone along with my contract. With the iphone they want you to pay $499 along with a contract. My phone meets 100% of my requirements for the device (I need to make calls), everything else is extra. My phone can't play mp3s, movies, or lookup google maps, but that's ok, because I don't need that. Maybe you do, but for many other people, they only buy a phone to make calls.

    3. Re:Iphone is the next PS3 by cthellis · · Score: 1

      Actually, they can easily get away with charging you no interest. Apple knows you're much more likely to purchase media from them and purchase a new iPhone later when the time comes, and at&t will have you locked in a contract for years, and much more likely to STAY with them if you love the iPhone, etc; not to mention the possibility of pulling you from another carrier simply BECAUSE of the iPhone, which is a rather amazing revenue swing for them. Any barriers if entry they lower will make for that many future advantages. At&t has already shown some interest in changing "how things are done" with the iPhone, so they may not be averse to experimenting with a few more. (The situation may change somewhat after they lose exclusivity, tho.)

      Also, can people PLEASE stop using "I don't care about these features on my phone?" rationales? Obviously the iPhone is not aimed at you. But to people who are not averse to the idea, paying $499 along with a contract is less objectionable when they are also not going to have to pay $200-250 for an iPod on the side, get real Wi-Fi connectivity, and excellent, easy-to-use, full features on the side.

      The iPhone certainly has points to prove, and--yes--it still has a price hurdle in the beginning (the same price point the RAZR started at, amusingly. It seems to have done well by itself.) but I wish people comparing prices would actually consider all the prices they SHOULD be. (And heck, we don't even HAVE all of them to compare yet.)

  28. iDISAGREE by ajanp · · Score: 3, Funny
    Because now you can do an iSEARCH, perform an iCLICK on the iMAP, get the iNAME of the iPLACE you want to get your iFOOD, use your iPHONE to make an iCALL to the iCAB to get your iMEAL and then watch an iFLICK on your way back to your iHOME (and your iWIFE if you're lonely).


    Clearly you aren't appreciating the vast amount of innovation that went into this device.

    --
    File Deletion is Murder.
    1. Re:iDISAGREE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you aren't appreciating the vast amount of innovation that went into this device.

      That would be iNNOVATION, btw.

    2. Re:iDISAGREE by GoatMonkey2112 · · Score: 1

      I'm hoping that the iWife has a setting that prevents her from becoming an iBitch when I get home late after doing that iStuff, forcing me to later visit an iStripper and drink some iBeer.

    3. Re:iDISAGREE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just curious to see what sort of interface improvements Apple can make with the iFuck.

  29. functionality vs design by gonerill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My xv6700 can already play mp3s, browse Google maps, take notes, record videos, etc

    Sure. But this is going to be just like the iPod and the "No wireless. Less space than a Nomad. Lame." response. You can point to devices that functionally do most of the things that the iPhone will do, or maybe even more things (like run Putty and all that). What you won't find is a device that triangulates so well between features people want, high quality user-experience, and excellent industrial design.

    1. Re:functionality vs design by Bamafan77 · · Score: 1

      What you won't find is a device that triangulates so well between features people want, high quality user-experience, and excellent industrial design.
      Dear gonerill,

      Your check is in the mail. Well done!

      Sincerely,

      Apple Marketing Department

    2. Re:functionality vs design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your check is in the mail. Well done!

      Sincerely,

      Apple Marketing Department

      Yea no kidding, right? I can't believe Apple fanbois even type this drivel, that literally sounds like it came from a marketing department...and he's some moron just sitting at home reading slashdot and not even getting paid for promoting them with marketing-speak. Do Apple products come laced with crack, or what?

      I don't know what is sadder--that he typed it, or that it got modded to (Score:4, Insightful)
    3. Re:functionality vs design by LKM · · Score: 1

      How old are you, and why are you not in school?

    4. Re:functionality vs design by dintech · · Score: 1

      How can you know this yet? Do you own one?

    5. Re:functionality vs design by rudlavibizon · · Score: 1

      Dear Anonymous Coward, Your check is in the mail. Well done! Sincerely, Apple Marketing Department

  30. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by ubernostrum · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Lack of tactile feedback in the UI. I.e. you have to look at it and concentrate on the UI to use it.

    I've been thinking about this, and I really can't see anything to be concerned about. Several things come to mind:

    • Does the mouse on your computer provide tactile feedback when you move the cursor over a button? Trackpads or pointers on laptops? Do any other touchscreens (e.g., in grocery store checkout lines) do so? Do any PDAs with touchscreens provide tactile feedback? I can't think of many, if any, that do, and that doesn't seem to have hindered them.
    • How often do you actually use a phone without looking at it? Even when I'm just hitting speed dial buttons I'm usually looking at the phone to double-check that it's calling the right person. Especially relevant: how often do you use advanced features like web surfing or text messaging/email without looking at the phone? Unless you've got a screen reader in there, don't you kind of have to look at it to use those features? Ditto for watching video on a handheld device.

    I'll wait until I actually see one in action to pass judgment, but I'm a lot more skeptical of the "no tactile feedback" argument than I used to be...

  31. Re:Linux? Who cares! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It runs OS X. I'd take that over Linux any day of the week!

  32. It's not about being revolutionary! by Man+in+Spandex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Was the iPod revolutionary when it came out? AFAIK the Dell Jukebox was also around at that time when the iPod came out. The difference? Not much when you compare the features. They both had similar battery life, they both played both played music for your ears. Where is the difference then? The Dell Jukebox would make your ears bleed! What I mean is, you don't have to be revolutionary to beat the competition. Just take what others are doing wrong, and do it right, or in a way that you think people will enjoy. The iPod wasn't/isn't successful because of marketing only. It does a great job at being an mp3 player and not a piece of shit that you battle with just to get it working.

    What about the iPhone? It's the same concept if you ask me. There are pocket pc's and blackberries that have many features that the iPhone promiss to offer its customers and whatnot. The difference is more in the interface and how you'll use it rather than discovering new features.

    I say this cause I see a lot of people commenting on the iphone and saying that "X" and "Y" devices do what the iphone does.

    AFAIK, a Geo Metro and a Lexus IS350 can both go from point A to point B and reach the maximum allowed speed limits on (almost) any road you'll be travelling on. The difference is the experience you get out of driving those cars.

    1. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

      Was the iPod revolutionary when it came out? AFAIK the Dell Jukebox was also around at that time when the iPod came out. The difference? Not much when you compare the features. They both had similar battery life, they both played both played music for your ears. Where is the difference then? The Dell Jukebox would make your ears bleed! What I mean is, you don't have to be revolutionary to beat the competition. Just take what others are doing wrong, and do it right, or in a way that you think people will enjoy. The iPod wasn't/isn't successful because of marketing only. It does a great job at being an mp3 player and not a piece of shit that you battle with just to get it working.


      I think the short version of what you're saying is that Apple is selling elegance. That'll probably be what makes this phone successful. The videos I saw didn't really show me anything 'new'. I have a Treo 700p, for example. I can watch a video on it, get a craving, then hop on over to Google, find a restaraunt, and click the phone number to dial. Whoop-de-doo. The big difference, that is assuming the commercial was in any way accurate, is that they were more streamlined in doing it. Assuming the internet connection isn't too dissimilar on both phones, the iPhone would probably get to that point fairly faster than the Treo. (Although I've read that the iPhone doesn't support the faster data connections that modern phones have, so I find that a bit questionable.)

      For me as a Treo owner, the iPhone isn't that super fantabulous. However, I'm sure I'll develop some envy when I see people around the office with their iPhones with their lack of frustration doing the same things I've been doing for the last year. So maybe I'll have one at some point in the next two years. In the mean time, though, I'm still scratching my head and asking the question: What more will it do for me than what I really have? I honestly think that's a variant of the "what's so revolutionary about it?" question. It's a fair question and Apple doesn't really need people running up to its defense with rhetoric about the iPod's success. Let's wait until the phone's in people's hands so they can say: "Here's what I'm doing with it." That's originally what got me interested in plunking down $300 for a Treo. I'm sure it'll work for Apple, too.
      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    2. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IMHO what will make the phone successful is that SO many people have their personal self-image tied up in it being successful. If it not successful their status as elite hipsters who are "in" will be harmed. So every flaw will be rationalized, every feature elevated. Naturally, the media will pick up this desire (since so many in press are in that group to begin with) and will promote it as such. Fact is, the phone does nothing that other cheaper phones don't do, but for so many people the only "feature" that matters is the apple logo.

    3. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by rsborg · · Score: 1

      So maybe I'll have one at some point in the next two years. In the mean time, though, I'm still scratching my head and asking the question: What more will it do for me than what I really have? I honestly think that's a variant of the "what's so revolutionary about it?" question. It's a fair question and Apple doesn't really need people running up to its defense with rhetoric about the iPod's success.
      Answer? As a Treo user, I will say, if you like your current phone... probably not much. The Treo does some great things (I don't even have a data plan, and it's highly functional) and I will likely not get the iPhone until the 2nd rev (at which point, being the cheapo that I am, will likely settle for a deal on the rev1's).

      This phone is not for us... but we're a very small minority in this jungle of bad phones, horrible interfaces and subpar providers.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    4. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      The jukebox came out well after the ipod.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    5. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by Man+in+Spandex · · Score: 1

      No I didn't say that Apple is the Louis Vuitton of geeks. Again, it's not about what the iphone offers versus its competition, at least I think it isn't since like everybody knows most of its features are available on existing devices at a much affordable price.

      What will matter here for Apple is will the interface they present to the user on the iphone be worth the switch from their current devices, if any.

    6. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by cgenman · · Score: 1

      I think grandparent poster meant the Compaq/HanGo Jukebox, not the Archos, Creative, Dell, Polaroid, RCA, or Tatung Jukeboxs (all of which came out after the iPod).

      Also, grandparent forgot to point out that up until that point all portable MP3 players used 2.5" laptop drives, which meant they only fit into very large pockets. Apple, going with smaller 1.8" Toshiba special-use drives, offered something at a much higher price per MB, which everyone thought would be a failure. Who knew so many people had tight pants?

    7. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by thesandtiger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The click-wheel on the iPod was what was "revolutionary," IMO. MUCH easier and quicker to use than any of the other interfaces I've seen on any player before or since.

      What sold me on an iPod was when my friend, who is a DJ and has rips of every bit of music he owns on his iPod and has filled up the 80GB version, was able to get to *any* song I mentioned within 30 seconds of my mentioning it, and usually quicker than that. On the other players I've owned, it was a fucking chore to find a specific track, and I don't have a collection even a third the size of my friend's.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    8. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by dwightk · · Score: 1

      AFAIK the Dell Jukebox was also around at that time when the iPod came out.

      Dell Jukebox: 10/28/03

      iPod: 10/23/01
      --
      Like anyone can even know that
    9. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
      AFAIK, a Geo Metro and a Lexus IS350 can both go from point A to point B and reach the maximum allowed speed limits on (almost) any road you'll be travelling on. The difference is the experience you get out of driving those cars.

      The difference is it still takes someone else to key your Lexus IS350 for you.

      You can key your own iPhone the first time you put it in the wrong pocket. ;-)

    10. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      samsung sph-100 came out far earlier than the iphone;
      i could play mp3s and take a phone call, too.

      (i *attest* to this statement)

    11. Re:It's not about being revolutionary! by radish · · Score: 1

      The iPod search interface needs a lot of work, it's actually a PITA to find a specific track. Whose idea was it to not display the name of the Artist when scrolling through the album list? Or worse - when looking at a list of song names? For example, in my collection I have 3 tracks called "Adagio For Strings" by 3 different artists. When either browsing by song or searching by name I have no way of telling which is which without playing them. The search function is amazingly slow too...

      Overall, coming from my old Rio player I find the iPod interface a big step backwards (including the click wheel - I much prefer a normal thumb wheel). I could find a specific track in under 10 seconds easily - and actually be certain I'd got the right one.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  33. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Rakshasa+Taisab · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why are people so obsessed with dialing?... How often do you actually do that?

    You got pretty much everyone you know whom you're likely to call already in your address book, and the few times you actually need to enter a phone number will be when you didn't look it up on through google.

    --
    - These characters were randomly selected.
  34. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who is genuinely uninterested in the iphone.

  35. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by turing_m · · Score: 1

    Thanks, that was classic! (And even though I grudgingly like the design of the IPod. Which I am yet to buy.)

    --
    If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
  36. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by PixelScuba · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you're some sort of tragic square who needs to run Windows

    Yeah man, it's like, can ya dig it... these freaky cats at Microsoft they, like, want you to believe they are innovative and shit, but, it's like, they just take ideas man. And ideas want to be free, like beer man, ideas can't be packaged and sold, they need to run free in the wild, man! Hay brother, keep fightin' fascism from those unhip squares at redmond, man... use the tools of the people, spoken word, rhythm and buying apple products, man!

  37. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by fermion · · Score: 1
    It depends how the screen is made, and how you carry it. My original gameboy is still in perfect condition. I have never carried it my pocket, but have never taken great care of it. That mean is has spent most of it's life (10-5 years?) stuffed in various boxes, often with metal objects.

    OTOH, my Palm and some of my phones with exposed glass have gotten broken. Now, these broke with significant force, never just by dropping, and they still worked for quite a while. My iPods, which are carried abound thrown in a bag of in a pocket, albeit in a case, have never broke.

    The first item is the lesser of the issue. I have not been able to use a phone by touch for years. To make a call on my phone, I have to look at it. OTOH, like many people, the phone is just the boosting station for the ear piece. With voice dial one does not ever have to take out the phone. Ir just needs to be nearby.

    Really, this phone is almost exactly what I hoped apple would create, except I would have been happy with a mini form factor, but I understand why the did this. As I have mentioned, the killer app for a phone is break away from anachronistic "dialing" the phone. There is no reason why making a call should not be as simple as stating someone's name. The lack of tactile feedback for music is a problem, though. I wonder if they have included voice commands to move through the tracks.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  38. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 1

    The two potentially big problems with it I see are:

    1. Lack of tactile feedback in the UI. I.e. you have to look at it and concentrate on the UI to use it.
    2. The fragility of the touch screen.


    I don't think the Treo would be a terribly popular phone if either of these was a serious issue.
    --

    "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

  39. Re:Wow. by Sidepocket_Pro · · Score: 0, Troll

    Not to mention that its another thing for the Apple Trend Freaks to flaunt. I might actually nuke the Tekserve building if this happens.

  40. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by jcr · · Score: 2, Informative

    No thanks Apple, unlike portable music players, people actually are happy with their cellphones.

    Guess again, Mr. Ballmer. Apple's done the research, and found that you are mistaken. They don't jump into a crowded market unless they know that it's very poorly-served.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  41. mystery app by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love how something simple like a "Games" button for games downloaded from iTunes becomes a "mystery app".

  42. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by MikShapi · · Score: 1

    Tactile feedback is a non-issue.

    I was concerned about the lack of tactile feedback on my CarPC 8'' monitor when I build the machine about a year and a half ago.

    After you get used to it, you don't miss it. It's just fine without.

    --
    -
  43. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not excited about the iPhone either, but I'm even less interested in reading you publicly declare that you're not interested. If you don't have anything interesting to say, just STFU. Otherwise you'll come off looking like some bitter Apple-hater.

  44. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by PortHaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You mean my Windows mobile crappy re-boot a couple times a day PDA phone. Oh, to be sure, I love what it should do. Getting it to do it and do it logically is about as easy as getting a suntan at the south pole.

    I mean, having even a basic logical way to close an application would seem a no brainer. I'm nigh of the opinion all present PDA phone manufacturers CEOs should be dragged out of bed and beaten. NO ONE I KNOW is HAPPY with their cell phone PDAs. We just need what they offer and we endure.

    I for one and over-joyed for the iPhone. Why? Cause at the very least it will get Microsoft to move it's but. And other phone vendors to try new things. Nokia, HTC, LG, you name it. They know if they do nothing and the iPhone works as displayed and is a success then they are looking at a market 5 yrs from now where iPhone is synonymous cell phone as iPod is to MP3 player.

  45. TV by minus_273 · · Score: 0

    Ad was just shown on ESPN during the Sox, yankees game

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  46. How To by RalphBNumbers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think the "How To" commercial does a pretty good job of showing why I expect the iPhone is going to do well.

    They visually explained how to use every major feature of the thing in a 30sec TV spot.

    Most people neither know or care about UMTS, or HSDPA, or AGPS, or any of the other high tech acronyms that certain /.ers obsess over having in their phones. But if they can see how an iPhone can be used for all their calls/mail/web/music&movies in 30sec of watching TV, *that* they'll like.

    Technology has progressed to the point where a well thought out interface matters more than having the latest and greatest bullet points on a spec sheet some months before the other guy. The bottleneck that needs to be addressed these days isn't generally in the machine, it's often between the user and the machine.

    --
    "The worst tyrannies were the ones where a governance required its own logic on every embedded node." - Vernor Vinge
    1. Re:How To by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      Some very good points. This is a good start. I wish, however (though there may well be, I just couldn't find it), that they a) tightened it up, and b) made it for TV. This isn't bad - it's nearly 2 minutes long, but to be fair, it was made for a conference, not TV ad. Actually, here's the TV ad, from Europe.

      I think this will be my next device, the N95.

    2. Re:How To by Trojan35 · · Score: 1

      Like the iPod and the ROKR, two things will determine the success of the iPhone:

      1) Does it sync with iTunes?
      Check.

      2) Does its interface work better than others?
      We'll see. This is why the iPod destroyed all other MP3 players, and this is why the ROKR was a POS.

  47. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tactile feedback isn't just an issue when you're not looking at the screen. Consider your keyboard, for instance. You judge where to place your fingers by the physical shape of the keys. If you accidentally place a finger between keys, you can instant feel that your fingers are mispositioned, and you can quickly readjust.

    Now imagine if your keyboard was one giant touch screen. The only way you can tell that you aren't properly positioned is if you're actively looking at your finger placement, or you start to hit the wrong keys while typing. Add to that the fact that your fingers are likely to drift when you move to and from the home row, and you get a whole host of problems with intuitively positioning and repositioning your fingers.

    Now imagine that the keyboard is now a quarter of its original size, and your fingers are still as fat as ever. That's the problem with tactile feedback at the iPhone. It looks really slick and I like the concept of all of the included apps, but the entire iPhone concept is reliant on entering a fair amount of text, and the lack of physical buttons makes me a little worried.

  48. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    No, but few of us use our computers while driving, walking, cooking, or involved on another task.

    And voice recognition while decent is not perfect. And I find it often more dangerous fuss with a hands free kit or sit there repeatedly having to tell voice-recognition. No, "try again" not that, no, "try again"...no..."try again"

    Where as my phones that had large tactile surfaces I could have the most common number programmed and simply press and hold "1", or "2" and easily dial the corresponding person with little trouble. And I found such to be the safest methods of dialing while occupied.

  49. Nope by debest · · Score: 4, Informative

    Right from the beginning, at the speech made by Jobs at MacWorld, he mentioned that the iPhone was going to be sold for $499/$599 with a two-year contract with Cingular (now AT&T). This is on par with other high-end devices on all carriers. They never said that the price was going to be for the unemcumbered unit.

    --
    Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
  50. Ode to the iPhone by booleanoperator · · Score: 1

    Oh iPhone, THE new shiny toy. So sexy, flexy, and coy. If only i knew all you could do, will your unix core make your flexible? more Will you have enough ram, and a fast CPU? I expect so much, will my wishes come true? for now good-bye, i'll see you on the 29th.

    1. Re:Ode to the iPhone by thogard · · Score: 1

      I'm researching ways around the at&t contract since their towers don't reach this far over the Pacific and I want a shiny new toy to crack open.

      Anyone know how to open one yet? I'm hoping its like an ipod or I'll break a shiny new toy.

      Who will be 1st to get it working on an non-at&t network?

  51. Always been two years by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    The only thing we had ever heard fro certain was a two year plan - anything else was speculation. You didn't treat speculation as gospel, did you?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  52. What are the terms by fermion · · Score: 1, Interesting
    More than the price, I want to know the terms. One of the articles clearly stated that the phones would be available at the ATT stores, which one would infer meant that ATT is in fact controlling the price. Typically this means that they will sell at or near their cost, for a two year contract. What is that cost going to be? Also, typically, one can shave a year off the contract for $50.

    And then there is the question of what plans are going to available for the phone. The standard data plan is not going be nearly enough bandwidth for reading a newspaper and Yahoo, especially considering how bloated the NYT is getting lately.

    I will admit the phone has some potential, although I think it is too big for casual daily use. If they are going to sell it like a phone, that will be great. If they are going to get into the games that cingular liked to play in the past, then I will give it a miss until it becomes less hot.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  53. "Just a phone"? Want to bet? by PapayaSF · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This minor fact seems to be getting lost in the Slashdot hysteria. Yes, it's a neat phone, certainly. But it's...just...a...phone.

    Of course, all that has been said of Apple products many, many times before:

    1977: The Apple II: one of many personal computers.
    1984: Macintosh - just another GUI, hard to upgrade.
    1998: iMac - just another all-in-one PC, hard to upgrade.
    1999-2001: OS X - just another Unix (or proprietary OS, depending on your POV)
    2001: iPod - just another MP3 player.

    Honestly, is it really a surprise when people are excited that Apple is coming out with a phone?

