Aug 2007
Is this thing on?
Tue, 28 August 2007
I've decided to retire this blog because,
quite frankly, nobody reads it. I have
answered to my own satisfaction the
question which was the original premise for
the blog anyway, which was whether the
iPhone is a good tool for a photographer. I
believe it is.
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Web on the go
Wed, 15 August 2007 Filed in: Apple
I had no idea how truly useful having the
"real" web on the go could be. Sure, I had
the "mobile web" on my previous phone, but
it was wretched. Opera Mini helped make it
a little more tolerable but the experience
was still wretched. Enter the iPhone, and
it's about as good an experience as you can
get in such a small form factor with
today's technology. Since applying the
1.0.1 update, Safari rarely crashes and my
push email works wonderfuly. I'll digress
for a moment to say that yes, I understand
everything should be rock solid, including
Safari. But come on, it's a
first-generation product from a company
that has never done a phone before. Apple
did remarkably well. The browser on my
previous phone crashed a time or two also,
but the difference is that it never once
got updated. iPhone 1.0.1 was out within
six weeks. I called Cingular support a few
times about various problems with the
previous phone. They pointed the finger at
LG. After an exhaustive search to find LG's
phone number, I called them and they
pointed the finger back at Cingular. Come
on guys, someone has to take responsibility
here. It makes sense to me for it to be
LG's responsibility to support the device
they designed and manufactured. Besides,
Cingular sells several different
manufacturer's phones -- it doesn't seem
reasonable to expect them to be able to
support every model from every
manufacturer. Warranty exchanges, yes. Tech
support for all but the simplest problems,
no.
So I was in Denver and didn't know my way around. I didn't know where the restaurants were, how the streets were laid out, or how to get around. No problem! I could easily use Google, Citysearch, or the Denver convention and visitor's bureau website to find the names (and often addresses) of places I wanted to go, and Google Maps to find out how to get there. I could send snapshots to family and friends via email so they could see the pictures at a larger size (and I could send them to people who don't have multimedia messaging packages -- yes, there are still such people out there). In short, iPhone blows the socks off other phones when it comes to web and email capability. The Blackberry does email extremely reliably, but its email capability is not nearly as flexible in non-corporate environments as the iPhone's. How many photographers work in a corporate environment? I'm not talking about having corporate clients, I'm talking about having a big corporation as your direct employer. There are some, but I would guess not many.
So I was in Denver and didn't know my way around. I didn't know where the restaurants were, how the streets were laid out, or how to get around. No problem! I could easily use Google, Citysearch, or the Denver convention and visitor's bureau website to find the names (and often addresses) of places I wanted to go, and Google Maps to find out how to get there. I could send snapshots to family and friends via email so they could see the pictures at a larger size (and I could send them to people who don't have multimedia messaging packages -- yes, there are still such people out there). In short, iPhone blows the socks off other phones when it comes to web and email capability. The Blackberry does email extremely reliably, but its email capability is not nearly as flexible in non-corporate environments as the iPhone's. How many photographers work in a corporate environment? I'm not talking about having corporate clients, I'm talking about having a big corporation as your direct employer. There are some, but I would guess not many.
