iPhone and me: A love story
Like the star on a Christmas tree, iPhone is perched atop all the top 10 gadget
lists for 2007, and with good reason. Not only did iPhone revolutionize the
way people think about their mobile phones -- as many writing those lists crow
-- but in my case, it has changed the way I live.
Let's be clear: I'm not your typical gadget or technology geek. I didn't have
a cell phone until 2000, and even then I purchased a refurbished Nokia handset
for $30 that resembled the Motorola
brick phone Michael Douglas used in the 1987 film "Wall Street."
2008 will mark the first year in as long as I can remember that I won't be
buying a leather-bound dayplanner to keep track of appointments, and I still
read more books than blogs. Though I rampantly text-message, instant-message
and e-mail, I'd still rather open my mouth and speak than send a series of virtual
messages to have a "conversation."
I covered the iPhone launch here in New York in June and didn't quite understand
what all the fuss was about, especially as I interviewed people who lined up
for days in the broiling heat just to be among the first to buy the gadget.
I am a huge fan of Apple products and own several iPods and a PowerBook, but
like many others, I didn't plan to buy an iPhone until the price dropped or
Apple came out with the product's second wave.
When someone gave me an iPhone in late August, I surprised myself by being
giddy. I immediately chucked my AT&T-powered Motorola Razr in favor of what
would become my new main squeeze. At close range, iPhone, like other Apple gadgets,
was just so -- for lack of a better word -- adorable. Even before I opened the
box, I realized that my love affair with iPhone was about to begin.
Four months later, I'm still smitten. Until iPhone, I never though a mobile
device could so drastically change my daily life. Its cousin iPod was certainly
a revolutionary product, disrupting an entire music industry that is still feeling
the repercussions. But for the average person, iPod really only changed the
form of device that plays your music or videos and how you purchase entertainment.
iPhone, on the other hand, affects daily human behavior on a much broader scale.
Soon after iPhone came into my life, I was heading to Brooklyn to see a friend's
band perform. Like any self-respecting cabbie in Manhattan, my driver had no
idea how to get to the venue, even when I gave him the address. Like most Manhattan-dwellers,
I didn't either.
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