January 15th, 2009 | Darrell Corriveau
I have been a long time user of the Blackberry and have been generally happy with the product. Being a long time Mac user as well, I have been interested in the iPhone from afar since its launch. My children both have iPod Touches so I have played with the interface, and some of the Apps, but my blackberry has never really done me wrong so I didn’t have a great urge to make a switch.
Well, early last week my Blackberry died. Half of the keyboard didn’t work, nor did the trackball. Bell store employees informed me that with the backlog of orders for Blackberries it may be quite some time before I got a replacement. I was not happy with this, so I took the opportunity to make the leap and sign up for a new iPhone 3G with Rogers.
Well, it has been almost a week I have had my iPhone, and I have to admit, somewhat sadly being a Mac devotee, that it does not compare at all to the usability of my old blackberry. Sure it is a great little product and has some definite benefits over the blackberry including:
- Easily syncs with the Mac. This is one major shortfall for RIM. Why they won’t support the Mac better has always confused me.
- Very slick and consistent in the interface. As is always the case with Mac products, the interface for most Apps have common elements and functions that make them very easy to learn.
- Browser is awesome. It would be nice to have Flash integration, but aside from that, the experience of web browsing on the iPhone is very close to doing so on a desktop. My Blackberry’s (the 8830 World Edition) browser is little more than a text browser, but as a lot of sites offer “m.” mobile sites it can be surprisingly useful.
- iTunes integration. I have a flash memory card in my Blackberry that allows me to load media files which is great, but I can’t listen to DRM music that I bought from iTunes, and I have bought a lot lately.
- WiFi support. I can’t benefit from local Wifi on my Blackberry so I end up getting a lot more usage over the cell network ($).
- General niftiness. People crowd around to see my iPhone. I am lonely when I use my Blackberry.
Now with all of those points you would think that my preference leans in favour of the almighty iPhone, right? Wrong! And here is the reason…
95% of what I use my mobile device for is text and email messaging.
The iPhone lacks in almost every respect when it comes to those important tasks. Consider the following:
- Quick scanning. On the iPhone the maximum number of email messages I can see the titles of on the main email screen at one time is 5. Granted they are very legible, but compare that to 9 on the Blackberry. It is very important to me to be able to see new messages quickly.
- External visual notification. There is no new message external indicator on the iPhone. When I get a new message or notification on my Blackberry, the little red light blinks to tell me, even if I missed the initial notification.
- Push in action. I may be wrong about this (at least I can’t figure it out yet) but it seems to me that push email on the iPhone is not as immediate as it is on the Blackberry. I send an email to my blackberry and seconds later it vibrates. Not so with my iPhone. Sometimes it does, and other times I get no notification until I open up the mail app and new emails come streaming in. Feel free to correct me if your experience differs from mine. Perhaps you need Mobile Me?
- Alarm clock effectiveness. In order to use my iPhone as an alarm clock (which I do all the time with my Blackberry) I have to enter into “Airplane Mode” which is within the settings, otherwise the device stays on, and I will get notifications of all events throughout the night. My Blackberry will sleep (no notifications) and awake at the time I set the alarm for, without having to make numerous setting changes every time.
- Batch marking. On the iPhone you can not mark multiple email messages as read. This is a huge deficiency for me. In order to mark emails as read you have to view every single one individually, and the same goes for deleting them. Not so on the Blackberry. Try doing that for over 300 emails a day that you also get on your desktop.
- Keyboard usability. Don’t get me started. The usability of the screen keyboard on the iPhone has been discussed by many others. Suffice it to say I can type about twice as fast on my full keyboard Blackberry.
Okay, so here endeth the rant. The short story is that I am going to return my iPhone and stick with my new replacement Blackberry (which showed up two days after Bell told me it would be weeks). Most of the points above (barring the red light indicator) can probably be fixed in later operating system updates for the iPhone, but for now, I’ll regard it as a very cool device and great toy, but not ready for the mass business market. I’m off to pick up an iPod Touch!
This post has 4 comments, add your own below
Mary Jane Braide - 15 Jan 09 @ 15:11:39
Here here. After being Treo nuts for 5 years (it was way ahead of its time) my husband just got an iPhone and I got a BBBold and we are both happy because we use them so differently. He loves the incredible apps on the IP and I like the BBB for the reasons you mention. The BB apps stink at the moments but that should change. Only thing I observe is that instant push email is what causes the crack-berry problem. That light is always blinking away at you like some needy pest. But I guess that is the new reality – always on.
Peter Kirkpatrick - 17 Jan 09 @ 17:21:36
So much for returning it. Rogers won’t take it back. I had 40 minutes of talk time. 10 minutes more than they will allow for a return. I called customer support and they told me to try and sell it on eBay. Rogers customer service wins “how to really impress a new client” award. Bravo!
Bryan Folsom - 17 Jan 09 @ 22:56:14
You should have told Rogers that 15 minutes of your time was spent with them on hold! They can’t track cell usage DURING a billing cycle .. A flaw in their reporting. You give up too easy dude!
Bryan Folsom - 18 Jan 09 @ 10:27:54
Heres a summary of my latest, most “wonderful” experience with Rogers Customer Service :
December 28 – Blackberry Curve dies so I contacted Rogers technical support as it was under warranty. The rep did the usual diagnotics over the phone and agreed it was dead. Rep said they would ship out a replacement. Rep said they had stock and should expect in 3 to 5 days.
Jan 5 – followed up with Rogers to ensure Blackberry was being sent out … they said they could not tell from their end where in the “process” my order was but they would escalate my order and should have by then end of the week
Jan 12 – followed up again to find out NOBODY could tell me status of order and they had NO IDEA when I would get a replacement. After 2 hours on the phone, the manager said “OH, I see it was just shipped out” … I asked for the UPS tracking number and they said they would call me back. Did I get a call back … NO
Jan 13 – Called back Rogers, go through to a manager who said “No, there is no unit being shipped out to you, and we don’t kow when you will get your warranty replacement”. After another 2 hours on the phone, and $150.00 in credits applied to our account, the manager agreed I could go to any Rogers Wireless PLUS store and pick up a replacement. HA!
Jan 16 Arrive at Rogers Wireless PLUS store in Waterdown. They have BLACKBERRIES – YAHOO!!! … BUT, OH NO Sir – we cant do any exchange here. You will have to pay for it and get a credit form Rogers .. YA RIGHT!!!! Another 90 minutes on the phone and the Rep says I can go to a store in Waterloo and pick one up. I told him if he was lying I would find out where he lived and seek him out! They dont like hearing comments like this! TOO BAD!
Jan 17 – FINALLY! A wonderful young lady in Waterloo (YES, I made the drive to Waterloo) quickly and efficiently swapped out my Blackberry and I am back on-line.
What a fiasco for a warranty replacement !!!