June 10, 2009

Your next iPhone: iPhone 3.0 update or iPhone 3G S?

Between Apple's free OS upgrade, the new next-generation handset, and the heavily discounted 3G, it's decision-time for both devotees and holdouts

Over the course of two weeks in June, Apple will deliver more new phones than any mobile handset manufacturer in history. On June 8, paid members of Apple's iPhone Developer Program were given access to the GM (gold master) of iPhone 3.0 firmware, along with a matching version of the iPhone SDK. On June 17, owners of all models of iPhone and iPod Touch will be able to download the iPhone 3.0 update through iTunes. And on June 19, Apple will start selling the iPhone 3G S, a faster iPhone 3G with longer battery life, an autofocus camcorder, a compass, and other goodies. Meanwhile, the original 8GB iPhone 3G will continue to be sold for the giveaway price of $99.

I say that Apple will set a record in new phone shipments because iPhone 3.0 creates an entirely new platform on every existing device updated to use it. The reach of Apple's OS update is unprecedented, and the fact that it overlaps with the release of a new handset creates some confusion. Some people are wondering what iPhone 3.0 is, what the iPhone 3G S has that the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3.0 don't, whether the original iPhone 3G is still worth buying, and whether owners of the existing iPhone 3G should upgrade. I'll do my best to address these questions.

[ Get InfoWorld's 28-page hands-on look at the new iPhone OS from the perspective of business and IT pros, including reviews of iPhone configuration management and application development tools, all from InfoWorld’s editors and contributors. | Take a guided tour of iPhone 3.0. See how the iPhone 3G and BlackBerry Bold fare in a head-to-head comparison. | Stay ahead of advances in mobile technology with InfoWorld's Mobile Edge blog. ]

iPhone 3.0 is a new feature bonanza that requires no new hardware. It will be delivered as an operating system update for owners of all models of iPhone, iPhone 3G, and iPod Touch. Just use your USB cable to connect your iPhone or iPod Touch to your Mac or PC after June 17. iTunes will detect the update, back up your device, download the iPhone 3.0 OS, copy the OS to your device's flash memory, and restore your data and apps. Your device will reboot with an extraordinary set of new features. If you have an iPhone, any model, iPhone 3.0 is free. If you have an iPod Touch, any model, it's $9.95.

It seems like all the iPhone users I know are in the iPhone Developer Program and already running the iPhone 3.0 beta (now, gold master), so I've been treating the new OS as if it's already shipped. It almost got past me what a huge day June 17 is going to be for that vast majority of iPhone owners who are currently running a 2.x OS.

3.0 is the charm
No matter what kind of mobile device you're carrying, you've never seen a firmware update like iPhone 3.0. It re-creates the device. Heading off the list of changes is global support for cut, copy, paste, and undo. When I say "global," I mean that the functionality has been added at the framework/API level, so all iPhone apps not only inherit the pop-up toolbar that makes drag-selecting text and graphics a cinch, they share a single system-wide pasteboard with other apps. Of course it works with text, but you can send someone an image, or a block of formatted HTML plus an image, from a Web site just by copying it out of Safari and pasting it in an e-mail message. In every built-in and third-party app I've tried, it works. Undo takes advantage of iPhone 3.0's new shake gesture.

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BurkPhoto 10-Jun-09 4:26pm
It still lacks one key element: Verizon Wireless connectivity. AT&T just sucks in too many places. If I could go to my Verizon store and get one, I would upgrade in a heartbeat. As it is, I'll have to think about it long and hard before making a switch to AT&T.
groupeone 10-Jun-09 4:56pm
@BurkPhoto: With all due respect, Verizon was offered the iPhone first. But being the control freaks that they are, they wanted to hold back on significant features of the iPhone, and not offer benefits Apple wanted for its users. It's likely that Verizon would have treated the iPhone like any other handset they offer. And for that, Apple told them to pound sand. In time, this will likely be corrected, but Verizon blew it, plain and simple. And you can't blame Apple for that. On another subject, Tom Yeager in his excellent post above discusses something that gives any iPhone considerable value: that its OS, and the capabilities of the iPhone can be updated considerably. That gives any iPhone owner tremendous value. Where I think we'll see a lot of this displayed will be in many updated and new apps to come in the next several months. It will be fun to see how mobile computing and telephony becomes more powerful and indispensable as well. One thing I hope to see in the next iPhone OS update is a better way to organize the growing volume of apps and data on my iPhone. Frankly, I was a bit surprised that Apple hasn't yet come up with a folder or similar metaphor for organizing apps, photos, video, music and other data we're increasingly storing on our iPhones and iPod touches. With new models coming soon that can store as much as 32 GB, I wonder what Apple will do to allow for this. I'm confident that people much smarter than me in Cupertino are well at work on this very issue. We live in interesting times indeed. All this advance and the explosion of iPhone sales is attracting competition. I expect to see responses from Palm, Google, Blackberry and yes, Microsoft - there's simply too much money in the game. The handset makers, software developers and telcos worldwide realize this. And this competition will benefit users worldwide, no matter which phone and carrier you prefer. So, love 'em or hate 'em, Apple is making the whole industry move forward. And not a moment too son.
pyknic56 14-Jun-09 7:53pm
You might wanna take a look at this article before you spend too much time thinking about a gaming console for the iPhone... http://industry.bnet.com/technology/10001595/is-apple-developing-a-game-...

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