It won't surprise anyone who knows me that I'm a big fan of technology. In high school I built my own speaker cases, linked them up to a Radio Shack mini-amp, and then wired that into a clock radio. I also owned a very expensive TRS-80 computer with a daisy wheel printer that sounded like a jackhammer as it printed my grade 13 English essays.
I had the good fortune recently to receive two pieces of up to date, high end technology. One purchased by me with my hard earned wonga, the other provided by my employer in order to keep me chained to the desk regardless of distance.
The two toys are an Apple iPad and a RIM Blackberry Curve 8900.
To say that I've had a different experience with each of these would be a massive understatement. The iPad has been a complete joy and become a valued member of the household while the replacement Blackberry is still waiting to have basic functionality restored/reinstalled after a week.
The Blackberry showed up first. My trusty old Nokia E51 had died after 3 years of abuse and the Blackberry was the smartphone on offer at the company shop. So that was that.
I hate it. I really do.
Of course it's different. It would have to be and I'd have to get used to it. But Briana has an iPhone 3GS. And that provided some preset expectations... I wanted to be able to install a lot of cool, free apps. I wanted a simple, intuitive email system for personal and work email. A great browser. Great contact management and calendar functionality linked with my work server.
Dream on. Very few apps. Useless and frustrating browser. The need to install brutally limited apps to do email (Gmail and NotifyLink) on a device renowned for it's email capability. A calendar that lets me create appointments but not actually allow me to invite anyone to them.
And then, 2 months in the trackball starts to act up. I try cleaning it, tapping it, and whacking it but nothing helps. So I end up having to replace the unit after only 2 months. Of course I take a full backup of the phone before I send it away to ease my way into the new device. I restore to find that it's reloaded my data but not my apps. It's remembered my wifi settings but not my Bluetooth. A week in with the new Blackberry and it still doesn't have any email apps installed and can't sync calendar or contacts with the server. What a waste of time.
Then came the iPad. Actually, I'm writing this article on it right now. My last article was written on it too. Just as an experiment. Today I'm using it because I happened to be sitting in the kitchen after dinner listening to music and drinking a nice glass of red and just fancied writing.
And that summarises everything I love about the iPad. Just because I fancy it.
I catch up with the news on the BBC just because I fancy it. I watch a film trailer because I fancy it. I check work or home email. I play a diverting game. I check the weather. I look up the actress from that film because I know I've seen her somewhere before. I write this blog. Just because I fancy it. When I fancy it. In my kitchen. Sitting in front of the TV. Whenever. Wherever.
Is it perfect? No. There are too many videos I can't watch because of Apple's silly Flash stance (I mean, who are they to throw around the word "proprietary"?). Why do I have to depend on a physical plug in to my Windows box for synchronisation when there's a perfectly good wifi network available?
But that doesn't mean that it isn't great (fast, great battery life, able to do many things well), convenient (always there, ready when you are), and frankly beautiful (it really does turn heads).
And while the v2 will have the Facetime video phone technology, a faster chip, and more memory, I certainly don't regret buying a v1 solution in any way. It doesn't feel like a v1 in any real way. You don't use it and feel that it's lacking. It does what you expect it to. Now.
Well, that's enough tech talk for now. Time to dial up that new album on Napster using my amazing Sonos system. But I'll leave that for another day...
I too have a Crapberry 8900 (a name you gave it last time we spoke which has stuck with me ever since) and have just upgraded to the HTC Desire Google Android smartphone. I too can concur having a similar experience with my Crapberry, that sometimes it connects to my wifi and sometimes it chooses not to. Often depends on what the moon cycle is ;-)
ReplyDeleteSome apps it lets me connect with, others it won't. It seems to be very picky on what it will let me do.
I will never ever ever ever ever go down a Crapberry road again....