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Smartphone Shootout
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Tue Aug 07, 2007 09:19 AM
from the hit-me-with-your-best-shot dept.
from the hit-me-with-your-best-shot dept.
An anonymous reader writes "InformationWeek's David DeJean makes the mistake of trying to compare the experience of Web surfing on a BlackBerry, Palm, and HTC smartphones to the experience on the iPhone. According to the DeJean, the three don't come close, but it's very interesting to read about the pros and cons of what can (and can't) be done with current mobile hardware and software."
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how connected do we have to be? (Score:2, Insightful)
I've posted around this topic before. While it might be an interesting technical and "can we do it" discussion, ultimately (IMO) the "smaller is better" and "everything in one device" approach seems doomed to fail.
I liken it to the early days of cell phones (albeit not tiny) where it was new, it was exciting, and vendors were rushing to flood the market, while consumers were rushing to get their new status gadget.
However, instead of making better and better phones, the trend is to cram more crap into the
Re: (Score:2, Redundant)
What I want from a phone is to make phone calls, and every once in awhile, check the time. But apparently, they don't make those phones in the US anymore. I can't even get a
Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
What, are you kidding? Quit buying ringtones, stupid!
Consumer whores like you are what enable the industry to be as screwed up as it is!
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I own a reasonable amount of stuff, if that's what you mean. However, none of it was "shit" when I bought it.
Anyway, back to the point: nobody needs ringtones. My phone, for example, sounds -- gasp -- like a ringing phone when I get a call! If you don't like the phone company's business tactics, then don't support them. Deal with not having a ringtone, or get yourself a phone that you can load them on yourself. But don't reward the assholes for attempting to screw you! You're alre
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
No I'm not; twice is enough! (Once is reasonable, because you don't see the bandwidth charges until afterwards. The second time, though, you should have known better!)
Maybe it hurts, but nevertheless it continues to appear to be the truth.
Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.amazon.com/Nokia-1600-Phone-Unlocked/d
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Pocket Space (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd say lack of voice dialing is a compromise on the phone experience.
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Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the question you meant to ask is, "do I really need to be that connected." You probably answered correctly.
But what about the question you actually asked? Do people need to be that connected? Well I really need to be that connected and I chose my phone with that in mind. If a lot of other people agree with me, they'll make a similar choice. If no one felt they needed this, these platforms would die out, wouldn't they? But that's not really happening, is it?
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Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:5, Informative)
I've had mine for a few weeks now. I use it for movies, music, my primary camera, and it is also my primary Internet connection because I have moral objections to giving comcast money. It is, of course my only phone as well.
I've never even come close to draining the battery in a single day, even using it to browse for hours while listening to music, or streaming h264 video over wifi, using it as a phone, etc.
Your claims are based entrely on uninformed opinion, and NOT any sort of experience or fact.
Also, the browsing experience is perfectly fine. The ability to easily and autmatically zoom to content negates the claim of screen real estate. Everything can be as large or as small as you like.
In short, you are a well spoken troll, but a troll nonetheless.
Parent
Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to disagree with you. The problem with the "all-in-one" model has traditionally been that you get a device that's a not-even-jack of all trades, master of nothing. There's a tremendous effort to cram everything possible into one device without any good design on how to have these features coexist. The result, in my assessment, has always been a device that isn't truly worth carrying around.
I've tried using devices from Palm, Blackberry, and Microsoft, and in each case I feel that same annoyance-- it does a lot of things, but does each of them too poorly. And they're big and clunky. Now, I have an iPhone, and it doesn't do everything, but what it does it does pretty well. Many have complained the that the touch screen interface would make it hard to type, but for the most part those complaints weren't made from experience. The touch screen, for the most part, has successfully navigated the interface problem of having all-in-one devices. Instead of trying to come up with one set of buttons that serves all the different functions, you make the buttons change depending on what you're doing.
You complain about the battery, but as an iPhone owner, I'll tell you that I regularly go a full day or two without charging it. That's not the best battery lifetime I've ever gotten, but it's acceptable. Admittedly, I mostly use the phone, PIM, and iPod functions. I don't really use it to watch video very often, and I only use the internet capabilities for the built-in e-mail client. Every once in a while, when I'm caught in a bind and need access to some particular bit of information, I'll use the web browser, and that's it.
