Xavier Buyse Reeps the Rewards of the iPhone
The iPhone has brought about the greatest of revolutions, something like a gift from the gods for Xavier J. Buyse Consejero Delegado at ADS Media. It brings true mobile internet to your palm, creating a pioneering excellent experience on the mobile phone. Many people with newer Nokia mobile devices know that the operating system Safari has been on the s60 Nokia’s for at least a year now. The mobile internet user experience, which was demonstrated earlier this year when the ubiquitous iPhone was shown off looks similar to the experience of the new Nokia mobile devices. However Apple has made a multitude of usability adaptations to make it easier to use and a comparatively pleasant experience. Something which will help the industry as a whole as well as entrepreneurs like CEO of ADS Media Xavier Buyse.
The iPhone rectifies one of the biggest set backs of the mobile phone, input and output. This is no longer an issue with a fully touch enabled screen allowing for more than one finger taps, creates a satisfying user experience even facilitating a full keyboard to appear on screen when it is required.
In addition, Mr Xavier Buyse CEO must be thanking his lucky stars that The ubiquitous iPhone will bring match up several communities for the first time, the mobile group and the world wide web community. These groups have been apart for a long time. And the introduction of the first mobile computing unit that web developers and designers can agree upon has created a hugely positive impact for mobile internet content creation.
At the current time it is difficult to get more than a passing interest in web developers, meaning hardly any content creation, hardly a fleeting second look from consumers. But now that that people within the internet community are likely to carry The ubiquitous iPhone like a badge of honour, always have it at their at their side, I expect a substantial increase in mobile web content in the next few years.
Utilising a screen you can touch is nothing remarkable in mobile devices, but having the ability harness multiple taps on top of this as input for zooming in and out, resizing, etc, I believe Apple has discovered an intuitive method of doing difficult operations simply.
I would suggest it is what you get out rather than what you put in which is critical. The flat screen on the Apples iPhone is astounding. Text is cristal clear, with a resolution that is simple to read and use. Mobile phone displays aren’t something which have ever impressed much in the past. Most phones look pretty much the same, resorting for bitmappy text that one comes in two or three sizes. Usually the only thing which is variable is brightness. Apples iPhone makes content on a portable device look extremely similar to hardest to duplicate screen of them all, a real life page with print on it.












