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January 15, 2008 10:28 PM PST

The mass SMS-text strikes back: The 1.1.3 iPhone update rocks

by Kevin Ho
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I still stand by my original post that the updates promised for the iPhone released today as firmware "update 1.1.3 "should be given a better number, maybe a 1.2?, to mark the great features and updates. Hoaxes and teasers aside, I can't contain my giddiness - mass SMS text messages are back! That and many other neat features tracks the industry-wide trend of users being able to customize their iPhones to greater and greater lengths. Installation, via iTunes (which itself got an update) was quick - within 10 minutes I was up and running.

The changes I've noted and used so far that have made all the difference:

Google Maps qausi-GPS. Pretty cool to know where you generally are while stuck in traffic. After hitting a button a circle appears to indicate where you are generally. Kind of looks more like a targeting device for Kang and Kodos but eh, I can see how this will be pretty useful.

Customized iPhone application homepages - without a hack! Finally, I can change my icons and shove Stocks and YouTube to the second page! I never used those applications anyway and, finally, here's a way to get rid of them, well, not seeing them. That and I've added Safari icon links to this newly freed real estate to The New York Times, Facebook mobile for the iPhone, SFGate and to CNET (of course). The best part of this new feature is the seizure-inducing icon-shake when you want to change the ordering and inclusion of icons (via a drop and drag feature) on the various pages (up to 9 pages, I've read) that contain your iPhone menus - perfect for all those developer applications that are coming.

And, finally, SMS-texting en masse One of my New Year's resolutions was actually to text less and call more. Well, with 1.1.3... let's just say I probably won't be keeping that resolution. I had been finding that, because mass text messages weren't available, that I communicated with fewer people than I did with my Razr. After all, there are only so many individual text messages you can send while at a traffic light, or waiting in line at the store, it wasn't only time-consuming, but tedious. Now, you can add multiple recipients - what the maximum number of recipients are is currently unclear, but sending the message does take longer. These text messages are denoted with a little group of people icon (how cute and convenient). What's more, early polling data seems to indicate that recipients of the mass text message can't tell it's a mass text message. Responses from individuals are also segregated and not contained within the original mass text thread. Excellent.

Kevin Ho is a San Francisco attorney and the owner of a brand new iPhone. He'll be writing about the experience for the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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by wmyinzer January 16, 2008 12:15 AM PST
I dont see the hype in this. Have you ever used a cell phone Mr. Ho? Almost any cell phone has a function for multiple-recipient SMS txting, pix, and video messenging. "Early polling data?" sounds like an Apple fanboy.
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by kkho28 January 16, 2008 2:52 PM PST
Yes, I have used a cell phone and have been texting for years when I lived in the UK. What's new about this is that you never tend to realize how important a basic feature like texting to multiple recipients is until you don't have it. Admittedly, this should have been a basic feature that should have come with the initial iPhone, but it wasn't and now it is. Much to my delight. (And, this response was authored on a PC).
by mhmmthatsright January 25, 2008 1:44 PM PST
whatever dude


have you ever used an iphone wmyinzer?

other phones might have multiple-recipient SMS texting

but before 1.1.3 there wasnt for iphone

so don't talk unless you know what you're saying
by janwynns February 16, 2008 2:16 PM PST
What a wonderful recent upgrade to the iPhone -- from moving around icons and placing them on different screens to (drumroll please) my iPhone now being able to locate where I am on the map! What a thrill when I discovered that!! Although not as precise as my Garmin, it's close enough that I might not need to upgrade to another GPS with better resolution (currently using an older Garmin iQue). I continue to be blown away by how much technology helps me in my work. Many thanks to all you geniuses out there who through technology enhance our lives in many positive ways. Now back to my iPhone to see what other little discoveries I can find. And, while I am here . . . let me step up onto my soap box . . . I wish there was a way to type in the suggestion of a contact name instead of having to scroll through them alphabetically. I feel so ungrateful saying this as I do adore my iPhone. But if we could just fix that one little item . . . . yes, I know, then I would just want something else, huh. :-)
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About Living with the iPhone

Kevin Ho is a San Francisco attorney and the owner of a brand new iPhone. He'll be writing about the experience for the CNET Blog Network.

He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

Disclosure.

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