    --
    Q: What does the "B." in Benoit B. Mandelbrot stand for? A: Benoit B. Mandelbrot
    1. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Other than the iPod, which of the descriptions you give are you claiming is inaccurate, exactly?

    2. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by PapayaSF · · Score: 1

      Other than the iPod, which of the descriptions you give are you claiming is inaccurate, exactly?

      Not inaccurate so much as short-sighted, because the criticisms are minor compared with their virtues. All of them (except OS X) have been hugely influential, often redefining the "niches" they were in. I expect the iPhone to do the same, and so it's no surprise people are excited.

      --
      Q: What does the "B." in Benoit B. Mandelbrot stand for? A: Benoit B. Mandelbrot
    3. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by Bamafan77 · · Score: 1

      Not inaccurate so much as short-sighted, because the criticisms are minor compared with their virtues.
      So now calling something merely what it is (it's just a phone people!) is now construed as a criticism? I'm not criticizing the iPhone (heck I called it "neat"). But apparently anything short of adulation and excitement is construed as criticism. Again, I'm impressed by Steve's Reality Distortion Field.

      A blurb from Wikipedia on the reality distortion field:

      "In essence, RDF is the idea that Steve Jobs is able to convince people to believe almost anything with a mix of charm, charisma, exaggeration, and marketing. RDF is said to distort an audience's sense of proportion or scale. Small advances are applauded as breakthroughs. Interesting developments become turning points, or huge leaps forward. RDF focuses less on outright deception and more on warping the powers of judgment."
      If that doesn't describe the insanity surrounding iPhone, I don't know what does. Again, it's not a knock on iPhone, which I'm sure is perfectly nice. But at the end of the day, it's still just a cellphone.
    4. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by LokiSnake · · Score: 1

      And the iPhone is just like how the Xerox PARC computer, at the end of the day, is just another computer with some extra gadgetry.

    5. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by LKM · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the iPhone is just a cell phone. In the same vein that the iPod is just an MP3 player.

    6. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by Pojut · · Score: 1

      You're right, the iPod is just an MP3 player! Last time I checked it couldn't wipe my ass or do taxes...

    7. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by LKM · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is. I was not meaning to sarcastically imply that the iPod is actually more than an MP3 player. I realize that while it does do a bunch of things outside of playing MP3s, these things aren't all that important. It's true: The iPod is just an MP3 player. No sarcasm.

      However, you're still missing the whole point. The iPod is not important because it's more than just an MP3 player. It is important because it's just an MP3 player that is actually nicely designed and sports a usable interface. There were many MP3 players before the iPod that did more and cost less than an iPod. But they were not accessible for most users.

      The same applies to the iPhone. There are many cell phones that are cheaper and do more than the iPhone, but people can't really use them. Of all the people you know who own cell phones, how many use their cell phone's internet access to look up maps on google? Make conference calls? Use the built-in organizer?

    8. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by badasscat · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the iPhone is just a cell phone. In the same vein that the iPod is just an MP3 player.

      Not a valid comparison. The iPod was category-defining. The iPhone is entering a market that was already defined long ago. This is why Apple really cannot replicate its success with the iPod here - the market is already saturated.

      Even the top projections put Apple at 1% of the cell phone market in a year. One percent. That's a lot of phones sold, but it still means that 99% of cell phone users will be using something else. This does not a game changer make.

      The iPhone will be profitable for Apple, sure. It may even result in some more Cingular contracts (it'll be a cold day in hell before I call them "AT&T"!). But the vast majority of the world is going to completely ignore the iPhone.

      With the exception of the iPod, that's how it always is with Apple products. Their fans' zealotry masks the fact that most people just do not care. That over-enthusiasm makes their products seem a lot more popular than they are. They have a 4% PC market share and they'll have a 1% phone market share.

      (Obviously I'm not really in that category or I wouldn't be commenting, but it is true of most of the world.)

      The bottom line is the rest of the industry will just keep right on going as it always has.

    9. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by Idbar · · Score: 1

      Not only the market is already saturated. It's saturated with well known brands that do things well, for less.

      The first advantage of iPod was that not many people had MP3 players at the time, MP3 players based on CD were sunk because of their poor anti-skip technology.

      Now, who's fighting apple here? Microsoft? Nokia? Motorola? Motorola's ming is quite smaller, and Nokia's N-95 is full featured. So, is it just the screen what makes this phone revolutionary? I'll wait for the N95 to be cheaper, and get one of those.

      But there's always somebody willing to pay $500+ for some stuff that can be cheaper.

    10. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by LKM · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Obviously they won't reach 70+% market share. That was also not the comparison I was making. I was merely pointing out that calling the iPhone "just a phone" because it doesn't do more than other cell phones was similar to calling the iPod "just an iPod" because when it came out, it didn't do more than other MP3 players.

      And yes, the iPhone is already a game changer. No high-end phone manufacturer can afford to ignore the iPhone or "keep going as it always has." If they do, the iPhone may very well soon break the 1% market share Apple is aiming for. And, in fact, the other manufacturers aren't ignoring the iPhone: LG, Palm; and Palm again.

      So far, cell phones were about hardware design and lifestyle ads. Apple is changing the game, and we'll all benefit.

    11. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by Pojut · · Score: 1

      I'm not one to judge the iPhone before it is released...however, the mere fact that they are actually calling it an iPhone says to me it will be the same old apple shit that it normally is:

      "It is made by apple, therefore you are cool and on the cutting edge for using it"

      To me, it's more like "It's made by apple, therefore you are clueless and spend way too much money instead of buying something that costs less, is more functional, and isn't made of 99% shiny plastic."

      But whatever, people think pretty=good...and in my experience, a large portion of the gene pool is pretty fucking stupid.

    12. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1

      In all the examples you mentioned, only one has outsold its competition. There have always been more PCs than macs, or Windows installs rather than OSX installs. Where Apple has been wildly successful is the MP3 market. Their strengths in this arena, which I believe allowed them to be so successful, is their design sense, usability sense, and marketing sense. If they can apply the same to the iPhone, AND it becomes affordable second/third gen, then it will be successful.

      These days Apple stores are selling Macs almost as iPod accessories.

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    13. Re:"Just a phone"? Want to bet? by His+Shadow · · Score: 1
      This is why Apple really cannot replicate its success with the iPod here - the market is already saturated.

      Saturated with crap. The current mobile phone market is a cesspool of half assed implementation and worse interface designs. If the game changing nature of the iPhone isn't apparent to you, that's just sad. Many people are happy with mediocrity. That's great, and that's what Windows and WinCE give you. But now there will be something more, something that the mobile phone market has consistently failed to deliver. The iPhone is already changing the mobile phone market if you care to read up on it, so pretending that "it's just a phone" is insightful commentary is a painful indication of just how far some tech nerds have their heads up their asses.

      --

      Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos

  54. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Gabrill · · Score: 1

    What makes you assume that children have a monopoly on dropping phones, squeezing by tight spaces (warehouse in my case), and friend's hazings? Not to mention bumpy four-wheelers, bouncing horses, oopses while repelling, crowds that jostle, and yes, kids that swipe the phone to see how cool it is?

    --
    Always going forward, 'cause we can't find reverse.
  55. Change of Image? by kitsunewarlock · · Score: 0, Troll

    Hate to say it, since their ipod image worked so well, but do you think its time for a change, Mac?

    Seriously, if you want to be innovative, don't just create the next evolution of the iPod (i.e. ipod with touch screen, internet and phone, as well as internet widgets most browsers can get quite easily). I know its very different from the pod...but in many ways most of my friend's newer pods are different from my own (no color vs. color, images, movies, downloadable games...).

    But calling it the "iPhone" just points out that its a contuation of your evolutionary design. Except in this case, anyone who owns a blackberry and a video iPod doesn't honestly need such a thing unless they don't want two of their four pockets loaded.

    Honestly, average number of pockets in a suit and dress pants or cargo pants: 7. Include a vest with the cargo pants and I can roll that up to about 14 pockets. Assuming you carry your keys and wallet, that leaves room for your napkin, i-pod, cell phone, a random 3 ft chord (lets just say ethernet), blackberry and deck of Magic: The Gathering.

    We don't need all these features crammed into one gadget. But an average RAZR costs about $15+decent plan, and an average older gen video i-pod costs like $200. Why pay $500, the price of both (easily), for a SINGLE gadget? When it breaks, there goes $500. As opposed to when my phone wears out (which will, assuming the shelf life of both devices are the same, take 2x+ as long as I'm not using my phone for MP3s or movies) and I have to buy another...

    Of course there's the "but you can't surf the internet on the go". Besides my laptop, I have a DS, which not only plays MP3s, uses Skype, Firefox, AIM, IRC, a word processor, touch screens and plays videos, but STILL costs less than (including all the add-ons) the iphone AND plays DS games.

    Plus when it breaks, I only have to pay $50 for Nintendo to repair it in a week (I know, they don't legally repair machines if you supe them up with all those 3rd party apps, but my friends have proven otherwise since they usually don't even look at software when you send them your hardware issued device).

    And hell, the DS is a bloody children's toy. Stop trying to look so sophisticated with your nifty Phone, Apple.

    On the other hand...

    If you included a built in hi-def projector, projector keyboard that actually worked well, microthin mouse had global free satellite wifi, had half a terrabyte of space (plus slots for extra storage), and dropped the "i" (I'd call the the "Litmus" myself), keeping the same price, I'd be interested. In fact, I'd get it just for the projector.

    But no. You gave us Video iPod + Phone + Blackberry.

    Or just "Nintendo DS" + $200 + AT&T account - DS games and running .exe files.

    --
    Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
    1. Re:Change of Image? by Barbarian · · Score: 1

      Honestly, average number of pockets in a suit and dress pants or cargo pants: 7. Include a vest with the cargo pants and I can roll that up to about 14 pockets. Assuming you carry your keys and wallet, that leaves room for your napkin, i-pod, cell phone, a random 3 ft chord (lets just say ethernet), blackberry and deck of Magic: The Gathering.

      So what pocket do you carry the condom in?

      oh wait, this is /.

    2. Re:Change of Image? by p0tat03 · · Score: 1

      I don't think the iPhone is about bringing anything completely revolutionary and unseen onto the table. Rather, it fills a very real ache in the market that nobody has so far been able to fill: true internet on mobiles. I've used browsers on cell phones, they are a pain in the ass. I've also used a Blackberry, and while they're a bit better off, the internet is still far from useful on them.

      Looking back, the iPod didn't bring in anything horribly new either. MP3 players have already existed for some time since then, but Apple rolled in a slick user interface, and an end-to-end music management service (iTunes). Apple has always built their products on being end-to-end integrated, with software working in tandem with hardware, as opposed to being two disparate parts of the same process. The success of the iPod wasn't that Apple had some absolutely revolutionary technology, it was that they took technology and brought it down to the average man.

      The iPhone is in for some tougher competition - the mobile market is a lot more mature than the music player market was at the launch of the iPod. But having used a lot of cell phones (both internet enabled and otherwise), I can say for sure that the market has a LOT of room for a phone (even one without the iPod!) that has as slick a UI as the iPhone seems to have. Goodbye convoluted two-button interfaces! Goodbye crappy browsers! Goodbye the infamous Motorola UI lag!

    3. Re:Change of Image? by kitsunewarlock · · Score: 1

      Yeah, every other post makes that ipod>MP3 player analogy.

      The main difference is mobile music players have been around since even before the walkman. Being able to "listen" to something other than your surroundings while walking is easy. The problem is, what do you do when your walking and want to surf the internet? Can you keep walking while actively engaging in a web surfing environment?

      I for one, cannot. >_>

      --
      Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
    4. Re:Change of Image? by p0tat03 · · Score: 1

      How is the iPhone required for use while walking? Personally I don't imagine the iPhone being used much while walking (except while listening or chatting) at all. The big selling point is both email and Google Maps. There have been *so* many occasions when I've gathered with friends, and wondered "where's the nearest burger joint?" or "when's the movie showing tonight so we know when to leave the bar?". Things of that sort - none of us know the cinema's hotline (there is one) by heart, so Google and GMaps is crucial for us.

      None of that requires use while walking. But it does require use while a laptop or other source of internet is not easily accessible!

    5. Re:Change of Image? by kitsunewarlock · · Score: 1

      As a college student living on campus in California without a car, I find myself walking almost everywhere, which is why I brought that up. Of course I also have wifi everywhere. As well as free public computers within 500 feet of me almost wherever I am, or else a friend's residence where I can borrow one.

      That's why I either:

      1.) Plan ahead.

      2.) Use 411.

      3.) Call another friend who will be by a computer.

      4.) Use a computer (keep in mind "hanging out with my friends" will mean "LAN Party", "DnD" or "Break from Architecture Work", all of which means, for me at least, I will be at a computer either during or less than an hour before we leave).

      And I never have trouble finding wireless when I really need it. Starbucks every 3rd shopping center. Walmart or Mc Donalds every other shopping center. All I need is my DS and a memory card and I can do anything, save for make calls, the iPhone can.

      But in the end I am not the normal consumer. The last thing I've purchased that doesn't come from a store owned by an Otaku or from a company that can be spelled out without misrepresentation in complete Kanji would be some Linen from Micheals I used to represent canvas in my study model.

      --
      Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
    6. Re:Change of Image? by p0tat03 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Like you, I am also a college student living on campus, except in Canada, though WiFi is also ubiquitous here. It is clear we have vastly different experiences. I believe the iPhone targets people like me:

      A - I don't have my laptop with me when I go out with friends. Why would I lug that thing around, especially if I'm out drinking? Recipe for disaster.

      B - Free public computers only exist on campus. Honestly, is campus really that exciting that you spend the vast majority of your off hours there?

      1 - Plans change. This sounds like one of the initial arguments against cell phones. "I always plan ahead, so there's no need for a barrage of phone calls on the go!". Well, invariably someone screws up, or something unforeseen happens (bar closes, buddy gets run over, movie theater's closed, etc etc). Since getting my phone I've had an infinitely easier time socializing with my friends than before, and I suspect this will up the ante for that even further.

      2 - 411 is $1 a call. Around here, it means dialing it, waiting. Waiting. Waiting. Describing what you're trying to find. Waiting. Waiting. Getting your answer (texted to your phone, nice), and then turning around and calling THAT number to find the actual information you need... Oh, and you might have to hold there too. With the internet at your fingertips, it's "free" (save data costs... but considering how much I plan to use the service, it's more than worth it compared to 411).

      3 - Yes, because my friends are my bitches who should look up movie schedules on-call. Not that I wouldn't if I were in a real pinch, but this allows me to find the information I need independently. It also allows me to skim a page for the info I need, instead of forcing my dear friend here to recite it to me.

      4 - I suppose this is where we differ. When I "hang out with friends", we hit pubs, bars, movies, restaurants, pool joints, concerts, and any other number of events and weird places. We like to explore a lot, and we bus ourselves to nearby strange cities to take in their sights and sounds. An iPhone-like device would be extremely helpful for us.

      Allow me to point out a very recent example. I just returned from Toronto (Canada), where my girlfriend and I went to see the grand re-opening of the Royal Ontario Museum (highly recommended visit for anyone in the area, seriously). After taking a look at the brand spankin' new museum, we decided to take in a movie, but wanted to check the movie schedule, as well as if we'd miss the last bus out of the city. Well, unfortunately that meant:

      A - Trudging down the street to the movie theatre. It's only a few blocks, but still 10 minutes wasted if I had access to their site at my fingertips.
      B - Trudging to the nearest subway terminal, which has a kiosk where you can look up inter-city bus schedules.

      Not rocket science by any measure, but you can start to see how an iPhone would have been useful here. A half hour information trek could've been reduced to 30 seconds. Heck, while perusing the museum we wondered about certain things, and if I had Wikipedia at my fingertips...

    7. Re:Change of Image? by Temporal · · Score: 1

      I have a DS, which not only plays MP3s, uses Skype, Firefox, AIM, IRC, a word processor, touch screens and plays videos

      LOL, Firefox on a DS. That's funny. Opera, sure, but not Firefox.

      If any of this software you claim to run on your DS actually exists, please do provide some links.

    8. Re:Change of Image? by rmadhuram · · Score: 1

      Dude, I believe you are in a college to study!

    9. Re:Change of Image? by acxr+is+wasted · · Score: 1

      random 3 ft chord (lets just say ethernet), ... and deck of Magic: The Gathering.

      !!!!! You just fell for the trap. Jisatsu datta. You totally pWn3d urself, G.

      --
      "Come on, let's go drink till we can't feel feelings anymore."
    10. Re:Change of Image? by Noke · · Score: 1

      2 - 411 is $1 a call. Around here, it means dialing it, waiting. Waiting. Waiting. Describing what you're trying to find. Waiting. Waiting. Getting your answer (texted to your phone, nice), and then turning around and calling THAT number to find the actual information you need... Oh, and you might have to hold there too. With the internet at your fingertips, it's "free" (save data costs... but considering how much I plan to use the service, it's more than worth it compared to 411).


      800-GOOG-411 - it's free.
    11. Re:Change of Image? by RootWind · · Score: 1

      Maybe it is just me, but everything you described all relies on the fact that you will be using the internet. The internet is not unique to the iPhone. Of course, knowing Apple, they will "stylize" and "mainstream" its use further (good thing). However, I still don't understand why Apple did not make it 3G in the 1st version.

    12. Re:Change of Image? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Well about the only thing I understand from the parent post is that people who play Magic: the Gathering spend too much money on chase rares, and can't afford $500 phones? Seriously, uh, what? Pockets?

    13. Re:Change of Image? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      I still don't understand why Apple did not make it 3G in the 1st version.
      Most likely because most people have no idea (nor do they care) what 3G is. The phone is slick, regardless of technical specs. If people on slashdot would say WHY it is a bad thing that the phone isn't 3G, maybe more people would be inclined to see that as a bad thing, but as it is now, nobody cares.
    14. Re:Change of Image? by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Because the United States doesn't have many 3G networks yet, and they wanted to sell to a broader market. A 3G iPhone is in the works, however.

      --
      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
    15. Re:Change of Image? by whereisjohngalt · · Score: 1

      Where do you keep your towel?

  56. What? by CyZooNiC · · Score: 0

    Who in their right mind would buy a GSM phone without access to the SIM card?

  57. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by espressojim · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have the cingular 8525 phone. It has a touch screen.

    When do I look at the buttons while I'm using it? Whenever I'm going through one of those phone based menus: "Press 1 for english". Older phones, I'd keep the phone by my ear and press the buttons. I could generally be doing something else, and not pay much attention to it. Now, I have to either put it on speakerphone (bad at work), or be ready to pull the phone away from my ear, hit the button, then get the phone back into position.

  58. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if there was no other reason to despise Apple your dimwitted Apple rah-rah posts on Slashdot are enough.

  59. Sure lets bet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only one of those items that has ever been unquestionably successful is the iPod. Every single one of the others has been a niche product purchased primarily by mindless Apple zombies. The same people who will buy an iPhone before they see one because if it is made by Apple they buy it.

    1. Re:Sure lets bet. by Admiral+Ag · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This and other posts are hilarious. You can almost smell the fear.

      Apple is going to sell shiploads of these things, and all the fud and whining in the world will not stop it. It has nothing to do with Apple fans. There simply aren't enough Apple fanboys around to account for the success of the iPod. The truth is that it was a success because it was about the easiest and simplest player to use and it was marketed reasonably well. I know a lot of older non-techie people who hate gadgets, but love their iPod, for the simple reason that it takes about 30 seconds to learn how to use it.

      The same goes for the iPhone. If you've watched the keynote, you pretty much know how to use everything that's on the phone. If you've watched the commercials, you know enough to use it. I've had a Samsung smartphone with Windows Mobile on it for five months and I still don't know how to use all the stuff on it (the manual is so arcane that you just end up forgetting stuff).

      But /. is not the place for such musings. People here seem to like tech that requires a PhD in order to use. Being able to use some hideously complicated piece of equipment to perform a simple task is a source of distinction on this site. In the real world (fairly or no) it is regarded as a symptom of a mental disease. This is not a phone designed for geeks. It is a phone designed to sell in large numbers and make money.

      The fact that some people in this thread have an irrational hatred for Apple doesn't change the fact that this will be the hottest tech item in recent memory. I'm wondering if the Cabbage Patch doll wars will be upon us once more (Jobs has basically said he hopes so, which makes him look a bit of an ass). Still, it is highly likely there is much link fodder in this thread for future gloaters.

      --
      "by that I mean people who don't sit on slashdot all day wondering why everyone else isn't building robots" DECS
    2. Re:Sure lets bet. by virgil_disgr4ce · · Score: 1

      Thank you for this post. Well said.

    3. Re:Sure lets bet. by toddestan · · Score: 1

      What I don't get is all these posts gushing about how great the iPhone is, when the thing hasn't even been released yet and 99% of the people talking about how great they are have never even held one in their hands, and have only seen a highly polished demo by Steve Jobs himself. It's not like Apple hasn't had their share of duds too - including their last attempt at a PDA-like device, so don't please mistake a little skepticism as FUD.

  60. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 1

    I want to see what the Iphone looks like after it's been thrown in a bag with some car keys, loose change, and sand... then shaken hard for a few hours.

  61. But you must realize... by IANAAC · · Score: 1
    that when it comes to technology, you can't use the word "generation" in the usual sense either.

