saleBlack Friday see store specials

Apple iPhone 3G

The iPhone 3G is the successor to the popular cell phone from Apple. The biggest changes over the first version is the addition of 3G high-speed data access, which Apple claims is over two times faster than the original when accessing the Internet, and the addition of Global Positioning System (GPS) capabilities. Outside of these changes, most of the unit remains the same as the previous, with the same touch screen, camera and memory sizes. The original iPhone 3G is the predecessor to the faster iPhone 3GS.

Where to Buy

iPhone 3G screen view
MSRP $199.00
Release date July, 2008
Brand Apple
love it
want it
have!
tag it
Pros & Cons72
Reviews79
Details
Buy It
Competitors26
Comments11
twitter

Pros & Cons

ProSCORE
75 reviews
49
negative
mixed
positive
36 positive
8 mixed
31 negative

[i] How is the ProSCORE calculated?

show me!

Pros:
Do you agree?
GPS Support
+46agreedisagree

High speed 3G
+37agreedisagree

Good selection of free apps available
+36agreedisagree

Intuitive interface
+29agreedisagree

Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
+28agreedisagree

Very vibrant developer community
+25agreedisagree

Real time 3D graphic rendering
+18agreedisagree

WiFi
+18agreedisagree

Very responsive touchscreen
+16agreedisagree

Slimmer contour than previous generation
+14agreedisagree

Purchasing of music and apps right on the phone
+13agreedisagree

Operating system years ahead of competitors.
+12agreedisagree

Excellent free development tools and documentation.
+12agreedisagree

Largest screen on a phone
+12agreedisagree

Desktop synchronisation with both MacOS X and Windows
+11agreedisagree

Quality controlled third party applications
+10agreedisagree

YouTube
+10agreedisagree

text selection, cut, copy and paste functionality (added in 3.0)
+8agreedisagree

Easily email and post photos to Facebook directly from the phone
+5agreedisagree

Integrated (via Google app) voice search is great.
+5agreedisagree

Viable Gameing Platform
+5agreedisagree

Cars now feature a digital iPod connector for crystal-clear digital interfacing
+4agreedisagree

Push synchronisation via me.com
+3agreedisagree

MMS capabilities (added in 3.0)
+3agreedisagree

MMS available in OS 3.0 or above
+2agreedisagree

Tethering available with OS3.0 or above
+1agreedisagree

Affordable (depending on service plan)
-13agreedisagree

Available in white (16 GB version only)
-13agreedisagree

Cons:
Do you agree?
Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
+28agreedisagree

Crippled Bluetooth (only hands-free devices supported)
+26agreedisagree

Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
+24agreedisagree

Camera didn't get improved
+23agreedisagree

Map driving directions are text only (no audio)
+20agreedisagree

When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
+19agreedisagree

Hitting back button in Safari forces the page to reload which is slow
+19agreedisagree

Turn by turn directions in Google Maps app isn't fully flushed out
+16agreedisagree

No text selection or copy/paste functionality.
+13agreedisagree

No built-in tethering solution for Internet sharing with a laptop
+13agreedisagree

No improvement in storage
+9agreedisagree

No map-caching for the default maps application, so if you don't have a strong signal, you get slow performance or a blank map
+9agreedisagree

Very quiet speakerphone
+7agreedisagree

No MMS capabilities
+5agreedisagree

No front-facing camera lens for video chat
+4agreedisagree

Cannot shuffle between apps
+3agreedisagree

Scratches easily
+3agreedisagree

No voice dialing.
+2agreedisagree

Prone to locking up and crashing when using Safari
+1agreedisagree

Can't file or delete emails on a plane or when you are out of signal coverage.
+1agreedisagree

Poor support from Apple in the event on harware breaks.
+1agreedisagree

Japanese iPhone not adapted for Japanese cell phone market
0agreedisagree

Touchscreen doesn't work well when it's too cold
0agreedisagree

Can't invite other people to meetings (MS Exchange appointments)
0agreedisagree

WiFi chip crashes on some models with firmware upgrade.
0agreedisagree

Poor search (no email search or web page text search)
-1agreedisagree

Can't use speakerphone when checking voicemail
-1agreedisagree

the screen shatters very easily, and the design of it offer no protection against falls and breakage
-1agreedisagree

not largest screen on phone a htc touch hd(blackstone) has a 3.8 inch screen, iphone has 3.5 inch screen
-1agreedisagree

