Please Fix The iPhone … Dot Com

The iPhone is just the most curious mix technology, and anyone who tells you it’s perfect should be immediately suspect. Some of the iPhone is laugh out loud perfect. But much of it is just deeply flawed, with no fix in sight. I love the iPhone, I hate the iPhone. It’s the ultimate Apple product, in other words. Beautiful but frustrating.

This comes to light in a number of ways, and almost every single time I use it. Just the latest example: Yesterday, my wife was flying home from Phoenix and her multiple attempts to call me on the iPhone as I headed to the gym would be funny if it wasn’t so typical. The iPhone is a lousy, lousy phone and it disconnected us so often she eventually just called the gym so I could talk on a reliable phone. (My trainer, also an iPhone user, just laughed in understanding. This happens to him all the time too, he said.) On the other hand, after the gym, I was able to neatly manage email using its awesome Mail application while waiting for lunch, and the iPhone handles that task with both ease and elegance. When I got home and sat down in front of the computer, I had much less email to deal with, having already filed away the chaff. I love how well the iPhone works for that purpose.

(I was talking to my wife about this last night after she got home and noted that I rarely use the phone stuff anyway. And good thing, as the iPhone almost useless as a phone. I noted that if I could just get pervasive Internet access on the iPod touch, I’d get rid of the iPhone and get a “normal” less-complicated and less-expensive phone just for phone calls. Let’s just say that my wife’s freebie phone from Verizon always works and leave it at that.)

Anyway, I’m obviously not the only frustrated iPhone user. A new site called Please Fix The iPhone has been set up to catalog users’ frustrations, and some of the top requests are pretty darned obvious needs. Hopefully Apple will take the constructive nature of this site to heart and fix the top requests first. Note that unlike the national newspaper reviewers, I’ve mentioned virtually all of these issues and feature requests in my own reviews of the iPhone. It’s funny how some people are able to overlook obvious problems as they trip over each other trying to out-compliment Apple. But there are real problems. They include:

1. Lack of MMS support

2. Wireless sync (non-Bluetooth)

3. Copy and paste

4. Use SMS in landscape mode

5. View Flash content in Safari

6. Make Safari crash less frequently

7. Fix the Camera application so that you can click a picture more easily

8. Uninstall/hide built-in iPhone applications

9. Video recording

10. Stop reloading multiple Safari pages when navigating back to them

If you’re not familiar with the iPhone, the number 1 and 3 requests above work in tandem to perform what is, quite possibly, the stupidest thing I’ve ever seen on the device: When someone does try to send you an MMS message, it appears in the SMS application with a link to a Web page so you can go and view the content. (So much for the iPhone’s multimedia prowess, eh?) But the link includes a user name and password. Since you can’t copy and paste (a la complaint number 3), there’s no way to actually view that content without either memorizing the user name and password, and switching repeatedly between Safari and SMS, or by … get this … writing down the user name and password on a piece of paper and then manually typing that info in after you go to the linked Web page. The whole thing is utterly broken, but then that’s how the iPhone experience works. It’s either dazzling or retarded.

BTW. A site like this for Windows Mobile would be pointless since the entire OS needs to be dumped and rewritten from scratch. Sounds like a good use for that MinWin kernel Microsoft can’t stop talking about, no?

Thanks to Robert J. for the link.