As far as mobile web browsing goes, no, you don't really need 24/7 connectivity, and if you need to do very much, it's better to use a desktop client. However, now that I have a web browser in my pocket, I can tell you that I do find it more useful than I would have thought. I've been in situations where I couldn't find the location of something or I needed to find someone's phone number, and I was able to fetch that information on my iPhone web browser pretty easily. I would have otherwise been pretty lost, and had to wait until I found an internet connection to find the thing I was looking for, so the whole thing was really helpful.
And though I wouldn't advise using the iPhone on EDGE for heavy everyday surfing, it really will work in a pinch. You'll be able to load a real website, the website will render properly most of the time, and it isn't entirely frustrating to browse around a little. Using the web browser in short bursts won't drain your battery too terribly quickly. EDGE is slow and uses more battery than WiFi, but like I said, it'll do if you really need a web page or two right then.
So if all you're saying is that the iPhone isn't a good replacement for your laptop or desktop computer, I'll go along with that. But if you're saying it isn't useful to have your e-mail client, MP3 player, web browser, calendar, address book, Google maps, digital camera, and cell phone be all in one slim, easy to use device, then I think you're crazy. If you think the iPhone doesn't execute this decently well for most people's uses, then I think you're either biased or ignorant.
I guess you could also argue that we should all slow down, stop using our fancy gadgets and doodads, and just not be "connected" most of the time. Do most of us absolutely "need" a cellphone? I guess not. Human civilization went for a long time without any internet or telephones at all. But all things considered, I'd rather have a cell phone than a landline, and I'd rather have mobile e-mail than not. Ideally, in my mind, I wouldn't have to have a "phone" at all, but I could have a wireless IM/VOIP/e-mail device. However, you need ubiquitous wireless internet access in order to do that, and nobody is really providing that yet except cell phone companies. Cell phone companies won't sell a IM/VOIP/e-mail device unless it's also a phone.
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Re:how connected do we have to be? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, yeah not as good as a full-fledged computer for some things, but it's not supposed to be a replacement. That's one of the reasons I never understood all the complaints about the speed of edge. Sure, faster is better, but realistically the amount of web browsing you are going to do is more limited by the small size of it than anything. If you are doing a massive amount of web browsing, then do yourself a favor and get a real computer. If, on the other hand, you are waiting for someone who is late (everyone is around here), if's f'ing great.
Also, in my personal experience, the battery life is great. Which in part due to the lower speed edge chip.
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Direction of Connection (Score:3, Insightful)
However - the thing I find useful about devices like the iPhone is being able to arbitrarily connect to the outside world at a time of my choosing. I love to be able to review maps, or do quick lookups, or glance at email (again when I want - I have even disabled automatic updates of email as I don't like the hourly chime that I have new mail). That is what connectivity was suppo
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
And do those same people really need to be contactable 24 hours a day? If not, then they do not even need a mobile phone in the first place.
Seriously, this is the same argument that people use against mobile/cell phones before they actually own one. But once they get used to having one (and to leaving it turned on all the time - yes Mum, I'm talking to you) then most people get dependant on the technology. I find now that I feel terribly isolated
Conclusion (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.informationweek.com/shared/printableAr
Funny:
One thing that became obvious to me as I looked at these various Web interfaces is that data speed isn't as important as good software.
You think????
The good news, as you might expect, is the Apple iPhone. The genius of Apple is its ability, over and over again, to completely reinvent, from the ground up, the user interface for hardware, and to support it with brilliant software. Web browsing on the iPhone is a paradigm shift, a completely different experience -- just as the BlackBerry was, in its time, a paradigm shift.
The elements of the technology that makes the iPhone so different will find their way into other devices, just as the BlackBerry's thumbpad and push e-mail have become more or less standard on smartphones. Touchscreens and direct interaction with the Web page will become standards of their own sort because they've come along just in time as computing, both personal and business, moves to the Web.
I've stated this to many people who've asked me about the iPhone. Even if it FAILS, it's technology, features, etc. will be copied into many other phones.
What I want to know is... (Score:3, Funny)
http://www.willitblend.com/videos.aspx?type=unsaf
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Nokia E70 (Score:5, Informative)
links to Maddox's comparison between E70 & IPhone.
