sbisson: (Default)
sbisson ([personal profile] sbisson) wrote2008-07-08 10:43 am
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Meet your personal computer

Nothing (at least techwise) gets more heated more quickly than a discussion about mobile phones - especially about smartphones. I've been thinking about this, and tying it in with some other thoughts and discussions I've been having on the smartphone as a tool for defining user context. The result is a possible reason why people rushed to sign up for iPhone upgrades yesterday, and why so many people felt let down and disappointed by O2's online store.

So why do people get so attached to their smartphones? The answer's quite simple. The smartphone is the first truly personal computer. PCs have claimed to be personal, and they certainly offer many of the features we want, but as they're tethered to a desk or a lap, they're not there with us all the time. Smartphones have become personally ubiquitous. They're with us from the moment we wake up (in a recent study a significant proportion of Blackberry users noted that they used their phones as alarm clocks), to the moment we go to sleep. They know where we are, they know what we're doing. They help us communicate with the people who matter to us, and they help us fend off those we don't want around. We use them to find out where we want to be, and to find out where other people are. In short, they've rapidly become an extension of who and what we are.

Do you get a twinge every time you lend a phone to a friend - or even a partner? You're handing over something much more personal and much more intimate than a diary, so it's no wonder you feel a strong attachment to a hunk of plastic and electronics.

But underneath it all we're not satisfied. Our smartphones have become so useful, so entwined with our lives, that we see every flaw, every minor bug as a strike against the device. Each of us has that perfect phone in our heads - the device that is so in tune with who we are and what we want that it becomes a seamless extension of our lives. And when our current phone fails to match up to that platonic ideal, we become disillusioned, even though we defend the device to all comers. We want our phone to be that ideal, and we want the people around us to believe that it is, that we've made the right choice. We forget that all phones are compromises, where the technology and the dreams of the designers are brought together in a device that will meet most of the needs of most of the people. It's the old 80/20 rule at work - but unfortunately that 20% will always include something that matters to someone.

Even so, at the end of that year or eighteen months with the phone we rush to the online shops and review sites and try to find the next smartphone to make part of our lives. We read the promises of the manufacturers and we plunge in to another intimate relationship. After all, this could be it, this could be the one true device that will mesh with everything you are and you want. We want to believe, as we want that personal ideal. That's why the iPhone upgrade mess yesterday was so important to so many people - there was already an emotional attachment to the ideal the iPhone 3G had become. When O2 was unable to deliver on its promises, people felt rejected and unwanted - as the object of their desires was now unavailable and distant. Taunted with a glimpse of the ideal they were thrown out Eden and left looking at the angel with the sword in the new found shape of a sold out notice on a web page.

I'm a mobile device agnostic. I have to be, as I write about them as part of my life. As a result I tend to carry two or three different devices at any one time. At the moment that's a one of the latest Blackberry Pearls, a first generation iPhone, and a HTC Kaiser running Windows Mobile 6.1 - though I can quickly get my hands on a handful of other devices with different operating systems and different form factors. They're all very different devices, all very different ways of working with personal information. Some work well as Internet browsing devices, some as messaging tools, and some as all-purpose computing platforms that you can fill with software you choose. What's interesting is that none of the design decisions made by the device developers are wrong - they all stem from different assumptions of what the end user wants. The choices that have been made follow logically from those initial assumptions. That's why there's no one-size-fits-all device out there, and why there's always going to be something better, something that scratches that itch that only you have.

Maybe you're a Blackberry user, or Symbian, or Windows Mobile, or iPhone. To be honest it doesn't really matter. What really matters is that you've got a device that works for you. There's no point in evangelising it to everyone around you - and even less point in denigrating someone else's choice. The device in your pocket or in your bag can only matter to you, as it's now part of your life. It's what works for you now - and it may not work for you tomorrow. The compromises you've made with the designers' compromises can only last so long, and soon enough you'll be looking for something new, for a new device to blend into your life.

After all, the one true smartphone (for you) has to be out there somewhere...

[identity profile] ramtops.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 09:46 am (UTC)(link)
What's with this "we"? I haven't had a new phone for over two years, and only got that one because my previous one had broken.

I hardly make any calls, never use it for the web, do very few texts. We're not all slaves to the little chaps.

[identity profile] sharikkamur.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 09:59 am (UTC)(link)
A very interesting set of thoughts.

I'm so tempted by a smartphone, I really am. I don't know if I can justify it yet but I do rather fancy one. The iPhone has appeal, but that's because I'm a Mac user. But then the Blackberry might also be quite fun.

Maybe you're a Blackberry user, or Symbian, or Windows Mobile, or iPhone. To be honest it doesn't really matter. What really matters is that you've got a device that works for you. There's no point in evangelising it to everyone around you - and even less point in denigrating someone else's choice.

That's so true, and not just for smartphones. Well put, sir!

