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OK, so I said I wouldn’t… but I did anyway

OK, so I said I wasn’t going to buy an iPhone yet. Yesterday I changed my mind and went to visit the O2 shop in Fareham, where the (very attractive) sales assistants were busy demonstrating the iPhone to the (very short) queue of people at the door.

Worse—for my wallet, that is—my existing phone is pay-as-you-go and I’d only recently topped it up with credit. Why not a contract phone, you ask? Well, quite simply, I’m not part of the current mobile-obsessed culture here in the U.K. and I never really have been. So how do I justify the cost of an iPhone contract? Good question. I’ll have to think on that :-)

Anyway, because of the substantial amount of credit on my old phone, I haven’t ported the number. So if you have my number, you’ll need to update it. Sorry about that.

A few observations about my new iPhone:

  • Mobile Safari has already crashed a few times on me.
  • Mail doesn’t support S/MIME. That’s annoying, because I use S/MIME quite extensively.
  • Mail doesn’t seem to support threading, which is a shame. Maybe I’m just missing the setting?
  • Mobile Safari doesn’t do SVG yet.
  • EDGE is just fine, speed-wise. OK, it isn’t as fast as my home broadband connection, but it’s perfectly usable even for web browsing. I was using it today, as a matter of fact.
  • The Google Maps application really is as good as you’d hope. OK, no GPS, but since you can only really use GPS if you have line-of-sight to sufficient satellites, putting GPS in a phone is of questionable utility anyway. I think people forget that in-car satellite navigation systems contain rather more than just a GPS receiver.
  • The camera is perfectly adequate. If I want high quality photos, I’ll use my SLR thank-you very much.
  • iTunes doesn’t seem to have any ringtones options here in the U.K. right now. I don’t actually want a silly ringtone, so this isn’t a huge deficiency, though I do have a couple of bits of music that would make good non-silly ringtones. And doubtless when we do get ringtone support, we’ll have to put up with the indefensibly silly “a ringtone is something different from playing a section of your music” nonsense here too.

Anyway, it’s very nice and it’s a huge improvement over previous phones I’ve owned.

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Comments

I decided to hold off on purchasing an iPhone: I already have an exceptional contract with 3.

The reason I've become tempted by the iPhone is by looking at the features it doesn't have. Things like MMS, video recording and 3G and video calling. These are the features that attracted me to my current phone but guess what, I've never used any of them. I mean I've sent one picture message but that was to test sending picture messages.

I really want one now but the only thing holding me back is the extortionate contracts, seriously, it's £35 a month for next to nothing. I get twice the minutes and messages on the cheapest O2 offering for just under half the price! Us brits really are halving to pay through the nose for it.

I'm going to have to get one when the SDK comes out though, I have a couple of apps I'm working on just now that would really benefit from a mobile component which could be offered though the iPhone and the iPod touch.

:-) It always amuses me all the talk about MMS, video calling etcetera. The phone industry has been trying for years to convince people that they really want to see the people that they’re calling, and frankly, we, the users of the telephone, really don’t.

I don’t quite understand why these huge corporations don’t understand this. It seems to be wilful ignorance rather than an accidental oversight—all they need to do is ask their own employees how likely they’d be to use the feature. Or just look at the past performance of video calling devices. It isn’t video quality that holds them back; it’s that the telephone simply doesn’t need video… it’s more convenient to just use audio in many cases.

As for the contract being extortionate, you’re not wrong. U.S. customers get a substantially better deal from AT&T as regards calls and texts. The best thing about the O2 deal is the unlimited data usage, particularly as it includes WiFi on The Cloud. I know The Cloud has done a deal for iPod Touch users, but, of course, that's WiFi-only and can't be used where there isn’t WiFi coverage.

Speaking personally, the included texts and minutes are probably far more than I’ll ever use anyway… I don’t really like mobile phones that much (though iPhone addresses many of the complaints I have about them, it still doesn’t fix my underlying problem with them, which is that they seem to exacerbate the impression that everyone is in such a rush); pretty much any contract is poor value for money for me as a result. The only area where contracts start to make sense for me is data, and only then because PAYG data is ridiculously expensive. But with most other mobiles, there’s no point in data because it’s just so painful trying to use the ’Net.

I suppose you might say that, as a user, I’m more interested in iPhone as a go-anywhere Internet device than as a mobile phone. As a developer, it’s also an interesting business opportunity.

Mind-you, maybe now I’m paying monthly I’ll use the phone part of my iPhone more than I used to use my previous mobile.

(I nearly wrote this on my iPhone, but since I had to go and get my laptop so I had my password, I ended up writing it on the laptop instead. Oh well :-) Roll-on iPhone Keychain, I say.)

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