This story appeared on Network
World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2007/082807bradner.html
Apple's iPhone --
not the home of the free
'Net Insider
By Scott Bradner, Network World,
08/28/07
Sponsored by:
Last week my mother admonished me
for having published two columns about the Apple iPhone before it was released,
but not a word since. She, of course, is right. I should have said something,
but IÕve been trying to figure out what bothers me so much about the product.
I have not bought an iPhone —
I may, but IÕm not sure if or when. I have played with them and am astonished
at their quality and ease of use. I expected a lot from the Apple designers,
but until I held an iPhone and played with it, I had not internalized just how
good a consumer product could be. The iPod should have given me a big hint.
Apple also has surprised most of
its possible competitors in the advanced phone business. A few are trying to
put out iPhone clones, and a few of these devices look good, but I expect it
will be a long time before products appear that show that other vendors
understand anything about what Apple has done. Making a clone does not require
understanding; you only have to look at the iPod to see how hard it has been
for most vendors to Ōget it.Ķ Apple introduced the iPod in 2001, and to me,
even today, there are no other products that come close to it in user-interface
design. (And there are rumors that we may be just weeks away from a whole new
iPod design, maybe something like a phoneless iPhone.)
So, the product itself is —
as far as I can tell without living with one — great. According to the
surveys IÕve read, most of the people who actually bought iPhones are very
happy with them. The network managers in their companies may not be as happy
because the iPhone is missing some things that such network managers see as
required for an enterprise phone, including high-quality interaction with
Microsoft e-mail systems and remote-device lock and erase.
There is a lot that bothers me
about the iPhone, however, mostly about AppleÕs business decisions. Back in
January, I wrote about some of the technology IÕd like to see in the iPhone.
Most of what I wanted is not there. Lots of other things are, but the functions
that would make the device complete are missing, at least from Apple. Some of
the missing parts already are available from third parties. It is hard to blame
Apple for not being able to lock out the hackers, especially when they have
your device in their hands, but to me, it would have been far better for Apple
to sell a version of the iPhone that admits it is a computer running a good
operating system and lets customers use it openly.
The worst part of the iPhone is
that Apple is treating the iPhone just like another cell phone. Apple, the
company whose innovative and compelling business model forced the music
business and some of the TV and movie business to deal with the Internet, has
done none of this when it comes to the iPhone. The phone, as sold in the United
States, is locked into a particular carrier and cannot even be used for
non-phone functions without agreeing to the lock-in.
The locks, predictably, were
quickly overcome and now Apple is retaliating by trying to block the exploits.
If it were true to its image, Apple would have sold unlocked phones to people
who wanted them. It may have to in Europe. If so, it will be sad indeed if
customers in AppleÕs own country canÕt be free.
Disclaimer: Harvard predates the Ōland
of the freeĶ but has not expressed an opinion about AppleÕs refusal to be part
of it in this case. Thus, the above review and lament are mine alone.
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