craighal | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 14 2008 | iphone, apple, photos, smugmug
It's almost worth getting an iPhone for this feature alone.
Quoted: Geotag your photos and send them online with SmugShot. Show your friends what they're missing in seconds. And where they're missing it.
Quoted: The iPhone camera is surprisingly good. See your photos BIG in gorgeous galleries with silky-smooth, full-screen slideshows at SmugMug. Or, browse your SmugMug galleries on your iPhone. SmugMug knows when you're browsing with an iPhone and serves up a deliciously beautiful iPhone interface.
craighal | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 25 2008 | apple, iphone, web, MobileMe
Ah, shucks...
Quoted: Unfortunately, after a week of intense testing of the service, I can’t recommend it, at least not in its current state. It’s a great idea, but, as of now, MobileMe has too many flaws to keep its promises.
Quoted: I am not referring to the launch glitches that plagued MobileMe earlier this month, such as servers that couldn’t keep up with the traffic and email outages that, for some users, persist as I write this. Those were bad, but they have eased considerably. Apple already has apologized for them and is giving customers an extra 30 days on their subscriptions to make up for the poor start. The problems I am citing are systemic.
craighal | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 13 2008 | iphone, apple, software
Ah, shucks...
Quoted: Apple suffered extensive network gridlock Friday morning, as many of the six million users of the original iPhone tried to upgrade to new software while the first buyers of the new iPhone 3G were trying to activate their purchases.
Quoted: The setback was a classic example of the problems that can follow when complex systems have single points of failure. In this case, the company appeared to almost invite the problems by having both existing and new iPhone owners try to get through to its systems at the same time.
craighal | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 12 2008 | apple, iphone, microsoftgood Scobleizer article...
Quoted:
Apple continues to amaze. I’ve never seen a company have a technical meltdown in front of the eyes of the world the way Apple did today. Yet when my son got out of the store after three hours of hell inside the store (we were snuck to the front of the line by someone who gave us cuts so that we could be among the first to get one, so that we could document what it was like for him to walk into the store and be #1 — he waited for two days) he said he still loved Apple and still loved his 3G iPhone.
After playing with it today I’ve got to agree. This is the company that can give you a crappy camera. No video. Charge you more than other devices. Make you wait hours in line. Take hours to get your credit card approved, your iPhones activated. And, at the end of it all, make you feel good.
I’ve been comparing the iPhone 3G to my Nokia N82 and N95 and my Microsoft Mobile-powered Samsung Blackjack II cell phones and, again, the iPhone kicks ass.
The App Store is simply brilliant. The new things available for the iPhone are just years ahead of other phones. The experience of using an iPhone is just way ahead of even the best Nokia and Microsoft phones (although I met with both companies recently and don’t expect them to let Apple have all the fun for long).
It’s worth the hell. Apple and AT&T will do just fine after fixing all the bugs that caused today’s debacle.
That said, no other company in the world has so much brand love in reserve that it can get this reaction. Any other company in the world would have seen riots after it took more than an hour to process even a portion of the first group of 20 people to enter the store
Related Content from Around Faves
apple
-
1 FaverViewed: 2 TimesQuoted: U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu publicly complimented Apple, PG&E and the other companies that have recently resigned from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce over its opposition to greenhouse gas restrictions.
- brad - Aug 25 20093 FaversViewed: 14 Times
- mike - Jul 27 20091 FaverViewed: 3 Times
