
Steve Jobs just introduced the world to what seems to be the next "it" gadget. First it was the 1984 Mac that changed computers. Then it was the iPod that changed audio. Now he’s giving us the iPhone. The iPhone is actually a new widescreen iPod. More later.
The iPhone is a new “smartphone” that runs OS X. It has only one button and a huge touch screen. The phone is the thinnest smartphone on the market, thinner than the Motorola Q and Blackjack.
Like the iPod, you will navigate the iPhone using your finger as a pointing device on the 3.5-inch screen which displays at 160ppi.
The phone comes with a 2 megapixel camera built in. It also has a 3.5mm headphone jack, a speaker, a mic input and, of course, an iPod connector port.
The phone is quad-band GSM with EDGE support. It has WiFi and Bluetooth 2.0, but not 3G right now. 3G will likely come later.
The phone’s UI is sleak and designed to make it easier to:
Place calls
Send SMS messages
Take and organize photos
Checking your voicemail is really easy. You can easily navigate all of your saved and new voicemail.
It has 3 sensors that are revolutionary: a proximity sensor, an ambient light sensor, and an accelerometer. The proximity sensor senses how close the screen is to your ear, face, or other object. This sensor will shut off the display and touchscreen when it is near your face. The ambient light sensor senses how bright the environment is around you. So, it adjusts the brightness of the phone’s screen to save power. And finally, the accelerometer senses when the phone is being held in portrait or landscape.
The iPhone has push email technology, just a like a Blackberry. You can also download rich HTML emails with any POP3 or IMAP service.
The iPhone has a built in web browser, Safari that even runs Google Maps.
The iPhone will function like an iPod displaying movies, TV shows, pictures and playing back audio.
Apple has partnered with Google, Yahoo, and Cingular to bring exclusive and embedded services to this phone.