The iPhone promises to do for communications what the iPod did for music. I for one don’t have much trouble believing it.
Apple iPhone, holy grail or false prophet?
And so it was on Tuesday that Jobs descended from Mt Cupertino and delivered to the faithful the much coveted iPhone.
A product somewhat smaller than Moses’s tablets of 4000 years before, but nevertheless a device poised to deliver a similar impact, at least in technological terms. But what’s all the fuss about?
In a nutshell, the iPhone promises to do for mobile telephones what the iPod has done for music. That is, to deliver a simplified yet rich user experience, combining for the first time a phone, contacts, calendar, email, real internet browsing and, in a unique twist, a promising partnership with Google.
Check out this ad, and the entire platform makes sense.
As an entrepreneur, business technologist, and design sympathiser, I can’t help but feel excited by a deliciously sexy device that delivers real-time access to the internet, and otherwise creates a platform where I have all the benefits of my home Mac when I’m on the road.
However, is this anything new? I think so, in execution at least, and here is a short list of the everyday features that people are going to love about the iPhone.
- It’s the most logical phone on the planet. Easily find a contact in an email, contacts list, website, and call them.
- Late for an appointment? Can’t find an address? Need directions? Google Maps are now in your pocket.
- Web-based services are hugely popular and here the divide is crossed into handheld territory en-masse for the first time. MySpace, Salesforce, Twitter, productivity tools, newspapers, SmartCompany, Crikey! Great for my own benefit or when working with clients.
- Music & Movies. Browse the iTunes store anywhere and download music/movies for the road.
- Cheap phone calls? I use Skype religiously, and one can only imagine that delivering VOIP/WiFi functions for iPhone is just on the horizon.
Our short technological history is littered with examples of products that were seemingly “under featured” yet ultimately succeeded because they got the mix of usability and functionality right, and then evolved to meet new requirements. Like the iPod before it, I suspect the iPhone will part the waters for Apple Corp and deliver yet another fantastic growth story.
What do you think?
Our Tech Guru Ben Prendergast is the CEO of Element Software, creators of copperproject.com, a web-based project management and collaboration tool used in over 50 countries by organisations such as Apple, Disney, Pixar, Coca-Cola, and Sony Pictures Digital.
This is Ben’s first posting here at SmartCompany. If you have any angles you’d like to see covered, send him a comment.
Comments
Scott from pixelshifter.net writes: Seems like a holy grail to me! if the iPhone really does do for mobiles what the iPod did for music then we in for some changes indeed!