Category: iPhone

iPhone: More info than ever before!

The latest iPhone demo video on the Apple website brings us more info than ever about this little beastie I like to call “Christmas 2006” (since I hoarded Apple gift cards since then to pay for the sucker)… looks like it has an intuitive interface and should make you the king of all geek gatherings. Also, I suspect it would be a cool thing to whip out at a bar next to the hot woman or man you’re trying to start a conversation with… “why, yes! this IS an iPhone…”

Of course, my girlfriend is almost certainly already sick of me speaking of my soon-to-be new phone. I’ll have to stick with impressing the geek gathering…

iPhone… seriously, some day I may stop posting about it

I’m out in the country enjoying a semi-vacation, but I can’t help to post… again… about the latest iPhone news. Glass surface and an 8 hour talk-time battery!

Um, yeah… news, sort of. The real question I pose to myself (apparently publicly now) is whether I’m going to be one of the sad suckers camping out to get one of these beauties. After a very nice gift from the girl, I now I have Apple gift cards aplenty to cover the cost. But a first generation electronic device? Isn’t there some rule that only suckers buy those, considering the price comes down and the quality goes way up a mere few months later?

This is my disease. Apple knows it… so does Nike, I think. In any event, assuming I have the iPhone next Friday, you better believe I’ll be blogging about it…

iPhone email: more nothing

Details… we’d like some details. So far Apple has done a great job of telling consumers the exact same thing about the iPhone… over and over again. How much will the iPhone service plan cost? What’s the contract details? Nothing. For those of us who kind of care about operating cost, particularly considering the high price tag of the iPhone, it’s starting to get a bit old.

In any event… here’s the latest info from Apple as it appeared in my mailbox:

iPhone arrives on June 29. iPhone features an amazing mobile phone, is the best iPod we’ve ever created, and puts the Internet in your pocket with desktop-class email, web browsing, searching, and maps. And iPhone makes it all easy to use with its revolutionary multi-touch user interface. iPhone syncs with your PC or Mac just like an iPod, so organizing your content now will help you start calling, texting, emailing, surfing, listening, and watching even faster when you get your iPhone. Here are a few suggestions to help you get ready:

Making a call with iPhone is as simple as tapping a name. You won’t need to re-enter all your contacts because iPhone syncs with the address book you already use on your computer—Address Book or Entourage on a Mac, or Outlook or Outlook Express on a PC. If you keep your contacts on the web using Yahoo! Address Book, iPhone can sync with them, too. To get ready for iPhone, organize your contacts in one of these applications and make sure they’re up to date with the latest phone numbers and email addresses. If you don’t have contacts on your computer, don’t worry. You can still enter them directly into iPhone.

Using its built-in calendar, iPhone lets you check your appointments with the flick of a finger. iPhone uses iTunes to sync with the calendar application you already use on your computer—iCal or Entourage on the Mac, or Outlook on a PC—just like it does with your contacts. If you don’t already use one of these applications to manage your appointments, now is a great time to start, so you’ll be ready to sync when your iPhone arrives. If you choose not to use a calendar program, that’s OK. You’ll be able to enter appointments directly into the iPhone calendar.

iPhone is the first phone to come with a desktop-class email application. So now your phone can display rich HTML email with graphics and photos alongside the text. iPhone will even fetch your latest email every time you open the application and automatically retrieve your email on a set schedule, just like a computer does. iPhone works with the most popular email systems—including Yahoo! Mail, Gmail, AOL, and .Mac Mail. If you’re not already using one of these services, now would be a great time to get an account. iTunes will make email setup on iPhone a breeze by automatically syncing the settings from email accounts stored in Mail on a Mac or Outlook on a PC. Don’t worry if you’re not on one of these email services; iPhone also works with almost any industry-standard POP3 and IMAP email system.

iPhone has a 2-megapixel camera and a gorgeous 3.5-inch display, so it’s a great way to enjoy and show off your digital photos. iPhone uses iTunes to sync your photos from iPhoto on a Mac or Adobe Photoshop Elements, Adobe Photoshop Album, or any picture folder on a PC. You can carry thousands of photos on iPhone, but you can start by creating an album or two with 50 to 100 of your favorite photos, so that when you first sync your iPhone, you’ll be ready to quickly show off some of your best shots.

iPhone is the best iPod ever. Its beautiful, 3.5-inch widescreen display allows you to easily enjoy the music, TV shows, and movies you have in your iTunes library. If you already use iTunes, you can start getting ready for iPhone by creating a playlist of a few hundred of your favorite songs. If you don’t have iTunes, now is a good time to download it and start a music and video library. That way, when you sync your iPhone with iTunes, you’ll be able to take your favorite music, as well as a few of your TV shows and movies, with you wherever you go.

