iPhone 3G First Look Part 2 : The At-Home Setup

By Rachel Rosmarin, published on July 13, 2008
Source: Tom's Guide | Keywords: , , | Themes: 3GSM, Smartphones

1. The At-Home Setup

In the end, I was one of the lucky ones. After connecting and disconnecting my iPhone from the computer (an Apple MacBook) several times of the course of three hours, iTunes finally processed my request and activated my iPhone. However, many new iPhone owners have still been unable to activate their devices by Sunday—two days after the phone’s launch.

The activation process itself is very simple: Log into iTunes with an existing account, or create a new one, and enter personal information like mailing address, e-mail address, and phone number. The summary screen of iTunes displays capacity information as well as phone details, while six other tabs in the application give options for instructing the software to sync various bits of information with the iPhone. Info covers e-mail accounts, browser bookmarks, and contacts. The other tabs encompass ringtones, music, photos, podcasts, video, and applications.

I synched my contacts via my MacBook’s Address Book application, but iTunes can also import contacts from Outlook, Yahoo!, Gmail and several other specified locations.

Synching e-mail was especially easy. I’m not a user of Microsoft Exchange Server, so Apple’s enterprise mail options weren’t desirable. I will be using the iPhone’s mail app instead to check two mail accounts: an IMAP account and a Gmail account. Since I already check my work mail (the IMAP account) on my MacBook, iTunes was able to immediately find and load all of the account settings associated with my mailbox into the iPhone 3G—servers, passwords, everything. When I synched the iPhone, my mail was there with no data input from me.

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mpjesse 07/13/2008 11:09 PM
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Quote :and it appears that T-Mobile’s EDGE network is slightly faster than AT&T’s.


Your chart indicates otherwise. It states it took 57 seconds to load the NYT site on AT&T's EDGE compared to 65 seconds on T-Mobile's EDGE.

So which is it?

Tomsguiderachel 07/13/2008 11:33 PM
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mpjesse :
Your chart indicates otherwise. It states it took 57 seconds to load the NYT site on AT&T's EDGE compared to 65 seconds on T-Mobile's EDGE.So which is it?


mpjesse :
Your chart indicates otherwise. It states it took 57 seconds to load the NYT site on AT&T's EDGE compared to 65 seconds on T-Mobile's EDGE.So which is it?



Thanks for catching our error, mpjesse. T-Mobile's edge was slightly faster in our tests.

-Rachel Rosmarin, Editor, Tom's Guide

mpjesse 07/13/2008 11:38 PM
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Cool, thanks!

tntom 07/14/2008 5:37 AM
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Was hoping for your impression on GPS. Left us hanging there when you started to make a comparison with the Blackberry but stopped short. I looked to the next page looking for more.

Can see the signal strength wasn't that great in the Ab Crunch screen shot. And unless it was altered your email address appears in the other screen shot.

notherdude 07/14/2008 2:29 PM
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So, your Treo had a ridiculously bad battery life. The iphone by all accounts has what appears to be a normal battery life for devices in its class, which, if you surf a lot won't even get you through an entire day. Most reviews have it giving out in under 4 hours or so, IIRC. Since you cannot take the battery out and replace it with a spare this is a real problem for heavy internet users. I have an HTC PPC 6800. While away from home I can pair it with my laptop and surf to my heart's content or perhaps stream internet radio for hours on end while I work. The battery will be gone in under 5 hours but I can just pop in my spare. So no iphone for me. I suppose for more typical users they will at least make it home for an overnight charge so for them this is probably OK.

notherdude 07/14/2008 2:30 PM
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So, your Treo had a ridiculously bad battery life. The iphone by all accounts has what appears to be a normal battery life for devices in its class, which, if you surf a lot won't even get you through an entire day. Most reviews have it giving out in under 4 hours or so, IIRC. Since you cannot take the battery out and replace it with a spare this is a real problem for heavy internet users. I have an HTC PPC 6800. While away from home I can pair it with my laptop and surf to my heart's content or perhaps stream internet radio for hours on end while I work. The battery will be gone in under 5 hours but I can just pop in my spare. So no iphone for me. I suppose for more typical users they will at least make it home for an overnight charge so for them this is probably OK.

notherdude 07/14/2008 2:30 PM
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So, your Treo had a ridiculously bad battery life. The iphone by all accounts has what appears to be a normal battery life for devices in its class, which, if you surf a lot won't even get you through an entire day. Most reviews have it giving out in under 4 hours or so, IIRC. Since you cannot take the battery out and replace it with a spare this is a real problem for heavy internet users. I have an HTC PPC 6800. While away from home I can pair it with my laptop and surf to my heart's content or perhaps stream internet radio for hours on end while I work. The battery will be gone in under 5 hours but I can just pop in my spare. So no iphone for me. I suppose for more typical users they will at least make it home for an overnight charge so for them this is probably OK.

Anonymous 07/14/2008 4:26 PM
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Can anyone help me... Although i have not yet been connected do to the sheer number of new customers to o2 that they could not supply everyone with numbers right away, but anyway my question... I have noticed that you cannot use music as your ringtone which seems quite silly as it is supposed to be an ipod (music phone) so why would you not be able to set a song as ringtone?? seems crazy as all they have is about 10 VERY lame sounds that you can use!! Please help if anyone knows a way of getting music as a ring tone!! :)

Tomsguiderachel 07/14/2008 6:32 PM
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tntom :
Was hoping for your impression on GPS. Left us hanging there when you started to make a comparison with the Blackberry but stopped short. I looked to the next page looking for more.Can see the signal strength wasn't that great in the Ab Crunch screen shot. And unless it was altered your email address appears in the other screen shot.



tntom,

Stay tuned for our full examination and test of the iPhone 3G's GPS capabilities as compared to various other GPS devices. Coming soon!

