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Posted by Andreas on Apr 8, '09 10:36 AM for everyone
iTunes 8.1 is now faster and more responsive. You will enjoy noticeable improvements when working with large libraries, browsing the iTunes Store, preparing to sync with iPod or iPhone, and optimizing photos for syncing.

In addition, iTunes 8.1 provides many other improvements and bug fixes, including:

-Supports syncing with iPod shuffle (3rd generation)
-Allows friends to request songs for iTunes DJ
-Adds Genius sidebar for your Movies and TV Shows
-Improves performance when downloading iTunes Plus songs
-Provides AutoFill for manually managed iPods
-Allows CDs to be imported at the same sound quality as iTunes Plus
-Includes many accessibility improvements
-Allows iTunes U and the iTunes Store to be disabled separately using Parental Controls

Posted by Andreas on Mar 12, '09 6:57 PM for everyone
Sudah bisa di download di http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/

iTunes 8.1 is now faster and more responsive. You will enjoy noticeable improvements when working with large libraries, browsing the iTunes Store, preparing to sync with iPod or iPhone, and optimizing photos for syncing.

In addition, iTunes 8.1 provides many other improvements and bug fixes, including:

- Supports syncing with iPod shuffle (3rd generation)
- Allows friends to request songs for iTunes DJ
- Adds Genius sidebar for your Movies and TV Shows
- Improves performance when downloading iTunes Plus songs
- Provides AutoFill for manually managed iPods
- Allows CDs to be imported at the same sound quality as iTunes Plus
- Includes many accessibility improvements
- Allows iTunes U and the iTunes Store to be disabled separately using Parental Controls


The update should appear in 'software update'. I also received a Front Row update at the same time. Let us know if this new version of iTunes floats your boat.

Posted by Andreas on Mar 11, '09 9:40 AM for everyone
Kapasitas sekarang 4GB atau 1.000 lagu dengan desain baru minimalis tanpa tombol navigasi, berbahan body alumunium dengan pilihan 2 warna (silver dan black) dan berbobot 10 gram bener bener semakin imut. Daya tahan batrey meningkat menjadi 10 jam. Earphone dalam paketnya adalah earphone terbaru apple with remote untuk kontrol volume dan playback nya.











spec lengkap
http://www.apple.com/ipodshuffle/specs.html


Posted by Andreas on Mar 1, '09 9:18 AM for everyone

The iPhone is like the bacon-wrapped scallop of the mobile world. Both are quite visually pleasing relative to their peers, easy to use, and generally liked by the masses. Spend a little too much time with either, however, and you start to see the flaws. With the scallops, the grease and animal fat that was oh-so delicious on the way down begins to clog your arteries and slow your saunter. With the iPhone, the interface that seemed oh-so-polished when it first met your fingertips begins to show signs of oversight and imperfection.

We’ve been using the iPhone for just a few months shy of two years now, and a few things that once seemed trivial have come to drive us up the wall. You’ll find no mention of the glaring faults (The lack of MMS, Copy and Paste, etc) in this list - we’re talking about the stuff that we just can’t believe made it through Apple’s user experience team.

1. Long text messages are auto-split without any indication or character counter

img_0022

Not too long ago, I sent someone the following text message:

I think you’re already on 802.11n, which is what provides the range they’re claiming. Can you wait till 14th? I’ll fix your network up in As a thanks for taking me to the airport

The response:

king me - wtf?

See, text messages (all phones, not just the iPhone) only support up to 160 characters. In the message I sent above, everything before the “king” in “taking” got sent as one message, with everything after being sent separately. Unfortunately, the seperate parts of these messages often arrive out of order - and occasionally, they just don’t make it at all. The only message my recipient got was “king me to the airport”, which didn’t make a whole lot of sense. Maybe if we were playing some sort of odd location-based game of checkers?

