iPhone 3G: The First Two Weeks
Now that I’ve had a my iPhone for a couple of weeks a few realities have set it. Firstly, although I may have blocked out any memories from my mind I am now confronted with the horrors of iTunes once again. The first prompt I was faced with asked me if I would like to sync applications downloaded to my phone with the iTunes library. My initial thought was no as I was only trying out half of them and didn’t see the point in backing up, however as I was about to click “Don’t transfer” I noticed the small print: “If you do not transfer these purchased items to your iTunes library, they will be removed from the iPhone”. What!? The madness continues when I decide to start using my Mac rather than my Windows PC: the first thing iTunes wants to do is delete all the music from the iPhone. I’m sure there is some rationale behind treating my music in this way but personally I prefer my applications to be designed for me rather than to placate some record industry megacorp. I eagerly await the day that Amarok supports my new phone.
I mentioned most of the obvious niceties in my previous post and to add to that I have discovered the nice Facebook, Last.fm, Bloomberg and Wordpress applications. In addition there are quite a few enjoyable games available for free: Aurora Feint, Cube Runner, Morocco and Moonlight Mahjong are my current favourites. I still think the App Store could be made easier to browse and it would be nice if I could filter the ever growing number of pointless apps from my view. Also the delay in UK releases of some applications is a little frustrating; I’m still waiting to try out Jott. Outside native apps the iPhone versions of Google Reader and Google Mail are very slick and I even find myself reading most of my RSS feeds from my phone in the morning rather than bothering to turn on my laptop.
On the negative side for the actual phone my modestly sized contact list is rather slow to load and I have managed to crash Safari a few times. I am also slightly disappointed that I cannot grant applications the ability to run in the background which seems to rule out a useful port of adium/pidgin ever coming to the iPhone, it also means that when I answer an incoming call the current applications quits cancelling what it was doing. Finally the lack of any search functionality in the mail client seems like a major oversight on Apple’s part. However my email usage on the phone is mainly reading new mails that arrive while I’m away from a computer so I haven’t been greatly impacted by this.