Apple on Friday posted a video to its website offering prospective iPhone buyers a 25-minute guided tour of the handset. We've compiled a listed of interesting tidbits revealed in the step-by-step demonstration.View the video
The guided tour is available via Apple's iPhone website, which continued to see additional refinements on Friday.
Notable mentions:
- iPhone ships with a stereo headset that features a microphone and integrated button that lets users answer and end calls easily. It can also be used to control audio and video playback.
- If a call comes in while music is playing, the volume will fade out and the iPhone will pause the music. A single click on the headset button will answer the call. A second click will hang up and fade the music back in right where it left off.
- iPhone can be locked by pressing the Sleep/Wake button. Once locked, iPhone will still receive calls and allow users to play music and adjust the volume. However, nothing will happen if the user accidently touches the screen.
- To completely power off iPhone, press and hold the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds. Then, drag the red on-screen slider to confirm.
- Users can change the order of iPhone lists, such as favorite phone numbers, by drag-and-drop.
- iPhone's visual voicemail feature allows users to scroll through recordings in realtime using an onscreen progress slider.
- If already on a call when second call comes in, iPhone's on-screen software allows users to ignore the second call or place the first call on hold while taking the new call. A handy onscreen "swap" option then provides an easy way to alternate between the two callers. Similarly, a "merge calls" option will merge the two calls into a conference call.
- When listening to a specific song in iPod mode, iPhone offers an on-screen button that will display a playable listing of all tracks from that same album.
- iPhone will automatically switch to CoverFlow mode when the device is positioned in landscape view under iPod mode.
- Movies play only in landscape view.
- Hot buttons at the base of the iPod mode software interface can be custom configured like toolbars in the Mac OS X Finder.
- Photos taken with iPhone can be used as wallpaper, emailed, or assigned to a contact in the handset's address book.
- Mail includes built-in readers for viewing PDF, JPEG, Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel files. It also features the same action sounds as the current version of Mail running on Mac OS X Tiger.
- Tapping on a phone number included in an email will automatically call that number.
- It does not appear as if "Maps" will determine your current location using AT&T's wireless network.
- Maps includes a "Traffic" button that provides an update on current driving conditions. Green lines on the map indicate traffic is flowing smoothly while yellow and red lines mean problems ahead.
- You can turn off iPhone's network features so it can be used safely on an airplane.
- iPhone comes pre-loaded with an assortment of ringtones.