Filing of emails is clunky - need search / typeahead capability.
-1agreedisagree

Limited to one exchange server account to be setup
-1agreedisagree

Unresponsive touch screen if it gets greasy..and it gets greasy
-2agreedisagree

External speaker is mono only. Should be stereo.
-2agreedisagree

No background running apps
-2agreedisagree

No Instant Messaging notifications
-2agreedisagree

cannot pick up reception/signal even in areas where you know you should get reception/signal
-3agreedisagree

Very short USB/power cord included
-4agreedisagree

Speaker sounds horrible
-4agreedisagree

Even though it's an awesome Internet device, it sucks as an actual phone
-4agreedisagree

Weak WiFi antenna
-5agreedisagree

Requires development of apps using C-Objective, rather than the more popular Java
-5agreedisagree

Automatically opens web links from home screen in new Safari tab, so you end up with 8 tabs (the max allowed) open all the time
-6agreedisagree

Poor on screen keyboard
-8agreedisagree

Slow at finding WiFi networks
-15agreedisagree


81 people added to this review by submitting or voting on pros and cons. Add your say!

Details

Specs

  • 3.5" multi-touch screen
  • 480x320 resolution with 163ppi
  • WiFi B/G access
  • UTMS, and HSDPA connectivity (GSM only)
  • Bluetooth 2.0
  • 2MP camera
  • Assisted GPS
  • Battery: 10hrs 2G talk | 5 hours 3G talk | 5hrs 3G Data | 6hrs Wi-Fi | 7hrs video | 24hrs audio | 300hrs standby
  • Price: $99 for 8GB | $199 for 16GB. Contract required.
  • UK Price: £Free on 24 Month contract with O2 - Works out to be approx £800-£900 lifetime cost.

Difference between iPhone 2G and iPhone 3G

3G support - when accessing the data network the data transfer speeds are substantially faster (over twice as fast according to Apple).

GPS - the iPhone 2G had basic location finding that was accurate to hundreds of meters, while the iPhone 3G's implementation is accurate to a few feet for most locations. Additionally, the iPhone 3G renders your position in real time.

Case design - the iPhone 3G is slightly thicker at 12.3mm versus the 2G's 11.6mm. The 3G uses a plastic backing instead of brushed metal like on the 2G, and now the iPhone's headphone jack is "flush" which lets you use regular headphones without the need for an adapter.

iPhone 3.0 Software Additions

Push Notifications - you can now be notified by an Application even if it's not currently running. However the notifications are limited to simple status messages and is not full background processing like the Palm Pre is capable of doing.

Copy-and-Paste - cut, copy and paste text between different applications.

Undo/Redo - Shake the phone to undo/redo when using certain applications like Notes.

Improved Calendar support - Calendar application supports more formats now including the ics standard to sync with Google and Yahoo Calendar services.

Landscape keyboard - now the landscape keyboard is available in all applications, including e-mail.

Search - the core Apple applications now have search built-in so you can search through the text. This includes searching through e-mails and the note applications.

Spotlight - on the left-most pane of the icon screen is now a search utility that lets you search through most of the major Apple applications, and the application names themselves.

MMS - now you can send pictures, voice, and other rich data through the SMS system.

iPhone 2.0 Software Additions

Enterprise Features - supports VPNs, Exchange Server, remote wiping, expanded documents compatibility (Powerpoint now supported, iWorks support). No document editing supported. Documents can now be viewed in horizontal screen aspect by turning the iPhone on its side. These software features are also available on the first gen iPhone.

  • saves images in e-mails to photo library
  • bulk delete and move
  • contact search
  • more language support
  • parental controls

App Store

iPod Touch and iPhone owners can download new applications and programs developed for the devices from the official App Store. Any 3rd party can develop and publish applications to the App Store and can set the price to anything they want, with Apple getting 30% of the revenue. Unofficial applications have already been created for the iPhone 2G, so Apple is hoping that official support and distribution for 3rd party apps will allow for an improved application ecosystem. The App Store can be accessed from the iPhone itself, or from iTunes.

