iPhone???? NO Blackberry is on the Mood....go Berry!!!!
The keyboard. The BlackBerry keyboard is an engineering wonder. I have a model with a full QWERTY keyboard rather than a downsizedphone pad, and I can thumb-type my editor with one hand while hanging off the side of a San Francisco cable car with the other. iPhone's virtual on-screen keyboard is a whole lot cooler, but it loses its luster as soon as you have to meet a deadline. After hours of practice—the trick is to tap the virtual keys lightly with your fingertips, rather than trying to press down—I still mistype my own name. The iPhone's built-in spellchecker adds to the confusion. It alternates between correcting words I don't want it to correct—my friend's nickname markc gets auto-corrected to marks—and somehow letting brazen errors slip through: I just sent an e-mail "from the Apple Stpre." No matter how much I practice, I still need to stare at the touchscreen to type correctly. I'm sure there's someone out there who can iPhone with his eyes closed, but I've yet to meet him. Touch-typing BlackBerry users, meanwhile, are everywhere, thumbing away behind steering wheels or with their hands tucked under the conference table during meetings. Sure, we're a highway menace, but we're productive. Contacts. In my career, fast personal networking is as important as fast computer networking. I've set up my BlackBerry with a hot button to jump to my contacts in midcall or mid-email. The iPhone's home screen, on the other hand, includes YouTube and Stocks but not the Contacts app. When you do find it, you'll see the iPhone lacks the all-in-one "spotlight" search that's built into Apple's other computers. You can only browse your contacts by first name, last name, or other categories, and you need to go back to the phone's settings screen to change the browsing order.* This looks fantastic if you have 24 contacts but falls apart when you've got 240 and aren't good at remembering people's last names. Really, anything beats having to scroll through 300 names with my finger. Aside from the obvious benefits of Visual Voicemail, it's hard to conjure a scenario in which any of the iPhone's gee-whiz features will help you get any work done. Multitouchis fun to play around with, and it's neat to rotate the screen from portrait to landscape. I'm skeptical that either feature will ever help me meet a deadline. Apple hasn't yet succeeded in turning its fetish object into a productivity tool, but BlackBerry's maker, Research in Motion, has done the reverse. The company made its business tool into a fetish object by starting with functionality (check out the original model) and gradually growing into sexy shapes like the Pearl and the Curve. While I can't imagine ditching my BlackBerry for an iPhone, I'm clearly in the minority. That worries me. Whenever I visit a tech company here in Silicon Valley, the work focus is inevitably disrupted by some dork who whips out his Apple phone for a demo. (Yes, I've seen the thing you can do with two fingers on the photos. No, I don't want to see it again.) If the sales stats mean that professionals are replacing their handsets en masse, iPhone could be the biggest productivity hit to American business since that Dancing Baby video. We've got to do something—but first let me take this call.