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What is Apple Iphone 3g? Find Out All About Iphone 3G Here

Ever since the first generation of iPhones hit the market, many admirers around the world was in a frantic to obtain one. With its sleek design and great technology inside, perhaps you too would love to own one. The iPhone is one great device that combines a mobile phone, a multimedia player, and a web browser in one neat package. In fact, the iPhone can even do more than those things as it will be able to give you high quality entertainment that you never imagined possible in a mobile phone.

Today, the iPhone 3G has been unveiled and is now very popular among its fans all over the world. It has its own distinctive look and design, and it also has a radiant touch screen interface that you would definitely want in your iPhone.

The iPhone 3G is a buttonless phone that looks beautiful and desirable. However, one question remains, which is: does it really deliver what it promises?

The answer to this is yes. The iPhone 3G will be able to provide you with all the things you need in a mobile phone. In fact, it can even offer you more than just a tool to communicate with family and friends.

Basically, the iPhone 3G stands for 3rd generation. This particular iPhone version is able to offer a lot of flexibility to the user and will also allow you to be constantly online in order to exchange information with family and friends.

iPhone 3G will even allow you to watch a movie and even let you play with online games.

The multi touch screen of the iPhone 3G will allow you to control the display of the iPhone. For example, if you are viewing a photograph, you can zoom in and out by just moving your fingers inwards or outwards

The iPhone 3G also offers a 2 megapixel camera. With this kind of camera, you will be able to take high quality photos of just about anything you want. And, because you can connect to the internet with this mobile phone, you will be able to instantly send the photos you take to anyone you want. With iPhone, you will be able to capture and eternalize good memories in style.

Another cool thing about the iPhone 3G is that you can purchase and download iPhone applications from the App Stores online. Whatever applications you want to use, you will be able to access it, purchase it, and download it right on the spot.

The iPhone 3G is also a multimedia player. Fill it with your favorite tunes and videos and you can be sure that you will be able to enjoy listening to your favorite music and watching your favorite videos while you are on the go. You will never get bored with iPhone. And, if you liked the music you heard on a radio, you can instantly search for it with your iPhone and purchase your own copy of the music right directly in your iPhone 3G.

As you can see, there are so many things that you can do with the iPhone 3G. This is more than just a phone, but it is also an organizer, a gaming system, a multimedia player, and a personal computer all rolled into one.

So, if you like to have an advanced device or gizmo that can provide you with hi-tech communications in style, getting an Apple iPhone 3G makes sense.

For more information and articles on Apple iPhone, check out this great site iPhones Make Sense.

More great information about Apple iPhone are available at http://www.iphonemakesense.com/.

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10 Things to Love About the Iphone

10 things to love about the iPhone

I took delivery of my iPhone at the start of September, the start of a trying month personally that saw me out of the office for very long periods and only in touch with the world via my phone.  It was a baptism of fire for me and the device.

You will have seen the adverts, played with it in phone shops, looked over fellow commuters’ shoulders, borrowed your friend’s … great isn’t it?  Or is it?

In this article I touch on some of the best things about the device that have wowed me completely.  Or even just a bit.  And to maintain the celestial karmic balance I have a companion article on some of the things that drive me absolutely nuts.  There’s enough material for both articles, I assure you!

So here we go, in reverse order, the 10 things that you should love about the iPhone!

10. Voicemail organisation

One of the cutest features of the device is the way it organises your voicemail for you.  No more phoning the voicemail number, listening to all the messages in your mailbox in the order they arrived to get to the ones you want to hear.  There they are, in a list, with real names instead of phone numbers when the number is in your contact list.  You can go straight to the message you want and avoid the junk calls. 

You aren’t limited to the time limit on saved messages that your phone provider imposes – they will stay on your device as long as you need them.  It’s even got deleted file recovery, with deleted messages staying in your trash can until you commit the delete.

9. SMS text organisation

If you like the way the iPhone manages your voicemails, you’ll love the SMS organisation even more.  SMS messages are organised by third party name as before, but even better when you drill down by third party the messages themselves are displayed, in order, as a series of quotes like an instant messaging dialogue, so you can see the whole conversation.  So good, so obvious, so why hasn’t it been done before?

8. Onscreen keyboard

One of the things that strikes you about the iPhone is the absence of any keyboard or stylus.  In fact it’s almost devoid of buttons altogether, which is one of the criticisms I would level against the iPhone.