-Rachel Rosmarin

Tomsguiderachel 07/14/2008 6:36 PM
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Nadine :
Can anyone help me... Although i have not yet been connected do to the sheer number of new customers to o2 that they could not supply everyone with numbers right away, but anyway my question... I have noticed that you cannot use music as your ringtone which seems quite silly as it is supposed to be an ipod (music phone) so why would you not be able to set a song as ringtone?? seems crazy as all they have is about 10 VERY lame sounds that you can use!! Please help if anyone knows a way of getting music as a ring tone!!


Nadine,

There are many songs (99 cents) you can choose from via iTunes to create a custom ringtone: http://www.apple.com/itunes/store/ringtones.html
Of course, Apple needs to have agreements with the owners of the song. I'm sure a little bit of Googling might reveal a free (but perhaps illicit) way to turn any song into a ringtone!

--Rachel Rosmarin

Anonymous 07/14/2008 8:05 PM
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You state that you have to enter the mail app to see if you have mail. I am using a v1 4gig iphone and my mail is set to download or fetch every half an hour. When it fetches and new messages arrive, I get a number indicating how many new messages I have. This is all done without opening mail. I suspect this functionality is available to you through settings you may need to adjust, unless something has changed.

Pilotman28 07/15/2008 12:34 PM
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clarification? :
You state that you have to enter the mail app to see if you have mail. I am using a v1 4gig iphone and my mail is set to download or fetch every half an hour. When it fetches and new messages arrive, I get a number indicating how many new messages I have. This is all done without opening mail. I suspect this functionality is available to you through settings you may need to adjust, unless something has changed.



He meant without even having to look at the phone. The light he referred to was a blinking status light so even if the phone was feet away on a table across the room he would know whether or not he had received new mail or not.

[citation]Out to dinner on Saturday night, two first-gen iPhone toting men spotted my iPhone 3G and introduced themselves as Apple employees.[/citation]

How cute. Two male Apple employees out to dinner with each other. LOL.

randomizer 07/15/2008 10:05 AM
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Man, my Nokia 3210 would be lucky to get 36-48 hours standby time. 5 hours of talk time is unheard of! :lol:

JackNaylorPE 07/16/2008 7:54 PM
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25 minutes battery life on your Treo ? Are you using it as a business tool or an entertainment device ? My Treo, a 650 bought in the 1st week of Cingular / ATT availability(what is it 3+ years old ?) still goes a whole week between charges and that includes keeping my youngest son occupied when he's in the car with me and my daily fix of Sudoku. It shuts itself off at 11 pm and wakes me up at 6:30 am, otherwise it's on all day. Of course I don't take cell calls when I am in my office (about 4 hours a day) and won't do e-mail when a big screen and full size keyboard is available. I just can't imagine a usage pattern that kills batteries as fast as you are .... again assuming the use is as a business tool.

A second comment would be that judging a anyone's performance based upon experiences on "product launch day" is not representative of what anyone would experience whop didn't fell a need to be the first one on their block with "the new thing". Business's have long said an "OS is still a beta until SP3". The numbers say this thing sold at a rate about 3 times higher than anything electronic product in history. As with Firefox's download day, these conditions are bound to cause some hiccups as systems are stretched in a manner that they have never been tested at before. You don't want problems, wait a week for the new gadget.

Tomsguiderachel 07/16/2008 8:43 PM
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JackNaylorPE :
25 minutes battery life on your Treo ? Are you using it as a business tool or an entertainment device ? My Treo, a 650 bought in the 1st week of Cingular / ATT availability(what is it 3+ years old ?) still goes a whole week between charges and that includes keeping my youngest son occupied when he's in the car with me and my daily fix of Sudoku. It shuts itself off at 11 pm and wakes me up at 6:30 am, otherwise it's on all day. Of course I don't take cell calls when I am in my office (about 4 hours a day) and won't do e-mail when a big screen and full size keyboard is available. I just can't imagine a usage pattern that kills batteries as fast as you are .... again assuming the use is as a business tool.A second comment would be that judging a anyone's performance based upon experiences on "product launch day" is not representative of what anyone would experience whop didn't fell a need to be the first one on their block with "the new thing". Business's have long said an "OS is still a beta until SP3". The numbers say this thing sold at a rate about 3 times higher than anything electronic product in history. As with Firefox's download day, these conditions are bound to cause some hiccups as systems are stretched in a manner that they have never been tested at before. You don't want problems, wait a week for the new gadget.



Thanks for your comments Jack. I'm glad you've had such good luck with your Treo 650. It is quite obvious, however, that my Treo 650 has suffered numerous hardware failures after warranty expiration. Sadly, I know I'm not the only one to have these problems. It was a pain to live with the device for so long, though its problems had nothing to do with my usage pattern.

--Rachel Rosmarin

Anonymous 09/22/2008 9:00 AM
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can t mobile edge works on iphone 3g, and be able to access the safari browser internet

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