As I was riding my bicycle into work this morning, I wanted to change the song. I started to pull over so that I could reach into my backpack, and then I remembered the voice control. So I held down the microphone button on my headset and said "play playlist top rated" and then it started playing my top-rated playlist. The voice control thing is often problematic - "play Creed" somehow morphs into calling a co-worker whose last name (Kisch) is nothing like Creed. But when the voice control works, I have to say that it's pretty cool.
Another thing, I'm leaving work a couple of days ago and I'm listening to NPR using the NPR app over 3G with my headphones and I get in the car, and I unplug the headphones and plug in my car 3.5mm headphone jack for the Aux input and I noticed that the volume changed from the low setting that I had it on for my headphones to the max setting for the aux input (max volume works best with it). As a test, I unplugged the car aux plug and plugged it back into my headphones and the volume dropped down to the near bottom again. Back into the car and it's max'd. How does it know to do that? It can tell the impedance difference? However it works, it works well. When I get out of my car and put on my headphones, my eardrums don't blow out from the max volume.
That's it. I complain about my iPhone a fair bit, but there's a few little things that make it clear that they put as much thought into it as they are putting into hyping it.
Now I just need a Google Voice app like the Android guys have, a good GPS app with real-time traffic updates and lane assist, and for them to magically give me an SD slot and a battery with better battery life and I'll be pretty content with it.
I saw this new GPS app:
http://www.engadget.com/2009/0...-we-go-hand/#continued
if it had traffic updates, I'd buy it. Although the fact that an incoming call takes you out of the GPS app would be annoying. Ok, add a multitasking OS to my list above.
Another thing, I'm leaving work a couple of days ago and I'm listening to NPR using the NPR app over 3G with my headphones and I get in the car, and I unplug the headphones and plug in my car 3.5mm headphone jack for the Aux input and I noticed that the volume changed from the low setting that I had it on for my headphones to the max setting for the aux input (max volume works best with it). As a test, I unplugged the car aux plug and plugged it back into my headphones and the volume dropped down to the near bottom again. Back into the car and it's max'd. How does it know to do that? It can tell the impedance difference? However it works, it works well. When I get out of my car and put on my headphones, my eardrums don't blow out from the max volume.
That's it. I complain about my iPhone a fair bit, but there's a few little things that make it clear that they put as much thought into it as they are putting into hyping it.
Now I just need a Google Voice app like the Android guys have, a good GPS app with real-time traffic updates and lane assist, and for them to magically give me an SD slot and a battery with better battery life and I'll be pretty content with it.
I saw this new GPS app:
http://www.engadget.com/2009/0...-we-go-hand/#continued
if it had traffic updates, I'd buy it. Although the fact that an incoming call takes you out of the GPS app would be annoying. Ok, add a multitasking OS to my list above.