Posts Tagged ‘iPhone’

I Do Not Like Apple Right Now

June 11th, 2009

Just a few minutes ago I went to go meet my dad and sister at the Lenox Mall Apple store. WHy? Melissa is going to college in the fall and we needed to get her a good computer. I’ve been working on selling my friends and family on Apples ever since I got my first 12″ PowerBook G4 the summer before I started college, and finally I’ve convinced a family member to join me. By the way, my friends tally is 4 direct purchases I’ve impacted heavily and at least 2 indirect impacts. I am considered by many of my family and friends as an Apple fanboy.

In April my iPhone had its moisture sensor tripped. It worked one night, I had a couple drinks in a hotel conference room (in Arizona, btw, so it’s dry as heck outside and inside) and went to bed. Next morning, microphone wasn’t working properly. Been using speakerphone since. Apple told me I was SOL and it was $499 to replace the phone. I told them to take a hike and made the speakerphone switch – which means I can’t talk on the phone in noisy environments. Today they told me I could get an out of warranty replacement for $199. I’m going to do it, and they’re tricky enough bastards that I actually thought “Oh! $200 is a good deal!”

But my real issue with Apple is that they’re changing their approach and screwing customers over. The new integrated battery is “better” because of longer battery life and all that jazz – and is supposed to make up for not being able to easily replace it. Apple fans just accepted that change because most of the time we just buy a new computer before we buy a new battery. Here’s the trick: You can no longer change your own memory. The saleswoman told me “if you’re really savvy you can do it yourself” and I said “but it voids the warranty, right?” and she was just quiet.

Apple is known for great customer service and they’re not offering that. $600 and then $200 to replace a phone that went on the fritz does not make me happy. They’re supposed to have superior hardware and design – and guess what? Frickin’ amazing displays and unibody design is great, but if you can convince me that me NOT being able to replace my own memory is a design UPGRADE, I’ll buy you a frickin’ ride to the International Space Station. You’re not making friends, Apple. You’re not treating your customers right.

Nobody said “Oh, Mr. Ake, We can see that you buy a new computer every 3-4 years and purchase iPods and other accessories from us. Your expected value to the company in 10 years is between $15,000 and $30,000, depending on how happy you are with our company. Here – let us get you a new iPhone. We know the moisture sensors are tripped sometimes on accident.”

Nobody said “A built-in battery is great and all, but can’t we make it easy for consumers to replace their own memory and/or hard drive? That’s kind of important.”

Instead, they’re worried, as the saleswoman said today, about getting people back in their stores. “It’s business, we want people back in the stores,” she said “Besides, a PC is worse…” yada yada yada. The real issue here is Apple is going to have people back in their stores – pissed off – when they could treat us right and have us back in their stores because they friggin rock. Everyone wants to like Apple, but they’re not making it very easy right now.

Shape it up, Apple. Steve Jobs, you need to kick these guys into shape. This isn’t the way to do business when your reputation is built on superior service and design. Don’t piss off the faithful.

And give me a new iPhone, damnit.

Analyzing My iPhone Apps

October 28th, 2008

I’ve got an iPhone, and I clean it regularly, but let’s see if it’s unnecessarily cluttered. Without further ado and without cleaning it first, I’m going to post a screenshot of each of my 3 home pages and tell you how many programs I actually don’t use. Feel free to make fun of me, but don’t get upset when I become quite snarky about it.

Productivity Apps

Productivity Apps

As you can see, my first page is fairly uncluttered, except I have two Twitter apps and primarily use TwitterFon over Twinkle, rarely use Say Who (voice dialer) and more often blog from my computer than my iPhone. And I rarely use Zenbe, but I keep it there as a reminder that I need to transfer my to-dos there.

Apps Page 2

Apps Page 2

I never use Jott. Ever. Remote is a rare thing, but I use it from the front porch to control my iTunes library when it’s inside. Useful, that. App store I use for app acquisition and updates, never use iTunes, rarely use Notes and YouTube. I use GTLogin all the time – automatically logs me into Georgia Tech’s WiFi. Palringo? Chat, it’s awesome. Bible so I never have to carry one around. Shazam identifies songs (and is useless, I never need that), Simplify Media lets me stream other people’s libraries, and BrightKite is Twitter with location data, utterly useless cause nobody uses it (seems cool though, let me know if you want an invite). On to the third screen.

Games and Such

Games and Such

This has YET ANOTHER a twitter client (TwitPic enabled), and games. Yes, I lightsaber duel sometimes. Everyone else who has an iPhone has it, even if they lie about it. Stocks is here for amusement as the market plummets. SportsTap is the way to go for a sports application, AirSharing is a program Nathan installed that I’ve yet to figure out how to use, but it costs money now in the App store and you won’t find me deleting something that I could have for free. Zippo is… a bic lighter. Naw, it’s a zippo. Fring / iCall / GrandDialer are for VOIP stuff that I never use, and Word Warp is a great time waster if you’re ever on the toilet looking for something to spend time doing.

There you have it. Does it make me more productive? Maybe. Do I feel more productive with it? Yes.

Make fun of me for it, I’d love to bite your head off, in a gentle way.

Colin

PS – What’s YOUR most useless app?

