AppleInsider has a suprisingly balanced and detailed review by Eric Barger comparing an iPhone to a Blackberry from a point of view of a former Blackberry user.
Unlike some of the other reviews I have read so far, this one does not only touts iPhone advantages but also points out its weaknesses (at least in the current implementation).
I particularly liked Eric's thoroughness in reviewing e-mail, battery life and other features critical for many users, particularly those that come from Blackberry background.
Here is what he says on the iPhone's weaknesses, or the areas where Apple can improve the product in the coming months:
1. Copy and Paste - This is no doubt the biggest feature missing from the iPhone. I don’t think this needs explaining. Apple needs to get it done here.Eric gave the iPhone 4 out of 5 stars:
2. Landscape keyboard - Apple should include the ability for the screen to rotate to accommodate a bigger keyboard. The iPhone has a landscape keyboard in Safari but that is the only place you can utilize the feature. Text messaging would be taken to the next level with a landscape keyboard as I find it more comfortable to type with the phone horizontal than vertical.
3. A file system that works like a portable storage device - The ability to download files and then store them for reference, emailing, or work off the iPhone like a thumb drive is essential. The iPods can act like a portable drive already and make this a no brainer for the iPhone.
4. Mass email deletion - This has to be addressed. Any BlackBerry user will notice this feature before the missing copy and paste. The ability to delete 2, 30, or 100 emails at a time is a must have feature.
5. Searchable contacts by typing when in the phone application - The iPhone does not allow for a type-search when making calls from the phone application. The type-search feature should search all present fields listed for the contacts.
6. Internet tethering - Having the ability to give your notebook computer Internet access via a USB cable or wireless connection cannot be underestimated. I find the Internet tethering ability on the BlackBerry addictive and convenient when traveling.
7. MMS - This is a feature the general populous is going to demand. The lack of pictures in their text messages is going to frustrate and give the phone a bad name among the less savvy phone crowd. I am used to it because no BlackBerry I have owned has supported this. This could be a big let down to potential phone buyers when the price comes down.
8. .Wav and .mp3 support in email - You cannot play .wav and .mp3 files in email attachments. This is a huge pain for those who have Vonage or a similar phone system that emails your voicemails to you from work or home.
9. Only one photograph per email allowed - There should be a way to select several photographs to email so you don’t have to create separate emails for each photograph.
10. Weather widget ordering - You can order your world clocks but cannot order your weather widgets.
11. Message creation - When creating a text message or email, the same icon is used but they are placed in different corners of the screen. Consistency would be nice throughout the phone on similar tasks.
After two weeks with the iPhone I have never been more pleased with a phone. Apple has managed to produce a smartphone, PDA, and sleek video iPod all thrown in together. A mainstream phone with seamless integration on the Mac platform will be a relief to most Mac faithful users. The iPhone will offer perfect closure for the mobile phone community that will fulfill the needs of most users.
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