Reasons not to buy an iPhone

Just for the fun I collected some reasons from the net not to buy an iPhone.

1. It costs too much

At launch, the Apple mobile retailed US$499 for the 4GB model and US$599 for the 8GB model. Now, after a two hundred dollar price cut, the device still remains on the wrong side of affordable — there is the two-year AT&T contract to consider after all. It’s not the most expensive mobile phone on the market by any means (after all, the Motorola SLVR Diamond went for 75 grand (yes, that’s 75 thousand US dollars), and other phones have cost as much as a million dollars. But those are toys for gazillionaires. For the rest of us, 400 bucks is a lot to pay for a phone. Many are willing to shell out that much, if the phone is really, really great. But as the following list illustrates, it may be just a bit too hefty for the iPhone in its current incarnation.

2. It doesn’t fully support Exchange
Many business users get their mail via Exchange servers. iPhone proponents claim that the phone supports Exchange and it does — sort of. What it supports is IMAP (the Internet Message Access Protocol), a generic e-mail protocol for accessing mail on a remote server. You can enable IMAP on your Exchange server and get your mail, but you lose the ‘push mail’ ability, wherein each message is sent to your device as it’s received. Instead, the device checks the server at regular intervals (‘pull’ mail) to see if there’s new mail, so you may not get your messages instantly.

Even more importantly, since the iPhone doesn’t support Exchange ActiveSync, you don’t get remote access to your calendar and contacts. That can be a deal breaker for business users. There are rumours floating around that Apple has licensed ActiveSync and will support it in a future version of the iPhone. That’s all the more reason to wait on buying one.

3. User-unfriendly battery
A mobile phone without a user-removable/replaceable battery? Surely you jest. But it’s true; when the iPhone’s battery dies, you have to send it back to Apple to get a new one (for a fee). Sending your iPod away for a few days to have the battery replaced is bad enough, but most people can manage without music for a short time. Being without your cell phone for days (or weeks) could pose a real problem, since many of us rely on them for business and safety reasons, and more and more people have ditched their landlines and use their mobiles as their only phone.

The iPhone’s battery has a decent charge life, but what about those of us who like to plan for contingencies? With my Samsung i730, I can take an extra charged battery along with me and pop it in if I use up all the juice in the primary one. No such convenience for iPhone users.

I can’t believe there won’t be a lot of weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth when those batteries start to go bad. This seems like one of the top issues Apple should address in the next version; it’s a deal-breaker for too many folks who otherwise like the iPhone.

4. Where’s the keyboard?
As other PDA phone vendors strive to make their keyboards bigger and better (transitioning to side-slide keyboards with more usable keys), Apple went the other way and did away with the physical keyboard completely. The iPhone boasts a large on-screen keyboard, but a lot of folks out there started out with BlackBerrys and have become proficient at using their thumbs to key in information. That’s going to mean learning a whole new way of keyboarding with the iPhone.

5. No third-party applications
Those of us who have been using Windows Mobile phones are used to being able to download and install the applications we want to add, just like with a ‘real computer’. With the iPhone, you can’t install third-party applications. Apple undoubtedly did this with the idea that it would prevent a lot of tech support problems and make the phone’s operating system more stable, but I think it was a big mistake. People who shell out this much money for a phone expect it to be a full-fledged handheld computer, too — and that means being able to add your own apps.

6. Stuck with one operator

By limiting the iPhone offering to only one mobile phone provider, Apple immediately took itself out of the market for the many people who prefer other carriers.

Of course, users may be able to do a workaround now that there are reportedly hacks available to allow the iPhone to work onto other networks, but for the average user who isn’t particular tech-savvy, it’s not the ideal solution.

Even if you do hack your way off the AT&T network, you’ll have to pay a US$175 early cancellation fee to get out of your AT&T contract.

7. The bleedingly slow EDGE
Not only are you stuck with AT&T’s network, with the iPhone, you don’t even get to use its fastest network. Instead, you’re limited to the slower EDGE network. People who buy Internet-enabled phones want high-speed Internet.

8. Smile! You’re on iPhone camera
The built-in camera on the iPhone marks it as a consumer product, not a business-oriented one. Many business users don’t want cameras on their mobile phones because there are plenty of places where cameras are prohibited, and it’s a pain to have to surrender your cell phone at the door or leave it in the car just to get in.

But even for those consumers who do want to take photos with their phones, the iPhone camera leaves a lot to be desired. Although it does have some cool features, like the ability to set a picture you’ve taken as wallpaper or assign them to your contacts, it’s an adequate but not outstanding 2 megapixel model. There’s no zoom and most important, there’s no flash on the camera, so you’ll have to do your picture-taking in well lit areas.

Admittedly, it’s at least as good as the cameras on many other mobiles, but most other devices with cameras don’t cost this much.

9. iTunes required to sync
Apple assumes that everyone has iTunes installed on their computers, but many of us Windows users don’t. However, if you want to sync your iPhone with your computer, you’ll have to install it because that’s the mechanism the iPhone uses to sync files, contacts, calendar, e-mail accounts, etc.

Want to sync to your work computer but you’re not allowed to install music programs like iTunes on it? Oops. I guess you’re out of luck.

10. The dead zone
There have been reports about a display problem on some iPhones that manifests as a ‘dead strip’ that loses sensitivity to touch input. Since the iPhone is all about the touch-screen, this is not a good thing.

Even worse, some reports suggest that more phones are likely to fall victim to this problem as they’re used more.

11. Stylish and Stupid
There’s no doubt about it that the iPhone look “stylish” when you first see it. But isn’t that really the problem with all of Apple’s products? They look pretty but provide very low value for the price? Do you really want to be a loser that overpays for the iPhone just to look cool for a little while? Don’t forget that no matter how “stylish” you look, sooner or later other people will have an iPhone and then you’ll just look stupid.

Is that what you’re really after? To look stupid trying to be cooler than everybody else? Hey, you can do that without spending $600. In fact, you may have already achieved that goal just by reading this column but I’ll leave that to each reader to decide for themselves.

12. No Flash or Java Support
Flash and Java are both pretty basic parts of the web experience. And yet Steve Jobs and his lackeys have arbitrarily decided to exclude them from the iPhone web experience. So much for “the internet in your pocket” blather that Jobs was spewing earlier on. It’s more like the “crippled, crappy, lame version of the Internet in your pocket” instead.

No doubt though that Apple’s marketing department will probably put their usual spin on this and start touting the iPhone as being “Flash-free” or “Java-free” as though both things were positives instead of negatives. And you know what? The Apple Faithful will eat it up! They’ll storm out onto the Web and begin filling discussion forums and newsgroups with inane comments about how the iPhone “protects” users from evil things like Flash and Java.

I guess when you’re the head of a cult, you can make people believe anything.

13. international charges (LOL for this one!!!)

According to recent news, the iPhone has a very annoying feature if you plan to take outside the U.S. The autoupdate feature, which reads email even if the phone is turned of, can result if a huge bill from AT&T.

According to some users, the bill get as high as $2000 if you bring the iPhone to a foreign country, such as Mexico.

So, if you plan to travel with an iPhone, be careful of the resulting bill. Or maybe is better to leave the iPhone at home.

Summary

The iPhone looks cool, but if you’re a serious business user, there are other, less expensive phones that provide better functionality. And even if you’re not a business user, unless you have plenty of money lying around and absolutely must have the latest neat gadget as soon as it comes out, I’d recommend waiting for version two of the iPhone, which, we hope, will cost less and fix at least a few of these issues.

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