iPhone Review, After 3 Weeks of Usage
Friday, May 9th, 2008

It’s been three weeks since Yero came home and brought my iPhone order along with him, so I figured that it might be good to do a simple review of the device. Unlike people who bought this thing only to show that “they have the latest gadgets” or to show that “they’re (so-they-say) cool”, I bought it for the simplicity of use, because it is an Apple device, and that it syncs perfectly with my Mac (unlike some other crappy mobile devices with a stupid mobile OS, a device that some think could beat the iPhone hands down, or the other one that’s used to be smart, until they split the company, merge it, split it, merge it, and split it again, and decided to use that stupid mobile OS in the end. And did they merge it back again? I lost track).
My first experience with PDAs or Smartphones went back several years ago when my Dad bought himself a HP iPag 1910. I think I remember that he complained about how it hangs almost all the time, almost everyday. That is until he migrated to the Palm Treo 650, which I consider as a good smartphone of its time.
My first actual PDA is the Palm Zire 72, which blue paint scraps off by itself, and it’s a good jack-of-all-trades device, provided that you sync with Windows. At that point in my life, I don’t really care about calendar and address book workflow simplicity.
When I moved over to the Mac, the Palm was “technically” dead. It doesn’t sync to Mac’s Address Book and Calendar. And in fact, Mac OS X’s version of Palm Desktop sucked right down to the bone.
Compared to the previous experiences I had with PDAs, at the time Apple announced that they’re launching iPhone, I figured that this is it. This is the device I’ve been looking for. And today, I have no regrets for shelling out $400. The iPhone is worth every penny.
Hardware-wise, almost everything is spectacular. The screen is large, bright, and astonishing. The touchscreen response is second to none. And yes, hang with an iPhone for a day or two, and go on try that HTC Touch. It’s like comparing Rolls Royce with Becak, but here, the Becak costs more than a Rolls. Heck, the Touch is not even friggin’ responsive, and I don’t know how they can name it “Touch”. I think it should be named “Smack”.
The QWERTY keyboard, in contrary to what others believed, is highly responsive. Even without tactile feedback, I seldom get typos. I can tell you that being not able to text message while driving is not a drawback. That is called SAFETY.
Mobile Safari is probably the best browser on a mobile device ever created, despite the lack of Adobe Flash in it. It provides you the closest, if not the same, browsing experience to a real deal browser. By real deal, I mean any browser but Internet Explorer, whatever version that is.
For a device this big and powerful, I’d say the battery life is fair. Mine’s probably a bit more of a resource-hog as I need the bluetooth to be on every time, just for the simplicity that I don’t have to turn it on when using a headset while driving. But other than that, provided that you turn off the Wi-Fi when it’s not used, it’s perfectly fine, and on my average use, it can stay for two days without recharging.
Syncing contacts and calendar with my Mac is just brilliant. Enough said. No more of those dark hours trying to sync Address Book to Palm Desktop to PDA. It syncs perfectly, and as snappy as you can get. On a Mac, of course.
Being fair, of course, nothing’s perfect, and the iPhone also suffers from that as well. I’ve compiled a list that I think Apple should’ve include in the iPhone by default:
- The ability to install 3rd party softwares (done with Jailbreak, and almost done with Apple’s new SDK).
- The ability to turn off the keyboard’s auto-correct feature (Oh yes, it’s annoying).
- File transfer over Bluetooth.
- Sending and receiving business cards are still a messy messy job.
- Sync over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth.
- Adobe Flash (I’m a web-designer, at some point I might think that having Flash on mobile Safari could be useful).
- A better camera with flash (Not that I need it the most, but I think we can appreciate a better one).
So, it ain’t that bad for a phone that Steve Ballmer (The Monkey Boy) considered as a joke. I consider him as a joke, actually. It’s not everyday you can get a company to hire a dancing primate as their CEO.
I survived three weeks with iPhone, and I grow on loving it, where I didn’t even survive half an hour with Christo’s HTC Touch. Bottom line, iPhone rocks!











