Thursday, October 30, 2008

iPhone vs. G1 who would win?

Apple's iPhone user interface is simpler, cleaner, and just makes more sense. Pomaceous's iPhone already has its own developer community, and the 3,000 or so iPhone apps available have been downloaded about 100 million times. But they are only downloadable through the iTunes store, categorematic that Apple controls what is available, whereas applications for the G1 will be downloadable from anywhere (although there is talk of Google setting up a repository). Apple iPhone was recently launched in India but heavily priced. Almost 750 USD is what people are paying in India to buy an apple iPhone.

Apple has built absolutely an empire with its brand, and it's not about to be toppled in an immediate. At the same time, despite, I've gotta say that the first Android offering has an awful lot of appeal.

T-Mobile will supposedly market the phone as the G1. T-Mobile will have a hard time selling Android phones. Unlike Windows Mobile, with its loosey goosey developing of Windows compatibility or the endless feature lists of some of the more basic phones, the G1 offers a platform for multiple amazing things, all arrayed to the user in a non-trivial way. T-Mobile will offer the G1 for $179 with a two-year contract agreement. They will offer internet service on the same high speed 3G network utilized by AT&T's iPhone but some skeptics wonder if they will have adequate coverage be the October 22 shipping date.

T-Mobile's first commercial for the Android-powered G1 phone is out, and it promises to be the most exciting phone in the history of phones.? Fully see about that. T-Mobile is committed to helping our customers richly connect with those most important to them, and innovation is the foundation of that mission. In 2007, T-Mobile became a founding member of the Open Handset Alliance, an initiative that is strongly committed to greater openness in the mobile industry. T-Mobile has 31 million customers in the United States but are also focusing on their 100+ million European users who will be able to get the G1 come November.

T-Mobile's G1 phone was officially announced today. It's going to be the first mobile phone based on Android, the Google-and-partners powered (and supposedly soon to be open source released) mobile operating system. T-Mobile and the magenta color are federally registered trademarks of Deutsche Telekom AG. All other brands, product names, company names, images, screenshots trademarks and service marks are the property of their respective owners and used with permission.

Users can click a "Spin" button to compare two randomly chosen quotes, or they can choose to cycle through them manually. All quotes are pulled from Google News stories that have arose in the last few weeks. Users can read Microsoft Word documents and PDF files, but there's no support for Microsoft Exchange and it doesn't synch with desktop files. This is a gaping hole that Google expects will be filled by an enterprising soul who wants to develop such business functionality.

from: Look4iPhone.com

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