Yes, I was one of those (slightly obsessed) people who stood in line last Friday to be one of the first to own Apple’s new iPhone. I’ve been interested in designing technologies that are adaptive to human needs for many years and this gadget is one of the most interesting things I’ve seen in a while. It brings together existing technologies (there’s nothing really new in the iPhone) and focuses on creating a user experience that is exceptionally compelling and highly functional.
I must admit, there were several motivating factors that helped me make the decision to purchase an iPhone at this time — I don’t usually purchase 1.0 versions of any physical product at this price point. First, I already use Apple hardware and software to organize my life — the calendar, email, web browser, and iTunes media organizer included in MacOS X. That makes the iPhone the first device to be fully compatible with my digital world. Previous smart phones, such as the Blackberry and the Treo, require third-party software to synchronize with a Mac, and the results are somewhat mixed. Second, my partner Tracy was in need of a new cell phone, so I had the excuse of buying an iPhone and passing my old phone to her (this also helped me bypass the “early termination fee” when moving from Verizon to AT&T). Third, my iPod’s screen has been on the fritz for several months. It’s basically unreadable and I use it only as an alarm clock, since those settings were already in place before the screen went out. If these elements had not been in place, I may have chosen to wait until next January when a second iteration of iPhone hardware may be announced.
The verdict?
For me, the iPhone is working as advertised. Synchronizing with my computer is as easy as plugging it in and letting iTunes do the work. The battery lasts all day, even with significant use of all features. I can add new calendar events to the phone while out and about, check and reply to email, take notes, and check the weather. The web browsing experience is amazing for the screen size. The touch screen keyboard took about 3 days to get used to, but now I’m typing on it at about 75% of my full-keyboard typing speed. In short, this thing just works.
That’s not to say it’s perfect. Others have identified several shortcomings and the AT&T network has been oddly missing in some critical places (near the Seattle airport, for example). I’m sure that Apple and AT&T teams are watching closely the initial experiences of early adopters in order to improve that experience in the coming months.
My favorite feature of the iPhone has to do with its architecture — it works as a phone, but it thinks like a modern computer, meaning it can do multiple things at one time. While on a call, it’s easy to look up a phone number or address. If you are near a WIFI network, you can even look up information on the web to relay to the person on the other end of the phone. Yesterday afternoon I was working at a remote site when I received a call asking if I wanted to go to the movies. I switched to speaker phone, opened the web browser, and did a Google search for “Ratatouille near 98103″ - then relayed that information to my friend (the movie was ok, but not as good as I wanted it to be). This multi-tasking ability is absent in most cell phones, and it’s really the key ingredient that changes a “phone” into a “communications and entertainment” device.
Since the phone is based on Apple’s MacOS X operating system, there’s a tremendous ability to improve the user experience without changing the hardware at all. I expect this to be the first cell phone I’ve owned that will actually get better over time without a hardware upgrade.
I’ll end with a list of software-only changes that would significantly improve the iPhone experience.
Things I the iPhone Could Do with a Software Update
As a user experience designer, here are the things I hope Apple will update in the iPhone’s software over the coming months to make current generation iPhones even better:
- Sync with my computer automatically over a wi-fi network (right now a cable is required)
- Sync To Do Lists from Address Book
- Copy/Paste
- Add Flash player to Safari on the iPhone (web sites made with Flash technology don’t work today)
- Voice commands for making calls hands-free (a feature present on most modern cell phones)
- Vocal directions for Google Maps (avoid the danger of looking at the screen while driving)
- Allow developers to make iPhone widgets (I’d like a flight status widget for example)
- View Notes and Email in landscape orientation (only web browsing currently works in landscape)
- One-touch email to “me” for Notes, Pictures, Maps
- Send calendar invitations via email
- Send contact info via email (find a contact, click to send that info to a 3rd party)
- Show multiple calendars with different colors and options to display selected calendars only
- Bluetooth tether — connect a laptop wirelessly to the phone for remote internet access
- Create new email folders from the phone for organizing messages
- Email rules - add ability to filter and organize email coming to the phone (see my previous post about using gMail to do this on the server before it gets to your iPhone or in-box)



