pogue.blogs.nytimes.com — ?The CALENDAR program, does it accept input on the phone, or is it just a dumb viewer of synced data from your mac, like the ipod is?? ?Calendar program isn?t finished yet, but I did see an ?add new event? icon on the placeholder graphic.
Jan 13, 2007 View in Crawl 4
ross_Jan 14, 2007
we've been judging this thing for months now...even before it was announced...why would we all suddenly stop now?
wonotchJan 14, 2007
@ defect DSYou could have just said "Hit the reply button next time." or something. Talk about overkill...
danetrainJan 14, 2007
Dear defectDSSUCK ITG'day!DaneTrainP.S. Just in case, I'm not trying to be an assh**e or anything. :)
Closed AccountJan 14, 2007
David Pogue is a really cool guy. I would love to have a job with the New York Times reviewing technology. He is almost up there with Kevin Rose
Closed AccountJan 14, 2007
Ok. I just digged you down to -4.
wognaJan 14, 2007
I just dugg you up to +0. Suck on that gutterpunk.
dustkoJan 14, 2007
It will be a closed system, but that's not necessarily a bad thing, it just means Apple will have to pick up the tab and create apps that consumers demand (or more likely, build apps that create a consumer demand). Steve has made it very clear in his interviews that there will be more apps on the iPhone by the time it launches, with more to come in the future. Considering how well Apple create consumer solutions (the whole iLife suite), I don't see this as a bad thing. If you think it's underwhelming, keep in mind that we've only seen the beginning of the iPhone in the keynote. Steve didn't even demo the inbuilt camera, let alone mention the future possibilities of the device. One thing's for sure though, it's not like what it ships with is all it will ever have. Expect new apps and new functionality to be continually announced throughout the year and beyond.
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