- Registriert
- Jan. 2008
- Beiträge
- 1.041
bei dem iphone freak ist das hoffnungslos
Folge dem Video um zu sehen, wie unsere Website als Web-App auf dem Startbildschirm installiert werden kann.
Anmerkung: Diese Funktion ist in einigen Browsern möglicherweise nicht verfügbar.
What's (still) missing
As is always the case with Apple products, the initial gee-whiz open box experience is tempered over time as the realities of the device's compromises become more obvious. The list of missing features and functionality on the iPhone is deep, though again this should be weighed against its own trendsetting, innovative and unique features. Some of the more obvious include:
Camera. The built-in camera was limited a year ago and is unchanged in the iPhone 3G. It's still 2.0 megapixels with no zoom of any kind, no video support, and no flash.
Bluetooth. The iPhone's Bluetooth functionality is still somewhat lacking. It doesn't support stereo headphones, device tethering, or file transfer.
Voice dialog. The iPhone 3G still lacks voice dialing, which seems odd given its multimedia prowess.
Keyboard. I've learned to adapt to the balky virtual keyboard, but the lack of a physical keyboard option will turn off a huge segment of the potential audience. Too, the virtual keyboard, like the screen rotation feature, doesn't work consistently across applications. For example, you can access the virtual keyboard while the phone is held horizontally in Safari, but not in Mail or Notes, two applications where a larger keyboard would be ideal.
Battery. The lack of a removable battery is inexcusable on a device this expensive and power hungry. And if the battery dies, you have to pay Apple for a replacement. The battery life is borderline criminal. It's pathetic.
Yet another dock connector. Despite being virtually identical to the previous iPhone, the bottom of the iPhone 3G is slightly different from its predecessor and thus requires yet another dock connector. That means it's incompatible with existing iPod connector-based hardware (including popular items like the Bose SoundDock). Fear not, as Apple will sell you a new adapter. Yet another thing to buy.
Weak Web browser. When the iPhone debuted, Apple promoted its Safari browser as a way to browse the Web as it's seen from PC desktops. No one in their right mind regularly browses the Web that way, though. What we've seen instead are a new generation of mobile versions of Web sites and applications custom tailored to the unique dimensions of the iPhone screen. But Safari is still brain dead: It doesn't support popular Web technologies like Flash, Java, Silverlight, or Windows Media. Still.
Storage. Apple's portable devices come with copious amounts of storage. But there's no way to expand the storage, which is too bad: An 8 GB SD card can be had for less than $25 right now. Come on, Apple.
No copy and paste. Still.
MMS. This is another curious omission given the iPhone's multimedia functionality: It doesn't support MMS phone-to-phone photo sending.
Instant messaging. Apple doesn't include a version of its iChat instant messaging application (or any IM for that matter).
Speaker placement. The iPhone 3G's speakers are louder and sound better than those of its predecessor. But they're still located in the same poor location on the bottom of the device, where it's as easy as ever to inadvertently "mute" the speaker with your hand just by holding the device normally.
High-speed modem. Amazingly, you still can't tether an iPhone to your laptop and use it like a high-speed modem, as you can with many other smart phones. I miss this functionality a lot, and as I finish up this review on the train between Boston and Washington D.C., I wish I could get online in this way on the laptop, as I did years ago with a tethered Windows Mobile phone. (Yes, using 3G, this time from Verizon.)
Welches Programm nutzt du dazu?tja;D da hat jemand wohl kein jailbroken iPhone..
ich kann das iPhone als High-Speed modem benutzen....