What about business users? The original iPhone couldn't handle MS Exchange sync and push email, while the new 2.0 OS does an admirable job with Exchange push email. It's available in 8 and 16 gig capacities and the 8 gig comes in black while the 16 gig is available in black or white. It has WiFi, the best web browser on a mobile phone, plays youtube mobile videos.
Loading music and videos is just as brain-dead easy on the iPhone as an iPod.
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It syncs easily to desktop PIM applications (Outlook in Windows, the Mac OS Address Book and iCal in Mac OS X). The iPhone does everything an iPod does and boasts a 3.5" 480 x 320 pixel display (huge by phone standards) for extremely watchable video playback. As Steve Jobs said at the original iPhone's announcement, "it's the best iPod we've ever made". What's so special about the iPhone? It's that Apple voodoo of great looks, extreme ease of use, fun-factor and now, business savvy. Lines at the US AT&T and Apple stores were longer for the 3G than the original iPhone. The iPhone 3G, this time sold around the world and not just in the US, brought out buyers in droves. That's all quite nice, but nothing so revolutionary that a million folks would snarf up the new iPhone in the first weekend, right? Wrong. Smaller but important improvements include better speaker sound, a more hand-friendly curved back and a non-recessed headphone jack that doesn't require and adapter for larger headphone plugs. The iPhone 3G boasts a few additions while keeping virtually the same form- it adds 3G HSDPA for much faster wireless data and a GPS. Even grandmothers and technophobes knew about Apple's cool new phone thanks to long lines at the mall and a barrage of major news coverage. The original iPhone's launch 1 year ago was likely the hottest consumer electronics event of 2007. Editor's update, June 2010: read our review of the newest iPhone, the iPhone 4.