Most phones only allow you to input 160 characters, while others will let you type more than 160 characters but indicate in some way that the message will be split - and nearly all phones have a character countdown of some sort, letting you know when you’re close to the limit. The iPhone doesn’t do any of this. It just lets you type away until your fingers get sore, with no acknowledgement of the limit whatsoever. Not only does this lead to all sorts of confusion when the messages only make it over partially or out of order, but it’s bad for your wallet, too: each block of 160 characters counts as a separate text. If you’re not on an unlimited texting plan, that’s a quick way to gobble up your allotment unknowingly.

iphonezzz-1

2. UI Inconsistencies: The Jumping “New” button

In the Calendar application, the button you press to add a new event is in the upper right. In the SMS application, you press the button in the upper right to start a new text message. In the email app? Bottom right.

Sure, it seems trivial - and it is! But it’s also ultra sloppy on Apple’s part. A consistent UI is a strong UI, and this subtle inconsistency keeps the user from being able to train their thumb to know that new item = upper right. When you have to glance around the screen with each use because you can’t remember where the button is in this particular app, something is wrong.

3. No search in email

On a slow day, my work inbox usually gets nailed every 7 or 8 minutes. On a crazy day, such as during a trade show, this shoots up to once every 3-4 minutes. I don’t mind so much about the rate - it’s easy enough to tell if an email is important or not from the subject line and the first few sentences - but the noise makes it almost impossible to find something I need if its been more than a few hours since it hit my inbox.

Things would be a whole lot easier if the iPhone email client had even the simplest search functionality - but it doesn’t. Want to find that email your boss sent you a few days ago? Nope. Know a keyword or two that’ll filter your mountain of mail down to 2-3 important ones? Thats nice. Have fun hitting the “Load more messages” button and reading every subject line until you find what you want.

img_00261
4. No attaching pictures from within an email

Wow! You managed to nab a cute, candid picture of your kid in which they don’t have spaghetti sauce, mud, or any other junk on their face. That’s unheard of! You better send this one to Grandma to prove your kids aren’t horribly dirty all of the time. So, you type up the email - just a paragraph or two telling her what’s going on, how things are. You know, the standard stuff. You go to attach the image, just as you’re used to doing on any other email client.

Yeah, you can’t. You can only attach images to emails by hitting the “Email Photo” button within the Photo app. Once you’ve started the email the traditional way and done your typing, you’re out of luck. You either get to retype the whole thing, or send a separate email just for the image. Pft.

5. Inconsistent gestures: Where’s the swipe?

Apple likes to make a big deal about their gestures. They’re simple to use, and simple to explain - it’s a killer thing to pitch in a commercial.

Thing is, Apple doesn’t really use them very often - at least, not as often as they could. If you want to swipe between photos, sure - you can do that, which they’re happy to show you in every iPhone advertisement ever. Want to swipe between days on the Calendar? No. Notes or emails? Nope and nope. The latter are all things that are often viewed back-to-back - why make me click out and then back in if you’re trying to prove to me that swiping works?

6. No way to add home screen shortcuts for Airplane mode, WiFi, Blueooth, or 3G toggling.

Battery life isn’t exactly the iPhone’s strong point - and this is especially true with the iPhone 3G. It improves significantly if you flip the WiFi, Bluetooth and 3G radios off if you’re not using them - but this gets real old, real fast. Toggling WiFi takes 3 clicks, and toggling 3G takes 4.

I know what you’re saying. “What the hell? Is he really complaining about 3 or 4 clicks?”. Yes, yes I am. The 100th time you’ve flipped the switch on 3G to make sure you’re still juiced up and the end of a long day, that 400th click feels like the millionth.

We’re not saying everyone needs (or wants) quick toggles on their home screen - but for the sake of us road/airplane warriors, it’d be a nice option. Apple made it possible to add shortcuts to websites to the home screen - why not do the same for the more commonly accessed local settings?

7. Arranging applications sucks something terrible

As long as we’re only moving one or two applications around the homescreen, we’ve got no qualms with the way Apple’s set up App management. Hold an icon, wait a second, and drag it wherever you want. If you want to organize a bunch of apps by their functionality (or worse yet, alphabetically), that system is a pile of hot garbage. Ten click-hold-drags later, you’ve probably moved on to something more interesting, such as ironing all of your underwear or counting the specks of dust on the nearest TV screen.

