I'm a sucker...
So I'm writing this blog from my new iPhone. Yes, I took the plunge-- I stood in line and got one in hour one. I will probably write more on the subject later. More to come...
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So I'm writing this blog from my new iPhone. Yes, I took the plunge-- I stood in line and got one in hour one. I will probably write more on the subject later. More to come...
So I was just watching the recently posted Apple - iPhone - Activation & Sync video and something caught my eye: during the demonstration of iPhone sync features, it was clear that the presenter's iPhone has 80GB of space. Check this out:

I just went back to the video, and it's already changed! Now it's 8GB!
Something is fishy...
UPDATE:
Looks like Engaget caught this too:
http://www.engadget.com/2007/06/26/80gb-iphone/
There has been a lot of hullaballoo in the Mac developer community about
As I see there, there are three ways they could expose this:
As I see it, if they could expose both high and low level tracking for gestures, they would gain immediate benefit from developers implementing rich, iPhone-specific UIs for their web apps. They would also gain from the having the developer community be able to invent new gestures, most of which will likely be confusing, but some of which may actually be adopted by the iPhone in future software iterations.
Granted, I recognize that writing code to recognize new gestures based on the low-level API I describe above is no small matter. Consider something as simple as the "chord" effect being complicated by the diagonal chording gesture (currently supported in MacBook(Pro) trackpads): you would have to disambiguate finger fluctuations in such chording from the motion of spreading or pinching either by timed modes, tolerance thresholds, or some combination of the two. Not for the faint of heart!
Anyhow, that's what I was wondering...
Still haven't decided if I'm in for version 1 (err, mass-market public beta 1, more likely.) Some more details from AT&T would be helpful.
Whatever you may think about the state of war and peace in the world, it is clear
we continue to melt down our ploughshares only to reforge them as swords.
And this is the world I have brought my children into...