Posts Tagged ‘Iphone 5’

Palm vs. iPhone 3.0: which one would you want to get?

Written by admin on . Posted in Cell Phones

haiyeer questioned:

Palm vs. iPhone 3.0: which one would you want to get?

iPhone or Palm Pre?

Sprint, Palm Pre’s special carrier announced that Palm Pre would be launched on June 6. Then this summer that’s the question many would-be-smart phone purchasers just might question themselves. Both have their pros and cons. The iPhone has a huge profile and market presence, but the Pre has the ancient-school Palm faithful who have been waiting a long time for their Next Huge Thing. The iPhone has massive channels and even Sprint admits they won’t be advertising the Palm Pre much due to low initial supply. But those most likely to want the Palm Pre already know it’s appearance, where to get, and may well be reading this while already standing in line.

But what about the consumer on the edge? The consumer who has an older iPhone or Palm, or the one who’s about to go up from a feature phone for the first time. What about the dreaded “undecided”? This article is for them. Now let’s get it on.

Show

[img]http://nidesoft.com/forum/iphonevspalm/iphone-vs-palm.jpg[/img]

IPhone: gorgeous, large (3.5 inch diagonal), high-resolution (480×320 screen) multi-touch show.

Palm Pre: Gorgeous, large (3.1 inch diagonal), high-resolution (480×320 screen). The screen is not as large as the iPhone (0.4 inch less vital) but this is balanced against other hardware features such as the removable array and sliding keyboard further below.

Advantage: Tie

Keyboard

Palm Pre has a physical, hardware-based QWERTY keyboard while the iPhone has a virtual, software-based keyboard that can be QWERTY (or whatever thing else).

For those who need to feel those keys, the Palm Pre is the obvious choice. But, the Pre’s keyboard is reportedly somewhere between a Treo Pro and a Palm Centro: softer, more gummy keys with a narrow width overall. It might not be to everyone’s weakness. That said, at least the Pre has one, and it’s a slider to boot, which means if you don’t need it, you can just tuck it away back below the screen where it came from.

The iPhone, can draw any kind of keyboard it wants. So if you need to type occasionally (or regularly) in Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese, or most any language, you can easily switch between those exact keyboards. You can also automatically be open with web-optimized, or video, audio — any task at all — specific keyboards.

The iPhone is an brilliant touch screen phone, no doubt. But for heavy texters and e-mail addicts, the lack of a physical keyboard can be annoying. Now Palm Pre combined a touch screen and keyboard, pleasing both touch screen and keyboard fans. So Palm Pre wins.

Advantage: Palm Pre

Network

In the US — which is the only country with initial availability — Sprint has special rights to the Palm Pre, much as AT&T has a lock on the iPhone. When you choose mobile phone, also make a choice between the carriers. There are two factors to consider:

1. AT&T is a GSM network, which means you can theoretically pop out your SIM card and place it in another mobile phone. It is fantastic in emergencies, and if you travel and don’t want to deal with roaming charges. Sprint is CDMA, so any phone switches involves a call to your carrier at the very least.

2. Sprint doesn’t currently allow simultaneous voice and data. This means if you’re talking on the Palm Pre, you can’t use the web or email, and vice versa. If you’re using an iPhone on AT&T’s EDGE benefit, you’ll have the same problem, but if you’re on 3G, there are no worries at all. For the Palm Pre, you’d have to switch to Wi-Fi to do that.

Again, for me, using voice and data at the same time has become a must. Looking up information while out and about on a call is a frequent occurrence. If you’re not accustomed to it, you may not miss it, but once you are, it’s hard to go back.

Advantage: iPhone

Applications

Installing new applications on the iPhone is a complete joy.  It’s ultra simple and quick – an absolutely superb encounter than virtually nobody has matched today.  With 15,000+ apps now available there is something here for everybody and even if there is a lot of rubbish there are also many superb applications.

Palm has already confirmed that it will make a full App Catalog – one that will presumably have the same functionality and ease-of-use as Apple’s App Store. Though maybe there will not (initially at least) be as many apps available for the iPhone as for the Palm Pre.

