June 22, 2009

First look: iPhone 3G S is evolution in action

The iPhone 3G S is less revolutionary than its predecessors, but is still moving in the right direction

Bottom Line
The iPhone 3G S handset is well appointed, functional, and nicely packaged, but it’s not at the high end of the smartphone hardware scale. The OS and interface -- and the richly stocked App Store -- remain the best reasons to buy an iPhone. Unless you need 16GB or 32GB of storage, a compass, and a faster CPU, the $99 iPhone 3G will suit you as well as the more expensive iPhone 3G S.

After the drama that enveloped the last two iPhone releases, the party surrounding the iPhone 3G S is somewhat subdued. That's not because the 3G S is lacking. Rather, blame a troubled economy, in which it's much harder to justify spending for a new iPhone -- especially if you already have one.

The 3G S is identical to the 3G in form, distinguishable only by the lettering on the back. Inside, it's definitely a different animal. The CPU is faster, the RAM has been doubled, and there's a magnetometer, a 3-megapixel camera, and up to 32GB of storage. All of these pieces contribute to making the iPhone 3G S a formidable mobile computing platform, even though they are roughly in line with phones from other manufacturers. It's the apps and the interface that make the difference.

[ For more iPhone reviews and analysis from InfoWorld, see "First look: iPhone OS 3.0 is better for business, but IT won't be satisfied" and "Your next iPhone: iPhone 3.0 update or iPhone 3G S?" ]

There's certainly many "oh cool!" tricks in the 3G S, like the maps feature that combines the magnetometer with the GPS receiver to allow you to turn in any direction and have the map revolve to your position as you turn. I found the GPS receiver to be very fast and very accurate in linking to satellites. The camera is far better than the previous iterations, and the video recording and editing features are well done. I also found the voice control features to be useful, but the command listen duration seems too short, and voice control can be somewhat clunky to access.

A higher gear
I moved from an iPhone 2G to a 3G S, so the speed boost and new options were no doubt more dramatic to me than they will be to someone with a 3G. The speed is apparent immediately, with applications launching very quickly and navigation running much smoother than it did on my 2G. But after a few minutes, you won't notice anymore. The 3G S just does what you want when you want it, with little hesitation.

Otherwise, the 3G S offers roughly the same feature set as the 3G, especially with the iPhone OS 3.0 upgrade. Sorely lacking in both are tethering and MMS -- features that are supported by the device, but not by AT&T. This is a sad state of affairs for both Apple and AT&T; it's ridiculous to think that 22 countries and 44 carriers fully support these features, but they're not available to iPhone users in the United States. If anything underscores the fact that the United States is falling behind other countries in many technologies, this is it.

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mrwolf 22-Jun-09 3:02am
Do you people live under a rock!!! I have my iPhone for over a year now and I had multiple wm devices, such as the treo and the thc pro in the past. All the features the iPhone has is nothing new at all. The only impressive thing about the iPhone is the cover/look and to be honest it's not even that impressive any longer. Almost every feature in the iPhone is yrs old and especially the satellite navigation feature is like a decade old. The 32GB space is cool but I had 16GB sd card on my old phone and never used more than 2GB, and that's including music/photos/videos and office documents, and it cost me $24 for the SD card. At the end of this year the 1TB (1,000GB) memory card will out for sale. Apple finally added the copy and paste feature HAHA I was insulted when I found out my iPhone didn't have this feature. APPLE PLEASE RELEASE THE iPHONE FOR A BETTER NETWORK :)
inate 22-Jun-09 12:09pm
1 reply
Paul, I had trouble finding where in the article that explained why the iphone is "not at the high end of the smartphone hardware scale". Curious as which other smartphones other more high-end hardware. You mean physical keyboards? I know some phones have higher-rez cameras but not all of those are true smartphones. @mrwolf - yeah, i know, it's laughable that the iphone has all these features like GPS that other phones have had for a decade?? I guess that's why people bought a million of them last weekend instead of buying all of the technologically superior WM phones and Treos. I like your argument too that there will be 1TB cards available for phones that have card slots later this year but you had a problem filling up 2GB!
Paul Venezia 27-Jun-09 12:34pm
I thought that would be self-explanatory. There are many phones that have 5+ MP cameras, can take HD-quality video, have SDHC slots, a full Bluetooth stack, and so forth. My two-year-old Nokia N95 has a better camera than my brand-new iPhone 3G S, for example.

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