That was Steve Jobs' build-up to his Macworld keynote, where he would go on to introduce the iPhone.
The most iconic part of the keynote, at least according to us, was his prelude to the phone Apple was going to reveal:
"Today we're introducing three
revolutionary products. The first one, is a wide screen iPod with touch
controls. The second, is a revolutionary mobile phone. And the third, is
a breakthrough internet communications device."
"An iPod, a phone and an internet communicator. An iPod, a phone .... Are you getting it?"
"These are not
three separate devices. This is one device, and we are calling it
iPhone. Today Apple is going to reinvent the phone."
Jobs continued, talking about how
flawed, and difficult to use, smartphones were back then. The slide from
his keynote that described this, went on to become a representation of
the pre "modern smartphone" era, where phones came with small screens
and hardware keyboards.
Since then, the iPhone has, no hyperbole intended, revolutionized the way modern mobile devices look and function.
The iPhone introductory keynote is
considered not just Jobs' best performance, but also, one of the best
product launches ever. You could literally see people in the audience
stand up and pump their fists.
Of course, with Steve's great presentation skills, Apple also had an amazing product. So amazing, in fact, that RIM, in a meeting a day after the launch, thought that Apple was lying and that it wasn't possible to run such a device without an "insanely power hungry processor."
Palm had interesting things to say as well:
"We’ve learned and struggled for a few years here figuring out how to make a decent phone. PC guys are not going to just figure this out. They’re not going to just walk in."
This was Palm's then CEO Ed Colligan, talking to the NYT in
2006, before the iPhone was unveiled, and when the hype about the
Apple-phone was at its peak. (Fascinating commentary on this by John
Gruber over at Daring Fireball.)
So what is the scenario five years after the launch of the iPhone?
RIM is in trouble. Palm, on the verge of bankruptcy, sold to HP, which subsequently dumped Palm's main product WebOS in the open-source territory. Microsoft, once a leader in the smartphone space, had to start from scratch with Windows Phone. Nokia abandoned its in-house Symbian OS in favor of Windows Phone.
The leaders in the smartphone space right now, Google and Apple, weren't even in this business five years ago.
Clearly a lot has changed.
Interesting tidbit: During the keynote,
when Steve Jobs made the first public phone call with an iPhone to Jonny
Ive, he was using the Motorola Razr (as was Phil Schiller).
And with that we'll leave you to watch the introduction of Apple's iPhone on this day, 5 years back:
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