0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 10873 times.
So calling people that bought iPhones mutants and whatever isn't aggressive?Why do you have such a problem with this? I just don't see Apple as being part of a big mind control plot, or whatever you think it is.If you don't want one, vote with your dollar. Don't buy one. Kind of hardto believe Apple is still here after all these years because they make junk.Steve Jobs is laughing all the way to the bank over people like you...All your getting in a frenzy does is make people go investigate the iPhone.It's actually quite funny!
My work will buy me a blackberry (and pay the service) if I want one, but so far I've avoided it. It would be nice to be able to d/l a bunch of my research onto it for reading to and from work, but so far printing it out and carrying it with me works just fine. There is nothing via email that is *that* urgent that can't wait till the next day or if it was that important, someone would call me about it and I'd remotely sign into work.
No one can explain how this is such a revolutionary new product.
Its funny because when the new Motorola Razor came out my entire office was buzzing with excitement. Weeks after it was released, a third of the office had one and a few of my friends too.
My wife has had a Razor for a while, and she still can't figure out most of the features/functions...
Do you have any idea how you will have to wait to download a video? I provide video broadcast in 3GGP format to Smartphone users. Basically no phone system supports it except Sprint and each clip is limited to 2MB. Verizon uses a closed system called VCast so its useless to anyone like us. Regardless, it takes a stupidly long time to download anything. I cant’ see anyone doing it more then just a few times as a novelty and then forgetting about it. Unless your like 16 years old. Seriously, this isn’t what WE want. It just something they can do, so they do it and market it as the next best thing but its not. It’s just stupid and useless.
Quote from: PhilNYC on 2 Jul 2007, 06:15 pmMy wife has had a Razor for a while, and she still can't figure out most of the features/functions...My 9 year old daughter can show her. its easy.
Boead, I say let the masses decide whether the Iphone is all hype and no substance or otherwise. If 1% of all phone users adopt it, as S. Jobs/Ahem/A.k.a: The "god" for those that you label Macfans etc...., then perhaps that would be an inherent endorsement that the thing actually works.Remember the discussion about Windows Vista etc...and you claimed that Vista was superior, while I said just because people around 95% of the world have no choice of OSs in their PCs, and you simply replied "Exactly." If that is the case, let numbers decide and if the Iphone is herald of a new world order in terms of what we are to expect from smartphones. The jury will be out very soon. User interface is what the Iphone is attempting at the core of its existence. Perhaps it will not have all the software that business people are looking for, but then perhaps the business segment was not considered as part of the 1%. As for myself, I say nay to the Iphone until the public verdict is out. I was 5 years late into the Ipod party. I can wait.
Perhaps it will not have all the software that business people are looking for, but then perhaps the business segment was not considered as part of the 1%.
Quote from: Bemopti123 on 2 Jul 2007, 08:18 pmPerhaps it will not have all the software that business people are looking for, but then perhaps the business segment was not considered as part of the 1%. Just curious...what software is missing from the iPhone that would be a big deal to a business user?
Phil,I have a phone that uses MS Mobile. Besides the contact list which mirrors MS Outlook, the programs I use the most are MS Word and MS Excel. I also have several engineering programs that are written for MS Mobile that I use as the need arises.
…most of the functionality regarding working with Exchange server, real-time active syncing with Office, etc, are things I would expect to be done on my laptop, and far less importantly on my cellphone. In my days in the corporate world, it was enough if I could sync my phone once in the morning (to make sure I had my day's calendar and up-to-date contacts) and once in the evening to consolidate any changes...and really only when I was on the road (about 30% of the time). I'm sure that more "road-warrior"-type business guys (eg. people in sales) might need more real-time compatibility with Exchange. Just my opinion, of course...