Apple offers 25-minute iPhone guided tour
Apple on Friday posted a video to its website offering prospective iPhone buyers a 25-minute guided tour of the handset. We've compiled a listed of interesting tidbits revealed in the step-by-step demonstration.
View the video
The guided tour is available via Apple's iPhone website, which continued to see additional refinements on Friday.
Notable mentions:iPhone ships with a stereo headset that features a microphone and integrated button that lets users answer and end calls easily. It can also be used to control audio and video playback.
If a call comes in while music is playing, the volume will fade out and the iPhone will pause the music. A single click on the headset button will answer the call. A second click will hang up and fade the music back in right where it left off.
iPhone can be locked by pressing the Sleep/Wake button. Once locked, iPhone will still receive calls and allow users to play music and adjust the volume. However, nothing will happen if the user accidently touches the screen.
To completely power off iPhone, press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds. Then, drag the red on-screen slider to confirm.
Users can change the order of iPhone lists, such as favorite phone numbers, by drag-and-drop.
iPhone's visual voicemail feature allows users to scroll through recordings in realtime using an onscreen progress slider.
If already on a call when second call comes in, iPhone's on-screen software allows users to ignore the second call or place the first call on hold while taking the new call. A handy onscreen "swap" option then provides an easy way to alternate between the two callers. Similarly, a "merge calls" option will merge the two calls into a conference call.
When listening to a specific song in iPod mode, iPhone offers an on-screen button that will display a playable listing of all tracks from that same album.
iPhone will automatically switch to CoverFlow mode when the device is positioned in landscape view under iPod mode.
Movies play only in landscape view.
Hot buttons at the base of the iPod mode software interface can be custom configured like toolbars in the Mac OS X Finder.
Photos taken with iPhone can be used as wallpaper, emailed, or assigned to a contact in the handset's address book.
Mail includes built-in readers for viewing PDF, JPEG, Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel files. It also features the same action sounds as the current version of Mail running on Mac OS X Tiger.
Tapping on a phone number included in an email will automatically call that number.
It does not appear as if "Maps" will determine your current location using AT&T's wireless network.
Maps includes a "Traffic" button that provides an update on current driving conditions. Green lines on the map indicate traffic is flowing smoothly while yellow and red lines mean problems ahead.
You can turn off iPhone's network features so it can be used safely on an airplane.
iPhone comes pre-loaded with an assortment of ringtones.
View the video
The guided tour is available via Apple's iPhone website, which continued to see additional refinements on Friday.
Notable mentions:iPhone ships with a stereo headset that features a microphone and integrated button that lets users answer and end calls easily. It can also be used to control audio and video playback.
If a call comes in while music is playing, the volume will fade out and the iPhone will pause the music. A single click on the headset button will answer the call. A second click will hang up and fade the music back in right where it left off.
iPhone can be locked by pressing the Sleep/Wake button. Once locked, iPhone will still receive calls and allow users to play music and adjust the volume. However, nothing will happen if the user accidently touches the screen.
To completely power off iPhone, press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds. Then, drag the red on-screen slider to confirm.
Users can change the order of iPhone lists, such as favorite phone numbers, by drag-and-drop.
iPhone's visual voicemail feature allows users to scroll through recordings in realtime using an onscreen progress slider.
If already on a call when second call comes in, iPhone's on-screen software allows users to ignore the second call or place the first call on hold while taking the new call. A handy onscreen "swap" option then provides an easy way to alternate between the two callers. Similarly, a "merge calls" option will merge the two calls into a conference call.
When listening to a specific song in iPod mode, iPhone offers an on-screen button that will display a playable listing of all tracks from that same album.
iPhone will automatically switch to CoverFlow mode when the device is positioned in landscape view under iPod mode.
Movies play only in landscape view.
Hot buttons at the base of the iPod mode software interface can be custom configured like toolbars in the Mac OS X Finder.
Photos taken with iPhone can be used as wallpaper, emailed, or assigned to a contact in the handset's address book.
Mail includes built-in readers for viewing PDF, JPEG, Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel files. It also features the same action sounds as the current version of Mail running on Mac OS X Tiger.
Tapping on a phone number included in an email will automatically call that number.
It does not appear as if "Maps" will determine your current location using AT&T's wireless network.
