Fri Jul 11, 2008 9:17AM EDT
See Comments (47)
At last, I have the new iPhone in my hot little hands—and yes, it's plenty fast, feels relatively thin and light, and does a solid job of pinpointing your location. But is the iPhone 3G blowing me away like its predecessor did? Check out my first impressions.
Out of the box, the iPhone 3G looks almost exactly the same as its predecessor, although turn it around and you'll find the black, glossy backing. As expected, the new back panel smudges like crazy. No scratches yet, but I've only had the new iPhone in my possession for an hour or so—give me time.
Thanks to its clever tapered design, the iPhone 3G actually feels a little thinner than the original—although as I've written before, the new iPhone is actually about 0.02 inches thicker at its thickest point. Still, the iPhone 3G is about 0.1 ounces lighter than the iPhone 2.5G, and holding both of them in my hands, I definitely prefer the feel of the 3G model.
Turn the iPhone 3G on and, well, it looks just like the iPhone of old, save the changes in the 2.0 firmware. Up in the left-hand corner of the screen, though, is the telltale "3G" icon (which you'll see anytime you're in an AT&T 3G service area), and boy, it makes a difference.
I ran a few quick tests with the iPhone 3G and my 2.5G iPhone side-by-side, and the new iPhone blows away the old when it comes to surfing. The giant New York Times home page takes almost a minute and a half to load on my old EDGE iPhone; on the iPhone 3G, it took just 25 seconds. Running some speed tests, I got 420Kbps download speeds on average; the iPhone 2.5G only managed about 160Kbps.
In terms of GPS, I'm getting decent results, but nothing mind-blowing so far. The iPhone 3G managed to pinpoint my location to within a third of a city block—not bad, but my old iPhone could do that too. I'll conduct more testing today and report back. Update: I just took a walk around my block using GPS. I got a good signal, which turns the "current location" crosshairs icon into a solid, pulsating blue dot, which managed to trail me by about 10-15 seconds as I strolled down the sidewalk (with occassional phantom detours into the odd backyard). Now that's a trick the old iPhone can't do; make no mistake, though, it's no substitute for a dashboard GPS system, or at least not so far.
So, overall, how am I feeling after spending barely an hour with the new iPhone? I love the speedy surfing, but other than that, it still feels like the same old iPhone in a slightly sexier case. Will my impression will change in the next day or so, especially once I get GPS fully up and running? We'll see.
I'll be posting a full review tomorrow, so stay tuned. And in the meantime, feel free to post your questions below, and I'll cover as many as I can in a follow-up post.
Related Links:
iPhone "iPocalypse" as activations fail en masse
Â
Â
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
It "only" took 25 seconds to load the front page of the NYT? Geez, that's why I don't bother surfing on my Treo. Even the state-of-the-art performance smartphones are pretty pokey as things go.
Can the new Iphone forward text messages?
How do you become a test person for Wireless Technology? I would like to test new wireless phones for companies, but don't know how to get started in it.
hi
Does it have support for Flash player
I heard not all coverage areas for ATT are 3G. It defaults to the slower EDGE.....what a waste..
Does it record video and take digital pictures? If so, how well does the phone perform?
I am really bummed that the new iphone cannot record video. Do you think this is something that will come soon?
Can it run Excel or Calc4Web?
ah...its no Sprint Instinct
Try proofreading your juvenile "writing" before posting.Will will will you please.
Talk more about the Apps. Why don't you review all 500 Apps? 3G is 3 to 4 times faster than EDGE. Why do you want to waste time waiting for a webpage to load? That's worth the extra $10/month for 3G. There will be software coming out for the 3G iPhone's GPS. It hasn't come out yet.
Can u buy the Iphone without connecting it with ATT? I have my old one with T-mobile because I travel alot and I need it to activate in other countries!
How much did the phone cost in the end? The old iphone cost $499, but in the end, I spent over $600 (with plans and other hidden costs). Not to mention that the "$59 a month" phone plan is actually $72 something with fees, etc.
wow it's on 0.03 seconds faster then the first iphone wow but here the catch other then GPS its cool but your paying more... stick with old iphone....
how good are the pics and can how about the itunes? oh! if you want to print your pics how do you do that oh! what about the texting is really that good or not really? -thanks (sorry im not really good about all this iphone stuff)
Basically you bought a phone that doesn't work other than surfing the net. GPS isn't working and showing your location in a backyard? Same as its predecessor before but faster on the net. And how much are you paying per month?
Can't wait to get mine. I'm updating my original iPhone right now. Hit a couple of server snags, but it's fine now.
That is a great product that was created the I phone. My friends love their phones but They havent mentioned the upgraded phones. successin2minutes.com a site where the successful help those that want the best out of their lives...
Please enable your browser's cookies to activate the My Tech column.
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 Posted by jaypaneseninja on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:29PM EDT Report Abuse
Thanks! The reason I didn't get an iPhone before was because there was no official AIM on the phone and I'm a pretty heavy AIM user. I know on my old phones with 3G and EDGE, AIM would average 30 seconds (and even take up to 2 minutes) to send/receive one IM, so my conversations would be difficult to comprehend, and eventually using AIM from my phone ended up being pointless. Anyways, thanks again.