Thread: iPhone 5
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Posts: 500 | Thanked: 437 times | Joined on Nov 2009 @ Oklahoma
#3
Originally Posted by Wikiwide View Post
Here is the article:
http://www.nytimes.com/external/read...ref=technology

The conclusion:
In summary, that's a very smart smartphone we've just described: one that knows who owns it, unlocking just for them, one that can listen and respond to your questions, that can provide factual answers or point you to a related mobile app, one where your music library (and maybe more) is stored online, one that includes NFC for mobile payments, and one that works on whatever carrier you choose. Frankly, that sounds downright magical.

Now, taking it apart.

Working on whatever carrier you choose... Most phones and smartphones do that, and Maemo devices are mostly unlocked. It was iPhone's unique restriction to work with only one carrier.

NFC for mobile payments. First, it's introduced by Google's Nexus, iPhone is playing catch-up. Second, I don't use even Bluetooth, NFC would be a superfluous battery hog. Third, I don't connect my mobile phone with my shopping in any way at all. Maybe, I'm out-of-date, but NFC would be a minus (weight, battery eater, security vulnerability, etc) for me, I suppose; at least, not a plus.

Your music library (and maybe more) is stored online. I don't like cloud, I avoid cloud, I struggle not to use cloud. N900 has large memory to store music and videos, and microSD clot, and it's definitely a plus for N900 and a minus for iTunes.

Can listen and respond to your questions, can provide factual answers or point you to a related mobile app. I'm testing similar functionality on N900 with voximp and pocketsphinx; I have terrible pronunciation, but I can already switch to Fennec or open a new tab with Google in Fennec window by simple command (command-line interface of Fennec has become better in recent nightly). It's not all that usable, it has a long way to go, but it's customisable and open-source (unlike knowledge base Wolfram Alpha, which is also used by Bing, by the way). And I don't need Wolfram to tell me that 2 and 2 is 4, or calculate an integral, or tell capital of a country. I already have a simple calculator; I may find/create a better one (with integration and differentiation); I have dictionary which includes many different facts about different countries/words/etc; and I can find an open-source way to add one year, one month and one day to a date, thank you.

Knows who owns it, unlocking just for them. Laugh. The software will either not recognise the owner due to other clothes/haircut, or recognise a stranger as the owner. If you know how the owner looks, you can impersonate him, or otherwise just use a brute force attack by taking on all possible appearances. The novel way of unlocking will just make the phone less predictable for the owner and more entertaining for somebody else who tries to unlock it. The security will be diminished: previously you needed to watch owner inputting his password, now you only need to look at the owner, and you will know everything you need to unlock the iPhone.

And face recognition exists for N900, too, I just haven't tried hard enough to make it work for me.

Overall, some consumers will be in awe when iPhone 5 comes out, but all these features have existed before, iPhone will just give some polish and lock-down. Even one or two years old N900 could do all of these functions, if there was a strong incentive for the developers.
NFC was a feature of the Nokia 6131 NFC several years ago. So, nothing novel there for the iPhone5. Needing it or wanting is, as you've pointed out, a personal preference. Who knows, they might get sued by Nokia for patent infringement on NFC before it is all over.

Maemo devices work on whatever GSM carrier you wanted. They might as well be doorstops if you want to use one on a CDMA carrier (Verizon, US Cellular, Virgin Mobile US, etc.) Having CDMA and GSM together, what is being floated for the iPhone5, also is not novel, some devices have done this for a while, but to have a high profile device like the iPhone do it will mean, perhaps, Apple claiming to have "invented" a feature that prevously they wanted you to believe you didn't need.

What will be "magical" is how all the Apple fans flock to get it with many dollars, £s and euros heading toward Cupertino faster than you can swipe a homescreen.

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