Edit: I also use Google Maps while talking, or check for movie times while someone is on the phone.
Here are cases I've used:
1) Take a call while tethered (I think USians on AT&T underestimate this use case)
2) Send an email while on a call a discuss to discuss attachements. (PDF, image mockups, etc)
3) Send an iCal event and juggle schedules to meet
4) Take a call while running with RunKeeper in the background
5) Refer to Twitter DMs while on a call
6) Sync DropBox/iDisk while on a call to talk about documents
7) Look up directions on Google Maps for the caller
8) Look up movies on Flixster and decide which movie to go to.
9) Play games while on holdI'll tell you what has come up for me, though- the Pre's UI for multi-tasking is way better than that found under iOS. There are a lot of things I dislike about the Pre, but the WebOS UI is not one of them. If only I could merge the hardware and app selection of the iPhone with the UI of the Pre... well, a guy can dream.
Also, the limitation only applies to cellular data; anywhere a Verizon customer has wifi they can use both.
AT&T gave up its exclusivity deal with Apple for the iPhone back in the spring of this year. Verizon and other insiders had to have known well in advance that they were going to. They should have been ready for a release in July, at the latest.
Instead, Android has made great strides. I'm not a gadget guy when it comes to my phone; I just want it to work and be easy to use and not frustrate me. So, I've played with the various releases of Android and have continued to hold out for an iPhone ... until 2.2. 2.2 is good enough for me, and best of all, Android appears to be gaining ground on the iPhone, and it isn't being crushed by Apple's thumb.
It's tough to tell for sure, but if I'm not alone in all this, then when the iPhone finally does come out for Verizon, it could fall flat on its face. It just took too damned long and frustrated everyone that has been patient enough to wait for it for years.
Keep in mind... Blockbuster just filed for Bankruptcy... http://arstechnica.com/media/news/2010/09/blockbuster-offici...
Android is a joke. I love my Nexus One... but Apple is still delivering the best mobile experience. AT&T is without a doubt the only downside to the iPhone. While Apple is strong-arming carriers with insane sales and joyous fans, Android devices are getting worse and worse to try and make every little device unique. One has a 5mp camera, one has a 8mp camera, one has two LED's for flash, the other only has one, blah blah blah they're all the same!
I have been vying for the Android underdog for too long now and I for one am VERY anxious to see the iPhone on CDMA, because I'll finally be able to get back to using a terrific platform on a solid network.
That's about the whole of the argument, yes. :-)
> Have you used a Droid 2?
One of my techs got one a while back; one of my other techs got a Droid X just a couple of weeks ago. They both seem extremely happy with them. Several of my clients -- including those that aren't technically savvy -- also have Droid devices, and seem fairly satisfied with them.
> They're loaded with bloatware now... it's like buying a Dell PC.
That's a funny example to use, since Dells these days really aren't all that bad. They certainly are nowhere near as bad as, say, Acer.
> Android is a joke.
Eh. 32% of the people that bought a smart phone within six months prior to Jan 2010 - Aug 2010 seem to disagree.
> ...but Apple is still delivering the best mobile experience.
Before September of this year, I'd've agreed with you.
Most people don't seem to care much about which device has which camera or how many LEDs there are for flash or what-have-you; that seems to be more a software developer complaint.
I got the HTC Incredible and there isn't really any bloatware on it (some people don't like the Sense UI, but the phone doesn't suffer for it and most reviews I read were positive on it).
Several of my friends have iPhones, and I am never envious.
I think you jumped the shark on that one. It may be specifically true for you based on your own personal preferences but in general the iPhone is inferior in many many ways to Android, just as it is superior in many ways. Only someone quite unfamiliar with one or both platforms could really honestly say AT&T is the only downside.
Source? I thought Apple was still in the middle of their 5-year agreement.
http://www.engadget.com/2010/05/10/confirmed-apple-and-atand...
http://stadium.weblogsinc.com/engadget/files/Apple_iPhone_Ex...
http://stadium.weblogsinc.com/engadget/files/Apple_iPhone_Ex...
- Apple adopted subsidized pricing soon after the first iPhone was released (to sell it at $399/8GB instead of $599)
- AT&T’s serviced proved spotty and unreliable for many at times
- the iPad was introduced with an optional AT&T 3G data plan
So it’s hard to know if the agreement is still in place, or if it means enough to prevent Apple from pursuing the large Verizon customer base.
[1]: http://www.intomobile.com/2010/09/21/att-iphone-exclusivity/
Reminds me of that old Mitch Hedberg joke, "You will either hate us or love us... or you'll think we're ok."
Were you the kind of kid who had their Christmas morning ruined because you had to wait 364 days for it to happen? Everyone groaned when the AT&T exclusivity agreement was announced, but widely understood that it would be years before you could get the phone on another carrier. I'd argue that while it was a polarizing move, publicized exclusivity actually helped the sales of the iPhone. You either accepted that you'd have to use AT&T and got the phone regardless of the service, or you didn't. Anyone waiting with baited breath for a second carrier in the US was either ignorant, stupid, or both. The options were clear. Now that exclusivity is about to be over there is a second wave of adoption coming. Why? Because the things that made the phone worth buying to begin with are still there, and the only deal-breaker for most people is going away. Everyone who "needed" an iPhone already has one. Everyone who "likes" the iPhone is about to have it be an option.