The absence of a keyboard was one of the reasons I delayed switching to the iPhone in the first place.  I work out of the office probably 60% of the time and my PDA is often my only link with my business while I am out of the office.  Sending email via a T9 keypad is not ideal, and most soft keyboards I have see to date have been frustratingly slow.  I have had a couple of PDAs with slide-out keyboards and these can be satisfactory, but they also make the device heavier, thicker and less attractive as a telephone handset.

The iPhone soft keypad is surprisingly good.  I watched some demos on YouTube before I ordered the iPhone yet had nagging doubts about how realistic they were.  I need not have been concerned, however: It really is as good as the demos suggest.  The auto-correction works by comparing what you type with the keys around the key you strike, so if you hit an “h” instead of a “g” it will pick this up and correct your mistake.

It isn’t perfect, however. I have consistent problems reaching the space bar and seem to hit the letter “b” instead. The correction picks up faulty key presses, but won’t necessarily correct a mis-spelling if you put too many or too few letters into the word. You also need to be around 60-70% accurate with your key presses or the algorithm gives up. Rejecting an auto-correction suggestion requires that you hit the miniscule “x” at the end of the suggestion, rather than a dedicated key or backspace as in most Windows applications, and this can be really difficult. 

But overall the keyboard works well and, I have to admit, is more usable than the keypads on most of the Windows Mobile PDAs I have had.  I’m still not sure whether I prefer it to handwriting recognition with a stylus, but I can live with it.

7. iPod on a phone

Although it lacks the intuitive touch wheel interface of the original and best iPod, the iPhone, like the iTouch, makes up for it with its full screen iPod player interface that gives you faster and more direct access to media stored on the device.  I prefer the wheel of the iPod, but I admit it’s 6 of one and half a dozen of the other. 

Although the 8GB or 16GB memory of the iPhone is shared between the iPod features and other storage-dependent applications, I can still store over 3,000 songs which is more or less my entire CD collection.  I can play movies too, and the display is more than adequate for doing so, but a typical movie takes up to 2GB of storage so of course I have to “budget” for it. 

All in all the iPhone serves me well as a media player, especially as my BMW has the direct iPod interface built in to the iDrive, so I can access my music library through the car’s steering wheel controls and navigation display.  

6. Motion sensors and landscape mode (to a point)

The iPhone is jam packed full of sensors.  Proximity sensors so it knows you are using it as a phone.  Light sensors to adjust brightness.  Motion detectors to know you are waving the thing around (used to great effect in “Lightsaber Unleashed” – a free demo game on iTunes). 

The motion detectors are used to greatest effect to in Safari and document browsers to detect when you tilt the screen to view it in landscape mode.  Document too side to fit readably onto the screen? Just rotate the device and it will change the screen orientation. Cute!

The only problem is that implementation of the feature seems to be application dependent and is not consistently deployed across all applications on the device.  So reading and typing mail does not benefit from the feature, for example, while email attachments (see below) do.

5. Full web browser on a phone

I’m not a great Safari fan in general, preferring Firefox on the Mac and IE on the PC.  That said, the implementation of Safari on the iPhone is without doubt the best mobile browser I have seen to date. 

It supports CSS and Javascript and will support Silverlight in the future, but it does not support Flash at present.  With the screen rotated to landscape mode you can generally read most websites directly on the iPhone screen, while the “pinch” metaphor (placing two fingers on the screen and moving them together apart) zooms in or out to allow small text or fine detail to be viewed.  Touching on-screen controls like text boxes and menus zooms in onto the control making it easy to complete browser-based forms. The whole browsing experience is smooth, intuitive and engaging.

4. Native support for PDF and Office document formats

As a “dyed in the wool” Microsoft user, this feature has wowed me more more than almost anything else on the device. 

The iPhone renders all “standard” Office formats (Word, Excel and Powerpoint) as standard, without any plug-ins.  And not just Office 2003 – the extensible Office 2007 formats are supported as well!  The iPhone supports rotation to view documents in landscape format, complete with pinch zoom. 

Sadly you cannot edit Office documents as standard, although a number of publishers are planning to offer document editors and spreadsheets in the future. However for 80% of remote working scenarios I find the device suits me perfectly.

3. WiFi and 3G stacks

The original iPhone whetted appetites for mobile computing but soon disappointed Europeans due to its lack of support for 3G.  That of course is a thing of the past with the Mark II device.

