Apple may be a bunch of control freaks, but the iPhone ecosystem (app store, horizontal and vertical integration, cloud stuff) is very nice indeed, and 4.0 looks very tasty.
Not yet. There are electronics retailers stocking them in this country but not carriers yet. I'd get one with a SIM only 30 day contract if I did get one right now (currently on PAYG, but I'd probably change that).
I am very happy with my iPhone (3GS) and it does, in the main, "just work" - at least as much as any other phone I've ever had. I've rapidly become very used to having an internet in my pocket and Safari gets a lot of use when I'm out and about. The iPhone interface is very intuitive and usable, and it's surprising just how much you can do with a phone these days.
Darien has decided to abandon his 3G on principle after last week's announcements, though, and he's just waiting for the Desire to come onto O2 contract.
Darien has decided to abandon his 3G on principle after last week's announcements
More stuff about restrictive app store policies, or the iPhone OS 4.0 multitasking stuff?
I probably will get some sort of contract, but I think T-Mobile looked best for me: they did the minimum number of minutes per month and unlimited internet. scribb1e's got some sort of "unlimited internet for 1 year" thing with O2 PAYG, though, which might be worth a look.
It's great - it's cost me zero since I bought it because they transferred my old balance and gave me money for my old handset without even taking it away. Haven't nearly used up the money yet. Definitely the cheap way forward I think.
And the apps have actually saved me money so far :-)
That said, I'm loath to pay them money as they're so tight-fisted about application development, but I'm probably kidding myself when I imagine that I might write something for an Android phone anyway.
But the point about doing something for the principle is that it shouldn't *have* to affect you unduly before it seems wrong. I see the capricious nature of the iPhone Store rules and the ever-shrinking set of things you're allowed to develop (you can have any colo^H^H^H^Hlanguage as long as it's Obj-C!) as reasons in themselves.
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The App Store is the king for variety and (perhaps) quality.
If you just want Web and a couple of things - take your pick.
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Can you get a Nexus One under contract in the UK?
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Darien has decided to abandon his 3G on principle after last week's announcements, though, and he's just waiting for the Desire to come onto O2 contract.
O2 have themselves been good to both of us, btw.
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More stuff about restrictive app store policies, or the iPhone OS 4.0 multitasking stuff?
I probably will get some sort of contract, but I think T-Mobile looked best for me: they did the minimum number of minutes per month and unlimited internet. scribb1e's got some sort of "unlimited internet for 1 year" thing with O2 PAYG, though, which might be worth a look.
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And the apps have actually saved me money so far :-)
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But the point about doing something for the principle is that it shouldn't *have* to affect you unduly before it seems wrong. I see the capricious nature of the iPhone Store rules and the ever-shrinking set of things you're allowed to develop (you can have any colo^H^H^H^Hlanguage as long as it's Obj-C!) as reasons in themselves.
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