While we can’t think of a better solution while staying within the device, YouTube user svdomer09
conjured up the above concept video showing an absolutely awesome alternative within iTunes. It’s the best solution we’ve seen yet, and we’d sing a song from the top of the tallest mountain if it were made real.

picture-81
8. No custom themes without jailbreaking

Since the App Store launched, the number of reasons to jailbreak your iPhone has dwindled. What’s left:

  • Passive-aggressively sticking it to the man
  • Running apps that Apple inexplicably won’t allow, such as video recording/streaming stuff.
  • Illegal stuff we won’t talk about here
  • Customizing your theme.

Apple can’t help you with the sticking it to the man part, their App Store acceptance polices are a whole different (and long winded) topic, and they probably don’t want to help you with the illegal stuff - but the lack of theming support and basic customization is just silly.

We get it, Apple. You’re proud of your UI and your Human Interface Guidelines. You like things to be standard and uniform. (We’ll go ahead and ignore Brushed Metal, for now.)

But I’m tired of staring into the void. Apple provides a means of setting a “Wallpaper” - but it’s only shown for the half second between waking up and unlocking the handset. Then it’s back to the void.

The enthusiast community has already proven that there are a huge number of people who want to customize. Hundreds upon hundreds of themes (of varying quality) exist - why not allow the user to put a bit of fun in their device whenever they grow tired of the same old look? Even if, unlike the jailbreak-only themes, application icons were locked from modification for the sake of a consistent user experience, the user should be able to change the dock and the background. Hell, they could even add themes to the App Store and sell’em for 99 cents a pop.

The iPhone is still one of a handful of devices we’d call favorites - but it’s not perfect. Got any iPhone nitpicks of your own? Voice’em in the comments. Go ahead - it feels good.


Posted by Andreas on Feb 3, '09 8:03 PM for everyone
Wow.., bakal ada iphone baru, fitur-fitur nya cooldan desainnya semakin tipis dan stylis.

- Body titanium dan glassdesign
- OLED Screen
- 3,5G
- True GPS
- iChat Camera
- Removable Battrey
- Standard Headphones jack
- 3,2 Megapixel Camera
- 32GB capacity
- Messaging Light


Beritanya ada disini

Posted by Andreas on Jan 27, '09 4:02 AM for everyone

This update improves cursor movement when using the Apple Mini DisplayPort to Dual-Link DVI adapter with the Mini DisplayPort enabled MacBook Air, MacBook and MacBook Pro.

It also improves playback of HD video running on systems with NVIDIA GeForce 7300 GT or GeForce 9600M graphics.

Download


Posted by Andreas on Jan 21, '09 6:08 PM for everyone
Apple has released QuickTime 7.6 an update which increases reliability, improves compatibility and enhances security

The release is recommended for all QuickTime 7 users and can be installed via Software Update.

Video:
- Improves single-pass H.264 encoding quality
- Increases the playback reliability of Motion JPEG media

Audio:
- Improves AAC encoding fidelity
- Audio tracks from MPEG video files now export consistently

Application Support:
- Improves compatibility with iChat and Photo Booth

Security:
For information on the security content of this update, please visit this website:
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1222

Posted by Andreas on Jan 6, '09 7:29 PM for everyone
Earlier today at Macworld Expo, Phill Schiller announced that availability of iLife '09. Not a huge surprise, as a few of us guessed we'd see an iLife update today, but it does offer some cool new features.

iPhoto

iPhoto has been updated with two features called "Faces" and "Places." Faces, as you may have guessed, lets you tag photos by subjects' faces, similar to what Facebook and Picasa have done. iPhoto makes its best guess as to the identity of a subject based on previous tags and asks for confirmation. Of course, Phil called it "..the best technology we've found for face detection."

Places allows for geotagging of photos. Some cameras and the 3G iPhone will use GPS information to tag photos on longitude and latitude. iPhoto then organizes those photos by location, or "place." Also, Flickr and Facebook support are built-in. Those without GPS access can retro-tag photos by hand.

Other iPhoto features include enhanced slideshows and travel books.

Click below to read more about iLife '09

Update: Reader Lou purchased iLife '09 today, and says his receipt shows a ship date of Feb. 09.

