The greatest fear among the technophobic is the inability to a new computer, new software or a new electronic device to be used. Faced with this challenge, the Apple iPhone flattens the learning curve a lot.
Apple's approach has always been to create products from the perspective of a user, but as an engineer or a view of programmers.
This approach illustrates the power supply for the computer industry, with products like the Macintosh, iMac, PowerBook and iPod in your pocket.
The fact that the digital music player iPod is the dominant MP3 player in the market, with over 90% of the auctions on sites like eBay, the testimony of Apple's design skills.
One could say that the iPhone is the smartphone primarily for people using mobile phones is designed to hate.
The iPhone user interface is intuitive and therefore the users the opportunity to most of the functions of the iPhone without reference to a manual use.
Apple, which has been a pioneer of the graphical user interface in its line of Mac computers have for the smartphone, which for the desktop, laptop and his digital music player iPod has done icon.
While you could sit and feel that the features of the iPhone is so user friendly that anyone can do it, you can see some irony in this statement.
If the iPhone so easy to use because it was one of the other large telco already launched features such as a smart keyboard, computer, intelligence, intelligent enough to put the brightness of the LCD in response to the ambient lighting to adjust or disable the keyboard when in close to your face already?
While the competitors seem to be constantly struggling to add more opportunities for its digital music players and computers, trying to outdo each other, this seems an exercise in the significant increase in the whiz-bang factor of the devices.
Instead, Apple is the opposite approach and look for the easiest solution to a drawing or a technical challenge.
There is an elegance in simple solutions, and user-friendly way, and soon the Apple iPhone Apple iPod, which probably makes this category of smartphones into the mass market.
Many complain that Smartphones are now perhaps a little 'too smart for their own good, with menus buried under several menus, and users who struggle to make simple changes to their phones.
The iPhone looks to change this trend, and if he can, but still rankled some other place on the technology landscape.








