Hi Christina,

I've both witched to an iphone and then back to a nokia. And mainly because
of the ease of use that a nokia gives you.
 My nokia n86 will do everything the iphone does, but uses keys rather than
touch panel.

Don't get me wrong, the IPhone is a great device and it should be looked at
as an accessible device.
 But the nokia was just easier to use while on the go.

 The best thing to do is to try the iphone in store and also to look at a
number of the nokias that are available on the market and see which one
takes your fancy if at all.
 Your own thoughts and opinions are the most reliable. The iphone is great
but it may not be wat you want  in the long run.

 Cheers 

Simon F 

-----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Christina
Sent: Friday, 2 October 2009 6:46 a.m.
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone, my first impression


Hi, I'm considering getting an iphone.  I've never had an accessible  
phone.  The only thing I've ever been able to do with a cell is place  
or answer a call.  I'd like to be able to do more like use contacts,  
calendar, and caller id.  Since, you've switched from Nokia to iphone  
would you go back?  Do you feel you can do everything and more with  
the iphone or are there some aspects and features of the Nokias that  
you miss that I should consider?  Are Nokias and the third party text  
to speech software compatible with the mac?  I'm also wondering if I  
should wait until next summer to purchase an iphone.  I wonder what  
features and such apple is working on for the phone next year.

Thanks,
Christina
On Oct 1, 2009, at 2:47 AM, Krister Ekstrom wrote:

>
> Hi there,
> I come from the Nokia world myself, and i have found no problems
> phoning folks while out and about. With some training, you should be
> able to master the virtual keybord quite well and as for phoning,
> there's at least 3 ways of doing it. 1: use the dial pad, a little
> slow in the beginning, but it works.
> 2: use your contacts list, it's reachable either by itself by going
> into contacts or by pressing the "contacts" button from the phone app.
> 3: use voice control, works both with numbers in your address book and
> numbers not yet there.
> Hope this helps somewhat.
> /Krister
>
>
> 1 okt 2009 kl. 01.00 skrev Jean-Philippe Rykiel:
>
>> Dear all,
>> The first thing I saw, sorry, heard, was a demo video on Apple's
>> accessibility page. It was really impressive, and I already knew
>> that mastering such a revolutionary interface could not be achieved
>> in a day.
>> Well, never mind, I was excited enough to start calling shop after
>> shop in Paris to see if there was one available to try out. And so
>> here I was, this very morning, in a phone store in Paris, my hands
>> on this new magic toy.
>> I was glad I had read part of the instructions before I came, and
>> activating voice-over on the iPhone was quite easy, much to the
>> astonishment of the vendor.
>> I started fiddling and was soon surprised about how quickly I was
>> able to make friend with the objects on the object. It's really fun
>> to manipulate indeed.
>> Unfortunately, it was impossible to take the iPhone for a walk as it
>> was stock inside a kind of anti-theft display case and so I tried to
>> imagine how I would use the iPhone as I'm currently using my Nokia.
>> And that's where I think I found a limitation to this wonderful
>> interface. Don't misunderstand me, I absolutely admire the technical
>> prowess, but you see, the first thing I need a phone for is to phone
>> people. With a physical keyboard, it is actually possible to dial a
>> number while walking in the street and holding the phone in one
>> hand, same for SMS. The problem with the iPhone is that you can't
>> rely on tactile information  at all, and I'm afraid that using voice-
>> over for something as simple as dialling or typing text can only be
>> slower than using a physical keyboard.
>> So my bottom line is that the iPhone is probably a wonderful pocket
>> computer that can be used as a phone, but I don't see it as the
>> ideal tool for actually calling people.
>> This sensation I want to share with you only came after 15 minutes
>> of playing with the iPhone and I would love to know what someone
>> who's been using it for a longer time thinks .
>> Cheers,
>> JPR
>>
>>
>>
>> http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel
>>
>>>
>
>
> >




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