Discuss this Article 88

tayme
on Nov 11, 2008
This should be interesting... --tayme
shark47
on Nov 11, 2008
"The iPhone is a lousy, lousy phone and it disconnected us so often she eventually just called the gym so I could talk on a reliable phone. " Didn't you say that was fixed in the 2.1 update, Paul?
shark47
on Nov 11, 2008
"This should be interesting..." I doubt it. Ocean will probably come up with a link to a blog that talks about how much Windows 7 sucks and that'll be the end of this topic.
nutts
on Nov 11, 2008
Agree about the dropped calls, although I could go deeper into that conversation by questioning the choice of network, as Softbank here is easily the worst coverage-wise. I really do with people would stop harping on about copy and paste though. I can count on one hand the amount of times it would actually have been useful for me over the last few months, as the software is written well enough that it's only rarely needed. Nobody I know uses MMS so meh. And I'm really happy Safari doesn't support Flash as it's mostly only used for ads and games these days - anybody with a flash-only site doesn't deserve my custom. The rest though I certainly agree with. You missed two though Paul: 11. Todo syncing to/from iCal/Outlook 12. Notes syncing to/from Mail/Outlook
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
tayme Yep. Ought to be amusing. Of course, if Apple didn't have their insanely restricted developer program, every one of these could be fixed fairly easily. Also interesting is the most popular item on the "fixed" page on the Please Fix the iPhone site is Apple's blatant Podcaster rip off (Remember Podcaster? The app that Apple blocked from distribution through iTunes even though it met all the rules. Then blocked from ad hoc distribution. Then introduced their own version)
Lindy
on Nov 11, 2008
And despite all the bitching it still is doing well....in the US of course:) http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/The-NPD-Group-iPhone-3G/story.aspx?guid={7DDDC6C0-37E3-4534-B2D1-5F1399EBDB04}
Lindy
on Nov 11, 2008
Hmm that link seems broken here is the meat... "The displacement of the RAZR by the iPhone 3G represents a watershed shift in handset design from fashion to fashionable functionality," said Ross Rubin, director of industry analysis for NPD. "Four of the five best-selling handsets in the third quarter were optimized for messaging and other advanced Internet features." The top handset models in rank order, based on unit sales in Q3, were as follows: 1. Apple iPhone 3G 2. Motorola RAZR V3 (all models) 3. RIM Blackberry Curve (all models) 4. LG Rumor 5. LG enV2
shark47
on Nov 11, 2008
OK. So I was wrong. Ocean did attempt to hijack the thread by posting a news item about how bad Windows was. Lindy attempted to hijack it by talking about sales figures. Paul: The iPhone is great but has its share of problems. Ocean: Al Jazeera said Windows 7 sucks. How true. Lindy: Please let's not talk about iPhone problems. Let's talk about sales. If that doesn't work, I'll bring up the XBox. If that doesn't work either, I'll call Republicans names. ;-)
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
And following the usual pattern, after "they can't be broken, look at their sales" will be: They can't be broken, look how much profit Apple makes. Of course, by the same logic, Windows - with a larger share of the OS market than iPhone has of the phone market - is near perfection. This is the same "logic" Stephen Colbert uses to back up his character's support of global warming despite being a parody of an ultra-conservative: Al Gore's movie and book are best sellers, the market has spoken, global warming is real.
dmccall
on Nov 11, 2008
I'll take #6. Safari crashes all the time on me. I THINK it is when it approaches a page that tries to load Flash.
Lindy
on Nov 11, 2008
@Shark when I care what you think I will send you a card in the mail. I dont have a iPhone so I dont know its limitations. I own the #2 hottest selling phone in the US and I know its limitations well.
kanwaljit
on Nov 11, 2008
Lindy, you don't use Vista either,, But it doesn't stop you from bitching about it's limitations or problems???
beaker
on Nov 11, 2008
I'm an iPhone user and it is a love/hate relationship. As a phone, it isn't that great. As a camera - come on - it isn't great either (even though many recipients of my iPhone photos say the photo quality is outstanding). As far as MMS goes - I've told everyone that sends me one that it is useless.. because I'm an iPhone user. However, with all this said - it performed flawlessly while I was out of the country. TelCel or whoever it was in Mexico never dropped a call. WiFi works better than my laptop (at least signal strength/reliability in hotels with weak access points). I'm getting an Android phone today. I'm sure it will have issues as well.. but both of these phones have the other companies (including MS - no matter how much they want to deny the iPhone) frantically trying to catch up.