Submit a link

This report was started June 10, 2008 at 11:39 am by Omar
with the last edit occurring Monday, 4:19 AM by Adam Smith
This page has been viewed 11487 times, with 1808 edits by 95 contributors.
See the full report history »

Buy It

Apple iPhone 3G | Black

• iPhone 3G Black Cell Phone

UPC: 607375045331

MPN: MB704LLA

Apple iPhone 3G | White

• iPhone 3G White Cell Phone

UPC: 607375045386

MPN: MB705LLA

Competitors

Apple iPhone 3G is ranked 3rd among it's competitors.  See the top picks in Smart Phones »

Suggest a new competitor to add to the list of competing products.
If the product hasn't yet been added to ProductWiki, submitting it here will also start the product report.

Comments

1.  avatar Omar said:

I'll start off by saying that I'm disappointed they didn't upgrade the camera. I'd like to have a decent point-and-shoot camera with me at all times, and if the iPhone's camera was just a BIT better I'd be totally set. Oh well, I'm not too concerned about built-in video recording since an app will just get developed that does that.

Other than that, I'm just happy it's finally being officially released in Canada. Call me an optimist but I still have some hope that the data rates won't be TOO bad, and with the awesome browser that means I can surf ProductWiki wherever I am :)

I'm also excited for the apps that will get developed with the official SDK. I've seen my friend's hacked iPhone and that was sweet. Now that devs are actually supported means the apps will be even better.
Jun 10, 2008 12:06pm
2.  avatar dialupinternetuser said:

I like the price, but the way Apple is handling the App store annoys me. Open-source software and App Store don't mix because the way Apple is controlling it violates the GPL. And with Omar having an iPhone, does that mean we can get a mobile version of PW sometime soon? Cause that'd be awesome.
Jun 11, 2008 4:59pm
3.  avatar paul300 said:

The price is a scam
you have to sign up with at&t and all that
Jul 10, 2008 1:00am
4.  avatar ajm48786 said:

This is overhyped and overrated. 3G is an improvement; however, there are other methods that are quite a bit faster than 3G already available. This falls in line with Apple's long history of adding features that have been available for quite some time in other devices and using "feature X" as a means to promote their product; as though the feature is something totally new. It is deceptive.

The idea people line up in the morning to get these devices is appalling, yet sadly not surprising. Apple uses peoples' ignorance to their advantage. All companies do this to some extent; however, Apple uses peoples' ignorance like a beacon when they add one/two features to a "new" device yet leave everything else intact, even when the "new" features on an Apple product have been available on some other device for 6 months.

The new and the old iphones are RIP OFFS! The storage capacity is pathetic, the pricing is abominable; and you get stuck in a contract designed to leave you unable to purchase food. Where is an SD port!? USB!? Where is bluetooth!? Apple Iphone is way behind the game in terms of quality/features, yet they'll stay ahead due to the sheer blissful ignorance of the masses. Cheers!
Jul 10, 2008 5:37pm
5.  avatar purexultra said:

i love the fact that it comes with gps
Jul 11, 2008 12:48am
6.  avatar urbankudos said:

I agree that there are still lots room for improvement with the iPhone 3G, but give credit where credit is due, Apple have done a good job in focusing on creating good technology where and not get carried away to do everything.

I'm sure the rest will come in the next product cycle.
Jul 12, 2008 5:57am
7.  avatar LogicX said:

It is possible to tether the phone: http://www.modmyifone.com/wiki/index.php/How_to_Tether_the_iPhone_3G
Aug 04, 2008 9:19pm
8.  avatar abendstrom said:

While iPhone is nice as a mere portable internet device, in my opinion, it grandly fails the qualification as a Japanese cell phone, although it has been aggressively marketed in Japan since its introduction in July 2008 (which led me, Tokyoite, to buying it). The most important problem is that mail communication with other Japanese cell phones is not possible in many cases. The Japanese cell mail system is arguably the most frequent application of Japanese cell phones, but cell mailing in Japan is very different from ordinary SMS/MMS's in the rest of the world.

