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HSBBWeb Old Timer
Picture of jmepop
Posted
I have noticed it has been a little slow in here lately and I am curious to see what you guys think about the new IPhone coming out tomorrow.

Question:
Are you excited about the new IPhone coming out tomorrow?

Choices:
Can't wait, am standing in line now.
Will get one but after the rush.
No I like my old phone.
What's an IPhone?

 
 
Posts: 800 | Location: Boynton Beach, FL | Registered: December 26, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
HSBBWeb Old Timer
Picture of ClevelandDad
Posted Hide Post
Slow indeed!

I am afraid I had to choose option D. Care to give us your take jmepop?
 
Posts: 4887 | Location: Cleveland, Ohio | Registered: December 22, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
HSBBWeb Old Timer
Picture of tasmit
Posted Hide Post
I like my old phone.
 
Posts: 1130 | Location: KY USA | Registered: October 27, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
HSBBWeb Old Timer
Picture of jmepop
Posted Hide Post
Personally I am pretty old school when it comes to cell phones. Mine has some features that I don't use now.

I am curious simply because of the current price level on Apple Stock as well as AT&T. Thought I would try and get some grass roots level feedback because personally I think the estimates for 200K units this year are too high. If they don't come out with strong results in the first few days I suspect Apple share price will fall pretty hard.

I just haven't heard anyone saying they can't wait to get one but figured maybe I just don't hang around with enough techies to have a true picture of demand.
 
Posts: 800 | Location: Boynton Beach, FL | Registered: December 26, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
HSBBWeb Old Timer
Picture of 03parent
Posted Hide Post
I'm a independant At&t agent and our company (not owned by At&t) will not be carrying the iphone. I'm curious as well to see if it will be all its hyped up to be. I've already heard some negative things about it.... but we shall see!!!

I miss baseball!!!!


"Let's Go Peay"
 
Posts: 614 | Location: Paducah,Ky | Registered: December 26, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
HSBBWeb Old Timer
Posted Hide Post
I'm always amazed at the folks that will jump on a new tech toy like this. It may do very well.... the price tag should prevent many from getting it though that might want to do so.

I have always had the cheapest cell phone... the one that I could get free with my plan. Last year I decided I was going to splurge and get myself a "real" phone like everyone else seemed to have. Bought myself a Razor and can't stand it! I'll never invest any more money than I have to in a cell phone again. Smile
 
Posts: 5354 | Location: Kentucky | Registered: December 30, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
HSBBWeb Old Timer
Picture of jmepop
Posted Hide Post
Saw this article today. Just doesn't seem they can possibly match the hype.

AP
Should You Buy an iPhone?
Wednesday June 27, 8:26 pm ET
By Peter Svensson, AP Technology Writer
An iPhone Buyer's Guide: Look Before Leaping Onto Apple's Cell Phone Bandwagon


NEW YORK (AP) -- The most eagerly awaited cell phone ever is upon us Friday. Should you resist the iPhone's breathless hype, or take the plunge? Unless you're already standing in line outside an Apple or AT&T store, or are prepared to mug one of the first customers to come out after the 6 p.m. launch, the answer, at least for now, will have to be "let me think about it for a week or two."
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The level of hype and demand for Apple Inc.'s phone is reminiscent of the debut of the PlayStation 3 game console in November, when minor riots broke out at some electronics stores. However, eBay prices for resold PS3s quickly fell, and two months later the console was in ample supply.

Apparently, much of the initial demand came from people who weren't really interested in getting them for themselves, but counted on being able to sell them to people who were.

It's quite possible that the iPhone will be subject to the same demand bubble. Check with the stores a month from now: If they have iPhones in stock, the bloom may be off the rose.

Hype aside, the iPhone is a radical design, a sliver of a device with a 3.5-inch glass screen and very few buttons. The iPhone differs by being designed to be touched with the fingertips rather than a stylus, making it a greater departure from the PC experience. (There have been several expensive phones with large touch screens before, generally using Windows Mobile software.)