    Consider that a mere 24 years ago the Motorola DynaTAC would be the equivalent of your great-great grandparent, were we to equate it in human years (4 "generations" - and even then, some might argue that we're beyond 4th generation cellphone technology).

    1. Re:But you must realize... by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      True, but there are two factors here. One, the usage of the word traditional refers to the 11 icons on the screen, as if this is the way it always is, handed down from the earlier phones. Two, the iPhone hasn't been handed down yet. Traditions are handed down from earlier generations. Maybe on June 30th it could be considered handed down, but it's not even released yet.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  62. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by xouumalperxe · · Score: 1

    Your mouse doesn't provide tactile feedback when you move the cursor over a button, indeed. but it does indeed provide some feedback in the form of the 'click' sound that gives mouse clicking its name. Granted, trackpads that support tapping don't provide much in the way of feedback either, and I like them plenty (provided they're big and mounted shallow, like my iBook's).

  63. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Durandal64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No thanks Apple, unlike portable music players, people actually are happy with their cellphones.
    People were happy with their portable CD players, too. And before that, they were happy with their Walkmans (Walkmen?). Hell, I'm sure everyone was happy with their horses-and-buggies, too.

    Technology isn't about sitting on your ass and stopping innovation because everyone's "happy". That might be the game for the cell phone companies, who have spent years cramming more and more functionality into an interface designed solely for dialing telephone numbers. Sorry, but that's just stupid. Cell phones have been overloading the touch-tone phone interface for years, and no real innovation has gone on in the cell phone UI. It's about time someone came up with an interface that wasn't just "Let's put more buttons on it! On both sides!"
  64. Please don't mod parent down by cgenman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's too bad you will probably get modded down for having an opinion that runs against the tide of apple love, because it is a totally valid one to have.

    You ask what the point is? Apple doesn't create devices with the most features or best specs out there. Apple makes devices that makes those features and specs accessible to swaths of humanity who wouldn't otherwise have time or inclination to figure it out.

    To play MP3's on my phone, I have to unplug it from the charger, take out the battery, take out the MicroSD card (sold separately), pick some MP3's, copy them over manually, re-assemble it all, powercycle the phone, press the dedicated "Play MP3" button on the outside of the phone, then scroll through a flat list of every MP3 file on the device. I suspect the moment you drop in the iPhone phone to charge, iTunes will kick in and sync your music selection automatically. 7 steps reduced to 0. There is no way in heck I could get my mother to play music on my phone, but an iPod is totally within her reach.

    And that's pretty much what all of Apple's stuff is like. They cut out the dumb stuff so that you can get on with the business of doing whatever it is that you were going to do. For the iPod, it was giving the user a scrollable wheel and a Database backend, so that instead of a million up / down button presses the user could quickly scroll around an intelligent (and automatically created) heiarchy. iChat is great because you literally don't need to set anything up to have a household chat network, and setting up AV chatting was far, far easier than in any other client of the time.

    Apple thinks about their designs so that you don't have to. It is a wonderful feeling to be able to pick up a device the first time and be able to use it as if you've been using it for years. Even to an inquisitive technophile like myself, I love that I don't have to know what's going on behind the scenes if I don't want to... it just all works the way I expect.

    Phone UI's are horrible. To send a video message on my phone, I need to press a little button with a horizontal line (not the button in the middle with the big cingular guy), go to camera, record video, Press the other little horizontal line again, Flip Vertically, Press the little horizontal line again, record, Save it as a file with a hideously random name, go back out to the main menu, go into the SMS application, write out an appropriate SMS, attach the file, find the appropriate e-mail recipient, send the file, get a message back saying that the message couldn't be sent but we deleted the draft anyway, go back in and recreate the message with the file again, send it out again, and get a message back from the recipient in an hour asking what weird format the video file was in.

    Oh, and a phone is not a laptop. You can stick a phone in your pocket and carry it with you to a resturant. You can pull out your phone on the road and google maps just where the heck Vacaville is and how to get back to Santa Cruz. Your xv6700 should have shown you that a 2" phone in your pocket is a lot more practical than a 15" laptop in your bag.

    1. Re:Please don't mod parent down by Serious+Callers+Only · · Score: 1

      It's too bad you will probably get modded down for having an opinion that runs against the tide of apple love, because it is a totally valid one to have.

      All the comments on this thread that provide this meta-information (I or the parent will be modded down by frenzied zealots) are in fact modded up. That's the funny thing about Slashdot; though the users seem to have the impression that it's populated by Linux/Apple fans, in fact the vast majority of the readers use Windows. It'd be fun if they showed statistics for their userbase (didn't they once have this), or even a little tag beside each user (optionally) saying which browsers they'd accessed the site with.

      Phone UI's are horrible.

      ++
      This is the main reason I'll be looking at an iPhone when they're available.
    2. Re:Please don't mod parent down by thesandtiger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What you said.

      I want my tools to work for me, not me for them. I like gadgets, but I don't want to do battle with my appliances to get them to do their thing.

      Apple is very, very good at figuring out what people want their gadgets to do and making it very easy. The iPod is a perfect example - Apple's design team got that people want to listen to music on a small device that has adequate to good sound, they want to listen to music NOW, not have to struggle to find a song, and they don't want to have a lot of buttons. Oh, and if it's cute, so much the better.

      I'm writing this from a MacBook that I picked up thanks to an incredible discount. I've owned half a dozen laptops in my life, and this one is the first one that deals with some frustrations that I'd always had but never even considered might be fixable. I use it a lot when I travel, and sometimes I forget I've got it plugged in, or someone walks into the power cord - doesn't bother me since it just detatches and doesn't drop the computer on the floor. And when I'm using it I often have to move - shutting it or opening it puts it to sleep or wakes it up nearly instantly. And if I leave it shut and forget to charge it for a week, well, it writes its state to the hard drive and takes an extra 10 seconds (if that) to get going again once I plug it in an open it. And of course OSX is quite spiffy and I've got it tweaked out just-so where all kinds of things that were annoying to do (but I did them without complaining for years on other laptops) but necessary are easy.

      The iPhone is a bit more than I want to spend on a phone, and the HD space is lacking for my needs, and the provider is not one I'd be thrilled about using, but despite that, given Apple's track record, I can assume that one thing that WON'T be broken will be the interface. Once they come out with a 20+ GB version, I'll probably be all over it.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    3. Re:Please don't mod parent down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I suspect the moment you drop in the iPhone phone to charge, iTunes will kick in and sync your music selection automatically. 7 steps reduced to 0."

      And your contacts. And your calendar. And your Mail.app settings.

      I suspect, though, it'll ask your permission first, so it's 7 steps reduced to 1.

    4. Re:Please don't mod parent down by cthellis · · Score: 1

      Heck, I can't even get my mother to remember how to just PLAY the music on her phone, after I did all the other grunt-work for her. (But who can blame her... it is two menus deep, after all! Heh...)

      I'm pretty sure she could manage an iPhone, tho. I believe that's the point.

  65. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to have a mouse that in fact did have haptic feedback. It would vibrate when you moused over a link or a button.
    I wish I remembered who made. Belkin maybe?

  66. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by franksands · · Score: 1

    I guess history is bound to repeat itself, eh? At least now it's just a comment, instead of the summary.

    Of course, the phone market is very different from the audio players market, but how about and old pearl of wisdom called "Wait and see what happens"? I know I will.

  67. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by laffer1 · · Score: 3, Informative
    Is it me, or only non-techs and Mac users the ones that think the iPhone is great? I would say the iPhone is special, but only in reference to a short bus...

    Yes, well who do you think the target audience is for this phone? If Apple was going after tech savvy users, they would have made something like existing smart phones. Most people praise the Blackberry or some palm device. A few people like the MS products. Apple is trying to repeat the success of the iPod where they got ordinary users to buy an MP3/AAC player. This is a logical upgrade for them. People don't like carrying phones and iPods around with them. They want one device. Apple now has to compete against various phones with MP3 or WMA support. This is their answer.

    You can put Apple down for a lot of things, but making this device isn't one of them. Perhaps it was fatally stupid to make it exclusive to Cingular/AT there are a lot of cell phone subscribers on other networks why might want an integrated iPod/phone. Apple will eventually lose the number one spot in portable music just as Sony lost it previously. Apple fans will be sad and "PC" fans will be happy.

    Apple did not innovate with the iPod either but that was a big success. They have massive marketshare... almost windows like. Apple used the Microsoft business model of duplicating existing ideas but changing that one little thing that makes all the difference. Steve used the Bill Gates play-book.

    Personally, I won't be purchasing an iPhone. I hate cingular and I don't want to spend $500 on a phone. Apple does not get pricing for the midwest. $500 isn't that much money in New York City or San Fransisco. Its a lot of money in Michigan, or Iowa.

  68. All the time by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    At least prior to getting a smart phone. don't have much trouble remembering phone numbers, and you need to use them when using a normal land line. Well, with a regular cellphone where I could feel the buttons I could blind dial with no problem. Thus I found it easier to just punch in the number real fast. Now that I have a smart phone I use a phone book, simply because the lack of tactile feedback makes dialing harder. Certainly something I miss though.

  69. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I, however, am completely interested in hearing that you are not interested in hearing that he is not interested. I find it interesting that you complain that his interest is a non interest, and that this interesting topic only be used for non interesting points of interest, such as yours.

    Interesting.

  70. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by dfghjk · · Score: 1

    "I think you're underestimating the UI mechanisms used to use the device."

    No, we're not.

    "If you look at the demo of the Google map, you'll see what I'm talking about. It makes dialing easy. No current phone does this right now. None."

    Of course they do. Handmark Pocket Express has existed for years and Google maps runs on cell phones already. If you're going to be ignorant, try not to be so arrogant about it.

    Of course, none of that matters because you don't usually place calls be searching through maps. Ordinarily you use the keypad or the contacts database and Apple hasn't improved that at all.

    "About the only way this could get easier is if they start scanning your voice mail for phone numbers to associate with the visual voice mail .... hold on. I need to go write a business plan."

    You do that, fanboy.

  71. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    I disagree about the fragility of the touch screen. If children's devices (Nintendo DS) can have a touch screen, I don't see why adult devices should be concerned about the fragility of such a thing.

    Because a Nintendo DS is ca. US$100 and an iPhone will ba ca. US$500.

    I also suspect that since you'll have to do everything to the iPhone through the touch UI, and because it's not going to use a stylus, the iPhone's screen will see more "use".

    As for the tactile feedback, I think you're underestimating the UI mechanisms used to use the device. The most pressing activity on a phone is dialing.

    Text messages are another that springs instantly to mind. Realisticaly, though, it's basically everything that involves using the phone. You've probably never thought much about the tactile feedback and hence don't realise how much you use it, even if only unconsciously.

    For example: you know that to get to a certain UI element you have to do a certain number of button pushes. Say, two down arrow presses, across one and "enter". With real buttons, you get feedback when a button is pushed and your muscle memory can make getting to UI elements you are familiar with an automatic, practically instant procedure (because you don't need to watch it to make sure each action was successful, that you didn't "overshoot", etc). Further, you know where your thumb is relative to the next button you have to push, because you can feel it. With the iPhone, you will have to actively watch the UI as it changes to navigate through it, to know which intermediate step it is at during each phase and to know where your thumb needs to be.

  72. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by dwater · · Score: 1

    So, you never send any messages? I know SMS isn't that popular in the US, but it is in the rest of the world. Tactile feedback is definitely very important. I remember moving to a Nokia 3250 from a SE t68i and noticing how difficult the 3250's joy stick was to use since it didn't have a sharp enough edge on it causing my thumb to slip off.

    --
    Max.
  73. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by dfghjk · · Score: 1

    Unless you plan to find your contacts exclusively through scrolling, you're still in need of a keypad. Too bad the iPhone's one sucks balls.

    Apple can pretend that the user doesn't actually need to enter data all they want. Watching their demos you'd think that all you do on a cellphone is browse preloaded content. That and dance in multicolored silhouette, of course.

  74. No by His+Shadow · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    It's not "just a phone". If you didn't see the Keynote, shut the hell up about what you think the phone is or isn't. Really. Shut up. You don't "get it"? Shut Up. How many more times will Jobs and Apple change computers and consumer electronics before all the anti-Apple types just learn to shut up? I'm better never, but why don't some of you jackasses give it a try?

    --

    Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos

  75. Not really on par by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    We got Smartphones at work, UTStarcom (Audiovox) PPC6700s. They are latest, greatest tech type of deals with all the features. They were about $200 with a 2 year contract. $500 was more like the no contract price (I can't remember what it was precisely, but around $500-600). Looks like currently the offer is $150 with a 2 year contract form Alltel.

    So Apple is asking a price that is equal or higher than the no-contract price for phones for a phone with a contract. Yes I realise the Apple phone has a lot of flash storage, that's not expensive. I added 2GB to my phone for $20, that isn't why they cost so much more.

    1. Re:Not really on par by 8-bitDesigner · · Score: 1

      Aye, the ads state "Use requires 2-year contract" (or something to that effect), not "Price based on 2-year contract". I've got a sneaking suspicion that you may be able to use this as a PDA-type device by its lonesome, but will need a 2-year contract with AT&T to actually use it as a cellphone.

  76. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by metlin · · Score: 1

    As for the tactile feedback, I think you're underestimating the UI mechanisms used to use the device. The most pressing activity on a phone is dialing.
    Not really. Can't speak for others, of course, but I use my cellphone for two other things - text (SMS) messages and as my organizer.

    So, yes, I do text a lot (it's asynchronous IM on your phone - can't beat that) and I can touch type quite easily on a cellphone that provides tactile feedback but I would really hate typing it on something like the iPhone.

    Worse yet, I usually text when I am in meetings (or rarely, when I am driving). So, while I may occasionally glimpse at the screen, texting is something that happens in the background for me. So, in these scenarios, it would be a little hard for me to pay full attention to what I am typing, which is what the iPhone seems to need, from what I've seen. Or if I am checking my calendar or seeing if I have mail (or even replying to them), it would be impossible to do so while you are doing other things (like, nodding to whatever is going on in one of those particularly boring meetings and replying to mails in the background).

    Can't speak for the rest of the world, but I would imagine that there are more than enough folks here at Slashdot who do use cellphones and PDAs for sending text messages, replying to emails and organizing their calendar, and doing so with a system that doesn't provide tactile feedback would be very, very hard.

    Now, if they had generic buttons whose keys could come up with varying kind of texts - that would be neat. Sort of like the Optimus Keyboard for cellphones.
  77. And you don't either... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    No, but few of us use our computers while driving...

    And you don't use either you computer or phone while driving, RIGHT?

    Perhaps the new tagline for the iPhone should be "For people who don't want to die and take others with them in the process".

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  78. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Macintosh is the Fisher Price of computing. Have fun playing with your Photoshop filters.

  79. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by dfghjk · · Score: 1

    "I've been thinking about this, and I really can't see anything to be concerned about."

    There's no need to think about it. It's not like Apple invented the touchscreen cellphone keyboard after all. It's not even substantially different than previous models.

    The one thing different about the iPhone is that it *cannot* use a stylus and that means your big, fat finger is covering up those little, fake chicklet keys. So much for your eyesight providing all that glorious tactile feedback substitute you've been "thinking" about.

    "I can't think of many, if any, that do, and that doesn't seem to have hindered them."

    Of course, all of those have key differences too.

    "How often do you actually use a phone without looking at it?"

    Frequently.

    "Unless you've got a screen reader in there, don't you kind of have to look at it to use those features?"

    Yes, I do but, unlike the iPhone, my fingers aren't covering up the screen because my keyboard is seperate.

    "I'll wait until I actually see one in action to pass judgment, but I'm a lot more skeptical of the "no tactile feedback" argument than I used to be..."

    Of course you will. The speculated advantages you can pass judgement on now; the speculated disadvantages you should wait to pass judgement on. That's what it means to be open-minded regarding Apple, right?

  80. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Tactile feedback isn't just an issue when you're not looking at the screen. Consider your keyboard, for instance. You judge where to place your fingers by the physical shape of the keys.

    How sure are you? I'd say relative distance from a fixed location has a lot to do with how you type. When your finger is over the keyboard, then goes down to press a key how often are you feeling the other keys around it, vs. just hitting the kay you want? I find as I type this message I make little use of the keys around the key I am pressing, and simply type directly based on position.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  81. Three vs. ten by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Unless you plan to find your contacts exclusively through scrolling, you're still in need of a keypad.

    A phone number requires minimally ten digits to be pressed exactly right in order to get the result you want.

    A lookup in a contact sheet requres one to three keypresses, and keypresses can be judged contextually to have multiple possibilities, while still keeping the result set usably low.

    What Apple is trying to do is to make contacts actually usable to well, contact people with. Just because you've not had that experience in the past on a phone does not mean it cannot be done.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Three vs. ten by drsmithy · · Score: 2, Informative

      What Apple is trying to do is to make contacts actually usable to well, contact people with. Just because you've not had that experience in the past on a phone does not mean it cannot be done.

      I've had that experience with every mobile phone I've ever owned. Even with hundreds of "contacts" in my phone book I can get to one of them in a few seconds and (at worst) half a dozen button presses. For the 5 or so people I call frequently and regularly, it's just a matter of holding down a number on the keyboard or saying their name. Heck, it was true (except for the voice recognition) on the Nokia 5310 I had a decade ago.

      Of course, I've never owned anything but Nokias - other phones' phonebook interfaces may well suck as much as you imply, but they certainly don't by definition.

    2. Re:Three vs. ten by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I don't get the fixation on dailing thing. If I am in a circumstance where I cannot look at the keypad to dial, that means I have my headset on. If I have my headset on, I can just say "Call ____" and it dials. At least, my phone does this, and I have a "free" RAZR and use a bare-bones provider. It looks through my contact list and gets me whomever. I am assuming that Apple would make something that works as well if not better.

      Are you people complaining about a lack of tactile feedback making calls while driving? I'm trying to think of situations where one absolutely cannot look at the phone but needs to make a call.

      If it's something like a "mute ringer" button - like the phone is in your pocket and you want to kill it without taking it out, well, I will say that I am pretty sure Apple's designers have taken that kind of stuff into consideration. I mean, you know, they seem to be pretty on the ball when it comes to interfaces...

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  82. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Thanks for filling the niche of people who are interested in people who are interested in people who aren't interested in people who aren't interested in a subject. You can't imagine how long I've been reading slashdot and hoping to find someone with an interest such as yours!

    Interesting, INTERESTING

  83. Costs a lot per month... To make it work! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How much per month will this thing cost??? The silence is deafening from both parties (Apple/at&t) having not made one formal peep 6 months since it's introduction.

    Voice plan + texting (through the iChat-like bubble interface) + Visual Voicemail + Tons of Data through Safari/Widgets/Google Maps + Push E-Mail Service. If you were to subscribe to all of these services individually on one of at&t's BlackBerry devices, you'd be paying upwards of $110 a month after taxes.

    If you were to get a BlackBerry today, and enable the features Steve Jobs has been demoing and Apple touting the iPhone can do, this is every service you would need to make the phone work as advertised:

    $39.99 Cheapest Voice Plan
    $29.99 Cheapest Unlimited Push E-Mail/Data Traffic Plan
    $19.99 Cheapest Unlimited Messaging Plan (Yes, texting is still charged outside a Blackberry E-Mail Plan or any Data Plan. And I dare you to use anything less than unlimited for that iChat-like SMS program because otherwise it's .15 per 'blip' in/out!)
    $1.99 for Cingular's Enhanced Voicemail (larger inbox, longer messages, etc.)

    After taxes, that is well over $110 per month for ONE phone! How many high schoolers, college kids, et al. are going to be able to convince Mommy and Daddy to continue to cover THAT bill for them when this single line of service approaches or exceeds the entire family plan?

  84. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah dude. cause apple are known mostly for their badly made shoddy products. /sarcasm

  85. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Does the mouse on your computer provide tactile feedback when you move the cursor over a button? Trackpads or pointers on laptops?

    I'd argue that's a meaningfully different form of UI interaction.

    Do any other touchscreens (e.g., in grocery store checkout lines) do so? Do any PDAs with touchscreens provide tactile feedback? I can't think of many, if any, that do, and that doesn't seem to have hindered them.

    That's actually a relatively interesting point and I'd be interested to see any studies of error rates and input speeds for traditional numberpads vs touch-screen numberpads. I'd expect the touchscreens to lose, however, *especially* in the context of any sort of multitasking.

    How often do you actually use a phone without looking at it? Even when I'm just hitting speed dial buttons I'm usually looking at the phone to double-check that it's calling the right person. Especially relevant: how often do you use advanced features like web surfing or text messaging/email without looking at the phone? Unless you've got a screen reader in there, don't you kind of have to look at it to use those features? Ditto for watching video on a handheld device.

    It's not just about using it without looking at it, it's about using it while looking at it, but not really having to concentrate.

    The tactile feedback you get from real buttons tell you both where you are in the UI relative to other elements (ie: where your thumb is on the buttons) and when you have successfully complete an action (ie: the "click" when the button connects). This helps you both move your thumb quickly to the right spot by feel (even if you're also looking) and know that you've done something without having to actively concentrate on it. The iPhone will lack both these features and, hence, you'll have to actively watch the UI not only for the feedback that you'd normally respond to with muscle memory, but also correct positioning within the UI you'd normally do from muscle memory. Basically, you'll have to concentrate harder to use it.