Introduction

In Japan, there is a (high) quasi industry standard of what buyers of a new cell phone expect from their phone in terms of functionality, interface and usability. iPhone is currently the second most expensive telephone available on the Japanese cell phone mass market, marketed aggressively by Softbank, the official carrier and vendor for iPhones in Japan, so you would expect it to fulfill at least the standard customer expectations. In fact, though, iPhone's specifications are so different from of the established phones, that SoftBank has prospective customers sign a 2-page paper on "caution items when purchasing an iPhone". (there is none such caution form for any other phone in Japan)

However, the most crucial differences (and lacks) compared to the established cell phones are not mentioned in that caution form. I had to discover them after the purchase of my iPhone and confirmed them one by one with Apple's Japan iPhone support center as well as with Softbank. As I thought that those points are crucially blocking my use of the iPhone as a normal cell phone, I stated to SoftBank/Apple my opinion that they mislead me into believing that the iPhone can be used like a normal cell phone, which it cannot, and thusly contracts based on this assumption are invalid. I eventually demanded the cancellation of the carrier contract (about 8,000 Yen/month) and the reimbursement for the model (69,120 Yen). While admitting to the iPhone lacks of functionality, they refused my claim and didn't even offer me any other option. All conversation was on telephone, I unfortunately do not have names or anything in written at the moment.

Claims

Some of the "standard" functionality of most japanese cell phones that the iPhone does not provide and that are not mentioned in the caution form either, are:

1. Emails from the iPhone are simply rejected by many other cell phones, including most of my friends. This is much more crucial than in the U.S., for instance, as in Japan, cell phones in private use are primarily used for exchanging emails than for talking to people on the phone (This is partly connected to the fact that Japanese spend a lot of time in public places (trains) where talking on the phone is not allowed)


iPhone does not have an ordinary cell phone mail address like all other cell phones, but it has a new, iPhone specific domain. iPhone mails are not sent from the Softbank (carrier) server, but from a special server set up by Apple Japan.


Here lies the problem: Many users (and many of my friends) have their own cell phones set up so that they only accept mails from other cell phone companies, but not allow mails from normal computer mail servers. This is primarily to prevent spam. Now, while theoretically, I could go around and ask every single friend to reset their settings and include my address in the "allowed" list, this is impracticable in practice, it is a very complicated action, and futile, if I happened to only get the other people's mail address but not their number (which happens often with the iPhone, see claim#2) and thusly cannot inform them about the change in the settings because my mail informing them will be rejected too.


I also talked to the customer support center of docomo, which is the carrier most of my friends are customers of, and asked them if they would change the spam settings in order to include iphone mails. They said no, and told me only to tell all my friends to include my iphone individually in their "no spam"-list.


The fact that I cannot exchange mails with most of my friends makes the iPhone useless for me as a cell phone, so this is the most frustrating lack of functionality for me.

2. Japanese characters sent from the iPhone can arrive as "mojibake" or unreadable garbage texts on other cell phones. This is probably related to the fact that iPhone encodes text in Unicode while ordinary Japanese cell phones only allow for the more simple JIS(?)-encoding system. (Apple does in fact acknowledge in the "caution list"  that "emoji" emoticons cannot be exchanged, but this problem is apparently separate)

This is also the likely reason why the navigation system does not recognize any goal input in Japanese (and not in alphabet letters either, as the geographical data are probably stored only in Japanese characters). Any neighbourhood, famous landmarks or train stations, they are all refuted as "location unknown".

3. iPhone does not have infrared. All modern Japanese cell phones have infrared - Infrared is the most common way to exchange phone number and phone email address with other people, something done in a few seconds and with a few keystrokes. I now have to type the information entirely one by one, first into my phone, then into the other person's phone. Not to mention that the auto-complete system constantly hampers the input by suggesting useless completions while email text strings often have no real meaning. A very tedious action which might take up to several minutes.

4. Telephone history list. iPhone does not indicate whether a call was received or dialed. Also, it is not possible to delete single calls from the history list, only the entire list. All this is possible and very useful with Japanese cell phones.

5. Significantly slow. Opening crucial phone applications like the email folder or the address book only takes fractions of a second on normal Japanese phone. With the iPhone, all applications including those mentioned seem to respond with the same speed, i.e. several seconds. Especially the mail folder sometimes shows up only after 10 seconds or more after pressing the button. This significantly hampers the smooth use of the iPhone as cell phone, where you constantly open and close the main applications.

6. While iPhone has a camera, you can only shoot still photos, not movies. All Japanese cell phones equipped with a camera allow for the shooting of movies, too.

Contact me if you are frustrated too.

