At the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) this week, Steve Jobs rolled out the expected and anticipated iPhone 3G to the hungry fans, developers and fanboys.
While some of it is now the best mobile device on the market through the acceptance of the use of the downloading of data via the 3G mobile network, which was to be 3 times faster than the EDGE network and 10 times faster than standard GPRS estimated, it seems to be missing some features that otherManufacturers of mobile devices for years. Also the inclusion of Assisted GPS did not sway the public towards the device, as some predicted.
It was evident that Apple is a Zen-like attitude on the iPhone, by the development and use of the phone taking simplistic.
It is e-mail and can take photos via e-mail - so why should Multi Media Messaging?
Why clog up the iPhone with too many applications, too much and cause general instability in the underlying operating system? It makes sense for the iPhone make to have 3rd party developed applications and games for them, but it also makes sense because there is some sort of control over the way applications are developed and used on the iPhone. Keeping tabs on each application means that Apple's warranty that the device will still be stable no matter how many applications can be installed.
I am sure that all no 'camp will be happy once the> IPhone App Store launches in July 2008. You will get in a position to make their multimedia messaging, video recording, Bluetooth transfer of files and copies of Nokia Snake to play there. Its all a matter of time.
A major turning point for the iPhone 3G is the price. In the UK, can the iPhone 3G for just £ 99 with a contract or even free, if the contract is worthy enough to have taken hold there. It is far removed from the starting price of the device, which ran in several hundred pounds, plus the monthly contract!
If the iPhone 3G is released and the App Store is to be published in the same time, this will catapult the iPhone into the best, most versatile mobile phone you can buy. I suspect that the majority of popular applications for the device is free, and it is certainly more attractive to make people want to buy the unit.
For us people who are "early adopters" of> IPhone 1G model when it launched for the first time, what we have in stock? What is the future we can without the 3G, GPS and the slightly redesigned body? My answer is everything. "We are still in the App Store, we get the new 2.0 firmware that the iPhone with new features and updates to enable work on the App Store. We are not losing at all. We win, if you GPS is built then buy a TomTom or Garmin device! iPhone 3G with GPS do the work --but well worth the upgrade fee plus the cost of the TomTom's iPhone application when it starts? I think not.
What we do, to hold, is an excellent mobile convergence device with new firmware and new applications to play.
My advice? If you burn the money? Stay with 1G!
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