iPhone is revolutionary not just because of its (multi-touch) touchscreen. There are, after all, other touchscreen phones on the market, and none have achieved iPhone’s popularity. Why?
iPhone is revolutionary not because of its Internet browser. Mobile Safari has limitations that other browsers don’t – most notably the lack of Flash support, no text search, no scrolling to the end, among others. But iPhone users are among the most heavy users of the web. Why?
It turns out that when you put both these features together, you end up with something very different.
The web browser is one of the most mouse-heavy applications on your (desktop/laptop) computer. Maintaining that experience on the mobile phone is tough when you have to manipulate physical keys. Open a web page in a browser on your computer and imagine moving the cursor using only the arrow keys.
Your finger on a touchscreen is the best proxy for a mouse on a mobile phone.
This is, in essence, what makes iPhone so compelling. There are awesome touchscreen phones with average browsers, and great browsers trapped in keypad-based phones. iPhone has managed to bridge that gap. And how.
January 25, 2009 · Post to Twitter · Email this · Apple, Insights, Internet, UI, iPhone · 3 Comments
You might also be interested reading:
- The iPhone question – and why Arrington is wrong
- Why did Mowser fail?
- Two reasons why Apple sells so many iPhone apps (and why Nokia and co. understand only one)
- About the smartphone category called iPhone-like
- Two thoughts on mobile touchscreen interfaces
It seems as though you are heading towards a decision of getting the iPhone
!
Not at all! Here are two of my previous posts:
Why I won't be buying the iPhone 3G: http://www.rahulgaitonde.org/2008/08/08/why-i-w... and
iPod Touch + Nokia N82 > iPhone 3G http://www.rahulgaitonde.org/2008/08/28/ipod-to...
I had read both of them and I was wondering if you had a change of heart =)