Nov 11, 2008 11:57pm
9.  avatar bekwinz said:

love this phone, got some noce features

Nov 29, 2008 12:03am
10.  avatar claymadsen said:

wanting to have this phone ever since it was released. i have an ipod touch and i can say it has superb sound quality. i heard a lot of positive feedbacks about the sound and application in iPhone. i need to have this..
Feb 21, 2009 10:51am
11.  avatar redhat said:

This iphone is pretty good , apple is awesome , I like it very much!

Mar 30, 2009 11:59pm
Some HTML is allowed. Your comments remain editable after you post..

Reviews

Sort by: Most helpful  •  Newest  •  Most positive

Erik

avatar
September 22, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
39
negative
mixed
positive
16 pros
25 cons
trustedtrusted
have ithave it
love itlove it
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very vibrant developer community
  • WiFi
  • Very responsive touchscreen
  • Slimmer contour than previous generation
  • Purchasing of music and apps right on the phone
  • Operating system years ahead of competitors.
  • YouTube
  • text selection, cut, copy and paste functionality (added in 3.0)
  • Easily email and post photos to Facebook directly from the phone
  • Cars now feature a digital iPod connector for crystal-clear digital interfacing
  • Affordable (depending on service plan)

Cons

  • Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Camera didn't get improved
  • Map driving directions are text only (no audio)
  • When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
  • Hitting back button in Safari forces the page to reload which is slow
  • Turn by turn directions in Google Maps app isn't fully flushed out
  • No text selection or copy/paste functionality.
  • No built-in tethering solution for Internet sharing with a laptop
  • No improvement in storage
  • No map-caching for the default maps application, so if you don't have a strong signal, you get slow performance or a blank map
  • Very quiet speakerphone
  • No front-facing camera lens for video chat
  • Prone to locking up and crashing when using Safari
  • Touchscreen doesn't work well when it's too cold
  • Poor search (no email search or web page text search)
  • Can't use speakerphone when checking voicemail
  • Limited to one exchange server account to be setup
  • Unresponsive touch screen if it gets greasy..and it gets greasy
  • No background running apps
  • No Instant Messaging notifications
  • Very short USB/power cord included
  • Even though it's an awesome Internet device, it sucks as an actual phone
  • Weak WiFi antenna
  • Automatically opens web links from home screen in new Safari tab, so you end up with 8 tabs (the max allowed) open all the time

Competitors

Erik prefers Apple iPhone 3G over RIM BlackBerry Bold, RIM BlackBerry Storm, HTC Dream
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

fractalhorizon

avatar
October 10, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
93
negative
mixed
positive
27 pros
2 cons
trustedtrusted
have ithave it
love itlove it
4 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very vibrant developer community
  • Real time 3D graphic rendering
  • WiFi
  • Very responsive touchscreen
  • Slimmer contour than previous generation
  • Purchasing of music and apps right on the phone
  • Operating system years ahead of competitors.
  • Excellent free development tools and documentation.
  • Largest screen on a phone
  • Desktop synchronisation with both MacOS X and Windows
  • Quality controlled third party applications
  • YouTube
  • text selection, cut, copy and paste functionality (added in 3.0)
  • Easily email and post photos to Facebook directly from the phone
  • Integrated (via Google app) voice search is great.
  • Cars now feature a digital iPod connector for crystal-clear digital interfacing
  • Push synchronisation via me.com
  • MMS capabilities (added in 3.0)
  • MMS available in OS 3.0 or above
  • Tethering available with OS3.0 or above
  • Affordable (depending on service plan)
  • Available in white (16 GB version only)

Cons

  • Map driving directions are text only (no audio)
  • No map-caching for the default maps application, so if you don't have a strong signal, you get slow performance or a blank map

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

claymadsen

avatar
February 21, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
52
negative
mixed
positive
14 pros
13 cons
trustedtrusted
want itwant it
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very vibrant developer community
  • Real time 3D graphic rendering
  • Very responsive touchscreen
  • Slimmer contour than previous generation
  • Operating system years ahead of competitors.
  • Excellent free development tools and documentation.
  • Desktop synchronisation with both MacOS X and Windows
  • Quality controlled third party applications
  • Push synchronisation via me.com

