Lol. That's not bad. I think you got the idea down nicely. Just a couple things I'd say to clarify, I guess.
Yeah, there's some advanced things you could do with existing Pocket PCs that might be complicated. However, for the most part their operation is pretty similar to Windows PCs. They've got a Start button and everything. You push Google Maps and the picture comes up and you can drag it around with your finger or stylus or your nose if you want. However, before someone tries it, they find it intimidating. Part of the blame goes to the marketing of these devices. That's the genius of Apple. By wrapping it in an attactive and non-intimidating package, they've said to people "you can do it, too". That's why the biggest breakthrough here happened in Apple's marketing department, not their technical design teams.
I don't have any problem with Steve Jobs. Neither he nor Bill Gates nor any of those guys are evil .One reason for the "rage", I think, is that knowledgeable (not necessarily technically) people don't like the idea of others acting like sheep. Those other who've never tried neither the (more expensive) iPhone nor a Pocket PC, yet are convinced of the superiority of one over the other, because their TV or their favorite magazine told them so. And the latter two are the most guilty. By failing to really present the new devices in context of the existing technology, they fail in their mission to inform and only succeed in misleading. And a few extra billion will take a trip from the pockets of under-informed consumers to those of Apple shareholders (should've bought that stock, I guess) than otherwise would have.
So maybe the iPhone will result in a revolution. If only because people who would've never bought such a device will go ahead and try it. But it will be a revolution of its own accord, where the iPhone is a catalyst, not the cause. Many will buy the iPhone because they want to be part of the revolution, instead being in the revolution because they really preferred or even knew what the iPhone had to offer over its competitors.