I have been more impressed by the device’s WiFi capabilities, however.  Although battery consumption is less than ideal with wireless switched on, the WiFi stack performs really well, particularly in larger office and public environments where you move in and out of range or between access points, sometimes using different protocols, on a constant basis.  It supports a number of security protocols including certificate-based WPA-2 and TKIP and can interact with Microsoft-centric enterprise security deployments. 

You configure the device to join new networks automatically and of course once you have set up access to a network it will reconnect automatically the next time you are in range. It works really, really well – so well that frankly you can afford to forget all about it.  Which is how it should be, frankly.

2. Ease of adding applications

The basic iPhone provides basic email, calendar and contacts management alongside the Safari web browser, camera and iPod application. It also has a superb aGPS and Google maps which is surprisingly good, although the battery consumption with location services switched on renders the device almost unusable in my opinion. In other words, the iPhone offers a fairly reasonable set of basic mobile productivity applications.

So what do you do if you need more? The answer is iTunes AppStore, an online service accessible from the iPhone that enables you to search and download applications that are charged against your iTunes account.  So far I have mostly downloaded sample applications and free utility ware, which is enough to get a feel for what is out there and appreciate the very straightforward installation and updating process.  I have only bought one application so far – iBlogger, a generic blogging writer to connect to my CMS and blog.  The process is seamless and transparent, from the user’s standpoint, and exactly what the user needs.

The idea of extensibility is a good one.  This is where the crossover from computing and PDAs into the world of the mobile phone really has benefited the consumer.  But for the consumer to benefit completely there has to be adequate choice.

To date Apple has been successful in attracting software publishers to the game with a powerful development kit and simple distribution model.  I appreciate the concerns that some publishers have over the stranglehold that Apple maintains over the distribution channel, rather like Sony with the PlayStation, and time will tell whether the Apple developer engagement model continues to attract the best developers.

Right now what the iPhone lacks as standard is a task management tool that interfaces with Microsoft Exchange and a more advanced set of editing tools that offer basic features like cut and paste (that’s right, iPhone does NOT allow you to cut and paste text while editing). I don’t know if any such applications exist on the AppStore and I haven’t looked yet because frankly I would expect these to be provided by Apple as standard and hope that a future firmware update will provide them.

If my impatience gets the better of me I will go and look in the AppStore and I will probably find what I am looking for.

 

1. Great design (to a point)

Apple has done a phenomenal job with the iPhone.  It is gorgeous!  My iPhone is probably the most elegant and iconic object I have ever owned. That’s right, not just the most elegant phone, or PDA, or mobile computer – as an exercise in pure physical design it excels. 

The glossy surface is hard to keep clean and within minutes is covered in finger marks, but I find that wiping with a barely moist chamois leather is enough to restore it to its full glory.

Difficulties in keeping it clean aside, it is also pretty robust and usable day to day.  I have dropped it a few times onto hard floors with no apparent ill effects and it feels really solid in the hands.  I don’t bother with a case and simply slip it into my jeans pocket (front or back) and usually forget that it’s there. 

The user interface is remarkable – mostly.  The pinch zoom and fast list scrolling are excellent.  Adding, deleting and moving application icons on the home screen is intuitive and can be mastered in minutes. 

However the good parts of the UI are so good that the gaffs in design – the inability to collapse large directory trees in mail folders, the absence of a file manager, the lack of a cut and paste feature – stand out even more starkly and underline the genesis of the device.

 

The point is that the iPhone is the product of a prolific and brilliant yet highly introspective group of engineers.  It is design untrammelled by any notion of reality or practicality, particularly in the corporate context.  In most respects, and I mean probably 80% of the product in this case, the outcome is wonderful.  The 80% is so good I can almost forgive Apple the 20% of absolutely essential features that are missing.  For now!

Stephen Oliver is Director of Expraxis Limited (http://www.expraxis.com), a consulting company that works with academics, entrepreneurs and inventors who need help bringing new ideas to market. We help people set their priorities, plan for their business, build relationships with partners that can help them, and work with them to help turn those ideas into reality.

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10 Things to Hate About the Iphone

10 things to hate about the iPhone

I took delivery of my iPhone at the start of September, the start of a trying month personally that saw me out of the office for very long periods and only in touch with the world via my phone.  It was a baptism of fire for me and the device.