Cons

  • Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
  • Crippled Bluetooth (only hands-free devices supported)
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Camera didn't get improved
  • Map driving directions are text only (no audio)
  • When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
  • Hitting back button in Safari forces the page to reload which is slow
  • Turn by turn directions in Google Maps app isn't fully flushed out
  • No text selection or copy/paste functionality.
  • No built-in tethering solution for Internet sharing with a laptop
  • No map-caching for the default maps application, so if you don't have a strong signal, you get slow performance or a blank map
  • No MMS capabilities
  • No front-facing camera lens for video chat

Comments

"wanting to have this phone ever since it was released. i have an ipod touch and i can say it has superb sound quality. i heard a lot of positive feedbacks about the sound and application in iPhone. i need to have this.."
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

Omar

avatar
March 18, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
65
negative
mixed
positive
15 pros
8 cons
trustedtrusted
have ithave it
love itlove it
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very vibrant developer community
  • Real time 3D graphic rendering
  • Very responsive touchscreen
  • Slimmer contour than previous generation
  • Purchasing of music and apps right on the phone
  • Operating system years ahead of competitors.
  • Excellent free development tools and documentation.
  • Largest screen on a phone
  • Desktop synchronisation with both MacOS X and Windows
  • Quality controlled third party applications

Cons

  • Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Camera didn't get improved
  • When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
  • Hitting back button in Safari forces the page to reload which is slow
  • No improvement in storage
  • No map-caching for the default maps application, so if you don't have a strong signal, you get slow performance or a blank map
  • Very quiet speakerphone

Comments

"I'll start off by saying that I'm disappointed they didn't upgrade the camera. I'd like to have a decent point-and-shoot camera with me at all times, and if the iPhone's camera was just a BIT better I'd be totally set. Oh well, I'm not too concerned about built-in video recording since an app will just get developed that does that.

Other than that, I'm just happy it's finally being officially released in Canada. Call me an optimist but I still have some hope that the data rates won't be TOO bad, and with the awesome browser that means I can surf ProductWiki wherever I am :)

I'm also excited for the apps that will get developed with the official SDK. I've seen my friend's hacked iPhone and that was sweet. Now that devs are actually supported means the apps will be even better."

Competitors

Omar prefers Apple iPhone 3G over Samsung Instinct, RIM BlackBerry Bold, Palm Pre
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

hipotecas

avatar
March 16, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
82
negative
mixed
positive
18 pros
4 cons
trustedtrusted
want itwant it
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very vibrant developer community
  • Real time 3D graphic rendering
  • Very responsive touchscreen
  • Slimmer contour than previous generation
  • Purchasing of music and apps right on the phone
  • Operating system years ahead of competitors.
  • Excellent free development tools and documentation.
  • Largest screen on a phone
  • Desktop synchronisation with both MacOS X and Windows
  • Quality controlled third party applications
  • YouTube
  • Cars now feature a digital iPod connector for crystal-clear digital interfacing
  • Affordable (depending on service plan)

Cons

  • Very quiet speakerphone
  • Prone to locking up and crashing when using Safari
  • Poor search (no email search or web page text search)
  • Weak WiFi antenna

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

Amanie

avatar
January 5, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
33
negative
mixed
positive
6 pros
12 cons
trustedtrusted
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very responsive touchscreen

Cons

  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Camera didn't get improved
  • Map driving directions are text only (no audio)
  • Hitting back button in Safari forces the page to reload which is slow
  • Turn by turn directions in Google Maps app isn't fully flushed out
  • No map-caching for the default maps application, so if you don't have a strong signal, you get slow performance or a blank map
  • Very quiet speakerphone
  • No front-facing camera lens for video chat
  • Prone to locking up and crashing when using Safari
  • Speaker sounds horrible
  • Weak WiFi antenna
  • Slow at finding WiFi networks

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

ajm48786

avatar
July 10, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
12
negative
mixed
positive
1 pro
7 cons
trustedtrusted
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support

Cons

  • Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Camera didn't get improved
  • No text selection or copy/paste functionality.
  • No improvement in storage
  • No MMS capabilities
  • No front-facing camera lens for video chat

Comments

"This is overhyped and overrated. 3G is an improvement; however, there are other methods that are quite a bit faster than 3G already available. This falls in line with Apple's long history of adding features that have been available for quite some time in other devices and using "feature X" as a means to promote their product; as though the feature is something totally new. It is deceptive.

