Friday, April 16, 2010

iPhones and Androids and Blackberries, oh my!


While I am fully addicted to my cell phone, I do not, however, have one of these amazing phones! After looking at all of the specs for each of them, I honestly couldn’t choose which one to have in a perfect world. Each phone has its own concept as well as pros and cons for consumers. Below I have listed some things I found out about each.



  • iPhone- According to the About.com website, the iPhone is Apple's first Internet-enabled smartphone. It combines the features of a mobile phone, wireless Internet device, and iPod into one package.
    Perhaps the iPhone's most innovative feature is its 3.5-inch multitouch screen. This screen allows an interface based on touch, rather than a keyboard, mouse, or stylus, and allows items onscreen to be manipulated by two finger touches, rather than just one. The iPhone can also be viewed in landscape or portrait mode, with the screen automatically shifting based on the angle that the phone is held at.
    The iPhone runs a version of Apple's Mac OS X operating system.


  • Android- According to the WiseGeek website, an Android phone is a cellphone that uses the Google-developed Android™ operating system and platform. Google partnered with the High Tech Computer Corporation (HTCC) to build hardware for the G1 cellphone, the first mobile phone to run the Android™ platform. In 2008, T-Mobile premiered the G1 Android™ phone to the public.
    One of the biggest differences between a phone running the Android™ platform and others is that the software Android™ uses is a complex operating system. In contrast, the majority of operational cellphones run primitive real time applications.
    In regard to its Internet capabilities, the Android™ phone uses WebKit to power the G1's Chrome Lite browser. Because WebKit also powers
    iPhone's Safari, the G1 is a competitor to the iPhone in terms of users' enhanced web experiences.


  • Blackberry- According to Wikipedia, a BlackBerry® is a mobile communications device from the product line of the same name. They are designed to fit into a large pocket or clip into a belt holster, and most have some type of built-in QWERTY keypad. Modern BlackBerries, unlike traditional mobile phones, are considered to be both smartphones and personal digital assistants (PDAs); they have Internet connectivity, web browsing, e-mail, an address book, a calendar, a day planner, an alarm clock, games, text messaging, and mobile phone service. Options on some models include a trackball, WiFi™, Bluetooth® connectivity, speakers, GPS, a digital camera, and functionality as a media player. The line is owned by the Waterloo, Ontario-based Research In Motion Limited (RIM).
    Windows Mobile- a compact mobile operating system developed by Microsoft, and designed for use in smartphones and mobile devices.

    As a Graduate student, a future educator, and as a human in general, I am very excited about what is happening and what will come within the realm of cellular phones. The hardest decision will be which one to pick!

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