  86. Re:Wow. by kinglink · · Score: 1

    No I care... I care because I want to know what to laugh at when I see idiots carrying them. Like the Nokia phones. Motorola, flips open flips close, dials numbers. Ipod next to Nokia phone plays music. Phone breaks? Listen to music. Ipod breaks, use phone to get it repaired.

    But yeah you're right, this is just Apple's grass roots hype machine (get a few Diggs, get a few slashdotted stories. Sell billions no matter the price).

  87. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    As I have mentioned, the killer app for a phone is break away from anachronistic "dialing" the phone. There is no reason why making a call should not be as simple as stating someone's name.

    It already is, from that perspective. Heck, my Nokia 6310i has voice recognition for dialling and it's 5+ years old. However, the problems with the system aren't trivial:

    * You need the contact in your phone.
    * You either have to tag them with a voice-dial -or- the phone needs a good voice recognition system and you have to remember what you called the contact
    * Duplicates (in the case of a voice recognition system) require manual intervention anyway.

    If you have a small number of frequently-dialled contacts, the whole "voice dialling" thing works ok. If you don't, it doesn't and going via the "phonebook" is easier.

    The lack of tactile input is, IMHO, going to be a major usability problem - but I'm reserving my final judgement until I can actually use one.

  88. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It isn't so much the fragility of the 'touch' part as it is the 'screen part. Notice the nintendo DS folds up. Every PSP I have seen has been scratched to hell.

    --

    --

    WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  89. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um, jcr worked at Apple until recently. Most Mac software engineers know who he is. He knows what he's talking about.

  90. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Overpriced.
    Underfeatured.


    Like the iPod?

    --

    "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
  91. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Badly made and shoddy? No, not really. But they suffer from cosmetic damage EXTREMELY easily, which is probably the point that he was trying to get at.

    Just take a look at the iPod. If you drop it into your pocket with your keys or a modest amount of change, it's going to come out looking like hell. But whatever, Apple fanboys believe the screen will never get scratched because it was blessed by the essence of Jobs.

  92. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by RockoTDF · · Score: 1

    I think you mean you are going to rape his macbook with a vista install, my dear friend

    --
    There is more to science than physics!

    www.iomalfunction.blogspot.com
  93. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by furball · · Score: 1

    Yes, I do but, unlike the iPhone, my fingers aren't covering up the screen because my keyboard is seperate.


    Yes. And no.

    While your fingers are covering up the screen because the keyboard isn't separate, the front portion of the phone that your fingers occupy on your phone with the separate keyboard is about the same percentile of the front the keyboard that isn't separate occupies on the iPhone. Unless you're using some special phone with a detachable keyboard ...
  94. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

    Of course, if he was speaking on the information he gained while working at Apple, I'm sure they'd be really impressed to hear about steering into NDA-breaching discussion...

  95. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    For decades, we Mac users haven't really given a shit what was happening off in PC land.

    Well, up and until Apple woke up and realised that the G5 was more of an expensive radiator compared to what the PC land had been using for a couple of years already. Now that you're here, you can take those silly rose-tinted glasses off. And please have some taste, the black turtleneck and cheap wine thing is such a cliché.

  96. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

    I have a Handmark Pocket Express, and you can't dial from within a google map.

    --

    --

    WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  97. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by golgoj4 · · Score: 1

    now you know someone who likes theirs! I am the proud owner of an hp ipaq 6300. A few years old but still works great. It was apparently horrible when it came out, but they released a service pack and that was before I bought it. All in all, i am a happy man. You are right about the 'exit program' or lack there of...wtf were they thinking.

    --
    -those people who tell you not to take chances, they are all missing what lifes' all about-
  98. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by vought · · Score: 1

    YHBT. HAND.

  99. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get some info before you make claims. iPhone has a proximity sensor so that when you use the phone, your cheek won't make a gesture on the touch screen. That same proximity sensor also prevents your pants from making random calls.

  100. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by ozmanjusri · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I'm not happy with my cellphone.

    I'll second that. The mobile phone market's wide open to someone who can introduce a coherent and sensible interface that doesn't behave like the bastard child of a mediocre desktop OS. Palm had their chance and blew it. Psion/Symbian had momentum for a while, but have been stagnant for half a decade.

    I've been provided with an iMate JasJam, but I'd bin it in a heartbeat and pay good money for a replacement if there was a choice that meant I didn't have to navigate through weird menus and tolerate frequent crashes and lockups.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  101. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by evanbd · · Score: 1

    No wireless. Less space than a Nomad. Lame.

  102. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Wicko · · Score: 1

    I think the iPhone is a poor response to the problems you have pointed out. I don't think its meant to replace the current trend, but rather redesign the ridiculous-who-would-spend-that-much-on-a-phone market. Until they start showing up with phones regular people can afford, mobile phones are going to be just as shitty tomorrow as they are today.

    Personally, I like to keep my phone ability to the minimum, call people, text people, tell time and possibly have an alarm. Games, maybe, but might be unnecessary.

    The iPhone just seems like a pocket PC with phone capabilities.. maybe I'm missing something, but that doesn't seem all that revolutionary.. but hopefully you're right, and it will affect the market, and we'll see some higher quality phones. Nothing wrong with hoping.

  103. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by MrPerfekt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm a bit mystified about what planet you live on.

    I know -nobody-, not a single person, that is happy with their mobile phone. Happy being defined as they find it having every feature they need and want and have it implemented in a logical, easy to use way. I've used a good portion of PDA phones out there and I've never had one more than 2 months, I've relegated myself to a slider phone instead of dealing with the pure hell that is most PDA phones.

    I'm not saying you should like the iPhone, I personally prefer you don't until I get one. Even if only a small fraction Mac zealots get an iPhone, it will still be hugely successful for Apple.

    --
    I just wasted your mod points! HA!
  104. Pacific Catch, S.F. by benijouer · · Score: 1

    Has anyone eaten at Pacific Catch, the seafood restaurant 'found' in the "Calimari" ad? Also, can anyone explain how such an establishment got such a placement? Regards

    1. Re:Pacific Catch, S.F. by servognome · · Score: 1

      Check out this Review

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  105. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by lilfields · · Score: 1

    There is a big difference between the Nintendo DS and iPhone touch screens though; The Nintendo DS has in enclosed screen (like a flip phone), while the iPhone is open faced. I really hope Apple uses a resilient plastic...I don't doubt the GUI and tactile feedback will be generally good/great, but I am concerned about the iPhone's potentially fragile nature.

  106. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by MrPerfekt · · Score: 1

    If you're not in a position to at least glance at the screen every now and then while you're giving it input, you probably shouldn't be using it at that moment anyway!

    Yes, I'm talking about when you're driving.

    Yes, I'm also talking about when you're calling your boss a prick under the table in meetings.

    --
    I just wasted your mod points! HA!
  107. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by jayratch · · Score: 1

    While there is the capability to manually enter numbers into your phone book, I wonder what proportion of the typical user's book will get in it that way. I can safely tell you that the typical at&t customer utterly balks at the notion of having to manually enter even a fraction of their phone book. With sim cards and data transfer devices, the initial batch is generally already there before the user gets home with the device- though I doubt that, out of the box, this will be compatible with most (cellebrite) number copiers.

    Not unlike a typical smartphone, this one will be able to seamlessly sync your contacts (well, the typical users contacts) from whatever PIM they are likely to use. Don't be shocked if they tack in an "import phone book from Razr" option in the bundled version of iTunes, if for no other reason than to save time in customer service at Apple stores.

    I still fail to grasp the general anti-apple sentiment I sense here. It's just a product. If you don't like it, don't buy it. And especially, don't bitch about its "horrible keyboard" or other elements that you have yet to actually lay your bare eyes or hands on. I'm pretty sure a lot of us said that about the Mouse back in 1985.

  108. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by ncc74656 · · Score: 1

    Why are people so obsessed with dialing?... How often do you actually do that?

    Much more often than not. If you have the number in your head already, it's faster to just punch it in than to search for it.

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  109. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Wow, typical Apple bashing. I think people like you get upset when people are engaged by technology. Or how a company can convert a simple piece of technology into something that really works well for the consumer. Dissassembling just about any device will reveal a similar set of components, they're all chips/wires and other bits of manufactured electronics. It's how you combine them (with software) where the 'magic' experience comes from. Also there are numerous gaps in your knowledge about the new apple phone, particularly when you speak about a limited set of touch places.(simply not the case) Plus making needless comparisons such as camera sensors versus capacitance sensors is irrelevant(duh, you put your fingers on it and it works, no one cares how it works. Plus the MS method isn't new either, visit Helsinki public wall for example.)

    I think if you want to get on some santimonious high horse, then you definitely need to read up and understand why you don't like the product that you dissent so passionately on. (What's with dissenters anyway?)

    As for right now, you just sound like a raving lunatic who has some preconceived hate because someone you don't like admires an apple product.

    It might be time for you to be a reasonable person, to try and extract your personal bias from your critique, to realise what a "target market" is. (A device that does everything is often more complex than useful.) Perhaps begin to enjoy technology when it excites you, and just keep quiet when it's not your cup of tea. As for now, there are lots of people liking this new device, irrespective of who makes it. P.S. my portable TV has been "streaming" me live television since the 80s.

    You might notice I'm speaking generally, and not just about Apple. It's because you're truly a nutcase.

  110. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I had an account on /., I would mod you up. You're exactly right, and I've been amazed since the iPhone's announcement that Apple's designers have overlooked this. Nobody puts a PDA in their pocket without some sort of case to cover the screen. The same goes for digital cameras. On the other hand, nobody puts their cell phone in special casing because that would undermine quick access. Come July, there will be a lot of people crying over broken iPhone screens.

  111. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 1

    cause apple are known mostly for their badly made shoddy products. /sarcasm

    Your "sarcasm tag" is misplaced, because Apple *is* known for badly-made shoddy products. Ipod screens, laptop and Ipod batteries, laptop LCDs, Cube casings, Macbook plastic, Macbook fans, the list goes on and on and on.

    Apple is known for well-DESIGNED products that then get returned under warranty by the thousands.

  112. You must be from digg. by MrPerfekt · · Score: 2, Informative

    I assume you mean that the user can't get to the SIM card. Of course, you're wrong. The SIM card is accessible.

    --
    I just wasted your mod points! HA!
  113. Typical anti-apple post. by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    4. Because of 2 and 3 above, I can legitimately say that any post critical of Apple or Apple fan-boy-ism is "flame bait", as I myself will flame them,

    Because of this line, any moderation done as "Flamebait" would be undone by the flame post mentioned at the end!

    Just like an anti-Apple user to not think through the details of what might have otherwise been a well-crafted product (or post)... :-)

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Typical anti-apple post. by Taxis · · Score: 1

      'If there were no Apple, it would be necessary for Microsoft to create one.' No, there will always be someone else to take advantage of the hipster crowd that both don't know how to use a computer and need a lifestyle boost. Just so happens the two things that apple are good at - making things look nice and making themselves look good - work very well for these kind of people.

  114. Even there... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Even in that long commercial, they describe features that the device has - but never show the devic itself being used, just shots of the features on the phone, amost static. To me in that commercial there is no connection between the people and the device. And the "phraseology" of the people seems too scripted, and less real.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Even there... by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Shows potential, and whilst Nokia has got a lot better in that regard, they still need to stretch that extra bit.

  115. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    How sure are you? I'd say relative distance from a fixed location has a lot to do with how you type. When your finger is over the keyboard, then goes down to press a key how often are you feeling the other keys around it, vs. just hitting the kay you want? I find as I type this message I make little use of the keys around the key I am pressing, and simply type directly based on position.

    Ah, but you know instantly when you've duffed it and missed a key or hit between two keys, don't you, even without looking at the screen ?

    Tactile feedback isn't just about knowing when you get it right, it's (probably more importantly) knowing about when you've gotten it *wrong*.

  116. No Idea by Swift2001 · · Score: 1

    The commercials make me think that if the iPhone is as cool as it looks in the commercial, I want one.

    1. Re:No Idea by k_187 · · Score: 1

      yeah, i'm doing my best to not get sucked into drooling over the iphone, but its really hard not to want one. If they weren't on at&t, i'd probably be in line, but I'm not switching in the middle of my contract for one. Next year however...

      --
      11 was a racehorse
      12 was 12
      1111 Race
      12112
  117. iPhone is already influencing other manufacturers by LKM · · Score: 1

    All of them (except OS X) have been hugely influential, often redefining the "niches" they were in. I expect the iPhone to do the same, and so it's no surprise people are excited. And, in fact, it's already starting to influence other manufacturers. For example, Palm has hired a former Apple software designer to work on its new handhelds.

    The iPhone will be good for all of us, just like Mac OS X has been good for all of us. It will bring some much-needed competition into the UI area of cell phone design. Let's face it, cell phone UIs are crap. My P990i is probably the worst piece of pure interface idiocy I have ever used. Cell phone manufacturers care about how the device looks, how many features it has, and how much it costs. This is obvious when looking at their ads. Check out Apple's new iPhone ads and you'll immediately see the difference.

    The iPhone is not sold as a pretty, feature-rich cell phone. It is sold as a beautiful, intuitive user interface with a matching hardware shell.
  118. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by LKM · · Score: 1

    No thanks Apple, unlike portable music players, people actually are happy with their cellphones. Really? Who is this mystery person who is happy with his or her cell phone? I have yet to meet him or her.
  119. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by LKM · · Score: 1

    The revolutionary thing about the iPhone is not that it uses a multitouch screen (although that is pretty new, too - if you know of any other cell phones that do that, I'd love to hear about it). The revolutionary thing is how it uses the touch screen. Have you ever seen a cell phone ad that focused on usability? That's pretty damn revolutionary if you ask me. Which you don't, of course... but... it still is! HA!

  120. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by LKM · · Score: 1

    Watching their demos you'd think that all you do on a cellphone is browse preloaded content. Apart from entering SMS messages, this is pretty much what people do, I'd say.
  121. Re:Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I have seen the phone has a button on the top that will put it to sleep and lock the screen. You have to swipe your finger across the screen in a specific way to unlock the unit. Apart from this, it also has a proximity sensor that is designed to turn off the screen when you put the phone up to your face. It seems to me that this proximity detector would probably do the same thing if you put the phone in your pocket. (How does it know the difference between your face and your thigh?) It would be pretty cool if it works this way because it would solve the problem of false dialing etc.

  122. Conan O Brien iPhone parody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  123. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by LKM · · Score: 1

    Yeah, because if you do that, the iPhone will look so much worse than any other phone on the planet. I mean, my P990i was made for bags filled with keys and sand! It's the ultimate sandbagphone!

    There will probably be about a gazillion different socks and bags and thingies to choose from into which you can put your iPhone before you throw it into your bag filled with nickels, knives, scissors and other sharp objects. Maybe the iPhone will even come with some kind of protective case. Have fun with the hour-long shaking, though, if you're into that kind of thing.

  124. "Thousands" sounds right by LKM · · Score: 1

    Thousands is probably about right, and a pretty small number if you sell millions. So, your iPod player has a battery that never dies? Where did you buy that? I want one too.

  125. Nokia N95 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I can tell the Nokia N95 does everything the iPhone does (except the touchscreen I think) AND it features an integrated GPS system. If I had enough money and hadn't spend it on a K800 recently I'd go for the N95 instead.

  126. Actually, it is revolutionary by LKM · · Score: 1

    The videos I saw didn't really show me anything 'new'. Don't know about you, but I've never seen a cell phone ad that showed me the phone's UI. Usually, cell phone ads are about style, and elegance, and maybe features. And most phones are pretty and have tons of feature, but you end up never using them because the phones are buggy and slow and complicated.

    Showing the actual UI - and nothing but the UI - in an ad, that's pretty new for a cell phone.

    And this is the difference. This is why the iPhone will change the cell phone market for the better - not necessarly because everyone will get an iPhone, but simply because other manufacturers will be forced to give the UI more thought.
  127. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by stud9920 · · Score: 1

    Dialing from the top of your head is the quickest way to call someone. It will stay that way.

    Speed dial sucks, it can only hold a few values.

    Adress book dial sucks, you don't do any less keypresses than with number dialing. It's a matter of entropy.

  128. 'soon'? by dwater · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile, the Nokia N95......has been shipping for months, and is proving extremely popular...

    --
    Max.
    1. Re:'soon'? by Zelos · · Score: 1

      Is it much of an improvement over the N70? That was a truly awful phone. Mobile phone reviews seem to concentrate on feature lists instead of the actual experience of using one day-to-day.

    2. Re:'soon'? by dwater · · Score: 1

      It's proving very popular. I only have experience of a pre-production unit, but even that was really good. I haven't played with the GPS, but everything else was functional. I was sold on it and planned to buy one, but now my wife and I are planning on buying a flat, so it's not an option any more, as well as that nice flat screen TV :(

      Of course, the power of S60 comes with all the app you can put on it ("Open to new features"). There's some really neat stuff out there, and becoming more and more easy to program for (widgets/OpenC).

      The N70 is a pretty old S60 2nd edition phone. It was better than the previous ones and not as good as the newer ones. The N95 UI is much prettier, but it's essentially the same thing - nothing particularly revolutionary there, IMO.

      Of course, S60 itself has proved popular, I think, or at least popul*ous*. They've sold over 100 million phones that run S60.

      I know a few N70 owners and they seem to be pretty happy. Perhaps you'd care to elaborate on what you found to be awful about the N70?

      --
      Max.
    3. Re:'soon'? by Zelos · · Score: 1

      I just found the N70 really fiddly to use - the 5-way controller was way too small, the camera slider was too loose, the UI was overly complex and very slow to redraw.

    4. Re:'soon'? by dwater · · Score: 1

      > the 5-way controller was way too small

      you might find that to be similar - I didn't do a side-by-side comparison, but I think they differed too much.

      > the camera slider was too loose

      the camera protection on the N95 is excellent.

      > the UI was overly complex and very slow to redraw

      The UI is similar, I think, certainly in the way it is structured, but the speed is *much* better - 'zippy' even :)

      I think they've done some reorganising in the UI, but not a whole lot (it would confuse people who are used to existing S60, though they do move things, which *is* confusing to existing S60 users).

      So, YMMV.

      Max.

      --
      Max.
    5. Re:'soon'? by sangsara · · Score: 1

      IMO, although the N95 has a lot more going for it feature-wise (GPS, 3G data), the interface is a sorry, sluggish mess compared to what the iPhone promises.

    6. Re:'soon'? by dwater · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't call it sluggish on the n95 (I would on it's predecessors), but I *have* found it quite frustrating at times, so that might equate to 'mess'. On the other had, the iPhone doesn't have as many applications to deal with, so it obviously doesn't have this problem - S60 is quite quick when it doesn't have any additional app in the menu (I expect).

      Still, by the time an Apple iPhone has similar features, perhaps S60 will have had time to improve. Hopefully, this will be the influence the iPhone has on the market - push it's UI in the right direction.

      I also hope that the Apple iPhone will have a positive influence on the development environment. Developing for S60 can be very painful (in C++ at least).

      It's a horrible thought, but I suppose you could say S60 is to iPhoneGUI as MS Windows is to Aqua.

      --
      Max.
  129. Apple needs to FTFF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you forgot to say "GTFO."

    Christ, you forgot to shower, too. Goddamn hippies.

  130. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 2, Funny
    If you're some sort of tragic square who needs to run Windows...Sometimes I wonder if it wouldn't be better to just round up these so-called "Mac users"

    So would their squareness make it more difficult to round them up?

  131. saw it during tv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    was on during extreme makeover home edition...

  132. Not at all by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Ah, but you know instantly when you've duffed it and missed a key or hit between two keys, don't you, even without looking at the screen ?

    No, actually I type and know I missed it by observing the screen - that's the reason to touch-type, right? So you can observe the screen as you work? On the iPhone the screen and your typing are as one.

    The iPhone keyboard is supposed to be correctional and make adjustments as you type, accounting for slightly missed keys - so it should even out and reduce the number of times I have to go back to hit a key.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Not at all by ubernostrum · · Score: 1

      The iPhone keyboard is supposed to be correctional and make adjustments as you type, accounting for slightly missed keys

      Indeed. Apple were among the first to get this sort of "correctional" interface behavior right in other spheres (e.g., even early versions of the Mac OS allowed you to "stray" a little when moving from a menu item into its sub-menu; rather than requiring the cursor to remain precisely within the bounds of the selected menu item, the mouse could venture outside a small distance -- so long as it continued generally moving toward the submenu -- without causing the submenu to disappear).

    2. Re:Not at all by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      No, actually I type and know I missed it by observing the screen - that's the reason to touch-type, right? So you can observe the screen as you work? On the iPhone the screen and your typing are as one.

      Well, I'd be quite willing to bet your subconscious recognised that you've made an error long before (relatively speaking) your conscious mind sees the error on screen, but I doubt you'll agree since you seem to have made your mind up.

    3. Re:Not at all by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Apple were among the first to get this sort of "correctional" interface behavior right in other spheres (e.g., even early versions of the Mac OS allowed you to "stray" a little when moving from a menu item into its sub-menu; rather than requiring the cursor to remain precisely within the bounds of the selected menu item, the mouse could venture outside a small distance -- so long as it continued generally moving toward the submenu -- without causing the submenu to disappear).