Posted by Andreas on Jan 6, '09 7:22 PM for everyone
Spec :
17-inch widescreen LED-backlit 1920 x 1200, glossy display;
2.66 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo with 6MB shared L2 cache;
1066 MHz front-side bus;
4GB 1066 MHz DDR3 SDRAM;
NVIDIA GeForce 9400M integrated graphics;
NVIDIA GeForce 9600M GT discrete graphics with 512MB GDDR3 video memory;
320GB Serial ATA hard drive running at 5400 rpm, with Sudden Motion Sensor;
a slot-load 8X SuperDrive with double-layer support (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW) optical drive;
Mini DisplayPort for video output (adapters sold separately);
built-in AirPort Extreme® 802.11n wireless networking and Bluetooth 2.1+EDR;
Gigabit Ethernet port;
built-in iSight video camera;
three USB 2.0 ports;
one FireWire® 800 port (FireWire 400 compatible);
ExpressCard/34 expansion card slot;
one audio line in and one audio line out port, each supporting both optical digital and analog;
glass Multi-Touch trackpad and illuminated keyboard; (hmmm...so interesting - can't imagine, how's it feel to my fingers...LoL)
built-in, 95WHr lithium polymer battery; and
85 Watt MagSafe® Power Adapter.

oh ya batrey nya tahan 8 jam, heboohh


Posted by Andreas on Dec 24, '08 3:09 AM for everyone
Last night, Apple released a Mail update for users experiencing problems with Mail unexpectedly quitting. "This can be caused by using a copy of Mail that wasn't updated properly (you may need to install the Mail Update)," the update page states.

If you have been experiencing problems with Mail.app post-10.5.6, then you can install the update by visiting the Support Downloads website and download the installer package.


Posted by Andreas on Dec 22, '08 6:21 PM for everyone
Today, RIM has released a preview version of its BlackBerry Media Sync utility for OS X. It's no Desktop Manager, but at least it is a start.

BlackBerry Media Sync is designed to let you easily sync iTunes playlists (minus any DRM files) with your BlackBerry device. In August, PocketMac added a similar feature to its software, which is available for free from RIM's web site for all BlackBerry owners.

Basically, BlackBerry Media Sync will let you use your BlackBerry as an iPod shuffle (again, with the caveat that any iTunes DRM songs will not transfer to your BlackBerry). You can sync specific playlists or just have the free space automatically filled by your music collection.

There are some things you need to be aware of:

  • If you have another BlackBerry syncing utility, like PocketMac or The Missing Sync installed, it will stop working after installing BlackBerry Media Sync. You will need to uninstall BlackBerry Media Sync and probably reinstall your other software to regain functionality.
  • It is slow. At least in my tests, syncing using the BlackBerry Media Sync app was slower than just dragging an album/playlist over to the BlackBerry's Music folder in Finder.
  • When you sync, it seems to re-transfer playlists all over again, even if they haven't changed. 
Still, we finally have a native RIM utility for OS X. Hopefully a full-fledged Desktop Manager is in the future.


Posted by Andreas on Dec 15, '08 11:59 PM for everyone
For details about the update you can visit the support document found here

You can install the update by selecting Software Update from the Apple Menu at the top left of your screen.

What's new in this update?
Address Book
- Improves reliability of Address Book syncing with iPhone and other devices and applications.

AirPort
- Improves the reliability of AirPort connections, including improvements when roaming in large wireless networks with an Intel-based Mac.

Client management
- Improves reliability of synchronizing files on a portable home directory.
- Fixes an issue in Mac OS X 10.5.4 and 10.5.5 in which managed users may not see printers that use the Generic PPD.
- Client computers that use UUID-based ByHost preferences now respect managed Screen Saver settings.

iChat
- Addresses an issue that could cause an encryption alert to appear in the chat window.
- Setting your iChat status to "invisible" via AppleScript no longer logs you out of iChat.
- Resolves an issue in which pasting text from a Microsoft Office document could insert an image rather than text.

Graphics
- Includes general improvements to gaming performance.
- Includes graphics improvements for iChat, Cover Flow, Aperture, and iTunes.
- Includes fixes for possible graphics distortion issues with certain ATI graphics cards.

Mail
- Includes overall performance and reliability fixes.
- Improves Connection Doctor accuracy.
- Fixes an issue that could cause messages identified as junk to remain in the inbox.
- Fixes an issue that could cause Mail to append a character to the file extension of an attachment.
- Addresses an issue that could prevent Mail from quitting.
- Improves reliability when printing PDF attachments.

