June 12th, 2008
by Michael Swanberg
Steve Jobs and company announced the new iPhone and related products at WWDC last Monday. So who’s on board?
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As many of you already know, I am pretty much Apple’s bitch. Steve says jump, I ask how high. But frequently, by the time I find out just how high I am supposed to leap, the Reality Distortion Field wears off and I balk. I am the proud non-owner of a Macbook Air, for instance.
In any case, I poo-pooed the original iPhone at first, and then ran out and bought one the day after it’s debut. I have been largely happy with my iPhone ever since, but part of being a happy iPhone owner and user means realizing that, although what the iPhone does it does extremely well, it doesn’t do everything. Once you come to that realization, you will be very happy with your $600 (argh!) purchase.
So here we are, nearly a year later, and here comes the next generation of iPhones, dubbed iPhone 3G. This is because it has the hardware necessary to connect to AT&T’s (in the US) 3G cellular data network, which is supposed to be up to 3 times faster than EDGE. Only 3 times? EDGE is painfully slow, as it is, especially when surfing the “real” web.
The iPhone 3G also has GPS, which starts some interesting thoughts a-churnin’. Notably, there will be some good GPS functionality, like the addition of pins on Google Maps representing the locations of your friends… of course, your friends have to have iPhones too… and not the year-old kind; they’ll have to have the new iPhone 3G.
The new iPhone is certainly tempting. It’s cheaper, $199 for 8GB and $299 for 16GB (I sure could use that extra 8GB for movies and such!). But that comes with a 2-year forced AT&T contract. It’s also supposed to have better battery life, but it sure seems like any user who wishes to get good life out of their iPhone’s battery will be running a constant dance of turning off and on 3G, GPS, etc. Apple announced that there will be 10 hours of talk time, but 5 hours with 3G. Huh? Why would the data connection affect talk time? Does the phone use 3G for voice calls? If so, is it worth it? Will it be better? Perhaps someone out there can answer this for me.
The next big thing that was announced at WWDC was the opening of the AppStore, which is a store for developers to peddle their iPhone applications. This is certainly wonderful news. Accordingly, on July 11, iPhones will get an upgrade to version 2.0 which will allow the installation of these apps. So far, we’ve seen demos of some games, but not much else. We’ll have to wait and see if there’s a lot of cool stuff or not. Spore itself might be worth the price.
Moving forward, Apple announced the next generation of .Mac, called MobileMe. Dumb name, but an interesting tidbit, certainly. They’re billing it as “Exchange for the rest of us.” Exchange is an information server built by Microsoft that allows devices to sync email, contacts, and calendar information. Many enterprises use Exchange, principally for email, but also for calendar events and as a “single source of truth” for contact information.
MobileMe is set to give the rest of us, for a paltry $99 per year, the same sync functionality. I watched the demo on Apple.com, and it was very neat. In addition to email, calendar, and contacts, it also has photo and file storage. One can only assume that the other .Mac features will make the port over as well.
I have said this before, and I’ll say it again, I really wish they would come up with an a la carte menu for .Mac, now MobileMe. I don’t care much about creating webpages for a .Mac domain. Email doesn’t really interest me since Google does such a wonderful job already. So why should I be forced to have these features if I don’t want them? How hard would it be for them to allow us to have a subset of the features? I know I would have been a .Mac subscriber long ago if they had. But the few things I would use are not worth the $99 to me, so Apple gets $0 from me.
In any case, MobileMe may now be worth it. As well, it seems that there is a new “push” feature coming to iPhone 2.0. It is unclear whether this will be a part of MobileMe, or standard in 2.0. The nature of this is that the iPhone can receive push events, and not just email, but pretty much whatever an app developer can desire. Chat apps (conspicuously absent from the iPhone thus far) will benefit from this, certainly.
So here’s my take. Come July, I will upgrade my iPhone’s firmware with the 2.0 version. Then it will be off to the AppStore to see what’s out there. From there, I will begin to determine several things, the first of which is, do the apps that I desire require 3G? If so, then I will make the decision to either upgrade the phone or else do without the app.
As well, I will make the determination if something I just have to have requires MobileMe. And then a similar decision process will go into figuring out if $99 per year is worth the new functionality.
So, as per standard with Apple announcements, it’s hurry up and wait.
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