rjohn05
on Nov 11, 2008
Someone should start a site like this for the iPod Touch! I regret ever upgrading it to 2.* As much as I love apple products I am growing more and more skeptical of ever buying anything else from this company. I just hope that when I get a macbook pro it does not have this many problems.
daveinla
on Nov 11, 2008
The iPhone is not a great phone as far as voice quality and range. The camera is in the middle of the pack for a phone camera. But I can tell you that AT&T is also to blame for the bad coverage. My wife uses it on T-mobile and we never are disconnected. Pretty much agree with all your points. But it's such a great internet device that it makes you forgive all of the above.
romperstomper
on Nov 11, 2008
It would also be nice if they fixed the following Exchange annoyances: 1. Ability to minimise folders - I have ~10 folders with subfolders and the only way the iPhone displays the folder tree is with the entire thing expanded, making it more than 30 folders long. That's just plain ridiculous. 2. Ability to notify when new emails arrive in subfolders. - The iPhone only notifies you when emails arrive in your top-level inbox. New emails that are filtered by exhange-based rules into subfolders do not give you any notification until you manually refresh that folder. What would be nicer is the ability to choose which folders will notify you, but a start would be all folders.
chuckb84
on Nov 11, 2008
I agree the iPhone is not a great phone. I think Paul overstates it a bit, but it is also true that the iPhone is only peripherally a phone. I believe it is really the first halting and imperfect step to put desktop power in your pocket. The main uncertainty in assessing the iPhone as a telephone is whether the problems are ATT, the iPhone, or both. I think both, however, I will say that the 3G network seems to handle calls with more clarity and reliability than my Verizon phone when the phones are in areas of weak signal strength. Warts and all, the thing is now the best selling phone in America. And, Mike, Paul LOVES to spout marketshare numbers about Windows as proof of its inevitable superiority, so sauce for the goose and all that...
Lindy
on Nov 11, 2008
I use Vista, when I have to. I have almost no problems with it save for file copy speeds and horrible battery life. I just don't prefer it nor would I recommend it at this point in time if you had a choice. I did not bitch about the iPhone either, I dont own one. I do see those limitations as affecting some people that use it for sure. My point is despite its shortcomings it was the #1 selling phone in the US in Q3, or so says the WSJ/NPD.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
chuckb84 Paul spouts marketshare about Windows and OS X to show what's selling. Mac Fans spout iPhone sales figures when it's flaws and bugs are discussed to say the product works just fine because it sells. See the difference?
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
Lindy Of course, you are aware that NPD only tracks selected RETAIL sales of phones and doesn't include other channels, right? (Hence the RAZR being their #1 selling phone every quarter for the last 5 years)
hereskilled
on Nov 11, 2008
I have never ever had any drop-outs on my iPhone, which leads me to wonder if you all should be shouting at your comm's companies. Oh btw I'm in the UK on O2. The iPhone isn't perfect far from it, but I've recently had my hands on the Touch Pro and Samsung Omnia, and realised even with the iPhone issues, I couldn't go back to a windows mobile device.
DRWAM
on Nov 11, 2008
And yet : iPhone trumps RAZR as most purchased US consumer handset: http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-fi-iphone11-2008nov11,0,1641818.sto... or "iPhone more reliable than the competition: Study finds Apple handset fails less often than BlackBerrys and Palm Treos" http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2230225/iphone-reliable-competition
chuckb84
on Nov 11, 2008
"Paul spouts marketshare about Windows and OS X to show what's selling. Mac Fans spout iPhone sales figures when it's flaws and bugs are discussed to say the product works just fine because it sells. See the difference?" No. Paul spots Windows marketshare numbers whenever anyone points out what an utter piece of crap Windows is. The same is now done with the iPhone. It's not an intelligent response in either case. In fact, you posted "Of course, by the same logic, Windows - with a larger share of the OS market than iPhone has of the phone market - is near perfection." I know that is rhetorical, but in many cases this argument is used seriously. As you say, it's wrong regardless of the specific case.
