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iPhone 3GS Review
I have now had my new phone long enough to offer some reasonably informed opinions about it. I should note up front that I am not a typical user; I use a phone in fairly non-standard ways, and I use it a LOT. So the criteria by which I evaluate it may be very different from yours. (I used to prefer a very basic phone, and have the complexity live in a PDA. Sadly, PDAs, per se, don't seem to get made anymore.)

1) Phone. Poor.
Usability features are good. A third-party app let me easily make a custom ring tone. But AT&T doesn't have the reliability of coverage that I was getting with Verizon. Of course, folks who hang out in different places, may get different results. But the A-number-1 function of a phone, for me, is so that [livejournal.com profile] kestrell can reach me in an emergency. So this is a pretty serious mark-down.

2) Ebook Editor. Meh.
I really like reading ebooks on my phone. But many of the books I read are scanned, and need corrections. I also like to write on my phone (and am writing this review on it!). So I don't just need a reader, but a robust editor as well. This actually divides up into many subcategories.
2a) Storage. Excellent.
This is the main reason I went with the iPhone, 16 GB of onboard storage. My old phone had an SD card, but if you use it as much as I did, those cards wear out and start corrupting files after about six months, which is clearly unacceptable. I currently keep about 300 MB of documents on my phone, and I expect that number to keep going up. The iPhone is the only one on the market that has enough built-in storage.
2b) Battery Life. Meh.
While the iPhone's battery is plenty good enough for the average user, I'm not that. When being used near-constantly, as, say, at a convention, the battery won't last out the day. I get paranoid when phone batteries run low, as reliability ( in all senses) is important to me. I solved this problem with third party hardware. There are several different iPhone battery extenders on the market, which shows that I am not alone in considering it a problem. I got the most powerful one, a Fastmac ($99), which in hindsight may have been overkill. On the other hand, it can be used to charge other USB devices, and has a potent flashlight built in, so those are fun.
2c) Text Entry/Edit. Average.
Lack of a tactile keyboard is annoying. The software one does work pretty well. Many typos get mitigated by an autocorrection system, which is usually correct (though it does have a baffling desire to replace "or" with "o'r"). Moving the selection point is a bit harder with a finger than with a stylus. The methods for selecting arbitrary blocks of text still sort eludes me in practice, though the theory is simple enough.
2d) Software. Meh.
On my old phone, I used Documents To Go, and I saw that there was a version available for iPhone, so I naturally went there first. The iPhone version is rather different from the Palm version, some improvements, some missing basics. The desktop synching software is easier to use in the iPhone version, which can remember folder and subfolder information from your PC. It does have a limitation (common to many iPhone apps, as it apparently stems from some bizarre Apple 'security' policy) that it cannot synch documents over the synch cable, but has to synch them over wireless. This was a bit of a problem for me, as I had previously had no use for wireless, but a relatively cheap dongle was able to fix that for me. One very serious flaw is the lack of ability to set bookmarks, which makes reading/editing lengthy documents quite awkward. I have hopes that a future upgrade will include this functionality, but for the moment it's just a hope. DTG is still the most advanced editor out there for the iPhone; none of the others have bookmars either (though several plain reader programs do).

3) Calendar/Alarm. Epic Fail.
The builtin calendar program is pretty bare bones. It will let you specify simple repeats for recurring items, but not such complex ones as "second Thursday of the month" or "every 28 days". It allows you to attach a maximum of 2 alarms to an item, and only one by default. Once those alarms have gone off, it will never bug you again, nor give you any indication that you may have missed something. I got very used to the way my Palm would bug me every five minutes until I explicitly acknowledged the appoinment; indeed, this functionality is vital when using a device as an 'alarm clock with snooze'. I tried purchasing a third party replacement app, but their alarm functions are *worse*! Apparently another of Apple's 'security' notions means that these apps have no background or interrupt ability. As near as I can tell, a third party calendar is only allowed by the OS to set off an alarm when the phone is turned on, and the calendar app itself is open. Totally useless. This feature is *such* an epic fail that I am still carrying around my non-phone-connected Palm for the sole purpose of filling this function.

Final Verdict: Meh.
I am definitely feeling some buyer's remorse. On the flip side, my perfect device doesn't seem to exist, so compromise is necessary. I will definitely be keeping an eye open for a better compromise in a year o'r so...
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Alexx Kay

February 2025

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