the iPhone in my daily “lifeflow”:
Saturday after the MAGNIFICENT LAUNCH PARTY – iCal
Chatting to some friends in Belfast’s wonderful, St. George’s Market, we discuss a possible lad’s night this coming week.
I consult my iPhone and notice that the Thursday evening is free. I add it to my calendar there and then before it can be stolen from me by other members of my family. At home it syncs and by the magic of .mac my work computer has the same information the next morning in its calendar.
Thursday arrives
I’m at work and I want to check train times to Belfast for this evening. I check them on my office Mac, take a pic of the results (a simple CMD-SHIFT-4) and drop them into a Note in the new Leopard Mail. I know that i will have access to this note on my iPhone as it syncs everything – images, pdfs using my .mac account.
Leopard Mail integration
Sure enough I get home and begin negotiations with my legally and spiritually bound female, my wife. I secure a lift to the train station. En route I open up the iPhone to check the times again in case I could make the earlier train.
Sure enough my notes are synced – train time image appears – and we have EDGE here and its not wifi but its fine. Even if they hadn’t synced I could open up the web browser and check them again live on the website. I’m the sort of person who forgets something the minute I see it that’s why I take pictures.
Music and Phone Calls
I get dropped off at the train station and try out the iPhones handsfree headphones for listening to music. As I enjoy the latest Sigur Ros live offering the music dips in volume and a ringing tone in my ear indicates a phone call. I push the sleek mini button on the headphones and I’m speaking to a friend who is trying to organise his own public transport to our combined destination. The sound quality is good and I don’t have to repeat myself. [NB As we chatted text messages were coming through by my other friend, these appeared with the full text on the iPhone screen - I like that - better than "you have 1 message"] The big plus about the headphones is that because it is, to all intents and purposes a set of iPod headphones, wearing it makes you look more like a cool muso and less like one of those Dads who have a mobile phone on their belt buckle and a permanent bluetooth headset attached to the ear whilst shopping with their wife in As Qmonkey has stated these people have such technology in place “just in case”. These people do NOT work for the CIA and have been watching too much Spooks. With the iPhone headphones / iPod combination you spare yourself some scorn.
Fumble-Less Technology
I’m standing by now in a drafty train station on a chilling November evening in Northern Ireland. Several phone calls and text messages take place but all seamlessly on the one unit whilst listening to music, my iPhone. I am the sort of person who tries to put a train ticket in the exact same place every time so that when asked I can find it without fumbling. Yet every time I need to get the train ticket I have to fumble around in every possible pocket (2 front and back on jeans, at least another 2 on jacket or coat) because I have forgotten again. With the iPhone I am decreasing that amount of fumbling. One device, one set of wires.
Train Home
After a great night of banter, steak and beer I get the train home; I ritually check facebook (which has its own iPhone friendly webpage). A friend wants to know what I think of the iPhone – I tap a response directly into facebook’s regular mail section “I’m writing this on a train from Carrick to Belfast, its easy”. The fact that I am doing that is testament to the ease of use of the iPhone. Somewhere along the train route the signal differed from GPRS to EDGE and back again. It didn’t matter, the software just handled that for me in the background.
The Morning after
Friday morning in work I check my emails on the the iPhone – several discussing the night before, the ones I have already read at home on my mac before leaving appear but without a blue “unread” dot.
I am so used to SMTP emails in perfect sync across many computers I forget what it is like to go to POP accounts where you have to wade through already read mail! I can immediately see the new mail no matter whether it is on my home laptop, my work iMac or now my beautiful iPhone. Easy.
in short:
- effortless syncing of calendar, address book, web bookmarks, music, podcasts
- Leopard integration lovely
- iPod to iPhone seamless integration. Music dips, text message chimes, phone rings, single click of headphones and we are chatting clearly.
- its the REAL web, my emails using .mac are my real NEW emails, my calendar is my ACTUAL calendar synced across two home macs and a work mac.
iLove her
*Max O’Malley realises that to live the sort of experience he has had this past week one needs :
1. Mac(s)
2. Leopard (Max OS 10.5) installed
3. a babysitter and/or permission from his wife for the night out
The experience can be mimicked with lesser equipment but you are on your own there.
With thanks to Apple and Lilytodd for providing all of the above services.

Posted by voxo 





Posted by voxo
Posted by voxo 