notawindowsuser
on Nov 11, 2008
I'm in the UK and with O2, and I've not had any dropped calls. "Paul spouts marketshare about Windows and OS X to show what's selling. Mac Fans spout iPhone sales figures when it's flaws and bugs are discussed to say the product works just fine because it sells. See the difference?" Nope, I can't see a difference all I can see is a straw man.
shark47
on Nov 11, 2008
"Paul spots Windows marketshare numbers whenever anyone points out what an utter piece of crap Windows is. The same is now done with the iPhone." The big difference is that Paul hasn't called the iPhone an "utter piece of crap". The same argument does not work in both cases.
cesjr
on Nov 11, 2008
Hey everyone is entitled to their opinion. It's just usually Paul's is wrong. Or at least completely out of touch with what most normal people think. Paul would have you think that the iPhone is 50 percent awesome, 50 percent retarded. Sounds pretty bad, huh. Well, that's the point (of Paul's BS). The truth is MUCH different. The iPhone is VASTLY superior to any phone that came before it. Like in another league. Got it? Because it's really not disputable, unless your like crazy or something. Perfect? Well, that's Paul's strawman. He's arguing against something nobody says. Nobody says its perfect. Go back and read the original Walt Mossberg and David Pogue and big newspaper reviews of the original iPhone. NOBODY SAID IT WAS PERFECT. THEY ALL IDENTIFIED ISSUES. Including the ones on the list above. Of course, Paul will never stop lying and saying these guys didn't identify faults. Except they did. Ooops. Now, the iPhone does have some unresolved problems (although Paul's BS about the phone aspect is WAY trumped up - it functions great as a phone, in part because you can, I don't know, actually manage your phone numbers without reading the manual. My wife still can't enter my phone number on her crap Nokia . But why do these minor "problems" exist (eg, cut and paste, MMS, etc) Paul never asks because he doesn't like the answer. They exist because Apple has spent its time on getting the more important stuff right first. That's what makes the phone vastly better than anything that came before it (not saying its the best for every person, just objectively the best overall - by a WIDE margin).
shark47
on Nov 11, 2008
You guys are attacking Paul for saying the iPhone is amazing but not perfect? What's wrong with all of you?Take a chill pill, folks. There's nothing wrong in suggesting improvements for a device, however good it is.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
chuckb I don't recall Paul ever using the argument "it sells well so it must work well" as the iPhone fans do. (but, surprisingly, since they're usually the same people, don't think applies to desktops and laptops) I have seen him say "it doesn't sell more than a trivial amount so it isn't a significant factor in the market" but that's a very different thing.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
cesjr Apparently Apple thought online podcast download was "the important stuff" because they blocked a potential competitor from selling a program that did just that and then decided to do it themselves. Sorry, that's just scummy behavior.
DRWAM
on Nov 11, 2008
Personally, I have had considerably more problems with my Treo and RAZR than the iPhone, which has not dropped a single call. the browser or an add-on app [thrid party] rarely quit. The Treo often needed to be reset and the RAZR gave a incompatible battery warraning several times a week. Both were replaced as well as my wife's RAZR. I would have to give my iPhone experience a top rating, in contrast to this post, as well as note that thrid party app crashes are most likely due to the third party app, not the iPhone. Also, I would never bash Win Mobile as the medical apps are just superior to anything out there and run great, esoecially the radiology app. Maybe it needs a facelift in the opinion of others, but it still does a lot more useful stuff than I find at the iPhone app store. Did anyone see the 'Aunt Flo' app? It and several others will log a menstrual cycle. Just how many of this type of app is needed?
WebGuy3000
on Nov 11, 2008
mikegalos@msn.com said: "I don't recall Paul ever using the argument "it sells well so it must work well" as the iPhone fans do. " Actually, I don't recall anyone using that argument for the iPhone in this thread either. Other than you, that is.
DRWAM
on Nov 11, 2008
MIke, if Apple offered the abilty to DL podcast free, they saved the consumer money which is a good thing. Perhaps that's what they were working on prior to the release of the competeting app. But remember, doc is the ultimate optimist at this site. Is Apple selling it or is it part of the next update?
