Thanks for the info. I've talked to several people, including a couple people who have used both. They all prefer the iPhone and they're all in business. One person has the Bold because it's too hard to type on the iPhone and she sends a lot of e-mail. She said she would have the iPhone if not for the e-mail issues. That's a major drawback for me too, but someone told me he got used to it pretty quickly.
I also heard the iPhone battery doesn't last for more than a day.
You know my comment sometimes might not be the correct one for a normal user, because i look at "systems" in a differente way, the usefull & correct way i would say. This is like when you ask someone "hey which cpu are you getting for your laptop" and the reply is "I need a 2.2 CORE 2 DUO 800MHZ man because i run A LOT of programs, excel outlook winamp internet explorer skype..." and they give you an extensive list which in the end, is nothing! and a difference of even 1 ghz wont really give any change, yes, programs will probably run faster but...you as user wont really notice the ms difference.
When i talk about correct & usefull use of "systems", reffer to you friend that sends a "lot of email". These gadgets were made for connectivity, no doubt, but from that to write a poem in your spare time to send to a friend just because you are bored, then sure, any keyboard is gonna sux.
Also think about this, most emails you receive in your mobile, are like, "order went fine" "tomorrow a meeting" "we have problems, are you coming here?" and stuff that is not REALLY important to fix it in the exact moment, so, instead of writting a long answer and wasting your time while you are at it, you could just have saved some default answers, then just pick the one you want and reply like "ok" "call you later"...
Not sure if you get the idea, but a correct way to decide what are you gonna buy is to ask yourself a simple question: "Do i really need all of these features?" "Do i really need the faster processor out?" "Do i really need 10gb ram or 2 will be enough for me?"
In the end, you end paying more for something that you thought it would be for you, but it isnt.