pe.ma Pema Hegan's collection of news and ideas too long for a tweet

12Feb/090

My iPhone ate my guitar tuner!?

My friend Dre posted a great presentation that he gave at the Mobile Marketing Conference a couple of days ago.

Dre is always showing me iPhone applications that he downloads to replace other devices in his life. His guitar tuner app, for example, that means he doesn't need a seperate guitar tuner in each of his 11 guitar cases (he like guitars!). Dre makes a good case in this presentation that a growing number of unsuspecting businesses are going to feel the burn when their products start to get replaced by apps in large numbers.

He makes a bunch of other great points too. Take a read - it's short...

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30Jun/082

Unlocked iPhones not syncing with iTunes anymore?

I just plugged in my unlocked iPhone and got this iTunes screen. The music, contacts and photos didn't update. Phone still works but it looks like it is not syncing with iTunes anymore. Oh dear. I guess Apple really want me to fork over some money for an official Rogers iPhone plan.

10Nov/075

Another Rogers photo: iPhone in Canada on January 18th

Another photo of some Rogers point-of-sale material for the iPhone hit the internet today. This time the launch date in Canada is January 18th. I'm still not convinced this is the real deal, but I'm getting closer. At least this time the Rogers logo looks like it is in the right place ;).

Fingers crossed everyone.

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28Oct/070

If it sounds too good to be true, it usually is

This Rogers ad for the iPhone in Canada found its way onto the web yesterday via the Boy Genius Report. Looks like a botched photoshop job to me. But still, we can dream can't we?

4Oct/0712

How to justify buying an iPhone in Canada

Last week I finally gave in to temptation. I drove to Buffalo and bought an iPhone. It's now unlocked and working just fine over wifi and the Rogers network.

Since picking it up I've had a ton of friends tell me they really want an iPhone, but can't decide if they should wait until Rogers release it here. I felt the same way until last week. So, here is how I justified buying an iPhone for use in Canada right now. I hope this helps...

1. The iPhone isn't (officially) coming to Canada anytime soon
Being the only GSM company in Canada, Rogers are guaranteed the iPhone. Back in June they announced they were in talks with Apple but said they were progressing very slowly, and today a friend of mine with contacts at Rogers told me talks are still progressing very slowly. Rogers have had 6 months to negotiate with Apple and they still don't have a deal. Makes me think it is very unlikely the iPhone will be out in Canada before the holidays, and it could be a much longer wait.

Why the big delay? The iPhone is so out of whack with Rogers product strategy that I think they will have real trouble striking a deal with Apple. For example, my wife bought a new phone from Rogers in the weekend. It came pre-loaded with a Rogers theme (some horrible red thing) and it was full of embedded links to things like the Rogers music store. Apple are most likely saying Rogers can't put anything on the phone, plus as I understand it Apple are asking for a rev share deal. The iPhone also promotes massive data usage, something that Rogers with their current pricing plans just aren't set up to accommodate. Finally, Rogers know that hacked iPhones from the US can only work on their network so they'll be getting all of the business coming from cross border sales anyway.

I'm guessing manages at Rogers Wireless are in no hurry to finalize a deal with Apple. As long as the competition aren't going to release the iPhone (which they can't, because everyone but Rogers is on CDMA) it's in their best interest to stick to selling blackberries and other handsets from manufactures who play nice.

2. Even without mobile data, the iPhone is a great device
I've been surprised at how the iPhone has fit into my life. I expected to be constantly checking email when I was out and about, but instead I'm using it on my wifi network at home more often. I'm finding it a great way to quickly check a facebook message, look up movie times, check the weather, do a wikipedia search, check my google calendar for the next day... all without opening my laptop. The iPhone is also just a lovely interface for text messaging, and has a pretty solid phone and camera. So, even without the mobile data, I think it's worth the $399.

3. If you're only checking email, Rogers sells 10MBs of data for $5
In Canada, your first 10MBs of data are cheap. It's the next 100 that'll bankrupt you! If you live in or around Toronto you can sign up to a Rogers Vision deal that gives you 10MBs for $5. This means if you're desperate to check email on your iPhone, you can - and it's cheap.

4. $399 US = $399 CND, and that's not going to last forever
Cross boarder shopping is as good as it's going to get with the 1:1 exchange rate. And Buffalo is only a 2 hour drive from Toronto.

5. And finally, if you don't get on the iPhone product release bandwagon now, you might never
Yes, Apple will release a 16GB iPhone after the holidays. Yes, they will probably have a model with video and all of the other features people are demanding not long after that. But in my experience with all things Apple, if you wait for the perfect product you'll be waiting for the rest of your life. Get an iPhone now - enjoy it - and you won't feel so bad about upgrading in a year ;).

Note: Having written this post I feel like a cross between a raving Apple fan boy and a sleazy PR exec. Disclosure: I did not get paid to write this ;).

25Sep/072

Apparently, “Canadians pay lowest wireless prices in North America”

This might actually be funny if we wasn't so likely to succeed.

The Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association (i.e. Rogers, Telus, Bell and friends) has launched a lobby site for the 2008 wireless spectrum auction headlined "Real competition benefits all of us."

Their lead story is a July 2007 report from the OECD that says, "...mobile phone customers in Canada enjoy some of the most competitive wireless prices among the 30 countries that comprise the organization's membership."

I think I could find a few people willing to argue with that ;).

After all that has been written about the farcical wireless pricing in Canada, it's hard to believe the CWTA would come out with such a brazen communication plan. But they have. And I'm sure they don't see the funny side.

Particularly paranoid about wireless rates are all of us Canadians hoping to buy an iPhone before the end of the year. We're deathly scared it will be priced out of our hands by Rogers. More on that soon...

14Aug/070

“Ted Rogers… Hello… Are you out there?”

The iPhone ads are annoying enough when I'm reading the New York Times (iPhone coming to Canada anytime soon Ted?) but this week it was even worse... T-Mobile had a full page promotion for their new HotSpot @ Home product.

Here's the gist: Buy a HotSpot phone ($49) and a wireless router and, while you're at home, T-Mobile will route all of your calls through the internet without you doing a thing. This means unlimited nationwide calling while you're at home (or any of the T-Mobile HotSpot locations) for only $10 per month. Now that sounds pretty darn good to me.

So Ted, when do you think we can expect to see this in Canada?... Ted?

26Jun/075

Pluses and minuses of living in Canada

Minus: Putting up with second rate mobile phone companies.

This week us Canadians are sitting here watching America go crazy for the iPhone (launching at 6pm this Friday). You'd think now would be the perfect time for Rogers to announce a release schedule for Canada. But no, silence. To rub salt in the wounds we all got a nice look at the AT&T/iPhone rate plans announced yesterday. They are about half the price of a regular Blackberry plan in this country and they include unlimited data transfer!!

Comparison...
AT&T iPhone plan: $59.99 (USD)

  • 450 daytime minutes
  • 5000 nights and weekends
  • Unlimited mobile to mobile
  • Unlimited data
  • 200 text messages

Rogers Blackberry plan: $112.95 ($90 + $6.95 system access + $6 text plan)

  • 350 daytime minutes
  • Unlimited nights and weekends
  • 25 MB data
  • 125 text messages

Today's USD exchange rate: 0.94

Tom had a great post a couple of months ago detailing our fate as Canadian mobile data consumers. It's not pretty.