lotsamystuff
on Nov 11, 2008
Numbers 1, 3, and 9 are deal-killers for me. I also understand voice dialing isn't an option, but I could be wrong there. At the risk of sounding like the good doctor who frequents this site and talks incessantly about his $400 laptop , I've found the Palm Centro to be an absolutely fantastic phone. The media player is very good (even giving me Internet radio--no need for a satellite radio subscription), the camera is adequate, the video recording acceptable for what I use it for. I have voice dialing, cut-and-paste (can't imagine living without that) and while the web browser isn't even close to the experience one gets on the iPhone, it's more than adequate for my needs. Email works flawlessly. SMS and MMS? Check. Needless to say, syncing is perfect, and I've always liked the Palm OS for scheduling and ease of use. Aside from that, it's cheaper, and the data plans are cheaper as well--I have everyone on a family plan with Verizscum, and unlimited texting isn't even an option on the iPhone. Again, that's an absolute deal-killer for me. Guess there's something for everyone, but the iPhone is missing some very basic functionality that I can't imagine living without in a device of this type. As excellent as the iPhone is, the Centro is simply a better solution for me at this time.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
Webguy Note that you had to quailfy that statement with "in this thread" to make it even close to believeable.
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
DRWAM It's included in the next update. The Apple SDK rules are being use to block Apple from 3rd party competition. And in this case, competition for something Apple didn't even have on the market. If that isn't a definitional example of Abuse of Monopoly Power, I don't know what one is.
WebGuy3000
on Nov 11, 2008
mikegalos@msn.com said: "Webguy Note that you had to quailfy that statement with "in this thread" to make it even close to believeable." I didn't "have to" qualify anything. Nor was I trying to. I generally like to avoid blanket statements and keep to the discussion at hand. Please feel free to cite an example where someone said that the iPhone "sells well so it must work well."
DRWAM
on Nov 11, 2008
Although good for the consumer, that's a shame for the developer. Hard work, time and money is wasted. I would be angry if I were the developer. It would be nice to be informed of upcoming update features so that my time and money is not wasted. Apple isn't evil for it, but inconsiderate, or at least how I define it.
heran
on Nov 11, 2008
WebGuy So you agree that iphone doesn't work well though it sells well? Let's get back to the main topic: iphone doesn't work well, shall we?
mikegalos@msn.com
on Nov 11, 2008
DRWAM The problem for the consumer is that Apple is locking in that only one company's product can exist in that niche and that means that nobody can offer an improved version and there's no pressure for Apple to offer a better version. And, of course, there's the fact that Podcaster was available long before iPhone 2.2. (posted it on the wrong thread at first)
Ocean
on Nov 11, 2008
Lets see: Carp47 brought me up, unprovoked, three posts in. In the same post, he says nothing, NOTHING about Pauls blog post. Pretty hypocritical to complain about something and then turn around and do it. Paul, can you ban him please? As for the topic at hand, yes, Paul and Mike are fighting a strawman. A objection of their own creation. I'd challenge the two of them to name any piece of electronics, not just a cell phone, that is 'perfect'. Perfection is relative. Those ten flaws might not be flaws at all to a significant portion of those who buy the iPhone...they might not even be noticed if added to the next generation of iPhone.
Ocean
on Nov 11, 2008
>>that's a shame for the developer<< Only a minority of developers have problems getting their apps published. I'm not saying it's right or wrong, just that there is a lot of noise about the those who don't get their apps published. But a casual stroll through the store reveals many, many apps that have made it through.
tayme
on Nov 11, 2008
@webguy3000 - Don't count on mikegalos providing any examples...I think he makes things like that up as he goes. It is actually kind of fun to watch. --tayme
subzerohitman721
on Nov 11, 2008