MobileMe
- Contacts, calendars, and bookmarks on a Mac automatically sync within a minute of the change being made on the computer, another device, or the web at me.com.

Networking
- Improves Apple File Service performance, especially when using a home directory hosted on an AFP server. Important: If you are using Mac OS X 10.5.6 (client) to connect to a Mac OS X Server 10.4-based server, it is strongly recommended that you update the server to Mac OS X Server version 10.4.11.
- Improves the performance and reliability of TCP connections.
- Improves reliability and performance for AT&T 3G cards.
- Updates the ssh Terminal command for compatibility with more ssh servers.

Printing
- Improves printing for the Adobe CS3 application suite.
- Improves printing for USB-based Brother and Canon printers.

Parental Controls
- Addresses an issue in which a parentally-controlled account could be unable to access the iTunes Store.
- Includes general fixes for time limits.
- Resolves an issue that prevented adding allowed websites from Safari via drag and drop.

Time Machine
- Fixes issues that could cause Time Machine to state the backup volume could not be found.
- Improves Time Machine reliability with Time Capsule.

Safari
- Improves compatibility with web proxy servers.

General
- Includes Mac OS X security improvements.
- Addresses inaccuracies with Calculator when the Mac OS X language is set to German or Swiss German.
- Improves the performance and reliability of Chess.
- Improves DVD Player performance and reliability.
- Performance improvements for iCal are included.
- Fixes an issue when running the New iCal Events Automator action as an applet.
- Adds a Trackpad System Preference pane for portable Macs.
- Improves compatibility with smart cards such as the U.S. Department of Defense Common Access Card.
- Updates time zone data and Daylight Saving Time rules for several countries.

Posted by Andreas on Dec 11, '08 4:06 AM for everyone
Apple today released firmware updates for their 'Late 2008' notebooks. The notebooks require two updates, a EFI and a SMC update.

This SMC Firmware Update improves the sensing and accuracy of the MagSafe Power Adapter indicator light, and the battery charge indicator lights on MacBook (Late 2008) computers.

The EFI update fixes several issues to improve the stability of MacBook (Late 2008) computers.

MacBook EFI Firmware Update 1.3
MacBook SMC Firmware Update 1.2

MacBook Pro EFI Firmware Update 1.6
MacBook Pro 15-inch SMC Firmware Update 1.2

MacBook Air EFI Firmware Update 1.1
MacBook Air SMC Firmware Update 1.1

Posted by Andreas on Dec 3, '08 7:38 AM for everyone
Setelah bertahun-tahun menjadikan kekebalan Mac terhadap virus, Apple kini menyarankan kepada para penggunanya untuk menginstal antivirus di komputernya. Apple yang kerap kali mengejek Windows yang rawan virus dalam iklan "Get a Mac" mengeluarkan saran ini disalah satu forumnya, mengatakan bahwa "Apple menyarankan penggunaan lebih dari satu aplikasi antivirus agar para penulis virus harus menghindari lebih dari satu aplikasi, menjadikan proses pembuatan virus jauh lebih sulit." 

Apple kemudian merekomendasikan beberapa jenis produk kepada para pemilik Mac termasuk 
Intego VirusBarrier X5Norton Anti-Virus 11 for Macintosh dan McAfee VirusScan for Mac. 

Apple sudah lama membangun persepsi bahwa 
platform Mac bebas dari virus. Salah satu iklan pertama dalam kampanye iklan "I'm a Mac, I'm a PC" Apple menitik beratkan pada virus. Karakter PC mengatakan bahwa "tahun lalu terdapat lebih dari 114.000 virus untuk PC" yang kemudian dibalas dengan "di PC, bukan Mac" oleh karakter Mac. 

