Apple iPhone Goes to Cingular

Apple unveiled their latest product, iPhone, at MacWorld on 9 Jan. The iPhone combines three products [a revolutionary mobile phone, a widescreen iPod with touch controls, and a breakthrough Internet communications device with desktop-class email, web browsing, maps, and searching] into one small and lightweight handheld device. iPhone is a new mobile phone that allows you to make a call by simply pointing your finger at a name or number in your address book, a favorites list, or a call log. It also automatically syncs all your contacts from a PC, Mac, or Internet service such as Yahoo!. And it lets you select and listen to voicemail messages in whatever order you want just like email. In addition, you can easily construct a favorites list for your most frequently made calls, and quickly merge calls together to create conference calls.

iPhone’s built-in proximity sensor detects when users lift iPhone to their ear and immediately turns off the display to save power and prevent inadvertent touches until iPhone is moved away. iPhone’s built-in ambient light sensor automatically adjusts the display’s brightness to the appropriate level for the current ambient light, thereby enhancing the user experience and saving power at the same time.
As for controls, the iPhone sports a multi-touch display. This display basically lets you control all functions with your fingers. The iPhone is also relatively thin, measuring 4.5 x 2.4 x 0.46 inches. Battery life is reported to be up to five hours for talk time/Web browsing/video watching and up to 16 hours for audio playback.
Here is a further breakdown of features based on the three different directions the iPhone takes:
Mobile Phone:
Widescreen iPod:
- Touch controls that lets music lovers scroll through entire lists of songs, artists, albums and playlist.
- Cover Flow, which lets you browse your music library by album cover artwork. When navigating your music library on iPhone, you are automatically switched into Cover Flow by rotating iPhone into its landscape position.
- A 3.5-inch widscreen display.
- Touch controls for play-pause, chapter forward-backward and volume when watching TV shows and movies.
- Syncs content from a user’s iTunes library on their PC or Mac, and can play any music or video content they have purchased from the online iTunes store.
Internet Communications Device:
- Features a HTML email client which fetches your email in the background from most POP3 or IMAP mail services and displays photos and graphics right along with the text. iPhone is fully multi-tasking, so you can be reading a web page while downloading your email in the background.
- Yahoo! Mail is offering a new free “push” IMAP email service to all iPhone users that automatically pushes new email to a user’s iPhone, and can be set up by entering your Yahoo! name and password.
- iPhone will also work with most industry standard IMAP and POP based email services, such as Microsoft Exchange, Apple .Mac Mail, AOL Mail, Google Gmail and most ISP mail services.
- Runs a version of the Mac Safari web browser for viewing web pages and lets one zoom in to expand any section by tapping on iPhone’s multi-touch display with their finger. Also includes built-in Google Search and Yahoo! Search, automatic syncing of bookmarks from a PC or Mac.
- Support for wireless Internet usage via Wi-Fi or EDGE.
- Built-in Google Maps, featuring Google’s online maps service and iPhone’s maps application, lets users view maps, satellite images, traffic information and get directions.
The new iPhone will be available in the US in June 2007, in a 4GB model for $499 and an 8GB model for $599 and will run off of the Cingular cellular phone network. iPhone will be sold in the US through Apple’s retail and online stores, and through Cingular’s retail and online stores. For Europe, iPhone will be available in late 2007, and Asia in 2008.Tags:
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Disclaimer: We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct.















January 12th, 2007 at 5:55 pm
[…] “This issue is not about money, and it’s not about the phone itself; it is about Cisco’s obligation to protect its trademark in the face of Apple using it without our permission,” said Jon Noh, Cisco spokesperson, explained to BBC. Cisco Systems is suing Apple for trademark infringement in a US federal court, for using the iPhone name. After 30 months and millions of dollars in top-secret development, Apple has launched a sleek new iPod-cellular phone this week, using the name claimed by Cisco. Cisco is asking the court to forbid Apple from using the name “iPhone,” which Cisco has held a trademark on since 2000 and used to brand a line of its own Internet-enabled phones that began shipping last spring and officially launched three weeks ago. […]
January 22nd, 2007 at 2:15 am
[…] Above all, these features contribute to the phone’s beautifully sleek and simplistic appearance. The handset was designed in tandem with the Italian fashion designer, glowing icons on the face of the phone disappear when not in use to reveal a pure, un-adulterated black exterior. But the most interesting point about the phone is its resemblance to Apple’s iPhone. […]