Oh, they're bragging. They're putting it in their gmail chat windows:
Available replaced by
i have an iphone.
Before you all start thinking it so, no, I am not jealous. And that's becase on the very day Apple put out the iPhone,
Ratatouille came out. As I sat in an air conditioned theatre with a hundred or so kids and their parents,
you were on the phone with AT&T trying to explain that the *#$^ thing won't activate.I'm a hardcore Mac fan. I am part of the Cult of the Mac and proud owner of three, count 'em three, Apple computers. Bought the second gen iPod. Waited in line in Ginza when the iPod Mini debuted in pink (had to return it 3 times b/c of manufacturing problems and finally gave up when they wanted to give me a fourth one...) There, now that I've established my cred...
Months ago, I asked some other hardcore Apple fans, as well as folks within the mobile phone industry, whether they thought I should buy it when it came out. "Puff," they scoffed, "not a chance. All first-gen stuff is gonna have problems."
And they were right. But even though the MacBook is "figured out" now, people are still
destroying them with sledgehammers.
Moving right along to the Disney/Pixar movie. The film is a gem. It does to me what the Harry Potter books and films have done to me. They make me feel like a kid again. I'm entranced and leave the theatre in a kind of daze, everything takes on a more vivid color and flavor. I believe rats are blue and can cook. That sort of thing.
The iPhone has been hailed by some as the phone that will revolutionize the way we live, eat and drink. Haven't all our other technologies already done that? As tech crazed as I am, I've been staying off the computer for longer swathes of time recently. More emails than ever but my real self-development is happening off-line. Isn't yours?
I know, it took technology to let me see that film yesterday. I guess I'm really just pleased that I wasn't one of those at the front of the line waiting to buy a phone, hang out with customer service and majorly lose my cool yesterday. You're not a trend-setter if you bought one. You're a slave to technology. And if you don't already own stock in the company, you're simply making Steve and Co. very rich.
Now, get out there and watch the film. It may not be terribly hip but you'll laugh. (And side note, you're making Steve rich by going to that film too,
since he's the largest shareholder at Disney.)
And if you still really, really want an iPhone, not to worry.
Here's a recipe for creating your very own homemade iPhone. All it takes is a little magic. *twinkle*
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*All images found in the photo montage above property of Steve Jobs. As far as I can figure it anyway. Paul of Plunge Artist added the Photoshop magic.