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."
Warning: Soprano's spoilers in subject line
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.
Three Squirrels
Overpriced.
Underfeatured.
The only people who would willing to waste so much money for so little in actual value are these types:
http://www.geocities.com/peacemalion/iproduct.gif
No thanks Apple, unlike portable music players, people actually are happy with their cellphones.
They're really pushing that June release date aren't they?
Okay... but does it run Linux?
Don't call me a cowboy, and don't tell me to slow down!
I do not have Apple, but am I the only one that does not care about the iPhone?
They know how to deliver, the pipeline to the stores will be full.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
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
Show of hands please... how many of you can't get up from your desk when your mom calls from upstairs now because you would feel "creepy"?
load "$",8,1
Here in Brazil the fanboys are crazy. They cant buy one.
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.
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.
Apparently, they do not want my money.
w _to/apple-iphone-how_to_848x496.movl amari/apple-iphone-calamari_640x496.movv er_been/apple-iphone-never_been_480x376.mov
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/ho
http://movies.apple.com/movies/us/apple/iphone/ca
http://movies.apple.com/movies/us/apple/iphone/ne
Sorry they are not all the same res, but I bet you can figure out how to get whatever resolution you want.
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!
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.
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.
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.
.... hold on. I need to go write a business plan.
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
Arted?
Or Hook Ares?
Apple = Lameness
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...
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.
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.
I did 'cause apple deserves at most that.
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.
For decades, we Mac users haven't really given a shit what was happening off in PC land. Every few years we'd hear about a new version of Windows, and we'd glance into the abyss just long enough to remind ourselves of Microsoft's eternal cluelessness. Other than that, I think our closest brush with Windows was Word 6, and that was a decade and a half ago.
So what makes Windows suddenly relevant to us now? Who are all these "Mac users" clamoring for aberrations like "Macintosh Explorer"? Are these the same "Mac users" on VersionTracker writing glowing reviews of Firefox and Azureus? Who let them in, anyway?
If you're some sort of tragic square who needs to run Windows, maybe you should have thought of that before you bought a Mac. Sometimes I wonder if it wouldn't be better to just round up these so-called "Mac users" and send them all on trains to Redmond.
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.
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.
Clearly you aren't appreciating the vast amount of innovation that went into this device.
File Deletion is Murder.
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.
I've been thinking about this, and I really can't see anything to be concerned about. Several things come to mind:
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...
It runs OS X. I'd take that over Linux any day of the week!
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.
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.
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
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)
I love how something simple like a "Games" button for games downloaded from iTunes becomes a "mystery app".
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.
-
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
I think the "How To" commercial does a pretty good job of showing why I expect the iPhone is going to do well.
/.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.
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
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
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.
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.
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!
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.
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
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
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
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.
Hate to say it, since their ipod image worked so well, but do you think its time for a change, Mac?
.exe files.
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
Ginga no Rekshiya Mata Each page.
Who in their right mind would buy a GSM phone without access to the SIM card?
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.
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.
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.
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PGP Key ID 0xCB8FF658
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).
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).
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.
The ______ Agenda
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?
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.
"I think you're underestimating the UI mechanisms used to use the device."
.... hold on. I need to go write a business plan."
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
You do that, fanboy.
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
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
"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?
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
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
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.
.15 per 'blip' in/out!)
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
$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?
Yeah dude. cause apple are known mostly for their badly made shoddy products. /sarcasm
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.
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.
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.
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WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
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.
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
I have a Handmark Pocket Express, and you can't dial from within a google map.
--
WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
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
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.
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!
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.
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.
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.
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.
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PGP Key ID 0xCB8FF658
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!
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
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
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*.
Its in threads like this that you see the extraordinary lengths to which the cult of Apple has gone. Not the cult of Mac, or of OSX, or of iPhone, but the cult of the company. You see it in the hysterical and defensive reactions to any criticism of any proposed product. For instance, the Register carried an article which, while very positive about the device itself, and Apple the company, thought that the sales projections for the iPhone were over-optimistic. Read Roughly Drafted's reaction - a tirade of rhetorical abuse and labelling of the author as an Apple basher. We have the same thing with Apple TV.