Personally, I don't believe in perfection. Perfection does not exist. Its a human concept of something without flaws. Yet everything and everyone has a flaw either major or minor. The iPhone is a perfect example of why I don't believe in perfection. If the iPhone is essentially a phone first and media device second, then how can it be considered perfect if it fails to be a good phone first? If it stinks as a phone, then its not perfect. Second, it was Steve Jobs who picked AT&T. Isn't that a judgement call to be questioned about his pick? When I choose a mobile phone, it has to do the phone part very well. Then I look at the bells and whistles. Trust me, you'll want that phone to work well when your car fails. You'll want it to work when you're in an accident. Its just another piece of tech that needs to be taken back to the drawing boards.
Ocean
on Nov 11, 2008
Apple isn't going to do anything that unnecessarily restricts the flow of the cash. Now what they consider necessary and what Mike considers necessary are two different things. But they *built* the system, and he...comments(!) on someone elses blog. In a nutshell, developers have every reason to develop for the platform. >>The Wall Street Journal Reported that the iTunes app store has earned substantial revenue for Apple and third party developers. * Sales at the current pace of the iTunes app store would yield $360 Million a year in revenue * Sega sold 300,000 copies of Super Monkeyball in 20 days ($9.99 each) * More than 125,000 have downloaded Epocrates, including 25,000 doctors * Developers’ share of iPhone apps were about $21 Million. 10 Developers earned about $9 Million >> http://www.researchcast.com/alpha/?p=68
Ocean
on Nov 11, 2008
App store or open market? >>Since its launch in July, the App Store has grown to become an indie developer's dream come true. Steve Demeter, developer of the vastly popular $5 iPhone game Trism, announced he made $250,000 in profit in just two months. His team? Himself, mainly, with a little bit of help from a friend and a contracted designer (whom he paid $500). If his profits continue at this rate, Demeter will earn nearly $2 million by July 2009. -- What's more, Demeter initially released Trism as a free native application in the Jailbreak community -- meaning it was a game that users could play only if they hacked their iPhones. The prospects of making money were uncertain, but Demeter had a vision: He knew iPhone apps would get big once Apple released a software developer kit to allow third-party apps on the handset, and he wanted to get in on the platform early. <<
Lindy
on Nov 11, 2008
"I don't recall Paul ever using the argument "it sells well so it must work well" as the iPhone fans do. (but, surprisingly, since they're usually the same people, don't think applies to desktops and laptops)" I was the one that linked the iPhone sales. I never said since it sells well it must work well. My point was/is despite its FLAWS its doing quite well. I dont care where NPD got those numbers. The same place they got those numbers from sell lots of WinMO phones, like ATT stores. Yet not one WinMO phone in the top 5. Like I have said in the past without Exchange being the dominant email player in the corporate world, WinMO phones would not even be around.
Ocean
on Nov 11, 2008
I didn't include the link. Here it is: http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/09/indie-developer.html >>Bart Decrem, CEO of Tapulous, would agree. His company's free application Tap Tap Revenge, a music-rhythm game that utilizes the iPhone's touch screen and accelerometer, hit a milestone of 1,000,000 downloads just two weeks after its launch. -- As for profits, Tapulous just recently began inserting advertisements in the game, and the company also has plans to release a premium version that will cost money. Decrem was mum to disclose profit numbers, but Demeter estimates that any top iPhone app is making its company roughly $5,000 to $10,000 a day. <<
shark47
on Nov 11, 2008
Oh. My. God. You guys are still attacking Paul? :-) Paul, how dare you say the iPhone is not perfect. How dare you point out flaws in the iPhone? If the Mac users here (and the one wannabe troll) say they're not important, they aren't. No one cares that you actually like the device and that you think it's one of the best devices in the market. All that matters is that you tried to point out flaws in it. No one even noticed that comment you made in the end about WM. It doesn't matter, Paul. As far as they're concerned, unless you say Apple is perfect, you're simply another M$ fanboy. Now repeat after me. The iPhone is perfect and any flaws are actually design features.
robertsjoe
on Nov 11, 2008
I'm guessing that this is another "paid by MIcrosoft" blog post? How about you get together a list of the bad things about Windows mobile? Can this ASP.NET blogging system handle such a large blog post?
Delmont
on Nov 11, 2008
Vista runs grat on my 3 year old Dell Dimension, my Jag runs great and my iPhone doesn't drop calls.

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