There’s always something to howl about.

Rhapsodizing the iPhone: A full day of my chaotic life, hours of phone time, a trip to Pleasantville — and I could not love it more

I’m totally loving my iPhone, so far. Wine Dog is right about power. I think I want two, one each for in- and out-bound calls. But it’s so far beyond any other phone I’ve ever had, I would never even think of stepping back to yesterday’s phone.

I have a piece of software called HandBrake for the Macintosh. It will convert DVDs to other file formats. It’s how I made this clip of Pleasantville last Summer. In early July, I ripped a full copy of Pleasantville in the iPhone’s ideal video format. I just watched it now. Excellent video, and theater-quality sound through the headphones. I’m ready to convert a DVD a night, while I sleep, and park them on a big hard disk for easy syncing.

I had calls drop today when I was in the mountains — nothing new for Phoenicians. Otherwise, the iPhone was fault free, and it works beautifully with the Jawbone headset. I do see power as being an issue, but it was with the Treo 650, too. I often drive for part of the day with my phone plugged into the cigarette lighter (what’s that?). With a hands-free headset, it doesn’t matter. Give me a strong voice dialer, and it will matter even less.

The Jawbone is so much better in sound quality that I’m thinking of pushing a lot more work toward Jott or other transcription software. Cathy is playing with OmniFocus, an iPhone-optimized GTD app. The iPhone is a software universe, rather than simply a set of tools like an ordinary smartphone, so there are almost unlimited horizons for us to discover.

My biggest challenge, I think, is to get Cameron interested in the iPhone SDK. Brian already has a project, and we can come up with dozens more. It’s not that this is the ultimate computing solution — far from it. But in many ways it is the optimax solution, the tool that offers the most, the most-flexible and the most-available computing power relative to its portability and form factor.

An example: I was talking to a reporter today from a business magazine about the availability of flexMLS, our new MLS system, on the iPhone. It’s not a sexy implementation at all, but, when you walk out of a house and the buyers point at the sign across the street and say, “What about that one?” — you have the ability to show them on the spot that it’s too small, too expensive and has no pool. Until now, that was always a follow-up chore.

Don’t tell me you coulda done that on your tablet computer. Your tablet computer is not in your shirt pocket — ready to screen Pleasantville if someone keeps you waiting.

I know there are limits that I will run into, limits that I will not love. But there are so many things that I will be able to do tomorrow, because of the iPhone, that I couldn’t do yesterday, that I may run out of implementation time before the next generation of iPhones cures some or all of my objections.

I’ve been preaching about the iPhone as the ultimate Realtor’s phone since it was announced, and the iPhone 3G offers few disappointments and a lot of satisfaction in that role.

Technorati Tags: , ,