The iPhone does e-mail, Web browsing, music and videos. It comes in two models -- $499 for a 4-gigabyte version and $599 for 8 gigabytes of memory -- and requires a two-year contract with AT&T Inc.

That's the basics. Here's a breakdown of who might want to consider an iPhone and who shouldn't:

-- The music listener -- Possibly. The big screen will make it easy to navigate a large music collection. A feature called Cover Flow shows your album covers like they're pages of an open book. However, the storage capacity is smaller than today's full-size iPods. The 4-gigabyte version fits about 800 songs, the 8-gigabyte version 1,800. The memory is not upgradable or expandable with external cards, so the 8-gig version is probably the one to get. Apple puts the battery life at 24 hours of audio playback, which is good.

-- The video watcher -- Sure, get one. The screen is twice as large as that of the video iPod, and the resolution, at 320 pixels by 480 pixels, is twice as high. The smaller memory capacity is going to mean frequent syncing with a computer, but the bigger screen will make it worth it. Definitely get the 8-gigabyte version, which will fit about 9 hours of video if that's all you keep on the gadget.

The iPhone also can access some YouTube videos, but since it relies on a relatively slow data network, access could be spotty, unless you're using its other built-in wireless technology: Wi-Fi. Other Web video will mostly be inaccessible, since the browser doesn't play Flash content, but that may change.

-- The phone chatter -- Maybe, but using it mainly as a phone seems like a waste. You can't type in names to quickly bring up someone from the contact list. Voicemail is listed with the caller's name or number, sort of like e-mail. In another neat feature, a sensor turns off the screen when you bring the phone to your face.

The cheapest service plan costs $60 a month for 450 daytime minutes -- relatively expensive, since you're paying for unlimited data use. Getting 1,350 minutes costs $100 a month.

-- The gamer -- No. The iPhone does everything except games. A pity, with that nice big screen. Third-party developers might put something clever together that works in the iPhone's browser, but it's going to be limited. You probably have a Sony PSP or Nintendo DS already, and the PSP, in particular, already has the big screen and some of the iPhone's multimedia functions, so you can complement it with a cheaper phone.

-- The corporate road warrior -- No. For professional use, you're probably stuck with what the company supports, and for now, that's going to be BlackBerries and Windows Mobile devices like the Samsung BlackJack. Corporate Microsoft Exchange e-mail servers can be configured to send e-mail to the iPhone, but many companies will not take this step. Other features of Exchange, like contact and calendar syncing, are not available.

One possible solution is to forward corporate e-mail to free Web-based e-mail accounts that the iPhone can access, but that raises security issues.

If you're looking for some entertainment from your work phone, Windows Mobile phones like the T-Mobile Wing are already quite capable. A recently released BlackBerry, the Curve, plays music through a standard stereo headphone jack and has a built-in camera.

-- The frugal buyer -- No, the first-generation iPhone is likely to be followed by something substantially better, like one that uses a faster cellular broadband network and has more memory. It's unlikely that the first iPhone will be upgradable, and in any case, it would require a trip back to Apple.

-- The photo buff -- Not likely. The iPhone has a 2-megapixel camera, which is decent, and the large screen should make the results easy to appreciate. But phones dedicated to camera buffs also record video and have higher resolutions. The new Nokia N95 has a 5-megapixel sensor and a lens from Germany's famous Carl Zeiss. Unfortunately, it sells for $750, since it isn't subsidized by any U.S. carrier.

-- The world traveler -- Possibly, but it's not ideal. The iPhone will work overseas, but only at AT&T's roaming rates. Better to have a world phone that has been "unlocked" by the carrier, so you have the option to use a local number and pay local rates.

-- The fashionista -- Sure. The iPhone is one of the best-looking phones ever. The screen is glass, not plastic, and should be fairly resistant to long fingernails. Goodbye, pink RAZR.

http://www.apple.com/iphone
 
Posts: 800 | Location: Boynton Beach, FL | Registered: December 26, 2002Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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