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Might as well talk about the iPhone too
June 28, 2007 08:51 AM
Since there’s not getting around the fact that all the talk in the coming days/weeks/months will be all about the iPhone, might as well put in my 2 cents on the matter based on what I’ve read in the internet. Here’s a press release from Apple
If this is true, then damn, that’s awesome! The use of glass is a brilliant idea - I just hope it doesn’t make the phone fragile and less resilient to [unwanted] physical impact. As amazing as these specs sound, there are also some other “feature concerns” the iPhone reportedly has. I’m not sure as to the accuracy of the data on the list below, as it was posted from a Windows Mobile-centric forum. But assuming they are true and not just an attempt at sour-graping, here are my thoughts on the matter.
post updated on July 11, 2007 @ 01:33AM |
i'm sure you've read/heard about Meizu M8/miniOne...iphone wannabe or serious contender?
That would depend on when, where, and how it would be released.
The only reason why Apple was able to put their foot on the door with a no-SDK, non-extensible OS, with no removable battery, etc. etc. is because it's an Apple product.
Regardless of the blatant design rip-off by the miniOne, if it turns out to have the same or even better tech/features than the iPhone, it'll have to market itself like an O2 or Dopod to people/developers to take it seriously.
That's not to say that Mobile OS X is a slouch, the way it handles the technology the iPhone carries is stellar.
Either Meizu comes out with a significantly better OS than OS X (which I doub't judging from how they can't even come up with an original design) or they optimize the phone to for the current popular OSes (WM6, etc.) - and HOPE that those OS manufacturers would provide support to whatever that phone will have.
So normally, at the moment, I don't think that it will be a contender, same way how Japan's 3G phones [which arguably had better technology years ahead of whatever we had before] never caught on in the markets outside of Japan.
well...the iPhone's out and as expected our Caucasian friends were falling all over themselves to get one. but with its price i don't see it doing anything exceptional...Nokia's N series phones can do the same things the iPhone can do...or am i just being ignorant? :| with regards to the Meizu M8/miniOne, i agree with you that it'll probably be more of a PDA. i guess the similarity in design with the iPhone is what's making people call it an iPhone wannabe.
The thing you got to hand Apple is that whatever they advertise their products do - they really end up doing them really well
So most of the reservations you or I have about the iPhone with regards to the price is simply because we are more savvy than the average user. But as far as what the iPhone is supposed to do... it does it better than anything else in the market.
Still, as for the US release of the iPhone, my friend was supposed to get one but since he's a Pinoy and has experienced more complex phones and features, he was a bit underwhelmed. So I guess that should make us sleep tight and not regret not getting one at this point in time.
They're gonna have to change the design for the asian release though; at least that's what I think... and that holds some promise because Asian phones that never make it to the US market tend to have the better features.
Honestly, if only the iPhone could let you get a new battery without having the thing serviced AND allows development of 3rd party APPLICATIONS (I don't consider web-based applications to count) - so I could handle my secure/encrypted information (passwords, etc). Then I wouldn't mind it having "less features" than my Atom, and would probably make the switch.
Another hassle of the iPhone which only the 3rd world countries could appreciate is how the OS/activation/etc. is tied in to the Apple server. This means if you try to hack the phone, you probably can't update the software anymore (hell you may not even be able to use it properly). But if you stick to its official "ROM," you're basically limited to what Apple allows you to do with the phone; which at the moment doesn't impress me. This is not the case with Windows Mobile, Palm, and the like.
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I got a kick reading an article by Wired’s editor in chief; which to me, was just intellectual masturbation (poorly executed at that), and hopefully...
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