Memang benar sebagian besar 
malware online menargetkan Windows yang memegang pangsa pasar dominan di dunia, akan tetapi belakangan ini sudah ada beberapa virus yang dibuat khusus untuk menargetkan Mac OS X, walaupun sebagian besar hanya merupakan demonstrasi dan hanya sedikit yang mempengaruhi pengguna Mac, salah satunya adalah AppleScript.THT yang sudah pernah kita diskusikan sebelumnya dan mampu mengendalikan sebuah Mac dan merekam screenshot atau berfungsi sebagai keylogger (via PC Pro



Posted by Andreas on Dec 3, '08 3:16 AM for everyone
ddd
dThumbnaild
ddd
Dari iTunes Store, hari ini memberikan daftar aplikasi tertinggi dari hail penjualan dan jumlah download untuk, Top Games, Top Entertainment, Top Utilities, Top Social Networking, and Top Music.


Posted by Andreas on Dec 1, '08 9:28 PM for everyone
Sudah 2 hari dibikin sebel ama might mouse karena pentil scroll-nya macet tidak bisa dibuat untuk scroll ke bawah, sudah 3 kali ini aku alami, tapi sebelum-sebelumnya hanya dengan membersihkan dengan tisue basah dan lap kering, sudah lancar lagi, tapi kali ini bener-bener bandel, setelah baca baca tips-tips di internet, banyak yang mencoba untuk membongkarnya tapi resiko malah dapat merusak body plastiknya karena memang sama apple dirancang untuk tidak mudah dibuka, beberapa cara dan tips yang telah aku coba :

1. Menngunakan cara di dari apple support
hasil : tidak berhasil

2. Menggunakan penghapus karet pensil, dengan cara menekan penghapus tsb pada scroll ball ke segala arah.
Hasil : Malah scrool keatas ikutan macet

3. memakai kertas putih bersih ditaruh diatas meja, dengan menekan Scroll ball keatas kertas tersebut, digerakkan kesemua arah hingga kotoran terlihat menempel dikertas.
Hasil : Belum berhasil

4. Menggulangi langkah no. 3 tapi sebelumnya pada scroll ball nya aku semprot dengan cairan clear for electronic atau memakai cairan pembersih lensa kontak, sambil nekannya diatas kertas agak kasar dan tega hehehehe, diputer puter ke segala penjuru, sambil di ketok biar kotorannya jatuh. YES hasilnya : scroll nya sudah normal berfungsi lagi.

Selamat mencoba


Posted by Andreas on Nov 28, '08 8:10 PM for everyone

Posted by Andreas on Nov 26, '08 8:28 PM for everyone
Apple has released QuickTime 7.5.7 to fix issues with the new MacBooks not displaying iTunes content on external displays.

This update is recommended for owners of MacBook, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro with Mini DisplayPort. The update addresses an issue where some standard definition purchases from the iTunes Store do not play on some external displays.

You can install the update by selecting Software Update from the Apple menu at the top left of your screen

Posted by Andreas on Nov 25, '08 11:18 PM for everyone

Selain berfungsi sebagai penghubung ke external monitor, ternyata DisplayPort baru ini yg dipasang di macbook dan macbook pro baru ini mempunyai fungsi sistem digital copy protection.

Sistem yang juga dikenal dengan sebutan DPCP (DisplayPort Content Protection) ini dirancang

untuk mencegah pembajakan akan film berkualitas HD yang telah dilengkapi fitur DRM.

Adanya proteksi DPCP pada MacBook / Pro Unibody terbaru ini tidak mengijinkan penggunanya untuk memutar film kualitas HD pada sembarang projector, televisi HDTV, ataupun monitor yang tidak dilengkapi fitur HDCP; sebuah standar industri untuk proteksi film dengan gambar berkualitas tinggi (HD).


Tentunya hal ini sangat melindungi bisnis penjualan dan persewaan content digital seperti yang dilakukan Apple di iTunes Store.




Posted by Andreas on Nov 25, '08 7:31 PM for everyone
Like many of you who read TUAW, I use an iPhone 3G as my day-to-day cell phone, mobile email and SMS device and to watch videos, listen to music and generally be entertained while waiting at the doctor's office, in line for a movie or when I need to kill some time. As many of you also know, there's another company out there besides Apple who's had a pretty tight hold on the "smart" phone market until recently, especially when it comes to mobile email and generally taking care of business as a professional on-the-go. That company, of course, is RIM and their device is the Blackberry.