I would love to see the facts supporting your hypothesis that, "AT&T gave up its exclusivity deal with Apple for the iPhone back in the spring of this year. Verizon and other insiders had to have known well in advance that they were going to. They should have been ready for a release in July, at the latest." You're making assertions about the strategy for the next phase of one of the most popular consumer electronic devices ever, and you're backing them up with the word "should."
Why? Switching carriers is a piece of cake these days. That's not a barrier at all.
So if Verizon has been losing out on potential iPhone sales for the past few months, aren't they also making up for it with increased Android sales?
I think that until recently, the Android market and the iPhone markets had only a little overlap; there were relatively few people that had a perfectly equal inclination to purchase an iPhone or an Android device, assuming that both were available on their carrier-of-choice.
Meanwhile, AT&T has continued to be one of the top complaints about the iPhone. [1] (This doesn't help Apple's image, BTW; if Apple is so concerned with the end-user experience, then why are they in bed with one of the most-hated companies in the U.S.?)
In other words, Android has been a popular fall-back for people that wanted a solid smart phone without AT&T. Although Android has been doing very well for Verizon [2], I have no trouble imagining that Verizon has lost out on a sizable amount of business from the market segment that preferred the iPhone to Android. Android 2.2 came out just a couple of weeks ago; back in July, a Verizon iPhone could have been a big deal.
Now that Android has finally caught up to the iPhone (IMO), I think the holdouts are going to start picking up Android devices, which is going to cost Apple, which has already fallen behind Android in terms of both growth and popularity.
On the other hand, AT&T has been paying Apple by the metric ton for the exclusivity deal, so maybe that money has been worth the lost market share for Apple and they just don't give a shit.
[1]: http://dvice.com/archives/2010/06/top-10-complain.php
[2]: http://gigaom.com/2010/10/05/nielsen-android-surges-to-no-1-...
edit: I suspect that a lot of this comes down to some politics and personalities. Apple had to have pissed off Verizon a bit when they offered a hugely popular device, but only for Verizon's only real U.S. competitor; then Apple pissed off Google shortly after; then, not too much further along, we start to hear that Verizon and Google are getting real friendly with each-other, possibly in an "any enemy of my enemy is a friend of mine" way. Verizon's been happy to push Android real hard, Google's been happy to support Verizon, and the two of them together are certainly putting some hurt on Apple/AT&T. It just sucks that consumers are getting caught in the middle.
iPad: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405274870340570457501...
No iPhone 4 Recall: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405274870468260457536...
Job's Liver Transplant: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124546193182433491.html
And a TechCrunch article mentioning it: http://techcrunch.com/2010/07/15/iphone-4-recall/
It appears that Yukari Iwatani Kane has a connection to Job's inner circle...
A Verizon deal would be news. A CDMA iPhone in January just means Gruber has good sources.
(Yes, I know DNF is actually coming out, it appears. Gearbox just had to go and ruin a perfectly good metaphor by releasing a game that people have wanted for years.)
1. Newspapers and bloggers love this story. It generates clicks.
2. People want an iPhone on other networks. This makes them want to believe this in spite of the evidence.
3. CDMA doesn't do simultaneous voice and data. Apple is unlikely to try and explain such a difference to consumers given their focus on user experience.
4. CDMA is a dead/dying technology. Jobs summed this up In his D8 interview (when talking about Flash): Apple picks technologies in their "Spring". CDMA will be phased out in favor of LTE.
5. Most of the world uses GSM. The market for CDMA is small. People in the US forget this because of Verizon.
6. Apple tests far more products than they release. I'm sure there has been a CDMA iPhone. That doesn't mean it will be launched as a product.
7. AT&T had a five year exclusivity deal with the iPhone starting in 2007 according to court documents. While this may have changed it seems unlikely that AT&T would give this up without getting something huge in return. The only possibility realistically us that AT&T has failed to meet it's contractual requirements somehow.
8. AT&T service apparently sucks in SF and NYC, where most tech journalists and bloggers are. They are fine in most of the rest of the country. But this creates a huge sample bias in the press.
If Apple does a CDMA anything it will, in my opinion, be an iPad.
In early August, John Gruber wrote that: “The wheels are turning on N92, the CDMA variant of the iPhone 4... It’s right about where you’d think it would be if it were scheduled to go on sale in January. The CDMA iPhone is no longer a cold storage, keep-it-alive-just-in-case-we-need-it project.” [1]
He noted that the CDMA iPhone could be headed for China Telecom first - the competitor to China Unicom, who just launched a GSM iPhone 4 in that country.
He cites anonymous tipsters, as well as:
- Bloomberg says Verizon iPhone coming in January [2]
- CEA announces the Verizon CEO as the keynote speaker for CES in January [3]
- Steve Cheney claims that Apple has placed orders for “millions of units of Qualcomm CDMA chipsets” for December [4]
- Digitimes reports that Pegatron Technology will begin mass production in December of CDMA iPhones for Verizon and China Telecom [5]
[1] http://daringfireball.net/2010/08/n92
[2] http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-06-29/verizon-wireless-sa...
[3] http://cesweb.org/news/080410.asp#4200
[4] http://techcrunch.com/2010/08/08/verizon-iphone-january/
It's also worth noting that overseas, where the iPhone is not tied to ATT, Apple continues to outpace Android significantly: http://www.clickz.com/clickz/stats/1733041/apple-google-cont...
However, most people, especially those 35 and under, and our technically inclined folks, all still carry their own phone. Primarily because they want the iPhone, or in some cases, want Android.
http://pdadb.net/index.php?m=specs&id=2548&c=verizon...
The database at pdadb.net has specs on a number of "known but unreleased" devices.