Archive for the ‘iPhone Reviews’ Category

Getting The Most Out Of Your Iphone

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007

The iphone is less like other new technology than anything else that has been released in the marketplace in recent years. This phone offers a host of communication improvements for both business and personal interactions worldwide. Not only is it faster than previous technologies but it is also a great tool for allowing you to instantaneously communicate with people anywhere in the world. Compared to past media of communication, it is a much better medium, and it has very few limitations.

Not mandated by the government or some regulatory agency, there is one very tangible condition that will affect your ability to use your iPhone to its full extent. Obviously, portable electronics don’t work so well without battery power. To avoid the disappointment of not being able to use your new iPhone, you should consider investing in several iPhone extras that will help ensure reliable and on demand functionality of the iPhone. Particularly wise investments are a home charger and carriage. Actually, you are not going to be able to use your iPhone without charging it. A home charger and carriage are the easiest way to charge your iPhone. The next desirable extra for the iPhone would be a portable or car charger, which offers convenient mobile charging.

Many new accessories for IPhone users have been created, and certainly many more will be released, just as what happened for users of the regular IPod. Some accessories that can be found are protective cases, both the hard and soft variety, arm bands for the active users, belt holsters, auto mounts, headsets, connecting cables, and more. No matter their style, it’s easy to outfit any IPhone user with the right accessories.

Apple Stores and most other consumer electronics specialty shops carry iphone accessories. Do a careful search at an online auction site, such as eBay, and you may find them there, too. It’s a great time to personalize your iphone by choosing any extras that suit your personality and lifestyle.

Check out the latest iphone news at: iPhone News. Learn about the latest iPhone Extras and Accessories

Make Your iPhone Battery Last Longer

Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

Most of the mobile phones use litium-ion battery. The Apple made iPhone also uses a same standard and frequently rechargeable lithium-ion dry battery. In Apple ipod battery is not removable or replaceable.

Therefore it is essential that a great care be taken to preserve battery condition in the best possible available way. Because battery cannot be replace by an ordinary technician so an expert can only replace the iPhone battery. Replacement of iPhone battery is an expensive affair; it normally cost $80 to 200 to get it replaced. A great care is needed to extend the life of iPhone battery to enjoy utility of it.

There are few basic guidelines, which help us to keep our battery safe.

First and foremost rule to protect a battery is to keep it away from moistures environment. Do not drop it and lend in different people hands. Never keep the battery for overcharging and on exhaustive discharging condition. If there are any symptoms of malfunctioning of the iPhone, consult an expert without a self-fiddling. These batteries and sets are very sensitive and fragile, it is advised to handle the iPhone with a single hand.

An iPhone battery can be made durable by taking these precautions. A lithium ion battery is a standard and high quality battery, which can easily be made to be used for a few years if a proper care and precautions is taken. There is no such battery, which can last forever; it just means that a care makes battery to last longer. Heat is a plague for a lithium battery so it should be avoided in all conditions. Intense ionization takes place in the lithium battery and heat destroys its ability of ionization. Instructions are given in the iPhone booklet to avoid the continuous exposure of iPhone to the sunlight. The battery will be sufficiently hot to get destroyed in few hours.

There are the examples that in the after noon sun light has severely damaged iPhone battery. Leaving battery in the car exposed to sunlight can also damage the battery. Always make sure that standard charger supplied with the set charges iPhone battery. It will not only ensure you iPhone’s warranty, but also keep the iPhone safe from damage.

Lithium-ion batteries need to be charged with an accurate charging rate and smooth voltage without any interruptions. Local chargers won’t provide the regulated voltage, which can slowly degrade the quality of the iPhone battery. Avoid charging iPhone battery in vehicle. These chargers are not accurate and charge the battery quickly, and it adversely affects the battery. Although Apple has developed few vehicle chargers, but these chargers are not as good as a charger provided with original equipment manufacturer. It’s true; a little care makes an accident rare.

