March 23, 2008 9:14 PM PDT

The inevitability of the iPhone

(Credit: Apple)

I walked into my local AT&T Wireless store on Saturday fully expecting and prepared to get a Blackberry 8820. My Blackberry 8800 died while I was in London last week, and both Visa and American Express tried to protect me from fraud by disallowing my attempts to order a new phone over the web. Hence, my face-to-face visit with AT&T.

Unfortunately for Research in Motion, maker of the Blackberry, the in-store price for the 8820 was the same as the iPhone. I deliberated for all of three seconds and walked out with the iPhone.

My reason was simple: I needed something that would sync consistently with my Mac. My Blackberry-to-Mac sync has been hit or miss for the past year (though I've been testing a beta of the new PocketMac and it is quite good) and I'm fed up. I just want something that works.

The iPhone "just works," and then some.

I thought I wouldn't be able to type on the iPhone without tactile feedback. I was wrong. I'm actually faster on the iPhone than I ever was on the Blackberry, and that's with only an hour of "training."

I thought I would miss a host of things with my Blackberry, but I haven't. Instead, I've been blown away by the innovative use of gestures and the user interface. I resisted the iPhone for a year or so, but looking back it was inevitable that I'd end here.

It is the best-designed phone that I've ever seen or used. It's not perfect: It aggravates me that I can't create SMS groups so that I can blast groups of friends (the Blackberry also lacked this), though I can simply save a "conversation" with a group and use it to send out group texts. I also could do without the clever (but time-consuming) graphics that accompany the deletion of an email, for example. Plus, the lack of Flash makes the full-blown browser a bit less "full-blown" (though I hear Flash is on its way).

But all its good points make up for these negatives. The iPhone is an amazing device. It was inevitable that I'd find my way to it, just as it's inevitable that it will continue to take more and more market share, eventually breeding lower-end devices that will change the way we use mobile "phones."

The iPhone is designed too well to be anything less than inevitable.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 34 comments (Page 1 of 3)
by Spider0407 March 23, 2008 11:29 PM PDT
FYI, the iPhone can text message to more than one person at a time!
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by hardmanb March 24, 2008 12:06 AM PDT
Another one bites the dust.
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by purpleLightning March 24, 2008 5:52 AM PDT
LOL. It's a trap.
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by Matt Asay March 24, 2008 6:45 AM PDT
Yes, I know. But what I want is the ability to set up an SMS group whereby I an address a group with one address, rather than having to type in each address individually.
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by jlward4th March 24, 2008 7:01 AM PDT
A similar thing happened to my wife and me. We salivated over the iPhone in the store but actually walked out of the store with a Blackberry Curve for her. I have a Curve and love it - mostly for it's Exchange OTA (Over-The-Air) syncing. My wife is in Medical School and needs the Epocrates software which is currently only supported on Palm & Blackberry. We got home and found that Epocrates is working on an iPhone version. Done deal. Back to the store - we exchanged the Curve for an iPhone. From the moment she opened the box for the next few hours my wife couldn't stop smiling. Everything about the iPhone experience - from packaging and setup to ordinary use - is just sexy and polished. However there are a few things that really annoy me about the iPhone: - Can't view movies in Portrait orientation - There isn't an adapter which allows you to dock the iPhone in Landscape orientation (Both of these combined mean that my sound dock thing is useless with the iPhone.) - No OTA syncing. This one is baffles me. My AppleTV can sync OTA. My wife's laptop & iPhone are on the same wireless network - so why can't it sync OTA? Also why can't it sync contacts, calendar, etc. OTA with .Mac? It's still a very new product so these aren't showstoppers and hopefully Apple addresses them soon, Apple has a good opportunity to dominate the mobile space but it will come down to what developers are able to build with the SDK. For my wife (and much of the medical industry) having an iPhone is just a toy until Epocrates runs on the iPhone (and not just in the browser because many medical centers don't have Wifi and have terrible cell coverage). For me and many in the corporate world the iPhone is just a toy until it syncs email, contacts, calender, etc OTA with Exchange. There are many other segments of people who are just waiting for the software they use everyday to work on the iPhone. But for millions who just want a sexy phone it's good enough today - and certainly better than the others. -James
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by benlucier March 24, 2008 7:14 AM PDT
Matt, I own a Blackberry and an iPhone up here in Canada. I've been using a Blackberry since 1999. There are two reasons why I prefer my Blackberry (besides the obvious issue of not having a decent carrier in Canada). First, I type WAY faster on my blackberry. You must be a slow typist because all the data out there indicates the iPhone is far more difficult to type on, mostly due to the lack of tactile feedback. Second, we use the Blackberry PIN functionality extensively at my office. If it weren't for these two complaints, I'd be using my iPhone full time.
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by JoshFofer March 24, 2008 8:20 AM PDT
The author states: "My Blackberry-to-Mac sync has been hit or miss for the past year (though I've been testing a beta of the new PocketMac and it is quite good)" You should definitely have tried MarkSpace's Missing Sync for Blackberry. It runs circles around PocketMac (that is to say, it actually works, reliably.) But yah, native iPhone synchronization is better.
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by dasdee March 24, 2008 8:36 AM PDT
Matt, I have to see this to believe it. You should post a video of your typing on the iPhone and then put that link here so we can see for ourselves how fast you can really type. I can type fast (have a WM device) and am having a hard time typing on the iTouch. -D http://www.mobow.com
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by slapppy March 24, 2008 8:50 AM PDT
You really have to try it to understand why its such a great device with an amazing potential. Just about everyone who have been standoffish at first immediately want to get one as soon as they have held it in their hands and used it.
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by hypermark March 24, 2008 10:14 AM PDT
Two general things keep me from switching from Blackberry (7130e) to iPhone. One is that as a phone I have consistently been more impressed with the call quality of a BB over and IP. Two is that there is no comparison between BB and IP as an input device. I have written 1000 word blogs on my BB, and never think twice about writing long emails on that. By contrast, on my iPod touch (basically the iPhone without the phone part), it is functional as email but the virtual keyboard will never be equal to tactile real keys on my BB. In other words, it all depends on what "job" you are hiring your mobile device for. For phone and email (my primary jobs), BB is cat's meow. For internet, media and entertainment, my iPod touch is it. A side note. Readers that haven't been tracking the hullabaloo around the iPhone SDK should, as that is a big deal, and promises to grow iPhone and iPod touch into bonafide platform status (think: developer ecosystem vortex, big enterprise wins, etc.). Have blogged on that topic, if interested (iPhone SDK: mobile reasons for optimism): http://thenetworkgarden.com/weblog/2008/03/mobile-reasons.html p.s., on BB-to-Mac syncing would echo comments on Missing Sync. It mostly works and PocketMac is pathetic. Cheers. Mark
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  • About The Open Road

  • Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. Disclosure.

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