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By: lijogk
Using iPhone Jobs said that this was the best iPod the company has ever made, and we have to say, we completely agree. We are not audiophiles, but from whatever we know about this phone till now, we think it is going to be at the top of the list of wants of every music listener this Christmas. The iPod makes full use of the touchscreen interface and managing and playing songs through the touchscreen seems so fluent and natural, it gives the impression you’re actually touching your music. The large widescreen is easily the best one to watch videos on. No longer does one need to squint on a tiny screen while watching videos on the move. Finding music seems to be faster due to the easily navigable interface, and the presence of OS X must mean more powerful searching and sorting features. The album art looks gorgeous on the large display, there is a built-in speaker and there is Cover Flow, for the first time on an iPod. And unlike in iTunes, the Cover Flow on the iPhone is actually useful, and we can see that becoming the preferred mode of browsing through their music for most iPhone owners. Get Started With the new iPhone To get started with the iPod, you push an orange iPod icon on the lower right hand corner of the iPhone screen. Once in the iPod interface, we see five buttons across the bottom—Playlists, Artists, Songs, Videos, and More. The first feature one needs to be acquainted with is the scrolling. To scroll through a list of anything, you just place a finger lightly onto the screen and flick it in the direction we want to scroll to. So if you want to scroll the list of songs up, you just flick your finger in the upward direction and it scrolls like butter. The animation gives you a feel that it is rubber banding up and down. Playing Songs on iPhone , creating play lists To play a song, you click on the “Artist” button, scroll through the artists and tap on the one you want, and a list of albums pops up, followed by a list of the songs for the album you chose. Now there is a “Shuffle” option at the top. You can either hit that to play the whole album in any order or simply chose the song you want to play. What follows is not only a treat for the ears, but for the eyes as well. The name of the artist, followed by the title of the song and the album is displayed in a bar at the top. There is a “Back” button to go back to the list of songs and a flip button to rotate the gorgeous album art displayed below. If you intend to buy an iPhone when it comes out, it is time to start tagging that cluttered library properly along with the album art. It will be worth it. The Previous, Play/Pause and Next buttons are at the bottom of the display followed by the volume control bar. For some reason, there seems to be no indication of the length of the track or the current playback position on this screen. This is quite odd, and we can only hope that they include those in the final shipping version. When you flip the album art around, you can see all the tracks in the current album complete with the track number and duration for each. At the top of the screen, there is a provision for rating the currently playing album on a scale of five stars, like in iTunes.Now comes the most interesting part: you can simply turn the phone around and hold it horizontally while the iPod is running. The phone senses the change in orientation, automatically switches to landscape mode, and displays Cover Flow. Here you can simply browse through the covers using the flicking gesture with your finger and tap on any cover to have it flip around and display the list of songs in the album. This is an added functionality, lacking in iTunes, and it makes Cover Flow very useful. Click on any song to start the playback. At the bottom left-hand corner of the Cover Flow screen is the Play/Pause button, and there is an “Info” button at the right-hand corner which, according to our presumptions, will show you all the relevant information about either the currently playing album/track or of the album which is at the forefront in the Cover Flow navigation. After you’re done, simply rotating the phone back to its upright state brings you to the currently playing screen described above.Of course, as with the iPod, you can make any number of playlists and play them conveniently. The “More” tab houses six other options—Albums, Audiobooks, Compilations, Composers, Games, and Podcasts. Selecting the “Albums” option lists all the albums stored on the phone in a list with a small thumbnail of the album art and the title of the each album. All the other options are pretty self-explanatory. The presence of the “Games” option indicates that Apple will develop games that take advantage of the iPhone’s huge touchscreen. However, this feature was not advertised at Macworld—maybe because no games has yet been developed that could be shown off to the audience.Watching Videos on iPhoneClicking on the “Videos” tab brings up all the videos stored on the phone. The videos are organised under the following categories—Movies, TV Shows, Music Videos, and Podcasts. Each video is represented by a thumbnail, the title, artist, episode number, and the length. Click on any video and it starts playing it in the landscape orientation. There is apparently no provision for playing movies in the vertical position (though we do not see any need for that). All of them are played in full screen mode with no controls to obstruct the view. Tapping on the screen brings up the onscreen controls. There is a “Done” button at the top left corner that takes you back to the list of videos followed by the scrub bar for jumping directly to any position in the video. You can see how much of the video has been played on the left side of the bar and the remaining duration on the right. There is a small button with two diagonal arrows facing each other but its function is not known as yet. Towards the bottom of the screen are the standard controls—Previous, Play/Pause, Next, and volume control. Widescreen movies are played with an aspect ratio of 16:10 by default (i.e. it takes up the whole screen and cutting out a little bit on both sides) and double-tapping on the screen while the movie is playing restores it to the default aspect ratio. Double-tap again to toggle back and forth. The iPhone also remembers how much a video has been played and if a video is quit in between and watched again a week later, it continues from that point on.Jobs describes the response he got from an Apple employee about the iPod functionality of the iPhone~”You know, I was showing this to somebody; I was giving a demo to somebody a little while ago who’d never seen this before inside Apple and I finished the demo, I said, ‘What do you think?’ He told me this—he said, ‘You had me at scrolling.’” Indeed, this seems to be the best portable media player in the market till date, and things are only going to get better with each revision. All in all, we think we can safely conclude that the iPhone truly excels in the media department.
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