The new iPhone is Released to Rave Reviews

Friday, July 6th, 2007

The new iPhone, from Apple, has been released to consumers amidst glowing iphone reviews. The new iphone is a top-of-the-line, cutting edge mobile device that incorporates a mobile phone, an MP3 player, and a high-resolution digital camera.  Additionally, the new iphone has several exciting new features, such as virtual voicemail, which allows users to pick and choose which voicemail messages to listen to and operates similarly to email, and an integrated web browser that automatically formats web pages to fit the screen. After Apple announced the new iphone, upgrades to the touchscreen and the battery life were promptly made to optimize the user’s experience.  The new iphone contains such a range of innovative technology that users may seem overwhelmed by the capabilities. However, the preliminary iphone reviews have heralded the new iphone as extremely user friendly and almost intuitive. Various iphone reviews have commented on the compactness of the device and marveled at the sheer number of functions the new iphone is able to perform. Other iphone reviews have called the new iphone “dazzling” and commented on the high-resolution touchscreen and the high-powered web browser that makes checking email or finding a great local Mexican restaurant as easy as accessing the information from a home computer. The new iphone, while more expensive than a standard mobile phone, is actually priced quite well, especially considering the number of functions the new iphone is able to perform. Consumers can purchase the 4GB iphone for $499 while the 8GB iphone is $599.  The new iphone has seemingly only one limitation and that is related to the mobile service carrier. Apple signed a contract with AT&T Mobile whereby AT&T Mobile will be the exclusive carrier of the new iphone up through 2008.  AT&T Mobile has attempted to guarantee both a reliable mobile network and equally as reliable wireless internet service as well as a range of service plans to satisfy every user. The majority of iphone reviews have not commented on the exclusive mobile service provider as a problem, however, due to a high satisfaction rate of the customers already using AT&T Mobile.  The new iphone from Apple will initially only be available through Apple outlets across the United States and from the Apple website.  Apple may have to step up production of the new iphone in order to accommodate all the new customers who have been eagerly awaiting the release of the new iphone.

The Apple iPhone

Friday, June 29th, 2007

The Apple iPhone is, to date, the most advanced mobile device available. The Apple iPhone is so much more than just a mobile phone. The Apple iPhone combines an MP3 player, a digital camera, an internet browser, and a mobile phone into one slim device.  After the initial iphone availability was announced by Apple, Apple subsequently upgraded a number of features on the Apple iPhone, making the iphone even more attractive to potential users. With increased battery life and an upgraded touchscreen, the Apple iPhone can now outperform any competitor’s mobile devices, including some computers. While the price of the Apple iPhone is considerably more than any other mobile device, the diversity of functions the iphone can perform should help to ease the cost anxiety of even the most frugal consumer. Consumers have two different iphones to choose from to suit individual needs.  The 4GB iphone retails for $499 while the 8GB iphone retails for $599.  Perhaps the only prohibitive factor for consumers is the iphone availability, which is only through AT&T Mobile.  Up through 2008, iphone availability is secured exclusively through AT&T Mobile, which means that users will either have to sign a two year contract with AT&T Mobile or patiently await the dissemination of the iphone to other mobile service carriers. When Apple initially announced the creation of the iphone, in January of 2007, Apple devotees and mobile device enthusiasts alike eagerly awaited iphone availability, which was slated to come six months after the iphone’s introduction.  Now, the only question of iphone availability is whether Apple can increase production of the Apple iPhone in order to meet the demand for the device. AT&T Mobile has attempted to guarantee a reliable mobile network, including a wireless internet network to accommodate the internet function of the iphone, and service plans to suit every individual user in order to garner a large customer base for the Apple iPhone. Apple executives have repeatedly communicated Apple’s confidence in AT&T Mobile as the exclusive carrier for the iphone, attempting to instill in consumers the idea that the best mobile device is exclusively paired with the best mobile service carrier.  Consumers hoping to have the mobile world quite literally at the touch of a button will be highly satisfied with the capabilities of the Apple iPhone, which provides all the standard mobile phone functions with a number of innovative new functions.

That iPhone Is Missing a Keyboard - The New York Times

Thursday, June 14th, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO, June 12 — If there is a billion-dollar gamble underlying Apple’s iPhone, it lies in what this smart cellphone does not have: a mechanical keyboard.

