After 6 hours spent at 6 different retail locations over 3 days from Southern to Northern California, I finally have my iPhone 3G!
I switched from my BlackBerry Pearl once Apple removed my primary barrier to adoption — lack of push email and calendar — and I am overlooking the challenging keyboard and lack of notes/to-do list sync.
I’ll miss the dedicated convenience of my Pearl, but “I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship”* between me and my iPhone.
The good:
- It’s cool and gorgeously, super sexy.
- The usability, both setup and ongoing use, is extremely good.
- The open platform and applications significantly increase the utility.
- 3G is pretty darn quick.
- The GPS is sweet. I could drive around all day just watching my car on the map. (Dork, I know)
- I do love it and am having a ton of fun.
The bad:
- On balance, I still believe Apple botched the launch weekend. Even aside from the long queues and the likely artificially suppressed inventory at AT&T stores, Apple made two critical mistakes: (1) Apple should have been better prepared for the server traffic from the iPhone 2.0 software upgrades and new 3G purchases. Apple now has placed itself in a position where it is offering mission-critical services to individuals and businesses. Effective outages (from bricked phones) and activation slownesses of the lengths experienced Friday are inexcusable and unforgivable. (2) Requiring that users with corporate accounts or discounts activate only at AT&T stores resulted in horrible customer experiences and undermines Apple’s entire strategy of acquiring business users. Business users require convenience, and the need to go to an AT&T store was decidedly inconvenient.
- Battery life on 3G is atrociously bad. I had a full overnight charge, started using the iPhone at 7:00 a.m., and my battery already is 30% drained. Granted, I’m using the thing a ton and haven’t optimized power consumption yet, but still . . . it needs to make it easily on one charge from the time I wake until the time I sleep.
- As with all things Apple, when things go wrong, you have few options and much frustration. Ringtones purchased on iTunes wouldn’t play at first. I’m frequently prompted to re-enter my iTunes password. A song spontaneously started playing this morning. Once I synced with my Outlook calendar through Exchange, I found that I have two calendars, including one that contains events from four years ago. The device has rebooted spontaneously a few times. It’s frozen a couple times inexplicably. In all these cases, your options and explanations and guidance from Apple are few.
- The touchscreen is great, but I have a hard time believing a touchscreen keyboard will ever be as good as a keyboard with tactile buttons.
Tips:
- The solution for freezing in some cases is to soft reset the device by simultaneously pressing and holding the power/sleep and home buttons for 30 seconds.
- I’ve found that the MacRumors Forums contain a wealth of information on troubleshooting. Just about every problem I’ve encountered, someone else encountered first.
- Apple’s site has a helpful page on battery optimization, although many of the suggestions are to disable the core functions that make the 3G worth getting.
On balance, I’m loving my new toy. Just remember: The difference between men and boys is the price of their toys.
* Humphrey Bogart’s “Jack” in “Casablanca”
Isn’t it ironic, as Ms. Morrisette would say, that you were able to get a phone after waiting only a few minutes?!?
Agreed they botched the launch and good points about wooing biz customers. However, I think the early adopters (or quasi-early adopters as this is the second generation iphone) would assume that the price they pay for getting their hands on a phone RIGHT AWAY, besides the endless and in some cases fruitless waiting, would be some glitches in the works. If you really cared about flawless setup/activation, you would wait a couple of weeks.
Can’t wait to see it!
The Master Dilettante is part of what makes the web great. People helping people. The iPhone blog above was extremely useful as was the help I received from Mr. Kim directly. Good stuff, Joon-Soo. Keep it up. I’m enjoying my new iPhone!