Entries from November 2007 ↓
November 30th, 2007 — hardware
AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson confirmed what everybody has been speculated, a 3G iPhone will be released “next year”. The assumption would have to be in Q1, but that hasn’t been confirmed yet.
So why do you care about “3G”? well, it’s all about speed. Downloading web pages on the iPhone over the current “2G” AT&T Edge network is about 1/10th of the speed of “3G”, so the difference is big; really big.
The only issue is going to be battery life — 3G sucks serious power. My other phone (an HTC Kaiser) is 3G and under heavy browsing will run down in a few hours. Let’s see if the wizs at Apple can do better.
November 30th, 2007 — shopping
The decidedly simple white of Apple products was once a sign of cool, but has it become so common its almost the new beige?
ColorWare transforms your white iPhone into a colorful beauty. Not a bad idea if you want your iPhone to be even more of a fashion statement then it already is.

November 30th, 2007 — games
The best thing about having an iPhone would be the applications you can use on it.
Here’s one that I thought was particularly cool – the Gameboy Emulator. Apparently ZodTTD just released a Gameboy Emulator that would let you play Gameboy games on the iPhone.
You’d have to supply your own BIOS and games in ROM, so it does sound like one for the advanced user. But still, how cool is that! Can’t wait to try this out!

November 28th, 2007 — games
Here’s a Battle Ship clone if you’re a fan of the game. This one is pretty cool because it’s multiplayer. Even has chat.

November 28th, 2007 — Uncategorized
Here’s a good one. Point your browser on the iPhone to http://www.cellfire.com and you’ll be able to see a bunch of recent coupon offers. Find one that matches what you’re buying and you can just being it up on your phone and show it too the salesperson.

November 15th, 2007 — hardware

Is the iPhone scratch proof? In the PC World article How Tough is The iPhone the iPhone is put through a series of tests to see how it holds up. It is placed in a zip log bag alongside keys and other articles. It gets shaken up, rubbed up against the keys, it even gets a key scratched hard on its glass surface. If that is not enough, it then gets dropped onto several different types of surfaces. The iPhone amazingly passes these tests. The glass screen emerges with its screen in pristine condition, no scratches! The metal case gets banged up a bit on the drops but that’s about all – “...don’t need to coddle it like a baby…” – WOW!
But for those of us who suffer from Scratch-O-Phobia and are not convinced by the above tests, there is a product available- The Invisible Shield. Its made of a military grade translucent urethane which was originally developed to protect helicopter blades from wear and tear. The Invisible Shield coats most handheld devices(iPhone included) and comes with a lifetime guarantee. Sounds like a product worthy of the iPhone!
November 5th, 2007 — google, gphone
For anybody waiting for Google’s answer to the iPhone there was some news today, but it wasn’t a device being announced. Google “I’m more open than you” Inc. announced Android, an open platform for mobile devices to simplify application development.Android promises to complete what J2ME started, but more or less failed to deliver. Be a standard interface developers can use to create applications — reminds me a little of what BluePulse was attempting until they became a social network.
So is this cool? Well, yeah. It is. We can do a lot more with software for our phones, but development costs and proprietary APIs really hamper development of cool apps. If Android catches on it will seriously dent dev time, and that means more apps on more phones with more features.Google has a battle on its hands though. Sun is tight with the manufactures, and people like Apple, Nokia, Motorola and Samsung have massive investments in their systems and software. Google already have deals with HTC, so there should be plenty of hardware soon, just not sure enough to entice lots of app developers over. We’ll see.