As of last Friday, RIM has released a new Blackberry they consider a potential "iPhone Killer" or, at the very least, a serious competitor for the iPhone -- the Blackberry Storm. As a Blackberry user prior to switching to the iPhone, I was of course very interested in seeing if the Storm would, in fact, offer any sort of competition to the iPhone. So, to find out, I got a Storm last Friday and spent the weekend using it alongside my iPhone to see how both devices compare when performing many of the tasks I use on a daily basis.

What follows is by no means scientific, nor is it an in-depth review of the Storm. I'll leave that to Engadget. These are just my observations and impressions as an iPhone and Mac user when also using a Storm to accomplish the same tasks.Size and Weight: The "official" dimensions of the Blackberry Storm are 4.43"(L) x 2.45" (W) x .55" (D) and weight of 5.5 oz. The iPhone 3G comes in at 4.5" (L) x 2.4" (W) x .48" (D) and 4.7 oz. Putting the stats aside, the Storm also feels quite a bit heavier than the iPhone 3G, although about the same as the original iPhone. Regardless of the weight and size differences, neither device are particularly difficult to carry in a pocket or attached to a belt.

However, over the months I've gotten used to the iPhone's dimensions, so the Storm seemed a bit awkward, especially when turning it to enable landscape mode. It's also a bit slippery to hold, even with its textured metal battery cover. The iPhone 3G's slimmer design makes it slightly easier to hold onto, at least for me. I'm sure with more use of the Storm, the awkwardness will most likely fade. Still, as this is a device you use in your hand almost exclusively, it would be nice if it was comfortable, even upon first picking it up.

Email / General Text Entry: As email is what Blackberries are known for, it was interesting to see how the Storm stood up when compared to the iPhone. Setting up my various email accounts on the Storm using Verizon's BIS system was very easy and my email was up and running in a few minutes. Compared to the iPhone, which takes quite a bit more text entry of account particulars to get email to function, the Storm was the clear winner.

However, once the accounts were all set up on both devices, composing email or text messages was another matter entirely. Even though I'm a former Blackberry user, I had very little trouble adapting to the iPhone's way of entering text. Sure, I'm not as fast using it as I was using a Blackberry with a full Qwerty keyboard, but I can go relatively quickly. Sadly, the Storm made my text entry speed grind to a halt.

Entering text on the Storm is a painful process. When the device is in portrait mode, you must use a smaller keyboard that doesn't provide a full Qwerty experience. On top of that. you are forced to use RIM's "Sure Type" technology and can't even enable "Multi-Tap."

Perhaps its just me, but I hate "Sure Type." I much prefer "Multi-Tap" and have at least some speed when using it. I'm not sure why RIM decided to only allow "Sure Type" when in portrait mode, but I hope that changes in a subsequent software update. Or they provide a full Qwerty keyboard in portrait mode, which I would love. Until then, I was only able to achieve adequate text entry speed by using the Storm in landscape mode.

Even then, text entry is far less capable than on the iPhone. Sure, on the iPhone I occasionally hit the wrong key. But on the Storm, it was almost a constant. Having to click down on the button to make it read, while seemingly a good idea to RIM's engineers, made it more difficult to enter text. It did not provide the same "feel" as having actual keys to press. Instead, it just made it more difficult.

Accuracy was also an issue. Perhaps with more practice I will be able to strike the correct keys more frequently. But until then, it's a chore and a seemingly steep learning curve not present when I first started using the iPhone. On the iPhone, I was able to start entering text quite quickly after only a few minutes and have steadily increased my speed and accuracy while using the device on a daily basis for several months.

Phone / Network: I'm not a Verizon lover. Nor do I have a particular fondness for AT&T. If the iPhone wasn't an AT&T exclusive, I wouldn't be on AT&T and would probably still be using a Blackberry on T-Mobile. However, whatever my personal bias against Verizon, their commercials don't lie. Their network is excellent. Everywhere I went in Los Angeles over the weekend, I had a very strong signal on the Storm. I was able to make calls the first time I dialed and those calls did not subsequently drop while I drove through parts of the city.

Sadly, AT&T's performance was not nearly as good. Granted, they've made improvements to their network in the time the iPhone has been available. But still, I experienced dropped calls or, at several points during the day, the inability to make a call at all due to poor network signal or no service entirely. The Storm, on the other hand, performed flawlessly and had none of these issues.

