Adam Christian
June 9, 2010 by

iPad’s, iPhone’s, iThink I’m going broke

Some of you may know that over the past few years I have been a bit of a early adopter, when it comes to Apple products. A few years ago, it was considerably easier — since the rate of product releases felt much slower and the increase in technological capabilities of each of the revisions seems significantly less compelling than today.

I remember thinking, I have a Macbook Pro and an iPod — what else could Apple possibly release that would be so compelling that I had to have it. As the upgrades happened, the iPod was still really just an iPod and the laptop’s got better but not that much better that you couldn’t wait two or three releases without feeling left behind. I feel that over the last year Apple has decided to call my bluff, and I have paid dearly.

As described by a “marketing person” a month or so ago, apparently I am a “card carrying geek”, and as a result cannot help but rally behind innovative technology. Growing up to Star Trek: The Next Generation, I am star struck by multi touch, video chat, GPS positioning, etc. thus I am the perfect target for these products.

I first have to say, I do this for all of you.. I mean, I can’t count the number of people who get in touch to ask about products before buying them — and I can’t let those folks down.

My little un-boxing ritual




I bought an iPad five hours after the release downtown San Francisco. I told myself, this time I’m going to be patient — I’m not going to join the insanity and stand in line like I did for the last two iPhone releases. And for five painful hours I sat at home watching the news and occasionally calling the Apple store to see how the stock was doing. Unlike my laptop and my iPhone, the iPad is not something that I need. In fact I’m having a hard time justifying it at all, considering the amount of devices sitting around my house.

HOWEVER, the iPad is a fantastic experience for the person who doesn’t have one of those two devices. It makes for a great browsing, emailing, casual gaming experience. Skype on wifi and 3g with iPhone headphones turns it into a totally legit way to make quick calls and the apps are getting better all the time. I personally am awaiting IOS4 to really make use of it. Pretty upset about the removal of the unlimited data plans by AT&T, if I was doing much travel or didn’t work in front of a computer all day, the iPad with unlimited data and Netflix would be an even more killer combo than it is on wifi.

My vision of the iPad is that it’s a start down a road to some exponentially cooler tech. The use case I invision is currently possible, but in a very early state. The single always online device you carry with your everywhere and dock in various locations for a more extensive experience. Many would argue that this same scenario applies to the iPhone. I still find the size of the iPad very curious, as it’s not small enough to carry in your pocket, but clearly too big to want to leave sitting in any one place.

I’m just going to come out and say this, I really like the look of the iPhone 3GS and preferred the weight of the original iPhone 2G. The new design doesn’t look very traditional apple to me, and so far looks significantly more invasive to my pocket. Fortunately the feature set is pretty amazing, but minus FaceTime and the gyroscope I’m wondering how much of the new experience I’m looking for will be achievable by upgrading my 3GS to the new software? I don’t feel all that compelled to do video editing on a tiny device, no matter how clear the resolution is. I understand that the speed updates are incredible, but will my 3GS experience start feeling unreasonably slow? I doubt it.

I just wanted to point all that out, so that after I try it out and wind up upgrading I have something to look back at with my starry eyes so I can answer all those questions (thus justifying the purchase).

It’s important to look back over the last few years and remember how the iPhone has changed things, I realize that is almost exactly what Steve said in the keynote. In Portland last week, I was walking home and my phone battery ran out after using the map all day long. For a few blocks I was pretty terrified because I realized that the first of my three reactions to my situation relied on, map, google, phone call. All the sudden my brain had to start doing things that it wasn’t used to doing! I’m not saying whether this is a good change or a bad change, I’m just saying it is a DRASTIC change.

Over the past month here in the bay area, plenty of people I know have been talking about how they *may* move over to one of the new android phones. They have these great big display’s with higher resolution photos, and it’s an open platform. I would be surprised if one of those folks actually made the change after this new phone becomes available… I’m just sayin.

It’s entirely possible that I’m an Apple fan boy living in the bubble, and recently I have been seriously thinking about running Linux on my MacBook instead of MacOSX (to mix things up a bit). But I would challenge all hardware makers to produce something, that head to head (in terms of user experience) can win me over.

So this is where I would normally try to conclude by casting my opinions as facts that you should really think hard about. Instead, I propose the question – without the innovation at Apple, where would the industry be? And for those of you who think I’m inside the bubble, enlighten me – what is going on out there?

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July 11, 2008 by

iPhone 3G — The Saga Continues.

As you all know — this morning at 8 AM PST, the new iPhone 3G was made available at Apple and AT&T stores on the west coast. Being a compulsive early adopter of such things, I somehow managed to tear myself out of bed around 6 AM this morning and head down to the Apple Store in Emeryville Califorinia. I arrived somewhere between 6:30 and 6:45 AM, and even though deep down I knew that it was going to be ridiculous — the whole experience still managed to be much crazier than I expected.