      "Corrective" isn't really the way to describe it - that would imply the system restricts the mouse movement for you.

      What MacOS did was allow for a certain amount of "looseness" in the mouse movement. It did this by creating a triangle bounded by the mouse pointer (at the time of the click or menu expansion), the top-left of the submenu and the bottom-left of the submenu. As long as the point stayed within the boundaries of that triangle, the submenu stayed open.

    4. Re:Not at all by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      Well, I'd be quite willing to bet your subconscious recognised that you've made an error long before (relatively speaking) your conscious mind sees the error on screen, but I doubt you'll agree since you seem to have made your mind up.

      You mean quite unlike somebody as open-minded as you, of course.
      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  133. Great by SuperKendall · · Score: 0, Redundant

    If contacts have worked well for you before, then they will work just as well for the iPhone right?

    The point at hand was how having a contact list is no replacement for simply typing in numbers, which I argue is untrue and you would seem to also assert.

    Personally I have found use of contacts on the phones I've owned to be annoying, and so I don't use them all the time even if I have them loaded. That would thus be the counterargument for why use of contacts in an iPhone would not be of use, which is what I was refuting.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Great by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      If contacts have worked well for you before, then they will work just as well for the iPhone right?

      Can't say. Haven't used it. My response based on the mockups on Apple's website is "maybe".

      The point at hand was how having a contact list is no replacement for simply typing in numbers, which I argue is untrue and you would seem to also assert.

      A contact list is great if it's populated. Not having a way to directly type in number is a pretty major PITA if need to, however. You need both to be well done for a phone to be good.

      Personally I have found use of contacts on the phones I've owned to be annoying, and so I don't use them all the time even if I have them loaded. That would thus be the counterargument for why use of contacts in an iPhone would not be of use, which is what I was refuting.

      I just don't see what the fuss about the iPhone's contact list is about. Certainly from looking at the mockups, it doesn't seem to offer any opportunity for significant improvement over existing methods.

    2. Re:Great by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      A contact list is great if it's populated. Not having a way to directly type in number is a pretty major PITA if need to, however. You need both to be well done for a phone to be good.

      The number keypad on the iPhone is pretty large and looks easy to type.

      Since the iPhone is undoubtedly built to sync rather well with a computer (unlike other phones where that ability seems like an afterthought) contact lists should be populated pretty well.

      I just don't see what the fuss about the iPhone's contact list is about. Certainly from looking at the mockups, it doesn't seem to offer any opportunity for significant improvement over existing methods.

      I think the iPhone is trying to treat it more seriously, and also attempt to better solve the loading issue, than other phones have. Apple does synching very well so I expect that part of the phone to work well.

      I don't think that's the centerpiece of the phone by any means, but if it works well it takes a lot of wind out of the argumnet that you must have a number pad to have the phone be generally quick to operate.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  134. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
    Now, I have to either put it on speakerphone (bad at work), or be ready to pull the phone away from my ear, hit the button, then get the phone back into position.

    Or use an ear piece. Also, sound can be a surprisingly good replacement for tactile feedback. If it's giving you an indication of where you're touching you could easily learn to use it without looking at it. (I have no idea if they actually do this.)

  135. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    Yeah, pretty much exactly like the iPod.

    Now, go look up the 1G and 2G iPod sales in the 2 years before they introduced the much cheaper iPod Mini.

  136. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by node+3 · · Score: 1

    What you're saying is, you can't text while driving (!!), and read emails while pretending to pay attention to someone (I don't see how you actually *read* an email without looking at your current phone, but I digress).

    In other words, the iPhone makes it harder for you to be an asshole. You've utterly failed to convince me that this is a bad thing.

  137. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by myxiplx · · Score: 0

    Aaah, crap. You mean I actually have to *look* at a device I'm using. Good god, how will I cope?

    And incidentally, I find I'm pretty good at noticing the feedback when my finger hits a screen. I don't waft it in front of the screen, or push it through any more.

    Do me a favour and save your arguments about how the lack of feedback will kill this device until you've actually tried one. The UI has had an awful lot of work put into it, I doubt it's going to be difficult to use.

    And to be honest, even in the worst case scenario where you're right and it is slower to use, I think that's a small price to pay for all the benefits. The larger screen, and much larger buttons for dialing numbers are two features I'd sacrifice an awful lot for.

  138. Europe? by Tom · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Anyone got any insight into when it'll launch in Europe?

    Cingular isn't exactly a large provider over here. ;-)

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:Europe? by KanjiMonster · · Score: 1

      It's supposed to come out in Q4 of this year. Apple also tries to have an exclusive carrier in Europe, and the decision seems to be between Vodafone and T-Mobile, while T-Mobile seems to be winning the bid. So if you are living in a country where T-Mobile isn't present (e.g. france), you might get problems buying one it.

  139. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by clonmult · · Score: 1

    I've had 4 phones that I've been totally happy with.

    Nokia N73 - huge array of features, reasonable battery life, a camera that is actually usable (apart from in low light conditions). A web browser that could correctly view most web pages.
    SE W550 - perfect for running, excellent battery life, and good for gaming
    Moto V3 - perfect for nights out and basic call/texting.

    My current phone, an SEW810 is close on perfection overall. The camera has an excellent colour balance, and with the little MXE-60 flash add on, its a true digicam replacement. Call quality is excellent, 4+ days battery life is useable.

  140. More like change of pace! by DJ_Maiko · · Score: 1

    So here's the deal, sure it's a phone being produced by Apple- which has had a VERY good track record of innovation in terms of ease of use & fun/wow factors. But seriously, though, it's a f'ing phone. Like Bobby Brown said, if you wanna dish out $600 (i'm sure it'll be more due to limited supply) for something that you can pretty much already freaking do, "it's your perrogative." But when you're 60 years old & you realize Social Security is no longer there for you (even though you put into the system just as much as the next person), I bet you will regret the purchase & wish you'd dropped that kinda cash on the stock market, your 401k or, heck, even a CD or money market acct.

    Seriously, all the fanbois need to get their hands out of their pockets!

    --
    Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever. -Mahatma Ghandi
  141. Blackberry vs. iPhone by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    I'm using a 7130 Blackberry because I wanted to merge PDA and Phone (works well btw.), wanted to me MS free and wanted a good sync to my Mac. SureType works fair enough. And the "Missing Sync" for Blackberry costs 39$ and works perfect - better than the crappy Palm conduit I had to use before. I costed 5$ and a 2 year contract - which I renewed anyway. I don't watch movies and my maxfield mp3 player is fine too.

    Then again, the Blackberry in some places has such a crappy interface and usability I seriously question the designers sanity. This is why the iPhone will be able to compete. The people building the Blackberries and other devices are often just to f*cking dumb to get it right. With Apple you have the Boss himself using the device and cross-checking if the engineers have lost it on the way or still are on track. Which is exactly how I would do it too.
      I whish apple the very best for this launch. They deserve it.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  142. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by ubernostrum · · Score: 1

    Of course you will. The speculated advantages you can pass judgement on now; the speculated disadvantages you should wait to pass judgement on. That's what it means to be open-minded regarding Apple, right?

    No, it simply means I haven't come to a conclusion and likely won't until/unless there's solid evidence of actual use of the iPhone to back it up. In the meantime, I'm willing to grant some charity based on the lack of available evidence and the arguments I'm able to come up with on each side.

    As for your actual points:

    • Why do you assume that lack of a stylus has any relevance to the question? I've used touchscreen interfaces which had no stylus and offered no tactile feedback, and had no problems with them; so have many others. Given this historical data, I'm willing to entertain the notion that the iPhone's interface won't suffer unduly from the lack of tactile feedback.
    • There are not that many functions advertised for the iPhone which would be useful without looking at the phone; dialing is perhaps the biggest and perhaps the only one where "eyes-free" use is desirable, and then the desirability is subjective; again, in my own use I often look at the phone when dialing or even speed dialing, to ensure I've dialed correctly. No amount of tactile feedback will change that for me. So we're locked on subjectivity, which means no useful argument can be made one way or another.
    • As others have pointed out, areas of the iPhone which are used for the screen are replaced with physical controls on many other phones; the tradeoff of "my fingers aren't covering up the screen" is "my screen is smaller". A larger screen size may well have usability dividends which offset the need to occasionally use part of it for text input, and until we actually see the iPhone in general use it's not possible to tell.

    So. Do you want to have a constructive debate based on what we already know about the iPhone and about similar touch-screen technologies, or do you want to take back-handed swipes at someone? I can do either, but I'd like to know up-front where we're going with this.

  143. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  144. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by shmlco · · Score: 1

    Every time I've seen it demo'ed pressing "home" brings up the standard 4 options at the bottom of the screen. "Phone" is always lower left. After that Favorites is two over.... and so on.

    As long long as the interface is responsive, "muscle memory" wouldn't seem to be an issue.

    And while I'm at it, I have a MBP that supports two-finger scrolling gestures on the trackpad... and I have to tell you that brushing up or down is now so natural it makes click and scroll wheels seem "quaint" and archaic. And "tactile" pg-up/dn buttons? Please. Watch the demos and notice the "flicking" gestures used to scroll and navigate. Watch how the "scroll" speed matches the velocity at which your fingers move. Gestures are intuitive as hell.

    And texting? Watch someone text sometime. Very few people (even on Treos) are "touch-text'ists", and most are starting intently at the phone while they're doing it. And if you're moving to the iPhone from a RAZR or some other phone that has a standard 12-key-pad, having separate letter "keys" (even virtual ones) would be a godsend over having to hit "7" four times to get an "S", or waiting for the last letter to "enter" up so you can get a "A" after you've entered a "B". Thanks, but no thanks.

    I think you're dramtically over-estimating the benefits of tatile feedback, and ignoring how interface action, responsives, and audible feedback can compensate, or even improve on the experience.

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  145. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by shmlco · · Score: 1

    "The tactile feedback you get from real buttons tell you both where you are in the UI relative to other elements..."

    Yeah, I'm really going to know on a Treo that I'm on C and not V. Lots of tactile feedback in dozens of identical little buttons.

    "Basically, you'll have to concentrate harder to use it."

    Assumption. And probably totally ignores all of the other things one does on a "normal" phone like handling voicemail, or diving down in the menu tree to change a setting, or things like multiway conference calls that no one does on their existing phone because they never read the manual and memorized the procedure.

    But hey. You've convinced yourself you're not going to like it. Fine. Horses for courses. And one less person ahead of me in line...

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  146. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by CyrusSukhia · · Score: 1

    unlike portable music players, people actually are happy with their cellphones. I've never met a portable music player that is unhappy with it's cellphone. Though to be fair, every one that I've listened to didn't offer an opinion one way or the other.
  147. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by dr.badass · · Score: 1

    Apple *is* known for badly-made shoddy products.

    Only among an extremely shrill minority. Most of us have realized by now that problems with Apple products just get a lot more press than problems with any other brand, whether or not it's a serious or widespread issue. The recent "6-bit screens" fiasco is a good example, wherein every PC manufacturer uses 6-bit panels for high-density displays, but Apple gets all of the bad press for it.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  148. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by antic · · Score: 1

    "The UI has had an awful lot of work put into it, I doubt it's going to be difficult to use."

    Myxiplx, I'd like to introduce you to the iMac round "puck" mouse... proof that sometimes Apple do something just to be different even if it proves to be difficult to use. Remember the after-market that developed to return those mice to a traditional shape?

    --
    'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
  149. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Icarium · · Score: 1

    Here I am. As long as it plays music decently and lets me make phone calls, I'm happy.

  150. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by vux984 · · Score: 1

    Dialing from the top of your head is obsolete.

    speed dial doesn't suck; I call the same four numbers more often than any other: v-mail, wife's mobile, home, office. That's probably half my outgoing calls from my cell right there.

    saying "Call John Doe" is the quickest way to call someone in my address book, faster and easier than dialing.

    saying "Dial 123-456-7890" is only slightly slower, and works for people not in your contacts. Its not quite as fast as blind dialing, but it doesn't tie up a hand or require tactile feedback either.

    My phone does all this very well NOW. Its only going to get BETTER in the future.

    Two years from now I'm going to say call the pizza hutt on main street, and the device will do a search, and make the call intelligently determining that I want to call the most *local* pizza hut on main street...

    Ten years from now I'll be saying 'call my sisters friend, what's his name, the one with the sports car' and it will probably be able to figure it out...

  151. I can't wait for it to flop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In one year when Apple has failed to sell a significant amount of iPhones to anyone outside of rabid Apple fans, will all the fanbois still be raving about what a wonderful, revolutionary device it is?

    Not even Vista was hyped as heavily by MS fanbois as this yet to ship device has amongst the Apple crowd.

    They are TOOLS people. Stop acting like they are religions icons.

  152. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'm really going to know on a Treo that I'm on C and not V. Lots of tactile feedback in dozens of identical little buttons.

    I was actually thinking of a regular numberpad, however, you'll still get more from "dozens of identical little buttons" than you will from a smooth piece of plastic with "dozens of little buttons" drawn on it.

    Assumption.

    No. Deduction.

    And probably totally ignores all of the other things one does on a "normal" phone like handling voicemail, or diving down in the menu tree to change a setting, or things like multiway conference calls that no one does on their existing phone because they never read the manual and memorized the procedure.

    No, it doesn't. Quite the contrary, in fact.

    But hey. You've convinced yourself you're not going to like it. Fine. Horses for courses. And one less person ahead of me in line...

    Ah, you must be an Apple zealot, someone for whom "maybe it won't be perfect because of these reasonable arguments" translates to "it sucks horribly and will never work" when referring to any Apple product.

    Which part of the I'll-wait-and-see position I advocated is leading you to believe I've "convinced myself" ?

  153. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by LKM · · Score: 1

    So, which phone do you use?

  154. Re:Wow. by dreamchaser · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    No, you're not alone. It's an overhyped, yet to be market proven piece of gear. Looks pretty, but it's hardly worthy of all this hype.

    Go ahead fanboys, mod me down as flamebait for speaking the truth. They'll sell some units, but they won't be taking over the world of mobile phones by storm anytime soon.

  155. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Professor_UNIX · · Score: 1

    1. Lack of tactile feedback in the UI. I.e. you have to look at it and concentrate on the UI to use it.

    Translation: "I can't touch-dial my phone while driving anymore." PULL OVER TO USE A PHONE STUPID.
  156. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Aaah, crap. You mean I actually have to *look* at a device I'm using. Good god, how will I cope?

    Dunno. Can you touch type ?

    And incidentally, I find I'm pretty good at noticing the feedback when my finger hits a screen. I don't waft it in front of the screen, or push it through any more.

    I've no doubt. But how do you know which part of the screen you've hit, what was under it at the time and whether or not the UI has responded correctly ?

    Do me a favour and save your arguments about how the lack of feedback will kill this device until you've actually tried one.

    You must have me confused with someone else, because I made no such argument.

    The UI has had an awful lot of work put into it, I doubt it's going to be difficult to use.

    I doubt it is either, however, that doesn't mean it will be *efficient* to use, or as easy as it could be using real buttons. Added to which, a) a lot of Apple's recent UI efforts haven't exactly been confidence-inspiring and b) they don't have any experience in this market yet, so even it "being good" is not a given.

    And to be honest, even in the worst case scenario where you're right and it is slower to use, I think that's a small price to pay for all the benefits.

    I've yet to see a lot of significant benefits over the alternatives.

    The larger screen, and much larger buttons for dialing numbers are two features I'd sacrifice an awful lot for.

    Your phone must really suck if you feel that the standard number pad is so awkward to use that you think one on a phone-sized touchscreen would be easier.

  157. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Every time I've seen it demo'ed pressing "home" brings up the standard 4 options at the bottom of the screen. "Phone" is always lower left. After that Favorites is two over.... and so on.

    How do you know how far without any physical feedback ?

    As long long as the interface is responsive, "muscle memory" wouldn't seem to be an issue.

    You seem to be missing the point I'm trying to make, which is that with decent physical feedback how responsive the UI isn't doesn't matter, because you can confidently be a couple of steps ahead of it.

    Please. Watch the demos and notice the "flicking" gestures used to scroll and navigate. Watch how the "scroll" speed matches the velocity at which your fingers move. Gestures are intuitive as hell.

    I've watched the demos. It reminds me of the first OS X demos and how "cool" they were. Then we got the UI train wreck that was the Dock.

    And texting? Watch someone text sometime. Very few people (even on Treos) are "touch-text'ists", and most are starting intently at the phone while they're doing it. And if you're moving to the iPhone from a RAZR or some other phone that has a standard 12-key-pad, having separate letter "keys" (even virtual ones) would be a godsend over having to hit "7" four times to get an "S", or waiting for the last letter to "enter" up so you can get a "A" after you've entered a "B". Thanks, but no thanks.

    I think you need to spend more time watching people under the age of 30 texting, and less time watching technophile, 50-year-old CEOs. Predictive text input systems have been around for 7 - 10 years, "learning" ones for at least 5 years, and anyone remotely familiar with doesn't write SMSes the way you describe. Indeed, I can't think of anyone I know who regularly texts that gives the screen more than a casual glance every 5-10 keypresses.

    I wouldn't be surprised in the least if regular texters used to a traditional keypad and predictive input will be at least as fast as people using an on-screen keyboard.

    I think you're dramtically over-estimating the benefits of tatile feedback, and ignoring how interface action, responsives, and audible feedback can compensate, or even improve on the experience.

    I don't. However, I'm willing to be convinced, which is why I'm waiting before passing judgement.

  158. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    Indeed, I can't think of anyone I know who regularly texts that gives the screen more than a casual glance every 5-10 keypresses.

    I should amend this to say "except for the poor sods using "smartphones" with QWERTY-style keyboards". Those things are a PITA.

  159. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    I don't understand. I have been perfectly happy with every cell phone I have had. I was less than happy with my service provider when I had cingular. I have a cell PHONE. I use it to make TELEPHONE calls, it works very well for that. I don't listen to music except when I am in my car...I don't need or want music on my cell phone. There is a market for multifunction devices, I just don't think it is a mass market.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  160. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by statusbar · · Score: 1

    I would like a phone that doesn't beep in silent mode.. or have buttons on the side of the flip phone which get pressed in your pocket which change the phone from vibrate to loud mode or take a picture of the inside of your pocket. I would like a phone that actually shows the date and times of missed calls. I would like a phone that adds new numbers to it easier. I would like a phone that has a time zone setting so that my sync'd calendar shows up correctly when I roam. Most if not all other phones really suck.

    --jeffk++

    --
    ipv6 is my vpn
  161. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by FireFury03 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The mobile phone market's wide open to someone who can introduce a coherent and sensible interface that doesn't behave like the bastard child of a mediocre desktop OS

    I agree entirely. I bought my SE P900 shortly after they were released and have been pretty disappointed from day 1. Symbian UIQ seems to be less stable than Windows 3.1 was - even the built in software crashes the whole phone quite frequently, and the built in software is just plain rubbish to begin with. 3rd party software is expensive (no, I have no intention of paying 30 quid for an email reader that actually _works_ - that sort of thing is supposed to be part of the base installation).

    So I've decided that I'm not going to buy a new phone until I can get some decent hardware running OpenMoko or similar. I want a device that I can treat like any of my other computer - that includes writing software for it without needing propriatory tools, being able to write bash scripts to do simple jobs, etc., being able to use the device without it crashing on a regular basis, and having a large collection of Free software available. And that last point is important in both meanings of the word "free" - under Symbian and PalmOS every little tool seems to be shareware and adding up the cost of all the tools I'd want would be a fortune, whereas under Linux I get all the tools for free.

  162. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Thyamine · · Score: 1

    I live just outside of Philadelphia, and I think $500 is a lot of money. In fact that's the only thing that keeps my from upgrading to one of these when they are released. I'm all about a nicely designed phone + iPod + touch screen interface, but $500 is a lot of cash to drop.

    --
    I will shred my adversaries. Pull their eyes out just enough to turn them towards their mewing, mutilated faces. Illyria
  163. iRelevant by residents_parking · · Score: 0, Troll

    Seriously, the actual physical article couldn't matter less to me. In my life, I've only seen 6 physical Apple products: a IIe, something unidentified in about 1988, an unidentified notebook, and 3 iPods, all broken. So, fangirls, rave all you like about this worldwide phenomenon, but be sure to let me know when it's come close to being tangible and not just an outcrop of the cult of celebrity.

    1. Re:iRelevant by njfuzzy · · Score: 1

      What part of Siberia do you live in?

      --
      My Photography - http://ian-x.com
      The Deathlings (comic) - http://thedeathlings.com
    2. Re:iRelevant by residents_parking · · Score: 0

      Where I live (the UK), carrying an iPod is an invitation to get mugged. Perhaps that's how they all get broken ...

  164. Competitors by GFPerez · · Score: 1

    It will be nice to see what the competitors will come with now ny copying the iPhone features, like what was done with iPod back in 01 and some time after it's release.

    Oh, btw, I didn't see any good point about how this is going to be a flop. I don't own a Mac and I'm not an Apple fanboy, but I have to admit that Steve Jobs isn't messing with product flops since the Cube. I guess they learned the lesson - although no company is safe from making a bad business decision.

  165. So ignorant people wil buy this? by Nursie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're saying that people will buy it because they're not tech savvy enough to know that there are many phones already in existance that can do everything the iPhone can do (touch screen excepted) and are likely to be a fraction of the price?