Re:Nokia E70 (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Nokia E70 (Score:5, Informative)
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Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd also like to point out that the year is 2007 and I just PURCHASED MY FIRST WEB BROWSER (Opera for the E61). I never in my life thought I'd actua
Darn (Score:3, Funny)
From personal experience... (Score:5, Interesting)
Then I got the iPhone and now I'm probably going to dump my Blackberry. Having and using the iPhone has soured my Blackberry experience. I'm now tired of seeing the HTML in e-mails instead of viewing the full e-mail. (For those of you without a Blackberry, it absolutely sucks at HTML mail - it displays all the code instead of stripping it out, FWIW, I use the client-side push instead of server-side push so that may be the problem) Having the iPhone and seeing e-mail as it was meant to be seen changed that.
Similarly the mostly-full version of Safari has changed my usage of the Blackberry's crippled browser.
As the article states, the iPhone is not without its problems. Safari crashes (I've never seen the Blackberry browser ever crash) semi-often, say once every 2-3 days in my usage, and its lack of Flash support is annoying. I haven't missed Java yet.
Data speed is it's albatross, but with the "real" web, I've personally been able to look beyond its mobile speed deficiency. When it's on a fast Wifi network, it REALLY shines and I'm still amazed by how well it does in rendering sites. Youtube has never looked better.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Sounds like a problem on your client-side push setup. Whenever I see a message on or touched by a BlackBerry, it is completely stripped of all HTML. Same with Exchange Direct Push (unless you're running the latest software, which supports HTML email.)
Re: (Score:2)
FIGHT (Score:4, Funny)
Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously! (Score:2)
Biased (Score:3, Insightful)
Even before the review starts it defends the iPhone with it's virtual keyboard and then how it's screen is in a class by itself.
Six pages of commentary? (Score:3, Funny)
What about the nokia n800? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What about the nokia n800? (Score:4, Insightful)
The Nokia 770's sceen resolution blows the iPhone away, but the screen is physically much smaller than I had thought it would be. It's actually almost identical in size to the screen on the Palm TX although much higher resolution.
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Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
If the openmoko could run the apps that have been ported to Maemo it would be awesome.
I use my 770 for GPS primarily, but it is a pretty decent gizmo for quite a few different apps.
It's a phone, not a BMW (Score:2)
But Does It Run Linux? (Score:2)
I haven't heard about Blackberry/Linux. And though I'd guess there's no iPhone/Linux yet, it seems inevitable.
Is there somewhere to look that shows which of these top smartphone HW platforms are most fully exploited by running Linux on them, so we can do whatever we want with our phones?
1280x1024 on a 15" monitor? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah right. What wonderland is he living in?
Mobile communications and PDAs (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm a software engineer and need to be connected most of the times. Recently, I was in a situation where I had to be in hospital for around a month to attend to my father, and let me tell you, the laptops don't really last much without a power outlet and Wifi isn't ubiquitous. Its anoter thing in normal life to drive to starbucks and check news and mail while sipping coffee, and its another thing to attend to client calls and mails while sitting at place you don't want yourself and your family to be in! The irony is, it is these places that you'd need the connectivity the most! You can drive to another coffee shop, if the connectivity sucks, you can't go around shifting to other hospitals for the same reasons!
I have a Sony Ericsson W800i NON-smartphone. The phone only supports basic GPRS (think 48kbps, yep thats bits), and I'm glad that I'd found the combination that served me well for all my business needs and enabled me to attend the family at the same time.
1. Get Gmail mobile app: Its a Java MIDP application, and it just bulldozes all email clients out there. Nothing like to be able to access all your mails even if you have low speed connecivity.
2. Get Opera Mini: This (Java MIDP) application lets you use even secured sites. Can't tell you how many times it saved my ass. Being able to watch Youtube in free time is one thing, being able to access online banking site when you most need it is another!
3. Inbuilt IMAP/POP email client with SSL: You want instant email, its there. The client doesn't suck that much and it gets the job (notifying you of mail) done pretty well. You can use it to have always on access to your corporate account.
In short, Java on mobiles absolutely rocks and serves pretty well. iPhone has that one down for me (and the reason I'd stay away from it). Get the basic "life-saver" apps first and setup well, and *only* then look for frills like flash, 3G (basic GPRS is ubiquitous, never found a place where it doesn't work!) and touch screens.
Oh, and choose your phone well. If your phone has tendency to lock-up thrice a day, or your browser crashes randomly, you might find it very disappointing on the rainy day!
- Akhilesh
Nokia e61i (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Thanks for testing out the crappy ones (Score:4, Interesting)
T-Mobile Ameo [pdadb.net], 640x480 screen and real 3G broadband speeds.