Advantage: Tie

Multimedia

For Palm Pre, it offers a 3-megapixel camera. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a chance to snap any photos, but early reports say that the quality is pretty excellent. Disappointingly, the camera won’t have video recording capabilities at this time, but those could be added in the future. In terms of music and movie, it is reported that the music sounds very gorgeous, also the movie looks perfect with the 320*480 pixels screen. But Palm Pre can only play MPEG-4, H.263, H.264 videos and MP3, AAC, AAC+, AMR, QCELP, WAV audio files. What if you have large music or video collections you want to carry around with you on your mobile? I have got third part software to do this admire job: use [url=http://www.nidesoft.com/dvd-to-palm-converter.html]Nidesoft DVD to Palm Converter[/url] to convert DVD collections into Palm Pre and [url=http://www.nidesoft.com/video-converter.html]Nidesoft Video Converter[/url] to convert video or music collections into Palm Pre.

As far as iPhone, there’s no doubt that iPhone is wonderful music mobile phone. Listening to music, viewing photos and watching movies/videos is just “something else” on the iPhone. IPhone can play MPEG-4 videos with resolution of 640 *480, up to 160 Kbps. Also it chains audio formats including AAC (16 to 320 kbps), MP3 (16 to 320 kbps), and WAV. With its gorgeous 3.5-inch wide screen show and Multi-Touch controls, iPhone is an incredible iPod. Watch movies and TV shows in wide screen, iPhone brings you a video encounter unlike any other portable device.

[img]http://nidesoft.com/forum/iphonevspalm/iphone-video-preview.gif[/img]

Advantage: Tie

End

So there you have it. Two companies that both pride themselves on their high-skill products. One who’s Newton spawned an industry that the other is Pilot defined and dominated, went on to converge with the Treo only to fall behind and get eclipsed by the iPhone, and is now poised to come back with the Pre. Apple is going on to the third version of their smart phone line while Palm is introducing the first version of their third act.

If it seems like the only real deciding factors are where you live and work, what you want to do, and how you prefer to do it, well — yeah. That’s it.

Bottom line, the competition between iPhone and Pre is excellent for Apple and Palm — it keeps them on their toes and on top of their games — and it’s better for us. We’re lucky to live in a time and place where we have such increasingly awesome mobile options to choose between.

Come this summer, we’ll have a few more choices as well. Which one will be yours?

Blackberry Storm Vs Iphone 3g: Will Rim’s Blackberry be Iphone Killer?

Written by admin on . Posted in Cell Phones

chendeng questioned:

Recently I had published a side-by-side comparison of the iPhone 3G and T-Mobile G1 DVD Converter which evoked an fascinating debate.(from:iphonehacks)

Here comes another side-by-side comparison of Apple’s iPhone 3G with RIM’s BlackBerry Storm, which is considered as another iPhone Killer.

BlackBerry Storm is expected to be released some time in November exclusively by Verizon in the US and Vodafone in UK.

Hardware Spec

Dimension:

Storm = 4.4 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches

iPhone 3G = 5.5 x 2.4 x 0.48 inches

Weight:

Storm = 155g

iPhone = 133g

Screen Size:

Storm = 3.2 inches

iPhone = 3.5 inches

Camera:

Storm = 3.2M pixel

iPhone = 2M pixel

Memory:

Storm = 1GB on board + 16GB expandable with MicroSD

iPhone = 8GB / 16GB (No expansion)

Array:

Storm = 5.5hrs talk time / 360 hrs standby

iPhone = 5hrs talk time / 300 hrs standby

Unlike T-Mobile G1 that we have reviewed earlier, BlackBerry Storm “steals” the design and looks much like the iPhone 3G. But, it does not look as sleek as iPhone 3G. It’s a small bit thicker (0.14inches more) and heavier (22g more) than iPhone 3G. And, surprisingly, BlackBerry Storm does not come with Wi-Fi support or they probably consider Verizon’s 3G network is excellent enough.

BlackBerry Storm’s screen is also a small bit less vital (3.2 inch) as compared to iPhone 3G (3.5 inch), but it sports a slightly higher resolution (460×360 pixels) than iPhone 3G (460×360 pixels).

