Monday, 23. July 2007, 02:30:26
tech
Ok so recently
.ed, a prominent member of the my opera community, posted in his blog about this thing he has with stats and decided it would be interesting to post his stats from his mobile phone. So to piggy back on his blog entry here are the stats from my personal mobile phone.
Model: Nokia N73
Date in Service: 06/29/2007
Days in Use: 23 Days
Messages and Data:
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SMS Sent: NA
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MMS Sent: NA
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Data Sent: 82.89 MB
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Data Received: 108.27 MB
Calls:
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Last Call: 00:11:27
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Dialed Numbers: 12:19:19
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Received Calls: 05:40:06
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All Calls: 17:59:25
Phone Memory:
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Memory in Use: 18 MB
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Free Memory: 27 MB
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Calendar: 407 b
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Contacts: 24 kB
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Messages: 294 kB
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Documents: 179 b
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Applications: 999 kB
Memory Card:
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Memory in Use: 655 MB
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Free Memory: 1267 MB
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Images: 14 MB
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Sound Files: 551 MB
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Video Clips: 58 MB
Contacts:
This post will be updated with more information shortly. I need to save and run for now.
Monday, 16. July 2007, 17:58:16
mobile, cellphone, Apple, iphone
...
So the release of the iPhone has come and gone. All in all the near immediate sell out of iPhones across the country would definitely make the initial launch a success. As most people that know me will tell you, I am a fan of just about everything Apple related. So why don't I have an iPhone in my pocket? Before I get into why let me give a quick review of the iPhone itself and what I have seen from it.
So the iPhone is a great device. Aesthetically pleasing, well designed (thanks to the infamous Jonathan Ives), has great battery life, a decent camera, and a very beautiful OS with complimenting applications. The device makes a great iPod, works very well with google maps, the safari browser is right at home on the device as well. One of the greatest assets the iPhone has is it's multi-point touch screen in which allows you expans pictures and web pages by simply stretching them out. I have had sometime to play with the device and I think it does everything it's intended to do very well. On the downside, I have also seen a couple things that make me wonder what Apple was thinking. First off, where is the MMS support. When I have sent MMS messages to my co-worker who proudly owns an iPhone he gets a standard SMS message with a link to the location of where the image is stored on the internet. This is hardly an MMS solution, it will take you substantially longer to view your message than if it would have gone straight to your device. The second downfall is the lack of a development platform beyond web apps. Web apps will work but this doesn't seem the way to go to get a dedicated program that will work wherever you are and perform as snappy as it should. The rest of my complaints about it are more specific, which brings me to why I don't own an iPhone.
First and foremost, one of the biggest things for me when it comes to a phone is freedom. The freedom to use your phone as you please, install what you want and turn around and sell it for what it's worth rather than be stuck with a device locked to one network. So it goes without saying that this shoudl be an unlocked device. Unfortunately here in the US the top GSM providers will not sell you a phone unless you buy a contract thus making it difficult for Apple to justify selling it unlocked and free to be used on whatever network you please. This doesn't mean that people aren't willing to dive into a contract to own a device that is free from being locked. Second, the iPhone does what it's intended to well. What about everything else? My current Nokia can do everything the iPhone can plus about a million things more that the iPhone can't do. My Nokia N73 cost me $350 and it has a 3.2mp Camera, takes decent quality video, surfs the internet with the best of them using Nokia's browser, or in my case Opera. On top of that the Series 60 platform has a multitude of applications that have been developed and more constantly being developed.
Basically what it boils down to is that Apple will have to kick up it's game to compete in the game of a making a full featured phone with heavyweights like Nokia. Even mobile manufacturers like Sony Ericsson and LG have mobiles with feature sets that vastly outweigh what the iPhone can offer. Apple, you wil have to do more to impress even your most seasoned customers.