We are in a bubble. One would say that the answer is long term puts - but phenomena like this have amazing vitality and can run to extremes beyond what one could imagine in wildest dreams in the earlier stages, and survive disappointments that would terminate any rational set of beliefs. That will be the answer soon, but maybe not just yet.
My own view is that both the TV and the iPhone will be financial busts. And that a leading part of the reason for this will be that its almost impossible for Cupertino to maintain contact with reality, because they are so caught in the web created by their encouragement of cult marketing. There's almost no way for them not to believe their own hype as it is reflected back at them by the fans. So they really cannot see that the devices are overpriced and almost unusable.
Those who the Gods wish to destroy, they first make mad.
The commercials make me think that if the iPhone is as cool as it looks in the commercial, I want one.
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.
Video at
v ideo/index.shtml#mea=55682
http://www.nbc.com/Late_Night_with_Conan_O'Brien/
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Meanwhile, the Nokia N95......has been shipping for months, and is proving extremely popular...
Max.
And you forgot to say "GTFO."
Christ, you forgot to shower, too. Goddamn hippies.
was on during extreme makeover home edition...
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
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
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.)
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.
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.
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
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 $600 (i'm sure it'll be more due to limited supply) for something that you can pretty much already freaking do, "it's your perrogative." But when you're 60 years old & you realize Social Security is no longer there for you (even though you put into the system just as much as the next person), I bet you will regret the purchase & wish you'd dropped that kinda cash on the stock market, your 401k or, heck, even a CD or money market acct.
Seriously, all the fanbois need to get their hands out of their pockets!
Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever. -Mahatma Ghandi
I'm using a 7130 Blackberry because I wanted to merge PDA and Phone (works well btw.), wanted to me MS free and wanted a good sync to my Mac. SureType works fair enough. And the "Missing Sync" for Blackberry costs 39$ 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
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:
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.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
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.
"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.
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.
so the countdown begins for all the idiot masses to waste a ridiculous amount of money on a phone that has the same amount of media attention as retarded 80's haircuts.. pretty soon the fad will simply die out, and there will be a few remaining losers that are balding yet keep their 80's haircut, and then they get interviewed on VH1 Behind the Music to preach their views on why they feel the 80's aren't dead.. well, live on iPhone fans.. and keep your eyes peeled for the next product that you just HAVE to buy.. i'll see you on Behind the Music when all of this fad passes over and you're still trying to explain yourself to the world as to why you spent so much money on a phone with hardly any features and for 3 times the price as the more feature-rich cell phones..
*plays the Apogee theme song music*
"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.'
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...
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.
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" ?
Translation: "I can't touch-dial my phone while driving anymore." PULL OVER TO USE A PHONE STUPID.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
No, really. I've found that I'm not coming here as much because of the wall-towall coverage of the iPhone. Time for a temporary boycott.
- - - If the sun is a star, why can't I see it at night?
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.
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
3. You have to sign up with a crappy service provider.
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?
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
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...
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.
There are not even enough apple fanboys to account for the sales of the MacBook and MacBook Pro. The XServe, maybe.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
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.
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.
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.'
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
to die, due faults not its own.
// "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
I have a feeling the iPhone will mirror the success of the Playstation 3.
All that hype... and then the flop.
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
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.
My Photography - http://ian-x.com
The Deathlings (comic) - http://thedeathlings.com
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
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.
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.
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
Slashdot's really gone down the tubes: corporate shills every-bloody-where.
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
"Business Plan" -- Don't you mean "Patent Application" ?
Matt
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!
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?
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
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.
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
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.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
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.
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.
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!
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."
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.
I suspect you missed the [sarc] tag in my original reply.
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.
Living With a Nerd
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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.
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.
'' 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.
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.
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.
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."
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
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
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?
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.
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.
3. Cheek Greese.
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.
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.
Ahh, sorry bro. I shoulda been paying attention to your subject!
Heh. Oops.
Cheers,
- Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
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 .... the Trash). The Dock should have at least 3 - maybe even 4 - different "zones".
* 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
* 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).
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.
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.
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*").
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.
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
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?
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!