    I mean, my free (with 30 dollar a month subscription) LG U830 plays music just fine. And my old phone (Nokia N70) which I've had since 2005 and got free wit a 60 dollar a month contract did everything the iPhone will do PLUS it allowed me to run whatever apps I wanted on Symbian OS without them having to be signed by Apple or Cingular.

    The iPhone is another apple trick - take existing tech, repackage and advertise to people who like form over substance and like to feel smug about it. They'll claim innovation, style, reliability (all things that Nokia have been doing really well for a long time) when actually delivering a shiny box that can do less than older devices.

    1. Re:So ignorant people wil buy this? by *weasel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My phone, a crappy LG that came with my Verizon plan can technically do nearly everything the iphone can do, touchscreen excepted. it can play music, videos, pics, browse, check email, etc.
      But how well does it do any of that?
      Yeah, that's right: it sucks, horribly. (there's a reason I have a crappy 'free' phone: I have an n800 for actual mobile stuff.)

      Putting good UI on a device is a hell of a trick alright - but it's not being pulled at the expense of the audience.
      Like most apple products: it's not for me, but i can't recommend my tech devices to my parents either.

      If Apple merely put its customary UI polish on the features many of us have had for a few years, the only problem left is AT&T exclusivity. AT&T/Cingular can DIAF. I hope they pick a better provider for Europe. It'd be a shame for a good device

      --
      // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
    2. Re:So ignorant people wil buy this? by hab136 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The iPhone is another apple trick - take existing tech, repackage and advertise to people who like form over substance and like to feel smug about it. They'll claim innovation, style, reliability (all things that Nokia have been doing really well for a long time) when actually delivering a shiny box that can do less than older devices.

      How is selling people what they want a "trick"? Apple does one thing really well - interface/experience - and people are willing to pay for good design.

      I actually built my own car MP3 player. It was more functional than, and had more storage than an iPod. I replaced it with an iPod and car kit. I wanted my trunk back, and the form factor and interface does make a huge difference in small quarters like a car. Other solutions are more functional - making playlists on the fly, for example - but I never use that. I just wanted something nice, neat, and simple to play music.

      Back to phones, I have a RAZR. Who decided that buttons on the outside should work when it's closed? I'm forever changing the ring volume by accidentally hitting those buttons. The soft buttons drive me nuts - if I dial an 800 number, then punch in a passcode, I can't press the Speakerphone or Mute buttons, because they've changed to Store and something else, I forget. I have to either wait 15 seconds for it to time out somehow and give me my buttons back, or search through the menu for both those buttons. The form of the device is great, but the interface blows.

      Anyways, the point is that interface and design matter. I don't really care how much memory my phone has, as long as it's "enough". I do care about how easy (or annoying) it is to use every day.
  166. Don't shoot the messenger by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Please consider submitting your request for Polish language support in Mac OS X to Apple via the Apple Developer Connection. It's free, as in T-Shirt (e.g. you need to fill out a little form with a bit of contact information including an email address). Obviously you're interested in the platform. If there's a store selling Macinsoth computers in Poland, then other people are, too, and you would be doing yourself a favor to point this out in your request. Include a URL to the store's contact information, if possible. Mac OS X provides pretty nice localization support for quite a few languges already.

    By the way, the original post was a reference to a troll that showed up, if I recall correctly, early on, in every Apple related thread and a few unrelated threads for a while. I recall some speculation that it might even have been an automated troll bot. The AC poster this time was clearly trying to make people laugh by converting the troll to an iPhone troll with a trivial substitution Macintosh -> iPhone. The tip-off for people who didn't recognize the post is that nobody will be copying a 17MB file from a device (the Motorola RAZR) which only has, if memory serves, about 5MB of RAM (newer versions of this phone might have more RAM, but the most popular early model was RAM starved). It was really a bit of an inside joke, as grokiing it requires familiarity with too many things that nobody should bother to remember.

    Apple doesn't seem to have described the localization features of the iPhone, although their plans to relase an iPhone in Europe later this year suggest that they are planning at least some support for other languages. The U.S. version of the phone could be limited to English and Spanish, or even merely English without hurting sales too much. As the hardware platform matures (mainly as solid state storage becomes cheaper at larger capacities) it's reasonable to expect that future versions of the iPhone will support multiple languages as a general feature, as does Mac OS X. But then, it's also reasonable to expect the European version of the iPhone to support 3G data networks, and we all know that won't stop people from whining about the presumed lack of 3G and how the iPhone won't sell in Europe without it, as though Apple doesn't know that. (Don't these people think Steve Jobs wants 3G on his iPhone? I'm sure he's personally lobbying AT&T to get their poop in a group and roll out 3G before they get crushed by Verizon's EVDO stuff here. )

    Oh, and that store isn't an Apple Store, by the way. Apple doesn't have any Apple Stores in Poland.

    --
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  167. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by CrazyTalk · · Score: 3, Funny

    You forgot also "Less space than a Nomad" and "Lame"

  168. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3. You have to sign up with a crappy service provider.

  169. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by El+Yanqui · · Score: 2, Funny

    I completely agree. This has flop written all over it. Just like the iPod, the Mac Pro and all those other useless and unpopular Apple products. When will Apple ever learn?

    --
    Well, thanks to the Internet, I'm now bored with sex.
  170. Consumer Hell by tauntalum · · Score: 1

    AppleInsider is reporting that the supplies at Cingular/AT&T stores may be relatively tight.

    I suppose we should be clambering over each other trying to secure one. We can queue up for the chance to spend our money! These jerks have us by the gonads if we constantly fear we might not get one.

    For most of us, this is an expensive toy. Can it really be $500 worth of fun?

    1. Re:Consumer Hell by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
      I suppose we should be clambering over each other trying to secure one. We can queue up for the chance to spend our money! These jerks have us by the gonads if we constantly fear we might not get one.

      For most of us, this is an expensive toy. Can it really be $500 worth of fun?

      Dunno, fun is relative. But you're right about the gonads. Edward Bernays understood this a long time ago.

      In the power relationship you describe, there's a marvelously easy way to manipulate consumer herds. Shortages offer both added value to early adopters and wield a whip over those who are denied.

      Shortages = bragging rights = "fun" for haves = viral multiplication of desire by have-nots.

      Why this should work especially well in America, short-term instant-grat consumer heaven, is the subject of the documentary I linked above.

  171. Service Agreement by KTorak · · Score: 1

    I don't know if anyone else watched all of the comercials, but the 2nd one (How-To) states in fine print that the phone is only available with a new 2 year user agreement.

    --
    Kyle
  172. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I drive, tactile feedback is very very useful.

    If someone's calling, i can easily find the answer call/speaker phone button without taking my eyes off the road.
    heck i can even reply by sms, just by holding the phone over the gears.

    the point is that with actual buttons on the phone, its very easy to 'familiarise' yourself with the keypad layout. after some time, you can use the phone without having to look at the screen. this can apply to all sorts of situations depending on the user, in my case... driving.

    this could not happen with a software multi tap based interface...

  173. The "in" crowd by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 2, Interesting

    See, this is where the argument falls apart. The "in" crowd, aka "too cool for school" aka "hipster" crowd isn't even aware that the iPhone is a computer. They don't care about that. They may like the fact that the device is "sexy", but they want it to work well, too. The iPod took off with this crowd because it worked. There were many dozens of MP3 players trying directly to capture this market. They failed ultimately because their devices suck. Apple solved that problem. Honestly, the iPod doesn't suck. You know that, if you have any clue at all. You don't even need to have ever owned one to know that. In the same way, using the fantastic pattern recognition engine that is your brain, you can anticipate that, come June 29, their will be a cell phone on the market that doesn't suck, for the first time giving ordinary non-computer-geek people something that a lot of them already know they want: the internet in their pocket. There is no reason why Apple should have had to make a phone to please Steve Jobs. In fact, they resisted the temptation for a long, long time. Finaly, almost three years ago now, they gave up and decided to fix the problem themselves.

    I for one welcome our new suck-free cell phone overlords.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:The "in" crowd by aws910 · · Score: 1

      for the first time giving ordinary non-computer-geek people something that a lot of them already know they want: the internet in their pocket.
      I hate to rain on your parade, but there are many devices out there that give you "the internet in your pocket". Some of them do it better than others, but I find it hard to believe that Apple is going to reinvent things with just a touchscreen and EDGE. I've used touchscreen-only smartphones before(believe it or not, Apple didn't invent this concept) and I was consistently underwhelmed. What will make this device a success, however, is Apple fans and their incredible powers of Cognitive dissonance. (after they buy them)They will get their friends to buy the devices, and the affluent ones will buy them for their friends. Apple will shell out large sums of money for conspicuous product-placements, and the iPhone-owners will smile when they see James Bond using an iPhone to remote-control a battleship.
      Cognitive dissonance is not unique to Apple users, though. I know a few Zune/Vista-ers who do the same. It allows anyone to be a fanboy of anything. As a recent GNU/Linux convert, I find myself trying to do it too... which makes me no better than the rest of them.

      I for one welcome our new suck-free cell phone overlords.
      Sorry but I had to bite at this one. It's not the phones that suck. There are many great phones out there. It's the service that sucks for most of us... Think about it: If the service(cingular/sprint/etc) was good, they wouldn't have to lock you into a two-year contract to keep you. They also wouldn't have to subsidize the purchase of a phone and simlock it to their network. The iPhone can't possibly change this paradigm of suckiness.
    2. Re:The "in" crowd by virgil_disgr4ce · · Score: 1

      It's not the phones that suck. There are many great phones out there. I think you're still making the same mistake that most of us slashdot readers tend to make. Making a good phone is not about features or capabilities. It's about inventing ways of using and interacting with the device that allow anyone, anywhere, at any time use it without learning entire paradigms of computing that are highly likely to be unfamiliar to them.

      We all have a crapload of experience with computing, and we're generally so familiar with the tropes and ideas of interacting with computers that we never have to think about it. But, as should be more obvious, most of the world (read: consumers) doesn't have that experience, and probably never will. And for most of them, they don't need it and don't want it.

      The proof is in the pudding: If you can design a device that anyone can use, it's going to sell. If there was a cheap version of the iPhone available I'd bet a good deal of money on its success. Even the expensive one will probably do pretty well.

      I'm probably like the 10th person to make this very point on this story so far, but people here are so resistant to believing that not everyone knows what a "menu" is. Surprise, but these things are not obvious to everyone, and that's not their fault. Apple is inventing a lot of genuinely innovative ways of using their technology, and as a fellow interactivity designer it's really freaking inspiring! If you can come up with new ways of using a computer that require literally no instruction, that's progress. And we've been observing over the past couple of years that Apple has a serious knack for this ability. (Another notable company: IDEO.) Apple's not the only company with talented designers with truly new ideas, but significantly, pretty much all the other technology companies still haven't come around to honestly believing that design matters--and I'm not talking about the pretty package the technology comes in, I'm talking about understanding how it's really going to be used and how that experience can be improved.
    3. Re:The "in" crowd by Penguinisto · · Score: 1
      Dunno; Gimme the ability to run Skype on an iPhone, and I bet you all the WiFi antennae in Portland Oregon Metro area that it'll damned sure change the way a huge chunk of us around here view our cell phone carriers... ;)

      /P

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    4. Re:The "in" crowd by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      It's hard to argue cognitive dissonance when iPods make up 70% of the market... Of course you can also argue that the same cognitive dissonance occurs with PCs because Windows makes up 95% of the market too.

      Except with Apple it is how everyone loves iPods and with PCs it's how everyone hates Windows...

  174. the number of the fanboy ("teh fanboi") by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    There are not even enough apple fanboys to account for the sales of the MacBook and MacBook Pro. The XServe, maybe.

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  175. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by myxiplx · · Score: 1

    lol, touche. Those things were bloody stupid. Took about 30 seconds of me using my first iMac to spot that not knowing which way was 'up' was a bad idea.

    First impressions of the iphone UI though makes it look like a very polished application.

  176. Palm cracks me up by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Palm will be the first victim of the iPhone. They so completely failed to grok their product and market that they were nearly crushed by WinCE. Imagine that. *shudder*

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:Palm cracks me up by LKM · · Score: 1

      Palm killed itself the moment it split into a hardware company and a software company. They're still kind of hanging in there like a freaking Zombie that doesn't really realize that its clock has stopped ticking, and they could yet come back from the dead if they really concentrated on creating a superior user experience - kinda going back to what made them big in the first place - but they need to do it fast. The iPhone is a wake-up call (actually a rise-from-the-dead call, to continue with this fucked up analogy).

      I hope they manage to pull it off. The more competition, the merrier.

  177. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by antic · · Score: 1

    Funny thing is that I remember using a round mouse with some Unix workstation (X11?) years and years ago and realising instantly that it was a pain in the arse!

    The UI looks great, don't get me wrong, but I think you're underestimating the value of tactile feedback. Never been annoyed shitless by a touchscreen kiosk because you didn't know if the click had registered? I've seen some microwaves that have the same issue. The power button on my Xbox 360 is similar - not always easy to tell whether the hit's been registered.

    The music part of the iPhone looks excellent. Dialling and answering seems fine. Texting looks like it will be a bit annoying. And I couldn't see myself using the map search at all. Who searches for "seafood" on Google to choose a restaurant? I eat out very frequently here in Australia and always go to my favourites and highly-recommended places. I have never searched for a generic keyword to pick a restaurant. If anything, I search a name to find opening hours, phone number, etc and whenever I'm in that phase, I'm at or near a computer.

    For me though, as someone who really needs to upgrade their phone, the issue is going to be who they choose to partner with in Australia. I really dislike Telstra and Three, but I have a feeling they'd choose one of those!

    --
    'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
  178. last time you checked... was too long ago! by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 4, Funny

    Regarding the two things the iPod can't do... I haven't tried it myself, but an inexpensive 3rd party product which can waterproof your iPod will enable it to perform one of the two tasks on your list of things the iPod can't do, leaving you with taxes.

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  179. con't by *weasel · · Score: 1

    to die, due faults not its own.

    --
    // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
  180. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1
    So I've decided that I'm not going to buy a new phone until I can get some decent hardware running OpenMoko or similar.

    I'd agree with that, except they seem to be taking forever to get to market. I don't thing the JasJam's going to survive that long, especially if the annoying little sucker keeps crashing on me.....

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  181. Another Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a feeling the iPhone will mirror the success of the Playstation 3.

    All that hype... and then the flop.

  182. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by benzapp · · Score: 1

    Here in New York City, the PSP is by far the most popular portable device. There isn't a day that goes by I don't see someone playing one on the subway. I rarely if ever see a DS. I also have a PSP and play it quite frequently. You know what? The screen is in perfect condition. Every one I have seen is in perfect condition. I have a hard time believing anyone would let a fairly expensive device get "scratched to hell".

    So far, the DS is the only device of any significant with a clamshell design. The original gameboy was in use for over 12 years without anyone freaking out about scratched screens. People still play Gameboy Advances without any trouble with screen scratches. The Nokia candybar cellphone design is still amazingly popular. This entire thread is about the iPhone which carries the same design motif as the iPod, which also has an exposed screen. Between the gameboy, candybar style phones, and ipods, we are talking about hundreds of millions of electronic devices with which people are relatively happy.

    So, this begs the question: with so many devices out there with exposed screens, why is the PSP unique or unusual in this regard? In regards to my personal experience, is it so bizarre that people in NYC have protective cases for their PSPs?

    --
    I don't read or respond to AC posts
  183. WTS [3G 40GB iPod] and [Moto SLVR L7] by njfuzzy · · Score: 1
    Seriously, I want one of these so badly. Why?


    First, I want a sensible interface for Internet access on the go. At my last job, I got tethered with a Treo. I didn't like being on call 24/7, but I loved being able to jump on Google Maps or whatever to look things up, that would affect my plans for while I was out. I've been using the Internet since I was a kid (since before all the pretty pictures) and the way I think now is tied to net access. Having it in my pocket would make my life a lot more convenient and connected.

    Second, my current phone is a piece of crap. I paid $200 for a (non-contractually bound) SLVR L7, one of the "best" phones out there, and it's an unstable nightmare. Within a week of buying it, the audio output on the iPod/iTunes feature died on me.

    Third, my current iPod is getting a little long in the tooth. As a photographer, I regret not having the photo features on the recent models. As a commuter, I wish I could watch TV shows and movies on the subway. I have about 9 GB of music on my 40 GB iPod, including zero-star and one-star stuff I don't need on there. It turns out I didn't need that much space, so the obviously upcoming 100 GB touch-screen wide-screen iPod is more than I will need.

    Finally, I've taken a look at the demos, and I am confident that Apple got the interface right. It just looks slick and intuitive. It doesn't look like I will have to struggle through the limitations of the device to do what I want. It looks like it will just work, in a way so clever that once you use it, you can't even see how it's an innovation.

    --
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    The Deathlings (comic) - http://thedeathlings.com
  184. Re:How extraordinary it is by BodhiCat · · Score: 1

    ... its almost impossible for Cupertino to maintain contact with reality

    Does Cupertino have any sort of contact with reality to begin with? The only saving grace of Apple is that once in a while Steve's reality distortion field comes up with a product that people will actually buy and that makes money for the company.

    People want to praise him for his wonderful sucesses (Mac, iPod, OS X), but quickly forget the failures (NEXT, Newton, The Cube) I remember seeing the introduction of The Cube on a closed circuit TV at MacWord in 2000 (2001?). I thought it would be the future and savior of all things electronic. Well that didn't happen, but somehow Jobs and Apple have been able to pull out of the dive bombs and keep on flying. What will happen with the iPhone is anyone's guess, for now I am keeping my money in a sock under my bed and wating on that Apple stock purchase.

  185. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by Doctor-Optimal · · Score: 1

    So would their squareness make it more difficult to round them up?

    [Insert Pentium joke here]
    --
    New punctuation update "~" (no quotes) at the end of a line to indicate sarcasm. ~
  186. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by monomania · · Score: 1

    MS products always exhibit a rounding error.

  187. MS: innovators of the future by GanjaManja · · Score: 1

    They DID make the worl'd first Comp-u-Table! pre-installed with the same GUI as Apple's iPhone! now all they need is to let you sit on it so it can scan your butt and it'll be perfect for home use.

  188. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

    Overpriced.
    Underfeatured.

    They exact same thing was said about the iPod. The iPhone won't have that kind of success because it's tied to a single wireless provider, but it will be successful. I've been waiting forever for a cellphone / mp3 player combination that works as well as my iPod for and I've yet to find one that comes close. I'd buy the iPhone for that alone, the other features are just icing on the cake. Oh and much like the iPod, if you think the first generation iPhone is all Apple will ever offer your crazy. More features will be introduced as new generations are released and there will be less expensive models in the future.

  189. I came here for a good argument! by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1
    You could, if you tried, have the courage to engage jcr in a good argument. A nice start would be posting, as he does, using a handle that can be easily tied to your real name and professional reputation. You may find that it clarifies the conversation a bit. One tends to reserve labels like dimwit for, well, actual dimwits.

    M: I came here for a good argument. A: No you didn't; no, you came here for an argument. M: An argument isn't just contradiction. A: It can be. M: No it can't. An argument is a connected series of statements intended to establish a proposition. A: No it isn't. M: Yes it is! It's not just contradiction. A: Look, if I argue with you, I must take up a contrary position. M: Yes, but that's not just saying 'No it isn't.' A: Yes it is! M: No it isn't!
    --
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  190. MS: innovators of the future by GanjaManja · · Score: 0, Redundant

    They DID make the world's first Comp-u-Table! pre-installed with the same GUI as Apple's iPhone! now all they need is to let you sit on it so it can scan your butt and it'll be perfect for home use.

  191. Features List: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, No - you need to review the tech specs:

    the iPod Shuffle Cures cancer,
    iPod raises the dead,
    and iPhone grants ascendence to immortality on a higher plane of existence.

  192. Ginger's Achilles heel by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    You've just explained why Ginger hasn't been the society revolutionizing technology that it was, uh, hyped to be. When cities started banning the thing from their sidewalks to prevent pedestrian injury, it became quite clear that cities would need to be litteraly re-engineered to achieve the large scale society improving benefits that were predicted for it, and that cities in fact would not be re-engineered.

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    1. Re:Ginger's Achilles heel by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      it became quite clear that cities would need to be litteraly re-engineered to achieve the large scale society improving benefits that were predicted for it, and that cities in fact would not be re-engineered.
      It might be interesting to note though that a number of European cities *are* being re engineered to take advantage of...
      the bicycle.

      (which does make a lot more sense than focusing on a rather silly battery powered platform)
      --

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  193. [ot] [sarc] Advertising Catch! by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    Slashdot's really gone down the tubes: corporate shills every-bloody-where.

    1. Re:[ot] [sarc] Advertising Catch! by azav · · Score: 1

      Uhhh, can't a guy who has no connection to a restaurant, happened to actually like it, express his opinion without getting called a corporate schill?

      Are we THAT paraniod?

      Look, I used to live down the street from PC and used to walk up from the Marina in between coding sessions to miss the crowds and for a sake, cricket cola (ooh, there I go, being a schill again) and some Hawiian poke or grilled salmon fillet.

      It tasted good so I did it again.