As the clearest expression yet of the Apple chief executive’s spartan design aesthetic, the iPhone sports only one mechanical button, to return a user to the home screen. It echoes Steven P. Jobs’s decree two decades ago that a computer mouse should have a single button. (Most computer mice these days have two.) His argument was that one button ensured that it would be impossible to push the wrong button.

The keyboard is built into other phones, those designed for businesspeople as well as those for teenagers. But the lack of a keyboard could be seen as a clever industrial design solution. It has permitted the iPhone to have a 3.5-inch screen. A big screen makes the phone attractive for alternative uses like watching movies and that could open up new revenue streams for Apple and its partner, AT&T.

The downside is that typing is done by pecking on the screen with thumbs or fingers, something hardly anyone outside of Apple has experienced yet. “The tactile feedback of a mechanical keyboard is a pretty important aspect of human interaction,” said Bill Moggeridge, a founder of Ideo, an industrial design company in Palo Alto, Calif. “If you take that away you tend to be very insecure.”

Mr. Jobs and other Apple executives argue that the keyboard that pops up onscreen will be a painless compromise. The iPhone’s onscreen keyboard has a dictionary-lookup feature that tries to predict the word being typed, catching errors as they are made.

That, of course, requires users to learn the new system, a task that Apple executives acknowledge may require several days. Last month at an industry conference, Mr. Jobs dismissed doubts about the decision to rely on a virtual keyboard, saying that users only had to learn to trust the keyboard, “and then you will fly.”

Yet in the days before the phone is scheduled to go on sale at Apple and AT&T stores around the country, designers and marketers of electronic devices centers are having a spirited debate about whether consumers will have the patience to overcome the hurdle that will be required to type without the familiar tactile feedback offered by conventional keyboards.

Apple is making other compromises. The AT&T Edge cellular network transmits data more slowly than those of rivals, but the iPhone will still be equipped with Wi-Fi for Web access. The phone will not accept memory cards.

The keyboard, however, is the biggest worry. At worst, customers will return the products. Currently AT&T gives customers 30 days to return handsets, but it is not clear whether it will maintain that policy for the iPhone. Any significant number of returns of the iPhone could conceivably undermine what until now has been a remarkable promotional blitzkrieg that culminates in the phone’s release June 29.

“There has never been a massively successful consumer device based solely on a touch screen,” warned Sky Dayton, chief executive of Helio, a cellular network service that has recently introduced an innovative handset that integrates Google maps with a G.P.S. system and another feature that physically locates friends using Helio phones.

Palm was successful, he noted, despite requiring the Palm Pilot’s users to enter text with a stylus using its own writing system called Graffiti. But the company eventually retreated and put a mechanical keyboard on its Treo smartphones.

“Texting” is central to an entire generation of people, Mr. Dayton argued, and Apple is taking a risk in not making that a central design feature. “There is a generation of users who are always online and who don’t communicate the way their parents did,” he said. “They’re e-mailing; they’re texting; they’re I.M.-ing.”

To be sure, Apple has had its share of product design hits and misses both under Mr. Jobs’s command and while he was in exile from the computer maker from 1985 to 1997. The Apple III was a well-designed computer, but was undermined by shoddy manufacturing. Several years later, the Lisa, the first commercial PC with a graphical user interface, and an infamously poorly designed “Twiggy” floppy disk drive, generated excitement but failed commercially. More recently, the Apple Cube, which was perhaps Mr. Jobs’s most daring design statement, drew critical praise and few sales.

But the comparison that could haunt the iPhone most comes from the specter of a former Apple chief executive, John Sculley, and his Newton. Billed as the original “personal digital assistant,” the Newton relied on a stylus for entering text. When users fumbled with its character recognition system, the machine went from hype to humiliation.

Although a small team of dedicated Apple engineers ultimately improved the technology, it was too late to save the Newton as a product.

Few industrial designers believe that the iPhone will suffer the Newton’s fate. Indeed, many leading designers argue that even before the iPhone has reached the market, it has changed consumer electronics industry standards irrevocably. Dispensing with a physical keyboard has given software an increased importance over hardware in product design, said Mark Rolston, senior vice president at Frog Design, an industrial design consulting firm.

A result, he said, has been a richer conversation between Frog’s designers and customers because the software presents a much wider range of options for features. “This is great for us because the carriers weren’t listening,” Mr. Rolston said. “They were slightly adjusting the soft-keys.”