You will have seen the adverts, played with it in phone shops, looked over fellow commuters’ shoulders, borrowed your friend’s … great isn’t it?  Or is it?

In this article I touch on some of the things about the device that have really irked me.  Just a bit or quite a lot.  And to maintain the celestial karmic balance I have a companion article on some of the things about the iPhone that I absolutely love.  There’s enough material for both articles, I assure you!

So here we go, in reverse order, the 10 things that you should hate about the iPhone!

10. Grubby fingers and the onscreen keyboard

The iPhone’s onscreen keyboard is surprisingly effective and doesn’t take long to get used to. 

Just remember to wash your hands before you do so, however!  This isn’t just cosmetic: For some reason I manage to leave a sticky mark under my right thumb that attract dust, biscuit crumbs, or whatever, right over the erase key.  Usually the crumb lands there just as I finish the 2 page email and starts to rub out the whole message character by character! This is not an exaggeration!! It is, however, not a daily occurrence!!

9. External memory

I went the whole hog and took the 16GB iPhone immediately.  I don’t regret it!  I haven’t been selective with my music collection and have more or less all my ripped CDs stored on the iPhone.  That’s 14GB.  Which leaves precious little room for real data.

On other devices this is rarely a problem and non-volatile storage is usually flash memory of some description, the size of which obeys Moore’s law and doubles in size and speed every 9 months or so and halves in physical size every 2 years or so with a new “mini” or “micro” format.  I have yet to run out of space on a mobile phone or smartphone, even with an address book of over 500 names.

The problem on the iPhone is that there is no external memory slot and no way (short of wielding a soldering iron) of expanding the internal memory.  A shame. The iPod Touch has recently spawned a 32GB version and I imagine that the 32GB iPhone is on its way.  When that happens the legacy user base will be left wondering what to do next.

8. Battery and battery life

The iPhone is sleek – barely a centimetre thick and enticingly smooth with those rounded edges.  There are few buttons, no little doors to come open and break off in your pocket and no memory slots to fill up with fluff and dirt. 

One of the reasons for the smooth design is that the iPhone does not have a user removeable battery.  The battery can be changed by a service centre, and over the two years I will keep this device I expect to have to change the battery at least once, but I cannot do it myself.  Also the battery is surprisingly small – it has to be to fit into this neat little package.

The price you pay for this is battery life.  My device is now 6 weeks old and have been fully cycled about 5 times (I tend to keep the battery on charge but allow it to run flat at least once a week).  If I am not using the device constantly, just checking the device twice an hour and answering calls, using 3G and Push, I can rely on a full working day of 10 to 12 hours between charges.  If I turn on WiFi this drops to 6 or 7 hours.  If I use the GPS without WiFi, autonomy drops to 4 or 5 hours.  If I wanted to be really frugal and last a full 24 hours, I would need to turn off both Push email and 3G, and reduce screen brightness to a minimum.

For some people this is a major issue.  For me, since I usually either have a PC on and can trail a USB cable, or spend the day driving with the iPhone hooked up as an iPod and being charged by the car, it is less of a constraint.  But it remains an annoyance.  I haven’t yet seen an iPhone equivalent of the Dell Latitude “Slice” – a battery “back pack” for the iPhone that could more than double autonomy with minimal extra thickness, but I assume that someone, somewhere, is working on an aftermarket device.

7. Document management

There is no equivalent of the Windows Mobile File Manager or Mac Finder on the iPhone so there is no way of manipulating file objects on device. 

Admittedly the iPhone does a credible job of shielding you from the need to do any file level manipulation: For example the Camera has a photo album that is also accessible in other applications that need to access images (for example, the iBlogger application I use to write short articles on this site).  But there are still occasions when you need to manipulate individual file objects.

 One is during installation and set up when installing root certificates for SSL so that the device can talk to an Exchange server: Unless you use Apple’s enterprise deployment tool (which locks down the device and prevents further configuration changes, so not always desirable), the only ways to set up the device for Exchange are to set up a temporary IMAP account and download an attachment that you open, or to set up a website with the root certificate and define the appropriate MIME types on the web server (I could not get this to work, incidentally!).  How much easier it would be to download the certificate onto the device using Windows explorer (connecting to a PC via USB exposes the devices memory as an attached storage device) and to be able to open the certificate file from memory on the iPhone.

The other key need for this functionality is when manipulating attachments on email messages.  There is no way of saving attachments, or attaching documents selectively to a new or forwarded message.