The idea people line up in the morning to get these devices is appalling, yet sadly not surprising. Apple uses peoples' ignorance to their advantage. All companies do this to some extent; however, Apple uses peoples' ignorance like a beacon when they add one/two features to a "new" device yet leave everything else intact, even when the "new" features on an Apple product have been available on some other device for 6 months.

The new and the old iphones are RIP OFFS! The storage capacity is pathetic, the pricing is abominable; and you get stuck in a contract designed to leave you unable to purchase food. Where is an SD port!? USB!? Where is bluetooth!? Apple Iphone is way behind the game in terms of quality/features, yet they'll stay ahead due to the sheer blissful ignorance of the masses. Cheers!"
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

abendstrom

avatar
November 12, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
0
negative
mixed
positive
0 pros
6 cons
trustedtrusted
have ithave it
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

Pros

Did not agree with any pros

Cons

  • Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
  • Hitting back button in Safari forces the page to reload which is slow
  • Prone to locking up and crashing when using Safari
  • Japanese iPhone not adapted for Japanese cell phone market

Comments

"

While iPhone is nice as a mere portable internet device, in my opinion, it grandly fails the qualification as a Japanese cell phone, although it has been aggressively marketed in Japan since its introduction in July 2008 (which led me, Tokyoite, to buying it). The most important problem is that mail communication with other Japanese cell phones is not possible in many cases. The Japanese cell mail system is arguably the most frequent application of Japanese cell phones, but cell mailing in Japan is very different from ordinary SMS/MMS's in the rest of the world.

Introduction

In Japan, there is a (high) quasi industry standard of what buyers of a new cell phone expect from their phone in terms of functionality, interface and usability. iPhone is currently the second most expensive telephone available on the Japanese cell phone mass market, marketed aggressively by Softbank, the official carrier and vendor for iPhones in Japan, so you would expect it to fulfill at least the standard customer expectations. In fact, though, iPhone's specifications are so different from of the established phones, that SoftBank has prospective customers sign a 2-page paper on "caution items when purchasing an iPhone". (there is none such caution form for any other phone in Japan)

However, the most crucial differences (and lacks) compared to the established cell phones are not mentioned in that caution form. I had to discover them after the purchase of my iPhone and confirmed them one by one with Apple's Japan iPhone support center as well as with Softbank. As I thought that those points are crucially blocking my use of the iPhone as a normal cell phone, I stated to SoftBank/Apple my opinion that they mislead me into believing that the iPhone can be used like a normal cell phone, which it cannot, and thusly contracts based on this assumption are invalid. I eventually demanded the cancellation of the carrier contract (about 8,000 Yen/month) and the reimbursement for the model (69,120 Yen). While admitting to the iPhone lacks of functionality, they refused my claim and didn't even offer me any other option. All conversation was on telephone, I unfortunately do not have names or anything in written at the moment.

Claims

Some of the "standard" functionality of most japanese cell phones that the iPhone does not provide and that are not mentioned in the caution form either, are:

1. Emails from the iPhone are simply rejected by many other cell phones, including most of my friends. This is much more crucial than in the U.S., for instance, as in Japan, cell phones in private use are primarily used for exchanging emails than for talking to people on the phone (This is partly connected to the fact that Japanese spend a lot of time in public places (trains) where talking on the phone is not allowed)


iPhone does not have an ordinary cell phone mail address like all other cell phones, but it has a new, iPhone specific domain. iPhone mails are not sent from the Softbank (carrier) server, but from a special server set up by Apple Japan.


Here lies the problem: Many users (and many of my friends) have their own cell phones set up so that they only accept mails from other cell phone companies, but not allow mails from normal computer mail servers. This is primarily to prevent spam. Now, while theoretically, I could go around and ask every single friend to reset their settings and include my address in the "allowed" list, this is impracticable in practice, it is a very complicated action, and futile, if I happened to only get the other people's mail address but not their number (which happens often with the iPhone, see claim#2) and thusly cannot inform them about the change in the settings because my mail informing them will be rejected too.


I also talked to the customer support center of docomo, which is the carrier most of my friends are customers of, and asked them if they would change the spam settings in order to include iphone mails. They said no, and told me only to tell all my friends to include my iphone individually in their "no spam"-list.


The fact that I cannot exchange mails with most of my friends makes the iPhone useless for me as a cell phone, so this is the most frustrating lack of functionality for me.