To set up your iPhone, you’ll need an account with Apple’s iTunes Store. If you already have an iTunes account, make sure you know your account name and password. If you don’t have an account, you should set one up now to save time later. To set up an account, launch iTunes, select the iTunes Store, and click the Sign In button in the upper right corner of iTunes. Sign in and you’re ready to go.

WWDC keytnote a yawner?

Maybe Apple is getting too good at building excitement… the reviews on the Steve Jobs keynote yesterday are a bit mixed. I think there were a few interesting things (the iPhone info and the fact that Apple is releasing a version of its Safari web browser in Windows) but overall it was a little flat.

With that ringing endorsement… check it out here.

iPhone: podcastable?

MacWorld reports that the iPhone will support developers to create applications for the device:

This capability is being exposed through the full version of Safari that will run on the iPhone, said Jobs, using “Web 2.0”-style technologies like AJAX that will enable developers to create content that “looks and behaves exactly like apps,” integrated with the iPhone and iPhone services.

Ok, so this could be exciting. If you’ve read my ramblings before, I’ve been hoping that there would be some way for the iPhone to wirelessly nab podcasts on the fly. It seemed that the version of iTunes on the iPhone would not do this, but perhaps a developer would be able to tap into the Safari development capability and hack up a podcatcher? THAT would make the iPhone super cool for podcast consumers… no more need to sync up with the computer for the latest episode of [enter fave nineball media production podcast here]. Slow? definitely if you’re just on the mobile signal… fast as heck if you’re in a WiFi hotspot. Get on it developers!

It’s official: iPhone in stores June 29th

Apple’s made it official… the iPhone drops June 29th. Check out the new iPhone ads… judging by the hype alone, Apple will likely sell as many iPhone s as it can get into stores in the first week or so. If the supply creates waiting lists, this could be an interesting summer. However, if the iPhone isn’t a decent product, I can see Apple taking a serious beating. We shall see starting June 29th…

Jobs and Gates: Cats and dogs livin’ together

Last night Steve Jobs and Bill Gates sat on the same stage together and had a virtual love-in over their competing product lines… full coverage here… nothing earth-shattering to report, however. Earlier in the day Jobs revealed that the Apple TV will soon sport a new source of content… some fly by night operation called YouTube. Yeah, like THAT’LL work…

(sarcasm off)

Hooking up with Google for the iPhone seems to be paying off in other ways… YouTube, as you may recall is owned by Google. This new option gives every Apple TV owner a whole new universe of content… some good, some not. It also firmly entrenches the video podcaster as a major contributor to Apple TV entertainment since many (if not most) video podcasts have a home on YouTube as well. Ninjas and Tiki Bars for everyone!

Sirius and Podshow divorce

So satellite radio will no longer broadcast a select number of podcasts. This news broke a few days ago, but I honestly don’t think it demonstrates much other than Sirius and Podshow decided that the experiment was over. Does this mean podcasting is waning? I doubt it… I have to question the original premise… content that has a major feature of being freely available 24/7 on the Internet via an RSS feed, and playable on demand was also being featured in particular time slots via a subscription service that required additional equipment. Hmmm. Wonder why that didn’t take off? Siriusly (heh)… I have to believe most listeners were shifting towards the on-demand content rather than waiting with bated breath for the next episode of Dawn and Drew to come through the satellites. Why wait? If you had a satellite radio, I’m guessing you had access to a podcatcher and a computer.

Let’s also face it… the shows that were featured on Sirius may have been too niche for a broader audience, as some have suggested. Bottom line… the satellite market probably is not the next logical place for podcasting growth. If podcasters are looking for over the air distribution, the best bet may be the continuing conversion of mobile phones with MP3 players.

Ahhhh, yeah… I believe that’s a semi-unintentional iPhone reference. I keep thinking that faster data transfer, plus vast networks, plus great players means effortless wireless delivery. There are (bad) methods where this works now, but I think the days of needing a computer to sync a podcast to a player may seem quaint in the not so distant future. And the (failed?) Sirius-Podshow experiment will be a distant memory then as well.

Wireless podcasts. Almost.

You may remember a few months ago in my drooling for the iPhone, there was a brief glimmer of hope that iPhone users would be able to download podcasts wirelessly. As we later found out, that was not to be. It seems to be something that would be a natural fit for a wi-fi enabled music player to be able to reach out and download new episodes with a built in podcatcher.

Today, SanDisk announced the launch of the Sansa Connect, a product that’s juuuuuust about there, but seems to fall flat right at the finish line. Seems that the Sansa hooks up with Yahoo! Music Unlimited To Go (hereafter to be forever referred to with an acronym as bad as the name… Y!MUTG), allowing a user to fill their Sansa with all of the tracks they want from the subscription service. Sadly, it seems that Y!MUTG is not cross linked with Yahoo! Podcasts… meaning those of us who dream of having instant access to podcasts as we roam aimlessly away from our computers will still have to wait for some Einstein or Curie (not to be confused with Curry) to deliver…