I can't believe Strobist beat me to this because I had been thinking about this blog all week. You can find his
here but it only covered some of the photographic uses briefly. I also won't post a picture of it just yet so if you haven't seen it you can check
here.Well, I have had these type of phones before. They supposedly do everything but usually very poorly. Touch screens are flaky at best and require realignment, plus that stylus thing. Not the iPhone, it just seems to work and it has changed some long time 'set in stone' perceptions for me.
Perception 1 -
I just couldn't bring myself to use apple products. I have seen them before, and I have used them before but in setting up my iPhone to sync with iTunes (wireless encryption & iTunes remote) it just worked. No dodgy failures or unexplained lock ups. It was the easiest device I have ever connected to my PC.
YES PC. It has got me think, what else does apple do so well. And I know I am not the first person I know to start to think this way after using the iPhone for a while.
Perception 2 -
Email syncing to your phone is not for real. It sometimes works and your constantly out of sync. Well, not so far. I have my iPhone setup to sync with our PureArte Exchange Server and it syncs within seconds of a change being made through my outlook client. The same whether its email, contacts or calendar. Admittedly some of the functionality isn't in the iPhone, but if I invite an attendee to a meeting on outlook my iPhone certainly understands and any updates I do on the iPhone are sent out. Assign a photo to your contact on iPhone and see it appear synced in Outlook in no time flat.
Perception 3 -
Touchscreens are crap. Unreliable and definately a technology in need of dev. Any crap on the screen makes it unusable. Again, not the iPhone. The touch screen combined with the video transitions makes the phone almost relaxing to use. I often pick it up and flick just to enjoy the interface. No complaints from me!!
I bought the phone for 3 reasons (4 if you include making phone calls but I expect any phone should have that sorted) and they are the portable portfolio, the iPod (podcasts and music) and the email syncing. Any photographer running a business doesn't like to be tied to their computer. Now I can reply to important emails if required, get my reminders, stay organised and
SHOOT!This phone does all these things very well, and a whole range of other useful but not essential functions which make shooting easier. Weather, Sunset Info (Thanks to photocalc $3.99 in Aus) Maps for finding clients and for Notes for scratching any thought or idea I have at the time.
Wrap up!! I bought this phone because I am a gadget guy. I buy things to fulfill a need in me to own flash and shiny (and expensive which this is not ) gadgets. I had no idea how easily it would integrate into what I do and then change it for the better. This is a tool. When I find a tool like this, like my pocketwizards, like my Nikon gear, that just works and enables me to apply myself even better that gets me excited.
My final tip!! I love this one. If your like me you give out business cards all of the time. Hopefully people hang on to them, but I know many people put them through the wash, lose them or file them somewhere safe never to see the light of day again. What I like to do is this. Once you've chatted, grab their email address and email them a business card, online, on the spot. You now have their contact details to follow up, and next time they sit down in front of the computer they will see your personalised business card reminding them of your conversation, and what you can do for them. You've just had a chance to make 2 impressions instead of one. Still carry a card or two just incase. Good luck.