So I finally got an iPhone (and a 4s at that!) after all these years of loyal Apple gadgetry use. As a conscientious spender — in spite of using all things Mac since 1992 — I’ve always thought that I would wait to get an iPhone till I could justify the expensive data plan. Now that I can, I’m retiring my old trusty iPod Touch and using the 4s in full swing.
What I am addressing in this post are my experience with the new iPhone and my greatest disappointments with the new iOS 5.
How I make use of an iPhone
Don’t get an iPhone then find uses for it to justify your possession of it. I wanted to have a genuine use for the device before I purchased one because they are expensive when you consider the monthly bill with AT&T (or other phone service). For me, it boiled down to several pragmatic uses for the tool:
• I need a reliable way to reach family with a call at any time.
• I need constant reminders for various meetings, projects, chores, events, etc.
• As my calendar gets fuller with each passing month in life, I need a constant handy tool to track events.
• A growing majority of my human interaction with friends are on social networks when it’s convenient for them — thus timely access to social networks is essential.
• Then there is the cool reason: I’m reviewing iOS games for AllThumbsGaming.com in the near future. The new speeds of the A5 chip processor in this phone will be put to good use.
• Lastly, what filmmaker doesn’t want a good camera on their person for any unique moment?
So reasons aside, what do I think of the phone? Well, I can’t compare it to previous generations of iPhones as I am a new iPhone user. As a newbie, it’s very user friendly. I like the way it handles system preferences and navigates around apps. The one thing I want more readily accessible is the brightness controls. Burying them in the preferences is a hassle to change evening and morning to save my eyesight.
Of course, I’ve had other cellphones before this one. There is no comparison. Other brands that half-heartedly attempt to offer music, gaming, and social networking services infinitely disappoint. Then again, you get what you pay for. Cheap phones hardly give you any real useful features. Apart from the phone calling aspect.
Anyway, the biggest advantage of the new Apple phone over all others on the market is Siri: the voice command personal assistant app built into the iOS. I use her a little more than I’d anticipated. She’s good for everything she’s designed to do. She schedules events, reminds me of my to do items in a timely manner, answers complex math equations, looks up stuff in an encyclopedia (of sorts), looks up any word or phrase in Google, sets my alarms, takes dictation for emails, plays my music… All on my vocal command. I find that as long as a use a clear and natural speaking voice that she’ll correctly understand most everything I speak. Siri is handy in that she reduces many steps it would otherwise take to perform everyday iPhone tasks. Not to mention she can make you smile at her clever work around your challenging questions.
How iOS 5 disappoints a seasoned iOS user
I want to ever find more practicality in the iOS as I do not use a laptop or desktop when I’m away from the office. My computing is all reduced to an iPhone and an iPad on the go and in my living room. As useful as the devices are, there’s just a few issue I take with their shortcomings.
First, they just got a built-in dictionary. It is a duh. Dictionaries are usually more useful than calculators (which the iOS has had on the iPhone since the first generation). So, yes, it’s finally got a dictionary, but the silly part is that to use it there isn’t a dedicated dictionary app, as there is a dedicated calculator app. To use the dictionary, you have to be using various apps with editable text or a PDF or an ebook. Then, you select a word and ask it to give you the meaning. So the dictionary is under the hood, as it were; it’s solely a part of the underpinnings of the iOS. This is one handy application of a dictionary — having it on hand while you write and read — but it seems obvious to me that at times you simply want to look a word up in a dedicated dictionary app.
Secondly, what’s with Twitter integration? This seems awkward to me. Where is the Facebook integration? This new iOS has twittering services built in — so much so you can install the Twitter app right from your system preferences! I use the twittering tools myself, but where are the glaringly missing Facebook tools? Twitter is seriously one-up on the iOS now amongst the social networks, and this is a disservice to iOS users because most everyday users are using Facebook ten times more than they use Twitter. Facebook is for all of life. Twitter is mainly for hobbies and professionals culture. So while it’s nice to have handy access to Twitter from more apps, it’s strange that Facebook is slighted. Hopefully, future Facebook integration is in the works for, say, iOS 6.
Thirdly, iOS 5 lacks new beautiful wallpapers. This is not mission critical for new iOSes, I know, but as much as I like the current assortment of flowers, textures, and funky art wallpapers, there is lots of room to grow for some appealing background images that would liven up the iOS. Most of the backgrounds available today were with iOS from the beginning (more than three years ago) and only a few were added with the first generation iPad (two years ago). Apple is good at the backgrounds they provide, so they just need to add more of them with each significant update. Backgrounds put a new face on a new iOS. Yes, I know there are many websites that provide backgrounds for these devices, but 90% of backgrounds out there are lame, generic, amateurish, or distasteful. Apple set the standards high with their backgrounds and I think they should continue to broaden the best of the best selection of backgrounds.
These things I point out aren’t to say that I dislike iOS 5. I just think these three issues are obvious areas for improvement. With over 200 (supposed) improvements in this iteration of the iOS, many of these improvements are unnoticeable to everyday users. So features like those I’m suggesting would be a bit more significant to everyday users that spend lots of time iOS-ing. As someone that spends little time on Mac OS when I don’t have to for work, I just want to flesh out some of these small things so I encounter less disappointment in iOS’s shortcomings that pertain to everyday use.
So what do you think of the new iPhone or iOS 5?