OK - here is the deal. First it was Nokia - great interface, ultra reliable and sort of easy syncing with a few glitches. Then it was onto the Smart Phone - HP Pocket PC with keyboard, GPS positioning, BlueTooth and wifi plus expandable memory. OK, but extremely buggy. Constant crashing, running out of memory, slow, loosing calls for no obvious reason for several hours, sometimes up to a day at a time.
To summarise
Nokia
Pros;
Reliable
Consistent interface
Syncing - mostly good
Cons;
Antiquated
OS not capable of more sophisticated apps
If the sync messed up was a nightmare to sort out.
Smart Phone
Pros;
Extremely powerful
Great range of apps
potential of almost anything
Cons;
Slow
Very very buggy - really always felt like a beta version
Unable to upgrade the OS - no firmware updates - stuck with the many bugs
Constantly missing calls for no good reason.
I decided to move towards a basic phone with a Pocket PC for the more sophisticated mobile computer experience ... until the iPhone arrived.
I was not immediately taken with the iPhone, for a start it was only GSM (Not even 3G), it was rather limited in memory and here in Australia it was quite difficult to get and really not worth the effort. Then they announced the 3G and a tentative date for Australia. I started to get interested. I wondered if this would be a nice intermediate compromise? The two devices in one.
My two sons bought iPhones when they were released so I got to see them up close and for all the limitations I did like it. It would be nice to have a phone that would work - as opposed to my pocket PC.
There is the story - one of frustration and constant phone envy - What is it like to have a smart phone that works? So finally, after having an iPhone for a couple of months here is my first assessment.
My first impression was how smoothly everything worked out of the box. No sophisticated computer knowledge required to set it up, no esoteric syncing software to set up, just the old favourite iTunes that I have been using for years and it just appears magically in the left hand pane with a big Sync button down the bottom. It does require a little setup and as with every program the options take some explaining - whey does IT language have to be so obscure. Why can't the options be self explanatory, or at least have a little help popup to explain them. But for all that it is much easier than either Nokia synchronisation software or Active Sync.
The first thing was to sync my music. Select the sync only selected music and check all the wanted play-lists and it was done. Simplicity itself. However the inability to access the device's files directly and only able to sync one way and to only one computer is severely limiting. I have looked for mechanisms to overcome this limitation but so far to no avail.
Application download and backup is straightforward. Although there are a plethora (supposedly just passed 10,000) of applications most of them are rubbish and you do not have the quality of applications that are available for the PPC. You get far less quantity but much higher quality applications for the PPC. Also the limitation to multitask on the iPhone is a severe limitation. I will be happy when all of my favourite apps for the PPC are available on the iPhone.
The phone works. What more can I say. The inability to easily sync with my Outlook is a nuisance but I am depending less on Outlook - but for those still tied to outlook can be rather problematic. I use Google for most things now - except for work mail. The mail app is nothing short of brilliant. I have two Gmail and one Yahoo account and it is very easy to use and has just the features one would want in a mobile mail app. Gmail contacts seem to work fine. No complaints really. There is an excellent web interface to the Gmail calendar but it does not integrate with the native iPhone calendar. It would have been nice to have integration with all of the web apps, it seems like half a job to me.
The interface is very nice to use. Smooth and easy to navigate, and all the application interfaces have a nice consistency. Much more than any other device I have used, and much better than the PPC. Selecting an application is easy and navigating it is simplicity itself - although the developer does need to make the labels so that they make sense. One of the benefits of Apple tying it down like a homicidal maniac is that you are forced into this tightly defined interface. Not a bad thing on a device such as this.
As mentioned above the iPhione is quite reliable - maybe not as reliable as a basic phone but no where near as flaky as my PPC. The occasional app crash (except for this reboot problem I have (more below) it has been extremely stable.
The media player is as good as one would expect from Apple. Anything on the Nokia or the PPC looks plain amateurish compared to the iPhone media player. It is smooth, powerful, easy to use, and of reasonable quality. The new Genius feature is a very nice addition. As above there are some gripes but the media player is not a tacky add on as with other devices. One thing I will say is, the lack of high def BT stereo support is notable. I bought a pair of BT stereo headphones for my PPC and so far they have lain idle. It is a nicely integrated powerful media player in its own right.
May trees have been felled in defence of the browser and apart from some well documented gripes it works as advertised and is very smooth and easy to use. Most sites are properly rendered and easy to navigate. IE for PPC, eat your heart out.
The maps software is nothing short of brilliant. You get the map, satellite view, directions, assisted GPS, markers and now with the 2.2 update you get street view. All of which is easy to use, fast and convenient. There is now only one thing lacking, that is turn by turn navigation. Why it is missing I have no idea. It is a serious limitation and its absence on what is otherwise such a comprehensive device is a complete mystery.
I do have an issue with my iPhone whereby on several occasions when the phone has been docked it went into a mode whereby it would reboot every minute or so. It would continuously reboot until I removed it from the dock. The first time I thought it had developed a software fault and did a full restore. After it started happening the second time I realised I could stop it by removing it from the docking station. I come back the next day and it is fine. Still no idea why it did this.
Pros;
Great interface
Very easy to use
Consistent look and feel on all apps
Many additional programs in every conceivable category to choose from - many free
Good email support
Most popular sites now have iPhone dedicated pages
First class media player
Cons;
No multitasking
Limited RAM
No memory expansion
No direct access to the file system (unless jailbroken)
Apple tie down the applications with a draconian approval process and limitations (Unless jailbroken)
No Stereo BT support
Many of the apps are toys with no real porting of many serious computer programs as yet
Often tied to onerous phone plans
No turn by turn
Conclusion
Using the iPhone is a pleasurable experience with very little down side. The limitations, some of which are really annoying, are far outweighed by the many advantages.
It would be nice to see a new model with more CPU grunt, more RAM, multitasking, better integration in some areas, better BT stack and turn by turn.
For all the limitations, given the choice, I would buy the iPhone again. Reliable device, smooth navigation, great feature set make this a great device. Add to this the great media player and maps it is a true winner.