Or wait awhile and pick up a phone in the I-Mate Ultra [pdadb.net] line. They all look sexy, and they all have a screen that blows the iPhone out of the water. And of course they all support real 3G speeds as well.
Or heck, just never get lost again [mobileplanet.com].
All those prices by the way? Unlocked phones. If you are going to sign up for a contract, why pay $500 for a phone, when you can get a high quality (albeit not top of the line) Windows Mobile phone for under $100.
Hell, don't like Windows Mobile? Go with Symbian. They have some high-res devices that are a lot cheaper than $500.
For $500 you could almost BUILD your own cell phone and get something far more capable then what Apple is dishing out. Does anybody know of an after market supplier of GSM or CDMA chips?
Opera anyone? (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess the ability to run a third-party browser would be an "unfair comparison" to the iPhone.
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My thought EXACTLY (Score:5, Insightful)
A HUGE advantage of PalmOS-based and Windows-based phones is that you can actually add software to them. Thus, such a comparison is meaningless. Don't like Blazer? Replace it with Opera. What are you doing on the iPhone? Sure Safari is great...but let's talk about the datebook application that takes half a dozen clicks to set the time of an appt (rather than me just clicking on the time band on a PalmOS unit)...or being forced to delete email messages one at a time (unlike a PalmOS unit...on which I frequently hit "select all" and then "delete" if I have read all the message already on my desktop). Even those advantages to palmOS are against the DEFAULT applications...and both applications can be replaced with countless other commercial, shareware, and freeware alternatives. Extrapolate to all of the other applications installed.
Yes, the Palm Blazer web browser is insanely lame...and most users will not replace it. I am not making excuses for Palm. They should have replaced this application with something more powerful years ago...and Apple is innovating...and I welcome our new overlords...if only to motivate the other slackers, but let's be fair. These love letters to the iPhone masking themselves as fair and unbiased reviews are getting tiring.
Here's my distilled version of the article...made objective...at least for the PalmOS:
- The iPhone browser rocks...and it is a good thing because you are locked into it. Oh yeah, connection speed is horrible unless you are using wifi. Not exactly a browser issue, but hard to ignore.
- Palm blazer is okay, but has problems with many sites and takes awhile to render pages.
- You can replace Blazer with Opera, but you'll have to find a JVM first, install it, and then twiddle settings forever to make it stable. Why the heck does Palm make Java apps second class citizens? Oh yeah, that is a business decision. Nevermind. Like most Palm users, I can't wait until "universe" gets out of beta...and, unlike the iPhone, I'll actually be able to install it.
Man, if Apple would just open up the iPhone and obviate the need for folks to reverse engineer every application, I would just shut my pie hole. The availability of one terminal application isn't cutting it for me. Guess I'll see what the future holds...and hopefully it's going to be a 3G future.
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Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I can think of no company that is as utterly disappointing as Palm. I suppose there's probably some behind the scenes story of how someone pillaged the company in the manner of the 80's corporate raiders who bought companies for the purpose of stripping them down and selling the parts. I can think of no o
Re:Ya nice benchmarks (Score:5, Insightful)
He starts off saying both virtual and normal QWERTY are bad. No examples, no proof, nothing. BUT yet then in another part states why the iPhone screen is so much better giving specific pixel info.
So how come he doesn't go into detail then about the pros and cons on the keyboard? Why spend so much detail in one section (display) but not really any details at all about the input?
His rules that he created are biased. You can;t use the devices then create the rules. He should have gone out and asked people what they expected, used that for the rules then compare. He made the rules when he already knew the answer. That has 0 value.
Why didn't he put other browsers on the smart phones that accept them and give feedback on those? If he was going to go on what is the default fine, but since he gave so much detail on the screen size why didnt he say things in the browser review about 3rd party options may solve the issues.
He does all the real details on the thing the iPhone is very strong on (display) and doesn;t put the same detail to his other rules. Something does not add up.
So please tell me how my post was a troll?
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Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Slashdot, a site originally all about Linux and similarly geeky things, has been overrun with Apple fanboys, Microsoft apologists and all around assholes. There a few who are extremely insightful (most of them I have marked as friends), and you learn to try to ignore the Apple hype articles. What annoys me (besides the Apple hype) is that I have the Apple section turned off, yet I
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That is certainly the optimists view. What tech compan
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Why are POP and a camera "basic" features? I never use my camera in my phone and in my last one (T610), I would inadverten