I have been looking for this app since I owned a Treo. Setup was a breeze, and everything worked exactly as I expected it would. Call quality was clear, although I noticed a little delay that I'm not sure if was the result of cell network or just being able to hear the person calling me in the other room. I was pleasantly surprised to hear the computer ring the same as my phone (not sure what I expected, though), and the little battery and cell meter are excellent additions. Reading the address book for the image was also awesome, and another pleasant surprise. Aesthetically, it's pretty, but it also works easily and well - what I expect in Mac software.
Some things I don't like: The app is a space hog on my screen. Ideally I'd prefer it be in the menubar, and only be a drop-down text box that I can type a name or number in to, and the icons can be the signal indicators (optionally, of course, and defaults to a phone). Failing that, I'd prefer the window be resizable at least. I don't need a full dialpad since I'll be dialing from my keyboard anyway. On the note of the keyboard, I like that the caller image was the iOS-7-style rounded icons, but the dialers are old, square keys. Lastly, it looks like you made all of the integrations and just stopped - the menus are sparse, and feel like you just ignored they were there in a default Xcode project. If I'm dealing with phone numbers or address book data, I don't need any text editing beyond maybe cut and paste (see the Edit menu - all of that text stuff is unused. Also, "Help isn't available for Connect" isn't helpful at all. Make it friendly ("Help is on the way, but not here yet.") or have it open Safari to your support site, email, something.
All in all, I like it, and as I said, I've been looking for this app for over a decade. With that comes a price critique - I would have gladly paid a lot of money for this in the past, but nowadays so much of my communication is through the iPhone's other capabilities, and my calls are rare anymore. At $0.99, it's a no-brainer. At $3, you're going to need reviews that defend the app's functionality and compatibility since it's out of the impulse buy window. Luckily, you've got one of those coming shortly. Best of luck, and great job on the app!
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You've no idea how much of an accessability bonus this is, I've never been able to access Siri without physically touching the phone before. Obviously not much touching going on with us quadriplegics!
You should think about writing an application that focuses on just this aspect alone, you could do a massive amount of good and help a lot of disabled people like me.
This has seriously made my day!
I'm quadriplegic, and making a phone call from my iPhone is a total pain even with the accessibility software turned on.
However, I'm able to control everything about my laptop, but was never able to bridge that three inches between my phone on my laptop to be able to do this.
Your app seems to be working as expected and I've just bought it!
Excellent work.
EDIT: Very cool! It's pretty polished and I didn't know I would have Siri in there too. I'm not totally sure about a use-case, because I'm someone who turns off Bluetooth to save battery (does it even save battery anymore?) but it's definitely a cool concept, well executed. There should be an exit button somewhere.
This is on the Late 2013 rMBP 15" and a 5S.
1. Setup/pairing: Clear instructions, worked perfectly
2. Access to phone book: OK and can be denied and then requires manual dialling
3. Making calls: OK
4. Receiving calls: OK, gives a notification.
I like the app, it works great. Good job.