      There is my complete history with Pacific Catch and summary of all the corporate connections I have with the company (read: none). In short, I have collected no money from my attesting to actualy like said eatery.

      I just thought it was cool to have a place I liked from a city I lived in for 15 years to be in an Apple ad. Jebus.

      --
      - Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
  194. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

    I'm bewildered by the number of Slashdot people who seriously believe that virtually everyone is "unhappy" with their cellphones. It gets even more laughable when you consider the common thread amongst those who criticise cellphones on Slashdot tends to be that they're too functional, a constituency that isn't going to be in any way satisfied by an expensive multifunctional touch-screen controlled cellphone.

    FWIW, I love my Motorola V635. My wife loves her RIZR. My "friend I talk about phones to alot" loves his Nokia 3220. My wife's sister's MiL loves her Samsung something-or-other she was showing us this weekend.

    Right now, amongst the flesh and blood people I talk to about such things, I don't know anyone who doesn't like their phone. And I can think of many reasons why they wouldn't like the iPhone.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  195. iPhone sucks less (TM) by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The worst part is that those 15 problems could have been fixed by the vendor but the industry is distorted so that doesn't happen. Before the iPhone, the maker of the handset was under the impression that the telephone company was their customer, and they really don't care one iota about you, the person who must use the device. This little love-fest between the telcos and handset makers results in the consumer being left with no place to turn. It costs the telco money to fix problems on your handset, because they "signed off" on the "final design" months ago and the handset maker has moved on to work on new models. They would rather sell you a different phone altogether than fix the crap software on the handset that you already paid for.

    A few weeks after the iPhone ships, Apple will release a software update for it. That will be the day the cell phone industry really changes. When people realize what a difference a vendor that treats them like a customer will make in their satisfaction of the handset, the industry will never be the same. All the pundits are focused on the magical multi-touch UI, and all the vendors are racing to catch up to the sleek hardware design and clean user interface. The software updates are the secret weapon.

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  196. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by matt2413 · · Score: 1

    "Business Plan" -- Don't you mean "Patent Application" ?

    --
    Matt
  197. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by LKM · · Score: 1

    I'm bewildered by the number of Slashdot people who seriously believe that virtually everyone is "unhappy" with their cellphones. This may come as a surprise to you, but I actually have non-geek friends. I know that they don't like their phones because I'm often the one they go to if they have tech problems. Obviously, the issues they have are not those a normal /. user has. They're annoyed if they start writing an SMS and then can't easily choose who to write it to because the phone software expected them to start from an address book entry instead of from an empty sms. They're annoyed if they can't figure out how to send the picture they took to their computer. They're annoyed if they missed a call, pressed "close" and then don't know where to find the list of missed calles. They're annoyed that there's no easy way to add a phone number from an sms they've received to an existing contact.

    It gets even more laughable when you consider the common thread amongst those who criticise cellphones on Slashdot tends to be that they're too functional, a constituency that isn't going to be in any way satisfied by an expensive multifunctional touch-screen controlled cellphone. You're missing the point. People aren't complaining that their phones are too functional. They complain because all the functions keep them from doing what they actually want to do at any given time. This is an important distinction.

    I'm glad your friends like their phones, but I'm afraid you're not part of the majority on this one.
  198. In other news.. by LarsG · · Score: 2, Funny

    the owners of Microfiber Screen Wipes INC were seen drinking champagne whilst ordering a LearJet.

    Joking aside, kudos to Apple for rethinking the phone UI but touch only?

    --
    If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
  199. Stop the phone. by shelterpaw · · Score: 1

    Every time I heard people say, "it's just a phone", I laugh. I think that's a really dumb statement because it's obviously much more than a phone. I think the name iPhone is the problem, but clearly this device is the coolest iPod/iPod video I've ever seen. So is it really just a phone, no. It's also a really cool hand held web device with wifi. Is it just a phone, no. The google maps feature alone is pretty sweet the way you can call the location on the map. Is it really just a phone, no.

    Too many people compare it to a Razr. I have a Razr and it's not an iPhone. Compare the iPhone to a Blackberry or another SmartPhone, but stop calling it "just a phone," unless, you're that blind to the technology that goes in it and if that's the case then why are you reading slashdot?

  200. 28 Minutes Later - Zombie Palm Undead by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Palm just announced that they hired Jon Rubenstein and sold a chunk of the company to raise cash for CPR. If their next step is to fire their entire managment team, they might have a chance.

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  201. Are you kidding me? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    Yes a Seafood place is going to pay some geek to astroturf on a nerd website like this.

    Is the only good Slashdotter in your mind someone who hates all corporations?

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  202. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by TheBig1 · · Score: 1

    Then we got the UI train wreck that was the Dock.

    What do you not like about the Dock? I personally find it very intuitive, more so than Window's task bar or the KDE / Gnome equivalents. The fact that it is application based, instead of window based, is a big plus to me and my personal workflow.

    The biggest problem I have with it is the lack of easy program launching, although I think that this is more of a Finder issue than the Dock. Even that is not critical; I use Quicksilver (which I love, BTW), and all is well.

    This is not a fan-boi trolling post; speaking as a UI designer for a few OSS projects, I am seriously curious about what you find so wrong with the Dock. I understand that people's workflows are different, and that what fits me may not fit you, but please share your concerns with me.

    Cheers

  203. iPaq + lithium in the water == happiness by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Call the county health department and have them test your water. Tell them to look for high levels of lithium, anti-depressants or other mind altering substances.

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    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
    1. Re:iPaq + lithium in the water == happiness by golgoj4 · · Score: 1

      wtf are you people doing to your smart phones? i regularly use a music player, the adobe pdf viewer and pocket word. it runs fine. it dies when i try and open more programs than it has memory, but then what doesn't? seriously, i think i must be 1 lucky bastard or something.

      --
      -those people who tell you not to take chances, they are all missing what lifes' all about-
  204. Leopard to ship June 29 by Gary+W.+Longsine · · Score: 1

    Oh, I'm not really sure how much to make of the Leopard delay anyway. It seems likely that the iPhone will be the first Apple product to ship on a Leopard version of OS X.

    --
    If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
  205. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Dionysos+Taltos · · Score: 1
    My general rule for technology roll-outs is never buy version 1.0. The same will apply to the iPhone, and I'd recommend that to anyone who'll listen to me. So I agree with you the wise course of action is to wait and judge. Let the determined early adopters work out the kinks.

    I'm not as concerned about tactile feedback, but I feel your concern is legitimate. I believe I have greater faith in Apple's design team. This isn't a product they rushed out the door, so I'm certain my faith is well-placed.

    However, I completely disagree with your anecdotal statement about young people only looking at their typing in a casual glance. My 14-year-old step-daughter seemingly text messages constantly. In the morning, in the evening, late at night. She is completely focused on the message she's typing out and never removes her eyes from the screen until she's done typing. But then that's just my anecdotal evidence. We're probably both correct within our small sub-sets of humanity.

  206. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by MrPerfekt · · Score: 1

    Do you have trouble walking and chewing gum at the same time?

    Seriously, how hard is it to glance at something and push a button...

    I had an 8525 and I returned it within a week. Between the sluggish response, terrible UI, third-party apps that just hosed the thing and the price which was actually more than an iPhone, I decided to hedge my bets and wait out the next 6 months for the iPhone.

    --
    I just wasted your mod points! HA!
  207. Re:How extraordinary it is by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    y own view is that both the TV and the iPhone will be financial busts.
    And you were one of those people "predicting" the failure of the iPod as well?
  208. Apple's the only manufacturer not selling "pretty" by LKM · · Score: 1

    I have to admit that I was not able to parse the first two paragraphs of your reply (the name of the product tells you that it is shit? huh?), thus I have to ignore those. I don't think it matters, because this seems to be the meat of what you're trying to say:

    But whatever, people think pretty=good...

    Actually, this is precisely what they hopefully don't think. Please note that the iPhone ads don't actually show the iPhone. They show a person using the iPhone's interface. When was the last time you saw a phone ad that did not concentrate on design and lifestyle? I bet this is the first.

    I don't really know what you have against Apple or the people who buy Apple's products, but it seems to be clouding your judgement. Apple is the only cell phone manufacturer which is not selling its phone based on "prettiness."

  209. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Dionysos+Taltos · · Score: 1

    And that ammendment makes a big difference, as my original reply to you was based on my step-daughter's Sidekick III which has a QWERTY keyboard.

  210. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    Yeah, pretty much exactly like the iPod.

    Now, go look up the 1G and 2G iPod sales in the 2 years before they introduced the much cheaper iPod Mini. Do you mean the numbers before Windows compatibility or after? What about the fact that the Mini came out 8 months after the 3rd Generation iPod? Or that the first time they sold over a million a quarter was after the 4th Gen came out, long after the mini?
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  211. [ot] Re:Are you kidding me? by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    I suspect you missed the [sarc] tag in my original reply.

    1. Re:[ot] Re:Are you kidding me? by 8-bitDesigner · · Score: 1

      Sorry, without a matching tag, he encountered a parse error.

  212. Re:Apple's the only manufacturer not selling "pret by Pojut · · Score: 1

    Insofar as "pretty" things, I was referring to apple products as a whole, not the iPhone. I'm sorry, but Apples products as a whole have (in the past 10 years anyway) become the similar to the Razr....everyone has to have one, and yet they are completely ignorant of the fact that they are overpaying for what they are getting.

    IN MY OPINION, remember, this is just my opinion, people that buy things like an iPod or an iPhone or an iWhatever, are doing so because of two reasons:

    It's a name they recognize, and because they are attracted to shiny plastic. The very fact that in advertising they say "This can hold 30,000 songs!" is enough proof of that, as we all know that since song lengths are variable there is no way they could determine how MANY things I could fit on there. It feeds off the ignorance of the general consumer, much like Intel's "more MHz = better!" approach that they had for so long.

  213. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by stewbacca · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately for your logic, most of the items you list are parts from other companies; Sony batteries are now Apple's manufacturing problem? Perhaps you should check your biases too, and see that Apple has been at the top or near the top in quality for computer products for longer than I can remember now.

  214. First time a demo was used in a commercial by gsfprez · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Seriously. When was the last time the actual product was demoed AS the commercial?

    Hell, when was the last commercial you saw so clear and simple so as to be produced at nearly zero cost? The have a dude holding the phone, and showing you how it works. Then there's a graphic at the end with the date.

    Compare to the blackjack commercial with the magic hands. WTF? The whole commercial pimps its card-like design by the hands? is there any indication of how useable it is? You barely even see the *actual* product for a few moments.

    My mom owns an iPod now that i've given her one - she fscking loves it. She uses it everywhere. I didn't get her a sansa or something else 1. because she's got a mac and every other music player is pretty much fsck-all useless if you have a mac 2. she understood how to use it in 15 seconds.

    She has called me exactly one time because she forgot how to make a new playlist in iTunes. Once sorted out, she's been using it - with 100% no techincal support from me.

    Compare to her sprint whatever the fsck it is phone. She's got no way to sync up her phone's phone book with her mac, and its impossible for her to DO anything with the pictures it takes - they're all stuck inside the phone.

    Just looking at the iPhone commerical - its obvious that my mom could use 100% of the functions on the phone. Its simple and it works seamlessly on Mac and Windows.

    When it comes to technology for day to day use - i want technology designed well enough that my mom can use it because i no longer live in her basement. I don't have the time nor the inclination to figure things out that just simply shouldn't be so complicated. I have stuff to do, and figureing out the minutae of some damn sycning issue is not one of the things i need to do.

    It amazes me how many don't get it. Well designed things may cost more - the cheapest thing you can buy is not always really the best answer. My life is considerably less stressful by following this one rule.

    Buy the best, or be content with what you have.

    (btw: i drove a beater early 90's accord until i could afford a Impreza WRX STi - and now, i enjoy it immensely, as opposed to having a long list of shitty half-baked cars)

    --
    guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
    1. Re:First time a demo was used in a commercial by radish · · Score: 1

      Buy the best, or be content with what you have.

      Sigh. There is virtually never a single "best" in any category. I would rewrite your golden rule as "Buy the best for your needs, and be content with what you have". Most of the world seems to agree that the iPod is the "best" mp3 player around - I disagree (and I have one) - it doesn't meet my needs as well as other players. Is an Impreza the "best" car money can buy? That seems unlikely unless you have very specific needs (is your name McRae?) - for a family with 5 kids something larger is probably "better". What's the "best" OS? Many people might say Linux, and that didn't cost anything.

      So no - the best is not always the most expensive, and the best for one person is very rarely universal.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

  215. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by steveo777 · · Score: 1
    I agree, I haven't had a phone that I was happy with since my Startac years ago. Currently I'm running around with a SonyEricsson S710a, which was nice a couple years ago, but I've got to a remove-the-battery reset every time I use the bluetooth or switch out the memory card. It plays mp3 and some video files just fine, but I was never completely impressed. The iPhone, well, it'll be a great expense... I'm thinking that it will outweigh a lot of the purchases that I'll have to be making in the future.

    I've also got a lot of friends who can't wait to ditch their PDA's, 'smart' phones, and music players and replace them with one device that works just as seamlessly.

    --
    This sig isn't original enough, it's time to come up with something witty...
  216. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by espressojim · · Score: 1

    The phone has no sound feedback to tell you where your finger is in 2d space. I'm not exactly sure how you'd use that to tell you what number your finger is hovering over...

    As for the ear piece, yeah, that's just one more piece of techno-crap to lug along.

  217. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by espressojim · · Score: 1

    I got mine for $140 (amazon has nice deals), and I figure that if I'm not thrilled with it enough to pay the $$$ for an iPhone, I can just transfer the plan to an iPhone (since they are both Cingular/AT&T)

    I needed a cel right away, but I can see why you would want to wait - I was trying really hard to wait, but after dropping my phone in a puddle, it was a choice between going without a phone (not going to happen) and getting *something* approximately useful.

  218. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    Every time I've seen it demo'ed pressing "home" brings up the standard 4 options at the bottom of the screen. "Phone" is always lower left. After that Favorites is two over.... and so on.

    How do you know how far without any physical feedback ?

    You mean apart from the width of the iPhone? Or are you claiming that it grows and shrinks?
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  219. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    Look, I've had this discussion about a dozen times before. Either you claim that the iPhone is just like the iPod, in which case it'll sell approximately 1/20th of what Jobs claimed it will in its first year, or the iPhone isn't just like the iPod, in which case extrapolating the iPod's success for the iPhone makes no sense. Since the latter option still allows for your belief that the iPhone will be a big success, why don't we agree on that one and be done with it?

  220. "Even if only a small fraction of Mac zealots..." by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
    Even if only a small fraction Mac zealots get an iPhone, it will still be hugely successful for Apple.

    Even Apple doesn't believe that. For years, zealots haven't been able to produce big profits for the computer line. In recent history, only the iPod was able to do that by appealing to a far wider group. And it has been Apple's hope ever since that iPod sales would have spillover effect, something that seems to be coming true at least in the laptop line.

    To be successful, the iPhone has to be popular with Wal-Mart America. That's Apple's market now. Apple wants to sell to Joe Sixpack, not merely to fussy refined aesthetes (that tiny segment's delivered already and not going anywhere). The hipsters and smugsters shown in the Switcher ads? Highly colorful pilot fish meant to bring along the carp. When the lady in the lime green stretch pants shifts her Big Mac to the other paw and whips out her iPhone, wiping clean the screen on her thigh, hearts will light up in Cupertino.

  221. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by DWIM · · Score: 1

    Apple's done the research, and found that you are mistaken. They don't jump into a crowded market unless they know that it's very poorly-served.

    Good of Apple to jump in and properly serve that miserable 1%!!
  222. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by jcr · · Score: 1

    The fact that Apple does their homework before introducing a product is public information.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  223. Re:Apple's the only manufacturer not selling "pret by LKM · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm sorry that your ignorance and prejudice keep you from objectively evaluating why people choose Apple products. The point you bring up about the number of songs is laughable, by the way. It's an example of Apple turning tech specs into something people actually understand. They're using average song length and bitrate to determine how many songs a typical user can store on the iPod. Nothing nefarious about it. Anyway, obviously, discussion is pointless since you've made up your mind about Apple and its customers. If you can't see a reason to buy a computer running Mac OS X, I'm afraid I don't know what to tell you.

  224. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by jcr · · Score: 1

    jcr worked at Apple until recently.

    It's coming up on two years since I left, actually.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  225. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

    I know -nobody-, not a single person, that is happy with their mobile phone. I'm quite happy with my phone. It doesn't have a camera, it's not an easy-to-break clamshell, it doesn't have all sorts of data plans that I would never use. And it has a flashlight, which doesn't deter from the fact that it does what a phone is supposed to do.

    The only thing I don't like about my phone is how hard it was to find a phone that is simply a phone.

    - RG>
    --
    Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
  226. Re:Apple's the only manufacturer not selling "pret by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

    '' The point you bring up about the number of songs is laughable, by the way. It's an example of Apple turning tech specs into something people actually understand. They're using average song length and bitrate to determine how many songs a typical user can store on the iPod. Nothing nefarious about it. ''

    I have the impression that everyone else (Creative, Microsoft etc. ) uses the same method nowadays. The only sad, sad exception was Sony who claimed 13,000 songs in the same storage where everyone else claimed 5,000 because they based their measurements on 48KBit/sec compression.

  227. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
    Of course. It wasn't meant to be a malevolent remark, hope it wasn't taken that way.

    What I was more referring to was the results of such research, not that such research had taken place. Of course, based on the decision to go forward, many reasonable assumptions could be made re said results ...

  228. Re:[ot] Precious Catch! by wild_berry · · Score: 1

    Hey, I'm sorry, I was being facetious about the state of Slash. I'd tagged the post with [sarc] to indicate that I wasn't being serious. I know what it's like to have little-known but excellent restaurants, and know it'd be cool to see them noted.

  229. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by nytes · · Score: 1

    I think the big problem with dialing the iPhone while driving is that it takes two hands to dial.

    That means that I'll have to put my beer down just to make a call.

    --
    -- I have monkeys in my pants.
  230. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    OK, what were Job's predictions of iPod sales for the first year? Or did you make that up like all the other facts from your post?

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  231. I can't believe geeks don't get it... by bodland · · Score: 1

    I mean come on. We all saw this coming...when the iPod came out and took over the world. We had a iPod, a cell phone, one if not two other pagers and a Palm...all clipped to our belts along with our shoulder slung notebook. That is the neo-pocket protector. A bunch of techno-gadgets.

    The marriage of all these devices was going to happen sooner or later. So here it is and the "folding table in the mall computer club" morons are saying how it is a just a pop culture fad and cannot possibly be as amazing as the Amiga.

    Like the Macintosh and iPod that ushered in radcial change so too will the iPhone change the way we work, play, live and communicate. I for one will probably buy one. I held off on buying an iPod because I already carry a pager and a cell phone and wish to limit number amount of "crap that beeps". I stopped lugging a notebook around. And now I will glad the day comes I can say fuggit to a pager, and cellphone, dropping everything I am doing to find a computer that I can access work with to fix junk.
    The iPhone will be "Lord of the bling."

  232. No, the phones suck by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I disagree - I have used a combination of many smart phones, and other higher end phones like the RAZR. They all suck as far as UI, especially so if you want to browse the internet - the iPhone should get some credit as being the first to try a really no-compromise browser with a good UI for traversing a larger page on a smaller screen.

    All of what they have done is derivative. That's mostly what they've done in the past. But the difference is, Apple is able to take the pieces and make them work in ways others have not managed before.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  233. Observational by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Well, I'd be quite willing to bet your subconscious recognised that you've made an error long before (relatively speaking) your conscious mind sees the error on screen, but I doubt you'll agree since you seem to have made your mind up.

    I simply examined what happens when I type. Yes you get some input from your fingers that you may be off, but you only get confirmation from your eyes because your fingers may also simply brush other keys on the way down without pressing them.

    My mind is made up, because that is how my mind works! I do not know how general this is, but to me it makes a lot of sense because as I said you look at the screen while you are touch typing and register mistakes there before your finger even leaves the offending key.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  234. Question About the Ads by Phat_Tony · · Score: 1

    In the iPhone Ad called "Calamari," the user has the area around Moscone Recreation Area up on the phone, and does a search for "Seafood." One of the hits, the closest one, is "Pacific Catch," around the corner of Fillmore St and Lombard St.

    Here's the thing though; it you go to Google Maps and search for"Seafood" right in that area where it found Pacific Catch, it doesn't find Pacific Catch. It does find a bunch of other hits for "Seafood" that are much closer than the other ones the iPhone found, but doesn't find Pacific Catch. If you search Google Maps in a browser for "Pacific Catch," it finds it right there where the iPhone found it and gives you all the same info the iPhone did.

    So why does the iPhone's version of Google Maps find Pacific Catch by searching for "Seafood," when the browser version doesn't. In fact, the whole results list has very little overlap when you put the same map area shown on the iPhone up in Google Maps in a browser and perform the same search.

    In his interview with Bill Gates and Walt Mossberg last week at D5, Jobs said that the iPhone Maps software was written by Apple and Google was very impressed with it, but that it just interface with the usual Google Maps API's. So I'm surprised it gives such different results, especially categorizing a restaurant under "Seafood" that the browser version of Google Maps doesn't. How does it know?