6. Navigating through email folders

I tend to keep a lot of emails in my mailbox.  I archive once a year, and usually towards the end of the following year.  I’m also fairly busy and work on a dozen consulting and business development projects at a time.  That means two things: a lot of emails, and the need to organise those emails sensibly.

I organise my emails into trees – consulting projects in separate folders and these folders organised by client, all kept separate from companies I’m invested in and from my personal stuff.  Probably 40 or 50 folders.

On Windows Mobile devices I can organise this quite cleanly, with the ability to expand or collapse sections of the folder tree.  The iPhone recognises the tree, but gives me no means of collapsing the hierarchy.  The Inbox is always at the top: Junk email is always at the bottom.  Moving incorrectly junked emails means traversing the whole tree, which is a pain even using the classy flick scroll gesture.  It’s clumbsy and unnecessary.

5. Filtering offline email content

The other side of this complexity is managing how much of my “online archive” to take with me. 

There is no need (and no space) to take it all with me: I am quite used to placing sensible limits on the section of the mail folder to take with me.  Windows Mobile allows me to take 1, 2 or 3 months worth of email with me, to say whether I take attachments with me, all the email or just the headers.  I can even select which folders to take or leave behind.  And I don’t need to worry if I go away and find I am missing a crucial folder – I can change the parameters and the device will download what’s missing.

The iPhone is slightly less flexible. It won’t let me download attachments pre-emptively: It will only load the message header and leave the attachment behind unless and until I select the email manually.  I can define how many days of emails I download from 1 day to 1 month, but beyond that I cannot specify a limit.  I have a filter on the number of messages within a folder that I display from 25 to 200 messages but the interaction between this setting and the time limit is not entirely clear.  If you are a light user this is less of an issue: For a heavier email user with a complex folder hieracrchy you have less control and can run into memory management issues as a result. 

4. Message management and Exchange

The worst problem with message management on the iPhone is actually specific to Microsoft Exchange.

I am an expert user and really love Microsoft Exchange.  It isn’t just my mail server: It’s a full collaboration engine, with group and resource scheduling, rich address book, “to do” lists, journaling, contact histories etc.  I don’t use it for fax and voice mail yet, but that is just a question of not having made the time to buy the interface box to the PBX and turn that feature on.  So I am up there with the other 60% of enterprise mailbox users that are hooked on Exchange.

When the iPhone first appeared the Exchange interaction story was weak.  It could do IMAP, but that’s just a fraction of the story.  No problem, that wasn’t Apple’s intended primary audience either, but the enterprise users clearly wanted the iPhone, so Apple got to work.

To be fair to them, Apple have done a lot with iPhone 3G to improve the Exchange story. Most of the security protocols are there, including critical features like remote wipe and SSL, and it supports Push. Enterprise deployment is straightforward too with a dedicated enterprise setup tool that supports remote device configuration.  Unfortunately Apple seem to have stopped halfway through the API and a lot of Exchange functionality is overlooked.  Some of this, like losing some data richness within calendar and contact items, doesn’t affect all users equally.  Other elements are more critical, however.

The best way to describe this is how you forward email messages with attachments.  The Exchange API permits clients to forward the message without the message content being stored locally: You can forward the header and the server will attach the attachments and other rich content before forwarding.  The iPhone doesn’t understand this: First it has to download all of the message and attachments from the server to the iPhone, then it has to add the forwarding address and send the entire message back to the server.  Moving a message between folders is the same and involves the same telecommunications overhead.  A nuisance for me, but no more than that: If you aren’t on a data bundle and pay by the MB then you need to be wary of this.  

[Another side effect of this issue is that server-side disclaimers and signatures get placed at the end of the forwarded message, rather than under new message text.]

3. Reading HTML and rich text messages

I love HTML emails.  I know that is considered a cardinal sin in some quarters, but as someone once said, if email had been invented after http would email have been done any other way?  HTML is ubiquitous, it is clean and it works.

And of course being the best mobile web device on the market, the iPhone should be a fantastic HTML email reader, shouldn’t it? 

Well, it very nearly is.  It does some things really well.  It gets the layout, it renders inline graphics, it’ll even show some background.  But what if the text is really wide?  It’ll wrap won’t it?  No, it won’t.  It’ll shrink the text to fit.  It’ll make the text really, really small.  And you can’t cheat by rotating the device, making the screen “wider” and the font larger, because the mail client doesn’t support landscape presentation (why???).