[identity profile] megadog.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 10:29 am (UTC)(link)
"the one true smartphone (for you) has to be out there somewhere..."

Call me a Luddite, but I don't *want* a 'smartphone'. I want a basic, easy-to-use reliable and above-all robust phone that makes/receives calls and texts. I don't want it to play music or watch videos (I've got proper dedicated hardware for that). In many places I can't carry a phone which has a camera (Official Secrets Act.)If I *want* to take pictures then Mr. Canon offers a range of rather fine DSLRs. Browse the Web? IBM's Thinkpad and a piece of Ethernet works rather more reliably than WiFi/3G-type stuff.

Sorry, but the whole idea of smartphone-as-jack-of-all-trades is something which just doesn't work mentally for me. My current phone is a Nokia that's at least five years old (I got it secondhand). It is a purpose-designed tool that makes and receives calls, sends/receives texts. It does these things extremely well (when I am within range of a base-station: my house works rather like a Faraday cage) and to be honest I don't think a 'smartphone' would make/receive calls any better.
andrewducker: (Default)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2008-07-08 11:04 am (UTC)(link)
I don't carry a bag with me most of the time. I have limited space in my pockets. So having a single bit of kit that makes calls, checks email, takes photos and surfs the web is great.

But my needs are not everyone's :->
andrewducker: (Default)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2008-07-08 11:02 am (UTC)(link)
I love mine. I love how the calendar on it syncs with Google, the email app is great, etc.

It's not perfect - web browsing is ok, but could be better, and having to tell it what connection method to use rather than it picking the highest one off a priority list is a pain. But by and large I'm very happy with it.

And it's great that there's a wide spread of different models and approaches - everyone pushes everyone else, and we end up with better phones all round.

[identity profile] felesin.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 12:24 pm (UTC)(link)
The word "compromise" comes up a couple of times, but the problem is people don't seem to want to compromise on anything. A phone is a device for making & receiving calls, a PC for internet/emails etc, a camera for taking photos and so on. If you add up the physical size of all these items you have a pretty large amount of kit - even if you have gone for the slimmest laptop and smallest camera. Then people expect what's probably the smallest of these gadgets to be able to handle all the functions of the other items just as well as the original.
Well I've got news for you guys - current technology means you just can't do that!
When I first went to Symbian I was amazed at the functionality available in a device as small as the Series 5; now people expect the same functionality in a mobile phone plus a load more.
But I'm the same as a few of the posters above, I want my phone to make/receive calls and texts. I think I've used the camera function about 3 times in the last 5 years. If I want to browse the internet I find the screen is too small, the functionality limited and the keypad too fiddly - the device is just too physically small for comfort. So my compromise is to wait a short while until I can get back home, or to the car where the laptop is.

[identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
So I wasn't the only one who felt O2 rather stuffed up yesterday?

[identity profile] bohemiancoast.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 01:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Actually, looking at the web, it appears that O2 didn't stuff up; but rather that they quite deliberately diverted existing customers to fail pages while selling their entire stock of iPhones as far as possible, to new customers. Which I'm sure is highly effective as a money making strategy, but as an existing iPhone customer, I'm fairly hacked off.

[identity profile] ajshepherd.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 03:32 pm (UTC)(link)
You should show them what you feel and take your business elsewhere!

[identity profile] marypcb.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 06:11 pm (UTC)(link)
if anyone else sold the iPhone, you could... and in the spirit of himself's entry, I'll resist the urge to say I'm an iPhone sceptic

[identity profile] cobrabay.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 01:01 pm (UTC)(link)
"Maybe you're a Blackberry user, or Symbian, or Windows Mobile, or iPhone. To be honest it doesn't really matter. What really matters is that you've got a device that works for you."

Oh, I wish! My current phone is an HTC Tytn (actually the T-Mobile badged version). At the time I bought it, it was pretty much the best fit available for what I wanted, yet I still don't like it. The keyboard is small and awkward to use, the screen resolution poor, the OS is laughable and the GUI atrocious. Sync with my Exchange server is less reliable than the Northern Line, and none of the 4 browsers I've had installed are much cop. I've managed to improve things a bit by adding lots of 3rd party software, such as a not entirely kosher upgrade to WinMob 6, an easier to use free GUI (PointUI), the aforementioned assemblage of browsers, plus a bunch of other applications and sundry registry hacks. The only apps I actually like on it are Google Maps and Mobipocket. Still, it makes a decent 3G modem for my laptop.
There are times when I wonder if I wasn't better off with a dumb phone and my old Psion 5.

[identity profile] dsgood.livejournal.com 2008-07-08 05:52 pm (UTC)(link)
What I want: A device which folds up to fit in a shirt pocket. And unfolds into:
1) A reasonably-large screen and 2) a full-sized keyboard with touchpad.