The iPhone's 3G coverage was also spotty. Several times during the weekend I was unable to get a 3G signal and had to use the Edge network to check something via the web browser, at greatly reduced speed, or navigate with Google Maps. Conversely, the Storm. which uses Verizon's EVDO network, had none of these issues. Whenever I didn't have a 3G signal, EVDO was available on the Storm. Speed test results, when comparing the Storm's EVDO to the iPhone's 3G, showed the Storm as the clear winner as well.

Multi-Media / Sync: Both the iPhone 3G and the Storm can play music, video and take photos. The Storm can also record video, which the iPhone inexplicably lacks. Still, even with the Storm's greater number of megapixels (3.2 versus the iPhone's 2.0), the photos it takes are not vastly superior to the iPhone's. They have slightly better contrast but still appear a bit washed out.

And the lag experienced when taking pictures with the Storm means you have to hold the Storm quite a long time before the picture is actually taken. Something that will surely spoil pictures quite often if you forget and move the Storm too soon. The iPhone, however, takes pictures quickly and its camera, while not great, takes passable photos. The Storm's built-in flash is also a nice addition, but not something I really missed when using the iPhone, so it doesn't really help the Storm's case here.

For music and video, there's really no comparison. The iPhone, with its tight integration with iTunes, is a superior music and video player. Getting songs and videos on the iPhone is extremely easy and they look and sound very good. While the audio and video quality of the Storm is mostly comparable to the iPhone, the way you get music and video on it is far more convoluted -- especially if you don't happen to have a Windows machine around.

Fortunately, you can use the Storm as a USB mass storage device and drag and drop music and video files onto it. However, only non-DRM files will work. So if you've purchased music or video from the iTunes store, you can't play it on the Storm.

You can supposedly also use Pocketmac's software to sync some data with the Storm -- although in my limited testing over the weekend, it did not work as expected. I need to investigate this further and in the meantime will use the USB method or a Windows machine for music and video. I also did not test the Storm with VMWare Fusion or Parallels, but I will and report back my findings.

Sadly, the USB method does not help when you want to put contacts from Apple's Address Book or your iCal calendars on the Storm. For that, I used Google's Sync tool for the Blackberry in combination with BusySync and the Address Book to CSV converter and was then able to sync my Google calendar and contacts to the Storm.

This works fine if you happen to use Google for your contacts and calendar or want to take the time to configure all the extra software you need to accomplish it. But if not, and if you can't get Pocketmac to work, you're stuck entering everything on the Storm manually, with no reliable and non-convoluted way to sync with your Mac.

There are rumors of new software that will sync Macs with Blackberries like the Storm. However, until its released, there are a still a few methods and work-arounds to accomplish it. But none of the methods or work-arounds matches the simplicity of the iPhone -- especially for Mac users.

Conclusion: So, is the Blackberry Storm an "iPhone Killer"? I don't think its so much a "Killer" as a worthy competitor late to the contest. It does have quite a few good things going for it, especially the Verizon network. But the iPhone's ease of use, integration with other Apple software like iTunes and its overall design, give it the edge over the Storm.

Do I wish the iPhone was a better phone, had better 3G coverage, recorded video and was easier to setup email? Of course. But I use the iPhone as more than a phone, so with that in mind, its a better and more well-rounded device for me. In the end, the iPhone, like most Apple products, is just easier and more pleasant to use.

The Storm, as a first generation device, still has a lot of room for improvement. But then again, so did the first generation of the iPhone -- which was not without its share of issues. Perhaps with time, and some updates to the software, the Storm will improve and one day equal, or even surpass, the iPhone? Anythings possible. Until then, unless you just love the Blackberry and have to have the latest device and/or are already a Verizon customer, you should probably just stick with the iPhone.

Update: Turns out, after more use of the Storm and info from a few helpful tipsters, you can enable "Multi-Tap" when in portrait mode. I still couldn't seem to get it to be the default, for whatever reason, but it can be enabled by selecting it in the Blackberry menu when, for example, composing an email or text message. So, that's a good thing and one more small step for the Storm in the right direction.

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