Overnight that has changed and that has resulted in significant new business for design companies like Frog. “We’re being engaged by many more customers with more aggressive ideas about what to do,” he said.

Mr. Rolston believes that Mr. Jobs will get away with his gamble. “They took a risk and it’s a bold step for the industry,” he said. “This is a worthwhile risk.”

Indeed, the handful of users outside Apple who have been able to play with the hand-held device report that the quirky company has made an important step forward in the art of controlling computer systems. It may teach a new generation of technology users to use their fingers rather than a mouse — a four-decade-old technology — as a pointing and command device.

Apple’s multitouch technology — which permits control gestures with one or more fingers or thumbs — and which is now also being explored by a variety of other companies, including Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard and others, is a much more direct way to interact with a computer. Software designers have injected virtual “physics” into the user’s experience. For example, sliding a finger along the screen in a directory will cause the index to slide as if it were a piece of paper on a flat surface.

Mr. Jobs’s new phone may resonate with a new kind of mobile user, said Donald A. Norman, a product designer who is co-director of the Segal Design Institute at Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill.

“Apple says, ‘We’re not selling to the person who lives on his BlackBerry, we’re selling to the person who listens to music and surfs the Web,’ ” he said.

And even Mr. Jobs’s competitors are rooting for him to win.

“When I first saw iPhone I was very excited,” said Benjamin Bederson, co-founder and vice president for client technologies at ZenZui, a Seattle-based mobile phone software company, which is commercializing technologies that were developed at Microsoft’s research labs. “It will raise the expectations. I think that consumers have had the central assumption that cellphone experiences are terrible and there’s nothing you can do about it.”

The New Apple iPhone is a Brilliant Multifunctional Device

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

By Michael Ferrerya

You may just be finding out about the iPhone, which is soon to be released Apple cellphone. When you hear Apple you probably think about computers or even the popular iPod, a leader in the MP3 market. The iPhone is especially unique because it features the popular features of a cell phone including text messaging, a built-in digital camera, the ability to surf different web sites, check and send out Emails, and communicate through cell phone of course.

One of the obstacles that Apple has to overcome when designing the iPhone was the issue of having a device with a touch screen that is meant to ride securely in pockets, as well as press against a user’s face when being used as a cell phone. For this issue Apple created special sensors which allow the iPhone to sense when it is close to an object larger than a human finger, causing there to be no input.

This may not sound that extraordinary as of yet but read on and you will be won over by Apple’s newest creation. The iPhone doesn’t really come with that many new technologies, but rather improved or smarter features. The most awesome feature of the iPhone is the fact that it is basically an iPod with a cell phone and other features. Not just an iPod but a video iPod. The new iPhone will have the ability to play your favorite digital music files as well as video.

Apple decided to make their iPhone a little different from other mobile cell phone devices by giving it an OS X operating system. This is an impressive and unique feature all in itself, and likely to be copied by other manufacturers and cell phone providers in the near future. This is one of the most advanced and secure operating systems that are out there right now. This makes it possible to enjoy features such as the Safari web browser, note taking applications, as well as other use features like the calendar, and the address book.

Apple has gotten rid of the keypad all together with the new iPhone, which comes with a 3.5 inch screen that is sensitive to the touch of a finger, no stylus needed. This means that when you need to call someone the buttons come up digitally, and when you want to send a text or Email you can have a virtual keypad at your finger tips. Find a cell phone that can deliver a virtual keypad along with an advanced video and MP3 player. When turned sideways the screen has a 16:9 aspect ratio similar to those in the movies and in many TV programs. This also means that you can view your video or browse the Internet in wide screen format.

It is easy to see why the iPhone has had such high pre-release reviews with different people who have been lucky enough to test the new device. The retail prices for the new iPhone are going to enter the market at $499 for the 4GB version, and only $599 for double the memory of 8GB. It is supposed to have a release date in June of 2007.

Michael is a writer for Everything iPhone where he writes daily about the Apple iPhone.

Along with writing the latest iPhone news stories, Michael also writes on such varied topics as how to choose a car kit for the iPhone.