The Remarkable iPhone
Posted by on 28 Jan 2010 | Tagged as: Revolutionary, specs
It can seemingly do everything and anything. It’s got everything a regular cell phone got-and much, much more. In fact, it’s more than a cellphone, it’s a multi-phone, a mega-phone, a super-phone. It’s the incomparable, incredible, remarkable iPhone. As you will see, this isn’t your big brother’s cell phone of five years ago.
On January 9, 2007, Apple made an announcement about the iPhone among much fanfare and speculation. The original iPhone was finally introduced on June 29, 2007 in the United States, before being marketed in Europe. It proved to be such a remarkable innovation that Time Magazine called the iPhone “The invention of the Year.” It was followed in 2008 with the iPhone 3G, which supports faster 3G data speeds and supported GPS. On June 8, 2009, the iPhone 3GS was released, with an improved performance, it has a camera with higher resolution and video capacity. It was followed more than a week later, June 17, 2009, with the release of iPhone OS (version 3.0) in the US as well as Canada and six European countries, as well as international releases in July and August.
The hardware consists of a cm (3.5 in) touchscreen and a liquid crystal display of (320×480 px at 6.3px/mm, 160 ppi, HGVA) It can be touch with one’s bare fingers. Gloves and styluses such as pens, for example, can interrupt its mechanism and cause the device to not to work properly. The display has three sensors, a proximity sensor causes the device to deactivate when the user puts it near their ear. This is done to save battery power. A 3-axis accelerometer can sense the orientation of the phone and change the screen accordingly, allow the user to alternate between the portrait and landscaping mode. It also has photo browsing, web browsing and music support playing for both upright and left widescreen orientations.
The updated version, the 3.0 can do even more. It has added landscape support, such as e-mail and an accelerometer that can be used for third-party apps, especially games. The iPhone has three swithches on its sides: wake/sleep, volume up/down, and ringer off/on. Originally, it came only in aluminum with a black plastic casing. Today, iPhones come in black or white. Its sound system is remarkable. It has one loudspeaker above the screen as an earpiece, and another speaker, opposite a microphone on the bottom/right of the device, and on the left side are volume controls as a slider. The iPhone can also use functional headphones as well. It also has built-in bluetooth for wireless earpieces and headphones.
The iPhone has a internal rechargeable battery which is not user-replaceable. It can be charged by connecting by connecting it to a computer by connecting it to a USB socket, just like you charge up an iPod. It can also be charged up with a stereo, car charger or solar charger.
The iPhone can operate on 8 GB (Gigabytes). Originally, it operated on both 4 and 8 GB. The 4 GB was discontinued in 2007. Today, there are now iPhones that operates on 16 GB.
The interface is built around the home screen. The iPhone has what is known as applications, called “apps” for short. There are seemingly apps for nearly everything. By default, the main screen contains the icons: SMS and MMS messaging, Calendars, Photos, Camera, You Tube, Stocks, Maps, Google Maps, Weather, Voice Memos, Notes, Clocks, Calculator, Settings, iTunes (an online music store), App Store, and a Compass (which is found only on the iPhone 3GS. It also has Mail, Safari (internet) and iPod Multimedia.
So there you have it, the greatest innovation of modern times, the first great innovation of the 21st Century. As you can see, as mentioned at the onset, this is not your big brother’s cell phone. This is the Phone of all phones, the boss of phones, the super phone, the amazing, incomparable, incredible iPhone. If you have one, you’re one of the fortunate ones. If not, then go out and get one asap. But keep in mind, iPhones can be expensive for some; it can run you anywhere from 350 to 500 dollars depending on the kind and its features. But its all worth it.
Topher Rollins
iFone Place