Of course you can zoom in, because it’s HTML, but then you have to scan the whole line, whizzing across the page to the end of the line, then whizzing back again to get the start of the next line.  Oh dear!

2. Task switching

The iPhone is a lovely, clean design.  And part of the cool, clean look comes from the absence of nasty short cut action buttons. 

The iPhone has only three buttons on the edges of the device: the on/off button on the top, the volume up/down toggle on the side and the excellent single button mute button above the volume toggle.  That’s it.  The only other button on the device is the “home” button on the front, below the screen.

The home button stops whatever application you are engaged on and takes you to the home page of the device – the pretty page full of icons that start up each application on the device.  Good job it’s pretty, because you see an awful lot of it.

There is no way to jump straight to your calendar, or address book, or email. Apart from the one “double click” action (user configurable to either select phone favourites or iPod controls), the only way to start a task is to go back to the home page and up again into the application you want. Find an interesting URL in an email that you want to look at in Safari?  Memorise it well, or write it down, because unless the text has been created as a link you’ll have to go back to the home page, start Safari, type the URL, realise you’ve got it wrong, press the home button again, start email, open the email, find the URL … and start again. 

Or you could just select the URL and cut and paste it into the browser address bar … except …

1. How on earth do you cut and paste?

Once Xerox had invented the mouse, the GUI and WYSIWYG editing, it was up to Apple to take that technology and make it affordable with the Lisa and the Mac.  And Microsoft to make it ubiquitous, of course.

One of the joys of using the mouse, or any pointing device, is that it gives you a third dimension as you move around the page.  You aren’t constrained by the line or the word or the paragraph – you can jump straight to any part of the document.  And you can select parts of a document by dragging over a word, a line, a paragraph, and do something with it.  Like cutting it out.  Or copying it.  Or dragging it.  It’s normal.  That’s just what you do.  You don’t have 3 hour seminars and training courses on using a mouse (or a stylus) to point and select, click and drag.  You demonstrate it once, the student understands and does it. 

But the company that helped the mouse escape from the lab and get into the shops seems to have forgotten all about it.  Get out your iPhone.  Write a sentence.  Write another one.  Oops – that second sentence would make more sense BEFORE the first one.  I’ll just cut and paste the sentence. Oh no you won’t!! Because there is no cut and paste on the iPhone.  Hear that? No? Well, I’ll say it again! THERE IS NO CUT AND PASTE ON THE IPHONE.

Google around a bit and you’ll find dozens of articles on the subject.  You’ll find surprise, indignation, horror.  You’ll even find brave Apple gurus explaining sagely that you don’t need cut and paste because the iPhone gives you more direct ways of using information, like linking URLS, or detecting phone numbers, or, er, something.

The most likely explanation is that once Apple has decided to do away with the stylus, the only UI gesture was to use two fingers and drag that over the page to select some text.  But that gesture had already been taken with the excellent pinch zoom movement used on large documents and web pages.

There is a way out, however.  Some very credible proof of concept demonstrations have been put on the web showing how a sustained point and drag with single finger (like the stylus selection action in Windows Mobile) would be workable and not conflict with any other screen action on the iPhone. 

Let’s hope that the concept demos work and we see cut and paste implemented in an upcoming firmware release. In the meantime, at least twice every day I bet every iPhone user will silently curse, shrug and give up writing that urgent memo because they just can’t be bothered to type it all again.

 

So that’s it.  Please don’t get me wrong, I think the iPhone is a wonderful, iconic and transformational device.  As with the Mac, it has changed our perception of what a mobile device should be.  Mobile phones and smartphones will never be the same again. 

It’s just that for all it’s brilliance, it remains flawed.  The iPhone is the product of a prolific and brilliant yet highly introspective group of engineers.  Left free to innovate, unrestrained by any notion of reality or practicality or what the user currently thinks he or she wants, Apple have created a concept device. I’m grateful they have, but I fear that it will be up to other companies, with a clearer grasp of what the user can use, in particular what ELSE the user is doing, to take the iPhone to the next step.

Stephen Oliver is Director of Expraxis Limited (http://www.expraxis.com), a consulting company that works with academics, entrepreneurs and inventors who need help bringing new ideas to market. We help people set their priorities, plan for their business, build relationships with partners that can help them, and work with them to help turn those ideas into reality.

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