Maps includes a "Traffic" button that provides an update on current driving conditions. Green lines on the map indicate traffic is flowing smoothly while yellow and red lines mean problems ahead.
You can turn off iPhone's network features so it can be used safely on an airplane.
iPhone comes pre-loaded with an assortment of ringtones.
Comments
Seriously watching that, how could anyone NOT get excited to have one?
OMG, SciFi ringtone!!! Love it.
It must have a GPS-style system too then if it can give you step by step instructions on where to go even if it's not using the GPS system but possibly some sort of solution based on mobile phone triangulation. Unless it just reads out the route similar to how someone would if you stopped and asked them at the side of the road.
Doesn't it do just what Maps does on the web? You put in a starting address and an ending address. It figures it out from there. Why do you need a GPS for that?
I didn't see anywhere in the settings allowing you to customize your ringtones. That would be disappointing...
e.g. email privacy or code activation of the phone if in particular.
There are likely to be security issues in companies and certainly there are personal privacy and theft concerns where passwords would be important.
~Innersongs
Doesn't it do just what Maps does on the web? You put in a starting address and an ending address. It figures it out from there. Why do you need a GPS for that?
It's just that it said it gives you step by step instructions on where to go. How would it know when to tell you which turn to make unless it knew where you were? Like I say, it might just read them out at once but the demo looked a bit like a GPS device.
It's just that it said it gives you step by step instructions on where to go. How would it know when to tell you which turn to make unless it knew where you were? Like I say, it might just read them out at once but the demo looked a bit like a GPS device.
It knows where you are because you tell it where you are. That is the "starting address". Where you are going is the "ending address". Step by step instructions are possible with just that information.
Everything looks great except for the pre-loaded ringtones.
I didn't see anywhere in the settings allowing you to customize your ringtones. That would be disappointing...
I agree. But there's a "ringtones" tab when you plug the iPhone into iTunes, so I assume that's at least how you would get new ringtones onto the phone. Whether or not you can use standard MP3s or AAC files as ringtones has yet to be determined.
Personally, I'd like to see Apple let you choose any file you like. If they want to make money on ringtones, then get popular artists to record special ringtone tracks exclusively on iTunes, or something. Don't take away what should be a basic feature just to sell ringtones.
It's just that it said it gives you step by step instructions on where to go. How would it know when to tell you which turn to make unless it knew where you were? Like I say, it might just read them out at once but the demo looked a bit like a GPS device.
The step by steps are just a list of turns. You have to advance from one to the next manually, with a tap on the arrow.
It's just that it said it gives you step by step instructions on where to go. How would it know when to tell you which turn to make unless it knew where you were? Like I say, it might just read them out at once but the demo looked a bit like a GPS device.
There's a button that takes you to the next or previous step, you have to push it manually, no GPS
That traffic feature is going to be sooo useful...
I agree. But there's a "ringtones" tab when you plug the iPhone into iTunes, so I assume that's at least how you would get new ringtones onto the phone. Whether or not you can use standard MP3s or AAC files as ringtones has yet to be determined.
Personally, I'd like to see Apple let you choose any file you like. If they want to make money on ringtones, then get popular artists to record special ringtone tracks exclusively on iTunes, or something. Don't take away what should be a basic feature just to sell ringtones.
Definitely. If I had to pay for all the ringtones I've created my for myself in the last year I'd be out at least 50 bucks.
It's nice being to edit a particular part of a song or chorus to get that "perfect ringtone."
So what about the SIM card? Is it user-installable or built in? Is there a cover that goes off?
Do you have an Apple remote? Change the battery.
Definitely. If I had to pay for all the ringtones I've created my for myself in the last year I'd be out at least 50 bucks.
It's nice being to edit a particular part of a song or chorus to get that "perfect ringtone."
I didn't see any folders on the phone where one would store ringtones, but I'm sure it's there, somewhere.
That being said, I'm dying up north waiting for this phone!
Does anyone else have some reservations abou the model they chose? he's so... sterile.
That being said, I'm dying up north waiting for this phone!
...yeah, where's the "beautiful hand" model from the original iPhone photos? <---(Hairy hands are what have kept me from becoming a hand model, too.)
And why does this new guy ("Bob"?) need to be married? He's nowhere near cool (or charming) enough to be symbolic of Steve.