My thoughts on the iPhone 6 Plus, five months later

I lead a mobile sedentary lifestyle. I’m not someone who travels a lot or needs to visit multiple sites during a workday. I like, as George Carlin once said, to bring all my stuff with me. This has created its own challenges. Keeping multiple devices in sync can be frustrating, so I try to make one mobile device the primary source of truth for my data. I view myself as a creative (although I’m not even on the same planet as Adam Savage), so I want my devices to aid my efforts while staying out of the way as much as possible.

I bought the iPhone 6 Plus with the hopes it would become that device, especially with some new enhancements in iOS 8. Read on to see how successful it was.

One device to rule them all: is that possible?

It is almost impossible to discuss the iPhone 6 Plus without talking about how it integrates with the rest of my mobile devices: an iPad 3 and a MacBook Pro from 2011. I also have a work-supplied ThinkPad I use for most of my daily toil.

One of my weird little personally quirks is that I try to do all things on my mobile devices. This has led to initiatives like my Year of the iPad last year. Due to limitations of my iPhone 5, my iPad saw heavy use. So last year I worked on not having to carry my MacBook with me as much. I was largely successful at this.

This is because my reaction to the 6 Plus was so positive, and I’ve also found myself reaching for the iPad less.

My daily routine is pretty well-established at this point. I show up for work and put my iPad into my Origami Workstation Case, my iPhone into its charger and I make my coffee while my ThinkPad starts up. In the past, when I went to meetings, I’d take my iPad and the keyboard and use OneNote. It’s a great option, but after awhile it felt like I was doing it this way for the sake of doing it, when I could (and should) just bring my work laptop. So for now, I’ve put off the idea of using the iPad to take notes during a meeting. I am working on getting more comfortable with the on-screen keyboard to eliminate needing an external keyboard. However, the iPad does still work as a mechanism to reference documents during a meeting. If I’m interviewing someone, I’ll just open his or her resume on my iPad.

While I doubt I can ever fully replace my iPad or MacBook for my personal mobile needs, I’m finding that I now do about 80 percent of my non-laptop tasks on my 6 Plus.

A member of the media inspects the new iPhone 6 during an Apple special event. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Thoughts on the iPhone 6 Plus, five months in

This is an amazing device. I wasn’t very happy with my iPhone 5. It was larger, true, but it didn’t really offer any noticeable difference. The extra row of icons was nice, but I still wasn’t able to read a book on it. When Apple announced the new iPhone would have two sizes, I knew I was going to jump to the bigger phone. It has exceeded all of my expectations. Prior to the Plus, I was contemplating the iPad mini. I was concerned that it wasn’t going to be small enough, and I’d have some of the same limitations with the mini I would have with the larger iPad. It would still be too large to fit in a pocket and I’d still need my bag to carry it in. With the Plus, I was hoping I’d find a sweet spot. I have.