2. Japanese characters sent from the iPhone can arrive as "mojibake" or unreadable garbage texts on other cell phones. This is probably related to the fact that iPhone encodes text in Unicode while ordinary Japanese cell phones only allow for the more simple JIS(?)-encoding system. (Apple does in fact acknowledge in the "caution list"  that "emoji" emoticons cannot be exchanged, but this problem is apparently separate)

This is also the likely reason why the navigation system does not recognize any goal input in Japanese (and not in alphabet letters either, as the geographical data are probably stored only in Japanese characters). Any neighbourhood, famous landmarks or train stations, they are all refuted as "location unknown".

3. iPhone does not have infrared. All modern Japanese cell phones have infrared - Infrared is the most common way to exchange phone number and phone email address with other people, something done in a few seconds and with a few keystrokes. I now have to type the information entirely one by one, first into my phone, then into the other person's phone. Not to mention that the auto-complete system constantly hampers the input by suggesting useless completions while email text strings often have no real meaning. A very tedious action which might take up to several minutes.

4. Telephone history list. iPhone does not indicate whether a call was received or dialed. Also, it is not possible to delete single calls from the history list, only the entire list. All this is possible and very useful with Japanese cell phones.

5. Significantly slow. Opening crucial phone applications like the email folder or the address book only takes fractions of a second on normal Japanese phone. With the iPhone, all applications including those mentioned seem to respond with the same speed, i.e. several seconds. Especially the mail folder sometimes shows up only after 10 seconds or more after pressing the button. This significantly hampers the smooth use of the iPhone as cell phone, where you constantly open and close the main applications.

6. While iPhone has a camera, you can only shoot still photos, not movies. All Japanese cell phones equipped with a camera allow for the shooting of movies, too.

Contact me if you are frustrated too.

"
Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

gbchaosmaster

avatar
August 1, 2009
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
75
negative
mixed
positive
24 pros
8 cons
want itwant it
love itlove it
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • GPS Support
  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Still has the best web browser on a cell phone
  • Very vibrant developer community
  • Real time 3D graphic rendering
  • WiFi
  • Very responsive touchscreen
  • Slimmer contour than previous generation
  • Purchasing of music and apps right on the phone
  • Operating system years ahead of competitors.
  • Excellent free development tools and documentation.
  • Largest screen on a phone
  • Desktop synchronisation with both MacOS X and Windows
  • Quality controlled third party applications
  • YouTube
  • text selection, cut, copy and paste functionality (added in 3.0)
  • Easily email and post photos to Facebook directly from the phone
  • Viable Gameing Platform
  • Cars now feature a digital iPod connector for crystal-clear digital interfacing
  • Push synchronisation via me.com
  • MMS capabilities (added in 3.0)
  • Affordable (depending on service plan)

Cons

  • Crippled Bluetooth (only hands-free devices supported)
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Map driving directions are text only (no audio)
  • When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
  • Turn by turn directions in Google Maps app isn't fully flushed out
  • No built-in tethering solution for Internet sharing with a laptop
  • No front-facing camera lens for video chat
  • Cannot shuffle between apps

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No

migo

avatar
August 30, 2008
approved
reviewer
ProSCORE
22
negative
mixed
positive
4 pros
14 cons
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

Pros

  • High speed 3G
  • Good selection of free apps available
  • Intuitive interface
  • Very vibrant developer community

Cons

  • Can't replace the battery yourself, can't replace with a "spare"
  • Crippled Bluetooth (only hands-free devices supported)
  • Battery life is disappointing when using 3G
  • Camera didn't get improved
  • When switching applications from within another application (ie. sending an email while on map), it doesn't return you to your original app
  • No text selection or copy/paste functionality.
  • No improvement in storage
  • Very quiet speakerphone
  • No MMS capabilities
  • Prone to locking up and crashing when using Safari
  • Poor search (no email search or web page text search)
  • Can't use speakerphone when checking voicemail
  • Unresponsive touch screen if it gets greasy..and it gets greasy
  • Poor on screen keyboard

Competitors

Did you find this review helpful?
Yes
 / 
No
«Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next»

Twitter

- join or start the conversation

... Loading for latest tweets from search.twitter.com..

tweetie

sponsored by:
Price comparison information by:

This product is also known as:

3, G, 3G