The Mercury News suggests
the phone acts like a 1.0 revision. Duh. It is a 1.0 revision
One of the iPhone's big selling points is that it has a full version of Apple's Safari Web browser, meaning that it can display Web pages in the same way as you'd see them on your computer. Having been frustrated for years by the crippled and difficult to navigate mobile Web on my Verizon phones, I loved the idea that I can finally get the real Web on a cell phone.
But for the most part, that remains just a good idea rather than a reality with the iPhone.
The device's worst flaw is the wireless network it runs on. Apple chose to partner with AT&T, but in orders to save space inside the phone and conserve battery life, the company chose to have the iPhone work with AT&T's older EDGE network, instead of its newer, faster 3G Mobile Broadband one.