My second reaction was disappointment. A few months before its release, Steve Jobs had locked down the device, ensuring that only Apple would be able to create programs that ran natively on the phone. After using it for a bit, that decision seemed short-sighed. The iPhone didn?t look like a computer, but it felt like one. This was a general-purpose device?a phone, a music player, a Web browser, and a personal assistant?whose capabilities should have been endlessly expandable by third-party developers. The more I used it, the more I wanted to use it: I wanted games, streaming movies and music, Skype. Most of all, I wanted things I didn?t even know were possible.
Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=309561c29ad25eaa15240c920c896805
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