VOIP/SIP on the iPhone

October 11th, 2008

The iPhone has WiFi. This opens up some awesome possibilities for VOIP/SIP connections over the WiFi to help supplement the AT&T plan. I’m almost always around WiFi at work, home, and school, and when I purchased the iPhone I was hoping I could get a setup that would allow me to make some calls over either VOIP or SIP to cut down on my AT&T minutes.

I started following a few different options, most of which included jailbreaking the phone. That’s not something I’m going to do, so I just continued to wait. I began stalking a solution called iCall on Twitter and Facebook, and beat the crowd and became 1 of 100 beta testers for their application. It’s OK, but it’s not the best solution in the world (crashes every now and then, etc). Their demo shows people transferring calls from the cellular network to the iCall application, but I haven’t been able to figure that out.  Granted, I need to download the new beta version of that program in order to truly evaluate the most recent version of the iCall application.  I should also mention that once iCall is up and running and out of beta, recent plans mentioned that they’ll charge $10/month for unlimited usage.

The other possible solution is a link of several solutions. Gizmo5 is a SIP service much like Skype, and it’s pretty decent. Inbound calls are free. I can get an inbound call to Gizmo5 by routing it through my GrandCentral number or having people call my Gizmo5 number directly. However, calling out is the trick – in order to call out via Gizmo5 and it not cost money, I have to use a dialer (like GrandCentral’s web button, or several other services) that first calls the Gizmo5 number and then calls the destination number – thus both the inbound calls (other caller to my G5 number) and my outbound calls (dialer calls my G5 number) are considered “inbound” and allows me to make free calls.

A solution just showed up on Apple’s application store called Fring that is a dialer – If you want to make some calls through Gizmo5, just set up a G5 account and download Fring. Give it a try and see what you think – I don’t have it down to a science yet, but free calls sound good to me.

Until next time (I’ll update when I get my preferred setup more figured out), take care of yourselves.

Colin

Mobile Blogging

July 31st, 2008

One of the biggest advantages of owning an iPhone as a blogger is the ability to blog from anywhere. I downloaded a WordPress app to the phone, entered my contact info and admin info, and I’m off to the races.

I plan on using this in two weeks when we are isolated in the North Carolina mountains outside Asheville, NC. No Internet? No problem. I’ve got myself a mobile blogging platform in the gorgeous little iPhone. And you better believe I’ll be taking my camera. I am going to try and write a lot of content for a new photography oriented blog as well as take some pics and maybe some video while we’re up there.

Be on the lookout for some sweet pics soon. More on the photography oriented blog soon.

Take care. I need to run.

Colin

Posted from my iPhone. In the bathroom. How’s that for mobile blogging?

iPhone Positive

July 29th, 2008

Well folks, I write this post walking into work from my very own iPhone 3G. It cost far too much, but it is an awesome piece of equipment. After arguing with AT&T tech support for an hour and a half, they were entirely unhelpful and I was left to purchase an iPhone with no discount.

Anyways, I have an iPhone and it is awesome. But AT&T sucks, hands down.

Colin

Written from my iPhone.

The No iPhone Blues

July 8th, 2008

I’ve got the no iPhone blues.  Because I can’t get an iPhone 3G for another three months unless I want to pay $200 more than the $199 list price.

AT&T Deathstar

Turns out, the evil empire that is AT&T won’t sell the iPhone 3G to people like me (who don’t have an upgrade credit available until October) at $199.  Nope, they want $399 for it.  And frankly, I’d rather wait three months and spend that extra money to get 8 GB of extra space.

So it looks like I’ll be iPhoneless in Atlanta for another three months.  No, it’s not the end of the world, but I won’t be able to email, browse, and surf the web from my phone on vacation in August from the top of a mountain.  Shafted by the death star again!

If anyone knows how to get around this upgrade credit crap, drop me a line.  I want the iPhone!

Colin

AT&T = Not Awesome

June 12th, 2008

There are no good wireless companies, no, not one.

I needed more than the minimum 450 minutes this past spring while running around crazily planning two trips for 20+ people, one being overseas, the other to Carnegie Hall. That said, I kept my rate plan at the 900 minute level to build some rollover up before switching back down to 450 minutes.

Then I went to switch back to 450 minutes, and they shot me back to the stone age. Apparently when you switch down in minutes you can only take as many rollover minutes as you have anytime minutes. So I got taken from 1500 to 450. Wasted my money, you stinky dumb decision makers. At least make it twice the anytime minutes, so I’d have kept 450.

AT&T = The Empire

Now, there are some who say Verizon is so much better, but I don’t think they really are. There are just as many pissed off Verizon customers as there are AT&T customers. And, why would I switch if my family and girlfriend are on AT&T? Well, and the iPhone, of course.

And I want an iPhone. I’ll stick with AT&T.

But why must all wireless companies shaft their users so?

I Want A Pretty New iPhone

June 11th, 2008

Really, how could I not want one?

Cheaper, faster, real GPS, thinner, and without a doubt better than my Samsung CrapJack (I’m on my third CrapJack in around a year, by the way). For $200 I can own a shiny, extraordinarily usable device made by the ultimate company – Apple

Let’s take a look at it.

iPhone

*drool*

I think I’d use it mostly for the email, internet access, and calendar/organizer features (can’t wait to have it all linked into my Google calendar). Then again, text messaging will be nice, as will IM. And the iPod option is just a plus. As if the GPS. And the Camera. And YouTube.

It’s just such a sweet little device. I’ll likely be waiting in line on July 11 when they come out. Anyone coming with?

Colin