Approaching the Apple Store, every step revealed more and more people waiting in the line that stretched most of the sidewalk in front of the Emeryville Mall. In my relatively delirious state, I excepted the situation and joined Mikeal in the line. About 15 minutes into our wait the Apple Store staff, and Mall security people started alerting people at the end of the line (where we were) that the direction the line was building to the left of the Apple store was going to be in the way of the construction and that they would like everyone to move to the right side of the store, but to stay in the same order. Clearly this is an absolutely ludicrous request considering that no one wants to be there waiting in the line, and everyone will do whatever they can to jump a few spaces. I instantly started walking to the other side of the store where no one was yet, and we found a nice set of steps to sit on about 50 feet from the front doors of the store. Instead of people being annoyed by us, then went ahead and built a new line with us in it putting us significantly closer to the magical new phone than we had been before.

I do have to admit that the fact that the Apple employees were constantly walking up and down the line passing out water, answering questions and passing out necessary information did in fact distract us enough to keep me from losing my mind. The Pandora guys stopped by to chat, and gave out some pretty sweet hats. I have since tried the Pandora App on the new phone and it is really slick, certainly recommended.


Somewhere around 9:15 we made out way into the store, to be greeted by another line that lasted around 15 minutes before we could actually talk to a sales specialist to do the deed. This is where things started to fall apart for me. My sales specialist (who was a pretty cool guy) disappeared into the back and came back with the box for my new 16g white iPhone 3G and started filling out the hand held device to complete the sale. After inputting all of my information, a big yellow box pops up on his screen saying that I am not eligible for the AT&T price and that my only option is to pay the full $699 to buy the phone without a plan. Considering that I have been with AT&T since the acquisition of Cingular, and my having an iPhone with them for a year I couldn’t understand that the problem could be. Instantly I got AT&T on the line (which was amazingly fast to get a rep on a day like today) who proceeded to tell me that I had an overdue balance (due yesterday) and that I haven’t been with AT&T long enough to be eligible for the upgrade and thus will be required to pay full price.

In my delirious state, I considered just paying full boat so I could get the hell out of there — or cancel my plan and just be done with it all. Instead I asked about three times to talk to a supervisor (to which I was told three times that they couldn’t “Override any of the rules”). I do have to interject that she was polite and could have been much more unpleasant (T-Mobile, Verizon, lets not go there), and a few minutes later I was on the phone with her supervisor. You must keep in mind that my poor sales specialist is standing there, with my phone half rung up (probably there since 6 AM as well) looking at a long day of selling phones, dealing with unruly Apple Fans and possibly having to listen to many unpleasant phone calls to the carrier. The supervisor after a few minutes of back and forth about the situation, and the realization that I was standing here in this situation announced that “If I pay my overdue balance, I can get the discounted rate.”, Hallaluia!

I’m now all paid up and feeling like a dodged a serious bullet, and it’s time to head to the front of the store to open things up and activate the phone. A woman with a huge camera, filming this whole event asked me a few questions and recorded me opening the phone… which was sort of strange. I wonder if I’m going to be on TV somewhere! We plugged the phone in and whala — a big error pops up from iTunes. We unplugged the phone and tried about 3 more times (as did everyone at the table trying to activate), and then I was released to go finish activation at home.

I’m not an infrastructure guy by any means, but didn’t anyone learn ANYTHING from the last time around? Call me crazy, but I would have assumed that this time around the servers for activation would have been beefed up enough to handle the load. The best part is that as soon as I left the store and went to use my iPhone 2G to call people to let them know I had survived and was heading out I received a “No Service” notice, and was now unable to use either phone.

I basically sat from 10:30AM to 1:30PM trying about every 5 minutes to activate the new iPhone and received the ugly error each time. FINALLY, it went through — and I am back to a working state of communication.

To answer your questions, yes 3G is that much faster. The screen is a slightly different size, the device is lighter, and thiner and the buttons have been enhanced for more satisfying feedback. The camera looks exactly the same, but the Applications store makes it all worth while. I have been told that the phone has a GPS chipset, but for some reason one Application thinks I’m in Seattle and Google Maps thinks I’m in San Ramon — so there appears to be a problem there. One last quibble — every time the phone wants to use your location data, a dialog pops up asking you if it’s okay. I understand the reasoning behind this, but please please please let us turn that off, it’s getting super annoying.




The applications I have installed and are really enjoying include:
- Where, Yelp, Google, Facebook, Jott, Remote, CheckPlease, Pandora, Shazam, Evernote, Movies.app, NYTimes, Whrrl, Loopt, and of course — Twitteriffic.

There are many more apps and games that I am going to explore as soon as I get a moment.

Was it worth it? Of course it was — all this insanity is half the fun.

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