Winner: iPhone 3G

Tips: How to convert DVD to iPhone 3G

Input Method

With the success of iPhone’s multi-touch interface, touch is now the standard for any new smartphone. Like iPhone, Storm does not have physical slide-out keyboard and uses the screen as input, in fact its RIM’s first smartphone to feature a touch screen. But, RIM highlights that the touch technology developed on Storm is somewhat uncommon to other touch screen smartphone available. RIM refers its touch technology as “Clickable Screen”. That means, when users press key on screen, they can really feel the key pressed and release, just like you press the mouse button. They call it a game changing touch technology that makes on-screen keyboard more appealing.

Also, like T-Mobile G1, it will have built-in cut and paste capability across applications a feature missing from iPhone 3G.

Winner:Its hard to call a winner on this one, until we get feedback from users on RIM’s touch technology. We like iPhone 3G’s revolutionary multi-touch interface.

Multimedia

Multimedia support is not the strong area of RIM smartphones, as they predominantly targets business users. Storm is developed with multiple support in mind to lure more casual users. Standard feature like music and video playback is included. A wide range of audio plot (including MP3, AAC, WMA, etc) and video plot (including MPEG4, WMV, etc). Storm also allows you to sync iTunes music files via BlackBerry Media Sync and has its own media software to manage your music.

iPhone 3G is the best iPod Apple has ever made. The music and video playback encounter is awesome. And, Apple continues to update features like Genius Playlist into iPhone makes iPhone’s multimedia support nearly indomitable. With its seamless integration with iTunes Store, you can download songs wirelessly or sync it between desktop using iTunes. iPhone 3G also chains a wide range of music formats but only the stage Quick Time video.

Winner: iPhone 3G

Camera & Video Recording

Apple did not upgrade the camera in iPhone 3G, its still a basic 2 megapixel camera while Storm comes with 3.2 megapixel camera and includes video recording capability. Storm also includes a flash and auto focus for its camera.

Winner: BlackBerry Storm

Modem Capability

iPhone 3G does not support tethering and Apple tends to ban any applications in App Store that adds this capability. The only option you have is to jailbreak the iPhone and use jailbreak apps such as PDANet, iPhoneModem etc. BlackBerry Storm, on the other hands, comes with tethering built-in.

Winner: BlackBerry Storm

Tips: How to convert DVD to Blackberry with Daniusoft DVD BlackBerry Converter?

Enterprise Feature

Apple has made quite a few strides to take market share from RIM in the enterprise area. iPhone 3G, with built-in support for Microsoft’s ActiveSync protocol, lets enterprise users to access Microsoft Exchange’s services. Also, it takes a fantastic step forwards to support Cisco IPsec VPN, which is a standard in enterprise wireless security. Further, it incorporates a feature to let administrator to wipe data remotely, in case the iPhone is lost or stolen.

RIM is always the leader in enterprise wireless devices. Storm, by no means, continues to lead in this area. The enterprise support is outstanding that uncommon security policies can be defined, such that administrator may enable or shutdown specific bluetooth profiles; and even, to disable its digital camera access.

Winner: BlackBerry Storm

To sum up, BlackBerry strikes a balance between business and causal use. It’s, by far, the sleekest BlackBerry; which should help RIM lure causal customers.

Is it another iPhone killer? Its hard to conclude. iPhone 3G and BlackBerry both come with some unique features that neither have and they are positioned differently in the market.

But, I still fail to know the omission of Wi-Fi in BlackBerry Storm, its right that BlackBerry is embattled at the business users who use it primarily for email, but still it seems like a major disadvantage over iPhone 3G.

As a consumer device, iPhone will certainly win thanks to the iPod attention, its Safari browser which is easily the most advanced web browser on a portable device which makes browsing the internet on the iPhone a treat and overall for its cool factor. But if you turn to some business-savoir-faire users and enterprise, BlackBerry is still the de-facto choice.

RIM has also not told the pricing or the official shipping date.

You can checkout the demo video of BlackBerry Storm to get an overview:

BlackBerry Storm, T-Mobile G1 and soon to be released Nokia’s XpressMusic phone (Nokia’s first touch screen phone) might or might not end up being iPhone killers but they are healthy competition to Apple’s iPhone 3G that will ensure that Apple constantly innovates which in the end is beneficial for consumers like us.

Let us know which one is a winner from your point of view and why?