So now it’s coming. In two days from now, the first stores in the USA will have Apple’s iPhone in the shelves from 6 PM. It’s got a 4GB and 8GB memory inside, so you choose you much space you want. It’s got this nice, super-cool Multi-Touch screen, with which you can zoom in and out pictures, browse through Cover Flow, navigate websites, read email and flick through Google Maps. All of these are the features that are delivered with the phone. Quite nice, I seriously have to admit. And until June 11, this phone was somewhat sexy and I was happily waiting for the next generation mobile device.
As the very last thing during the Keynote Address in the WWDC 2007 in San Francisco, Steve Jobs explained how developers could start to create their applications for the iPhone in this very moment.
This means: No SDK (Source Development Kit) for true software development
How does this affect the potential user?
- All “applications” can only run inside iPhone’s Safari. If they run there, they run in your Firefox, too.
- Once you got the device, you will be stuck forever with the things Apple supplies to you (except the updates Apple releases, or potential other software we don’t know of yet)
- You cannot install any other applications, such as games, or other instant messengers, or even movie players.
All of this is because Apple does not supply the necessary snippets of code required, to create programs for the phone. May I mention that the phone runs OS X, Steve? And may I also mention that Mac OS X evidently has and even ships with SDKs so that developers can actually develop software for it?
Despite the super duper critics the iPhone has earned just now, this tiny little fact, takes away a lot of “wow” factor on the mobile device.
What’s also taking down the euphoria are the price plans, that AT&T and Apple have announced. It starts at 60 Dollars per month with unlimited data and limited text messaging. All plans include unlimited data, but the rest appears to be pretty limited. Revolutionary mobile device?
So. iPhone won’t let you install any other software, because there is none. And cannot be, without an SDK. Despite the fact that it runs OS X, and I can imagine writing applications for it cannot be so hard as OS X is also a UNIX. Oh well.
One last thing…
Things the iPhone doesn’t have:
• Songs as Ringtones
• Games
• Any flash support (Wha…?!)
• Instant Messaging
• Picture messages (MMS) (WHA…?!?!)
• Video recording
• Voice recognition or voice dialing
• Wireless Bluetooth Stereo Streaming (A2DP)
• One-size-fits-all headset jack (May have to buy an adapter for certain headphones)
Stuff we already knew it didn’t have
• 3G (EV-DO/HSDPA)
• GPS
• A real keyboard
• Removable battery
• Expandable Storage
• Direct iTunes Music Store Access (Over Wi-Fi or EDGE)
—-
So… who’s gonna buy one, still?
Not me, that’s for sure… a Cover Flow iPod with Multitouch screen doesn’t help this time, Steve…
=(