    --
    Can anyone tell me how to set my sig on Slashdot?
    1. Re:Question About the Ads by gevil · · Score: 1

      And about the ads: One of the covers from the first Ad is from Céu; A brasilian underground singer, that is starting to boom over here. But the ìPhone wont come to Brasil! I wonder if shes in the Ad just because shes pretty. If you want to see more, click this: (sorry, portuguese) http://www.donttalkaboutlife.com/2007/06/cu-no-iph one.html

  235. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by wandazulu · · Score: 1

    I concur with your statement...for the year we've had our DS, our two kids (5 & 2) have banged on it (the 2yo broke a stylus on it in that the stylus itself snapped in half) and the screen is still registers every movement. I put a plastic film on the screen figuring that abuse would happen and I still havent' had to replace it.

  236. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by dstone · · Score: 1

    Apple's done the research, and found that you are mistaken. They don't jump into a crowded market unless they know that it's very poorly-served.

    Lately, sure, Apple has made some smart moves.

    But they do have a history of taking chances, jumping into markets quickly with new products or variants, and occasionally ending up with a commercial failure. I think people respect them for taking these kinds of chances. But they're not immune to bad judgement.
    * Apple III
    * Apple Lisa
    * Apple Newton
    * Macintosh Portable
    * Apple Pippin
    * Apple Interactive Television Box

  237. Re:Apple's the only manufacturer not selling "pret by LKM · · Score: 1

    Yeah. Sony claimed that their ATRAC compression was so much better than everything else that their 48kbps songs sounded as great as other people's 128 kbps AAC files. It's not true, of course, but what do you expect of Sony.

  238. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by hhr · · Score: 1

    3. Cheek Greese.

  239. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    Yes - and part of that marketing was the form factor combined with it being either free or $70 or so.

    The clientele for this phone, however, is more of the Treo/Pocket PC crowd. The lack of a tactile keyboard is the biggest problem, and for me the lack of an internal GPS receiver and not being able to run a bunch of cool apps (Agile Messenger) on the network of my choice.

  240. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
    The phone has no sound feedback to tell you where your finger is in 2d space. I'm not exactly sure how you'd use that to tell you what number your finger is hovering over...

    I didn't say that it did, but rather that it could. I'm sure it's non-trivial, but I've no doubt that sound feedback could be developed that would give you a very good sense of where your finger is. I don't know how sensitive to force the pad is, but if it can tell the difference between a light touch and a press then that's all you'd need.

  241. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by Dolda2000 · · Score: 1

    Indeed, I can't think of anyone I know who regularly texts that gives the screen more than a casual glance every 5-10 keypresses.
    If the tactile feedback really worked, though, they'd be looking at the screen constantly, rather than letting their eyes off the buttons only every 5-10 keypresses, no? Maybe then I'd also receive fewer SMSes with completely mistaken words that just happened to be on the same keys, as well. I can't quote any examples in English, but I think everyone knows what I mean...
  242. Re:How extraordinary it is by cthellis · · Score: 1

    People want to praise him for his wonderful sucesses (Mac, iPod, OS X), but quickly forget the failures (NEXT, Newton, The Cube)

    Newton was not his. NeXT contributed a ton of technical advances and became the basis for OSX, which most credit as the largest part of Apple's recent desktop successes, as it pulled them out of their OS funk. (NeXT by itself had some development gems going on, but indeed couldn't find a place in the market to survive on--which has basically been every other commercial OS that didn't pre-date Windows. It's not the easist of markets in which to find succor.) On the Cube, I can't really blame him for YOUR weird-ass opinions ("I thought it would be the future and savior of all things electronic."), but in the meanwhile it was simply a PC design that was not widely adopted and was quickly phased out. It's not like they sank tens of millions into it; to my knowledge it still brought in profit--it just wasn't popular enough to have them continue the production and line complications (and potential consumer confusion.) Shuttle and other mini form factor computers came out later on, and they were adopted but not widely so, so it's not until recently that we're seeing a stronger push for it. (Driven also by media center desires, which weren't there at the time.) The Cube was not on target, but it was not a huge failure to bemoan.

    In fact, if you want to go back to the Newton (which was Sculley's pet project, and which Jobs canned upon his return) and assume Jobs were a part of it from its' inception, we may have seen much less "failure" and much more "not seeing Palm exist," as Jobs pushes the same kind of values that Palm used to really take off to begin with. While the Newton was cool in many ways, it was also too complex and priced to a point where its' potential market was very limited, and not poised to expand that market. Maybe they could have kept up the technological advancements and pushing things with a higher model, but had Jobs been in charge we'd have likely seen something much like the Palm Pilot in existence much sooner. And if that were the case, the market would have started growing sooner, the room taken up by Palm likely co-opted by their already established name... Heck, Apple would probably still have held onto ARM and sunk more money into development, too.

    Jobs has certainly had failures in his time, but I find people tend to fixate on the sillier ones and "ones that really aren't," rather than what was going on before his ousting.

  243. Re:How extraordinary it is by Budenny · · Score: 1

    No, I had no views one way or the other about the iPod.

  244. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    Exactly what we're trying to do, 1% market share in 2008, 10 million units and we'll go from there. MacWorld 2007 Keynote

    You're seeing things, BTW. I can't have made up any facts because I never presented anything as fact.
  245. Re:Wow. by cthellis · · Score: 1

    How about we mod you down for saying nothing of use and being a general tool, as opposed to our being fanboys?

  246. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by catwh0re · · Score: 1
    I see your viewpoint. Up until this point I've enjoyed smaller phones that are not convergence devices. I find most convergence devices don't do any of their individual tasks well enough to be a phone, a camera, a java games platform or a media player. Most of the brands still use very similar interfaces for all those features as they had with just the phone functionality, which is very confusing. I feel the apple device has some success here because hardware wise there is very little limitation to the interface, the device is a purely software platform (as we all know not even the keyboard is physical.) While I have only been able to see the publicly available reviews and videos of the device, it does seem like apple put a good effort in keeping enough quality in each of the features to ensure that it makes a good phone, a good ipod and a good internet device (the built in web browser has taken a page from the wii, and work via a zoom and pan mode.)

    I feel there is a strong cross over between people who own high end ipods and people who have expensive phones. Apple is really trying to convert their cashed up video ipod audience into a new market. I think this market would appreciate the space saving of getting rid of their mobile phone, for a slightly taller ipod.

  247. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    Exactly what we're trying to do, 1% market share in 2008, 10 million units and we'll go from there. MacWorld 2007 Keynote

    You're seeing things, BTW. I can't have made up any facts because I never presented anything as fact. Listen, you Schmock. First you make up "facts" about iPod sales being driven by the iPod Mini, that you make up facts about Jobs making sales predictions for the iPod, and now you completely act like you never did. You say you had this argument 20 times before? And after losing 20 times, you still make up stuff and pretend you won?
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  248. Re:[ot] Precious Catch! by azav · · Score: 1

    Ahh, sorry bro. I shoulda been paying attention to your subject!

    Heh. Oops.

    Cheers,

    --
    - Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
  249. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    This is not a fan-boi trolling post; speaking as a UI designer for a few OSS projects, I am seriously curious about what you find so wrong with the Dock. I understand that people's workflows are different, and that what fits me may not fit you, but please share your concerns with me.

    Many (including me) have covered this before, however, some highlights:

    * The indication as to what is a running program (vs a launch icon) and what is not is too subtle
    * Similar objects look identical (eg: a bunch of minimised terminals or word docs, or a bunch of folder shortcuts) unless you either turn the zoom right up (which produces other problems), keep it big all the time (which wastes screen space), or constantly wipe the mouse across it to get captions.
    * It's centre-oriented (I realise this is changeable with appropriate tools, but the point is that's how it arrives out of the box). Additionally, it doesn't extend to the bottom of the screen. That makes it (relatively) hard to hit.
    * Further, it means everything on it moves constantly, destroying any hope of leveraging muscle memory.
    * The intermingling of icons with distinctly different functions (more apparent in the right side of the Dock where you get minimised windows hanging around with file and folder aliases and .... the Trash). The Dock should have at least 3 - maybe even 4 - different "zones".
    * Icons on the Dock behave inconstently (and, worse, _destructively_) with "similar" icons in most other parts of the UI (eg: drag something off and it disappears, rather than copies/moves). Icons on the Dock *should* be aliases that can be manipulated like other aliases.
    * The icons on the Dock don't tie back to anything (ie: they're not physical files that can be manipulated).
    * You can't drag-and-drop via the Dock to an arbitrary window.
    * Context menus are infuriatingly slow, especially for folder aliases.
    * Related to this, moving from an arbitrary window in one application to an arbitrary window in another application is tedious (I know Expose has disguised this problem, but I'm talking in the context of the original release).
    * Following on, I really don't like the application-centric paradigm (this is more a personal preference thing, I'll grant).

    Basically, it's difficult to find anything the Dock does _right_ (other than look cool in demos). The Windows Taskbar is superior in pretty much every functional way[0], as were the Application and Apple Menus it replaced from Classic MacOS (my only adjustment to them would have been to make the Application Menu cascade out a window list for each application on it and to improve drag & drop capabilities).

    The Dock is a very confused piece of UI. It tried to be a program launcher, [filesystem] shortcut bar, task switcher and window manager, and consequently ends up sucking at all of them. If you really are a UI designer, steer well clear of the Dock for inspiration. According to pretty much all well understood UI guidelines, it's a disaster. It was quite clearly made primarily to look cool and with usability (and good UI principles) as a distant secondary priority.

    [0] Even that annoying collapse-a-bunch-of-windows-into-a-button feature only serves to make that aspect (task switching) of the Taskbar *as bad* as the Dock when it triggers - and like the Dock's centre-orientation, it's "fixable" with tweaking utils (to bump up the threshold).

  250. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    And that ammendment makes a big difference, as my original reply to you was based on my step-daughter's Sidekick III which has a QWERTY keyboard.

    Well, not really, because a QWERTY keyboard on a similarly small phone-sized touch screen is going to be worse or, at best, equivalent.

  251. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    You mean apart from the width of the iPhone? Or are you claiming that it grows and shrinks?

    No, I'm saying that without looking at it, it will be difficult to tell if you're over one of those buttons or between two of them.

    "Two over" means nothing when there's no way of counting how many you've already gone past.

  252. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    If the tactile feedback really worked, though, they'd be looking at the screen constantly, rather than letting their eyes off the buttons only every 5-10 keypresses, no?

    Er, no ? Why would they ? When I know I can write, for example, "friend" by just hitting 374363, and being able to feel exactly where those buttons are is trivial, why would I be looking at it constantly ?

    I don't even send a lot of texts - maybe 2-3 a day - and I can write SMSes with only a casual glance. People who do send a lot (some younger colleagues at work) can quite literally write messages dozens of words long without even looking at (or, apparently, concentrating on) the phone. I sincerely doubt they'll be able to do that with an iPhone.

    Maybe then I'd also receive fewer SMSes with completely mistaken words that just happened to be on the same keys, as well. I can't quote any examples in English, but I think everyone knows what I mean...

    I can think of one - "he" and "if". On my Nokias, you toggle between the alternatives using the '*' key and it's basically an automatic reaction after a while (ie: writing "if" becomes "41*").

  253. They're the same price, actually by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

    Your comparison is misleading because you linked to the two-disc special edition. The regular edition DVD is only $14.99 -- it's marked down quite a bit from an inflated "list price", but Best Buy always does that.

    That's the same price as on the iTunes store, but you still get extra features (outtakes, commentary, other languages) as well as the ability to play it on any DVD player, rip it to your favorite compressed format, etc.

    --
    Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
  254. Re:I'd give this thing at least 6 months in the wi by TheBig1 · · Score: 1

    Thanks for this. I guess I must have subconciously modified my workflow to avoid some of these issues. For instance, I almost never minimize windows, instead preferring to hide them; I don't include any programs in the dock that are not essentially always running (Web browser, Mail, Terminal, etc). All the other applications I launch as needed via Quicksilver.

    Anyways, thanks again for the reply.

    Cheers

  255. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

    I agree with you completely.

    My problem is the non-informed SlashDot crowd that tries to paint the iPhone as revolutionary or 'technically' advanced, when it is not.

    It is just simple convergence with an Apple Logo, plain and simple.

    This doesn't make it horrible or bad either. My original post was a bit over the top trying to make my point of how average the iPhone is compared to other technologies, but I wanted to get some people to think about it realistically.

    If someone has tons of iTunes content and needs a new phone, this is fine choice for them. The iPhone isn't evil nor does it seem to be a bad design, however I am personally disappointed Apple is skipping several technologies like 3G level online performance.

    Also for people that are wanting multi-media in their pocket, there are some really good products already out there, and you can use WMP and either buy tracks online or even do a subscription and have access to 3 million songs for $15 a month. The iPhone level of convergence already exists in many other phones; it just doesn't have the Apple marketing machine.

    PS Thanks for responding and bring me back out of orbit. :)

  256. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

    Wow, typical Apple bashing. I think people like you get upset when people are engaged by technology

    I admit my post was a bit emotional or over the top, but I wasn't trying to Apple bash, but instead try to give people a wake up call.

    The iPhone isn't evil or bad, but also isn't a major technology advance and I wanted to get this across to people. (Although I did go a bit into orbit.)

    I have been around phones for literally years that offer solid applications, and a full multimedia (aka iPod) experience in addition to being a good phone and PDA.

    iPhone is kind of cool, but is driven more by marketing than actual features. With the exception of the paradigm moving to a multi-touch screen, it offers nothing new, and disappoints by not offering true high speed cellular performance.

    I have had 3G speeds for over 3yrs, and am used to using my phone alone or with my laptop on the beach with DSL like speeds. I am also use to using my phone as my second media device with 8gb of storage that I can change in and out and even Sync over Bluetooth or WiFi.

    Apple's marketing is awesome, they could sell ice to penguins, but that doesn't mean their ice is revolutionary.

    PS I apologize for going Postal on Apple in my original post, it was more emotional than what I intended when all I wanted to do is shake some reality back into the conversation.

    Take Care...

  257. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

    The revolutionary thing about the iPhone is not that it uses a multitouch screen (although that is pretty new, too - if you know of any other cell phones that do that, I'd love to hear about it). The revolutionary thing is how it uses the touch screen. Have you ever seen a cell phone ad that focused on usability? That's pretty damn revolutionary if you ask me. Which you don't, of course... but... it still is! HA!

    Yes I agree the usability is the key Apple is banking on.

    However this doesn't mean other phones haven't addressed usability. Some motorola interfaces aren't bad, and then there is Windows Mobile 5 and 6 that offer a comfortable level of usability. Phones with advanced features are not horrible to use like they were 5 years ago.

    I hope Apple's usability is beyond everyone else, as it is elevate the expectation of users.

    I still do wish that Apple would not have dismissed some of the technical features people like myself have come to expect in phones, like 3G speeds.

    I apologize for my original post, it was an emotional OMG type of post, rather than just laying out facts.

    Thanks for responding, and yes I would have asked you what you thought if I knew you. :)

  258. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    You do seem to have some incredible problems with your vision and your temper. Your rage blinds you to the quote from Jobs sitting in your face and prompts you to invent claims that I've never made. Hell, you can't even mock my hyperbole correctly: I said a dozen times, not 20.

    I'd ask you to calm down, but I don't think I have the patience to wait that long.

  259. In Soviet Russia... by feedmetrolls · · Score: 0

    Troll something something you!

    This is the best reply I could think of with without resorting to counter-trolling.

    --
    You are reading a sig. Cancel or allow?
  260. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by LKM · · Score: 1

    Some motorola interfaces aren't bad, and then there is Windows Mobile 5 and 6 that offer a comfortable level of usability.

    You offer the insufferable Motorola UI and Windows Mobile 5 and 6 as examples of good cell phone UI? I think you just made my point :-)

    Now, I will agree that there are cell phones with better UI than others. I like the Nokia phones. Nokia put a lot of thought into what the user needs at any given time, and it shows. The important options are always there.

    Palm is one of the few companies that gets smartphone stuff like the Calendar quite right.

    But none of these companies are competing on UI. And people have resigned. A friend of mine recently bought a new cell phone, a SonyEricsson. He told me that while he didn't like it too much, at least it wasn't a Samsung or an LG. I asked what was wrong with Samsung and LG - both make pretty cell phones and seem to have a rather good reputation quality-wise. He told me that the LG and Samsung UI sucks. He then proceeded to explain that he thought the SonyEricsson UI sucked, as well, but since he had had a SonyEricsson phone before, he at least already knew how it worked.

    Another example: I own a P990i. Entering a new entry into the calendar takes over 14 taps with the stylus (provided that you don't need any of the "advanced" features like a reminder or a timespan not equal to an hour). SonyEricsson recognized that this was an issue, so they created a shortcut for creating new entries, which is unintuitive to use and also takes about 10 stylus taps.

    In fact, the P990i is much more complicated and less usable than the P800, an earlier Symbian based SonyEricsson smartphone.

    The simple fact is that SonyEricsson does not care about the UI on its cell phones. They care about making it look good and making it cheap, and cramming as many features into it as possible, because that's what everyone is doing, and that's what seems to be selling.

    As you can see, I'm deeply unhappy with the current state of the cell phone industry :-)

    I'm really hoping Apple changes this trend.

    I still do wish that Apple would not have dismissed some of the technical features people like myself have come to expect in phones, like 3G speeds.

    I have no doubt that this is coming shortly. Otherwise, the iPhone won't stand a chance in Europe.

  261. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    You do seem to have some incredible problems with your vision and your temper. Your rage blinds you to the quote from Jobs sitting in your face and prompts you to invent claims that I've never made. Hell, you can't even mock my hyperbole correctly: I said a dozen times, not 20.

    I'd ask you to calm down, but I don't think I have the patience to wait that long. Maybe the reason is because nothing you have said made sense? Nah, that can't be it. Your claims were not based on realöity, but that is obviously my fault. Your made up claim that I said "the iPhone is just like the iPod" made you fantasize that "in which case it'll sell approximately 1/20th of what Jobs claimed it will in its first year" - now what could that mean? That the iPod didn't sell as well as Jobs said it would? So I asked you for Job's predictions of iPod sales - and you give me that for the iPhone.

    There sure as hell is someone with a reading problem - and he probably thinks I'm talking about banana cream pie by now.

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  262. Yes Slashdot Subject-Bot, the cat got my tongue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just a phone! What can you do with it? Make and receive calls! WOW! Brilliant!

    I've only been able to do that since before I was born. I just have to get one of these innovative devices.

    That's right America, CONSUME. Resisting hype would be un-American! Buy!

  263. Re:Parallels? *YAWN* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like someone is overcompensating for small penis syndrome. Take your hog Vista OS and go wank off in the corner doosh.

  264. Re:How extraordinary it is by Damvan · · Score: 1

    "for now I am keeping my money in a sock under my bed and wating on that Apple stock purchase."

    Since the day before they announced the iPhone (Jan 8, 2007), Apple stock is up 43.7%. How has the money in your sock performed?

  265. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Mattsson · · Score: 1

    The biggest problem with mobile-phones today is that everything is proprietary.
    Damn it! Use a standard headphone-port, a standard usb-port and give me some decent documentation and I'd be a great device.
    But noooo.
    Want to connect headphones? Then use our worthless adapter.
    Want to connect to the computer? Then use our worthless proprietary cable.
    Want to change the media-player application? You can't *argh*
    Want to build a [insert purpose]-device to interface with our phone? Then go back-engineer the interface, cause we won't tell you how it works!

    Current mobile-tech companies suck, along with their hardware.
    I do hope Apple will use standard ports, have an open software architecture and open control-protocols, but looking at their history, it seems unlikely that they'll manage to not suck like the rest.

    --
    /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
  266. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    I never made any claims about Jobs' predictions for the iPod. You mis-read my comments and asked for something unrelated to what I was talking about. To explain for the umpteenth time:

    If the iPhone is just like the iPod -- and note here that I am not claiming that you said this, though TheRealMindChild did -- then the iPhone's sales will follow the basic trend of the iPod's sales. The known sales record of the iPod in its first two years is a tiny fraction of Jobs' stated goal for iPhone sales in 2008. By the standards set by Jobs himself, that would be a failure.

    If it isn't true that the iPhone is just like the iPod (the only other option), then it makes no sense to say the iPhone will be a success just because the iPod was (eventually). Since that doesn't mean that the iPhone won't be a success, I find it amazing that this is such a controversial proposition, especially one that could anger you so.

  267. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    I never made any claims about Jobs' predictions for the iPod. You mis-read my comments and asked for something unrelated to what I was talking about. To explain for the umpteenth time:

    If the iPhone is just like the iPod -- and note here that I am not claiming that you said this, though TheRealMindChild did "you claim that the iPhone is just like the iPod, in which case"
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  268. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    Wow, that was retarded. You've just run out of stuff to make up, haven't you?

  269. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    Wow, that was retarded. You've just run out of stuff to make up, haven't you? Says the guy who made up the fact that the iPod started to sell when the Mini came out.
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  270. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    See? You have run out of stuff to make up. Now you're just recycling.

  271. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    You started with the making up of stuff. Before I even replied to you.

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  272. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    "You started it!"

    We've really reached a new low now haven't we?

  273. Re:iPhone == iFiasco by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    "You started it!"

    We've really reached a new low now haven't we? I still haven't sunk nearly as low as you, ohh inventor of "facts".
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck