Categories: Technology

This is how crazy the first iPhone should look

There were numerous design ideas for the iPhone prototype. In the end, the classic telephone with a touch display prevailed. But in the beginning, the first iPhone should look completely different.

We all know the classic smartphone design. Big, flat, glossy black and with a touch screen – so far so good. Unsurprisingly, many of today’s phones are still fundamentally based on Apple’s design for the first iPhone.

But as iPhone inventor and technology guru Tony Fadell has now revealed in his book, the first mass-market smartphone should look completely different. Above all, an element borrowed from Apple’s iPod, vaguely reminiscent of a dial on an old telephone, should characterize the look. But then things turned out differently.

Steering wheel instead of touch screen

And there’s a good reason for that: while the idea was original and cool, it wasn’t very practical. According to Fadell, the design simply wouldn’t have worked in everyday life. The fact that the phone had to have a pivot hinge in the middle, with which the front and back could be rotated as desired, does not make things any easier in everyday life and in long-term field tests.

The top half should consist of the screen on one side and a camera with shutter on the other. The bottom, on the other hand, should have the turning wheel for maneuvering already known from the iPod and, on the other hand, a numeric keypad.

In principle, the first iPhone should also be more reminiscent of an iPod with telephone functions than of a completely new device. Because of this, one of the early concepts was largely based on Apple’s music player design. The rotating wheel, a trademark of the iPod, was also taken from this idea.

Not a practical design

This would then require tedious “pinning” through contacts and menus, which is ultimately why this design never got past prototype status. “You couldn’t insert anything because there was no text input,” Fadell recalls.

Still, Steve Jobs was so convinced of the concept that he encouraged and urged the development team at the time to take the iPod’s strengths into account when designing Apple’s first phone. The reason: With the iPod wheel you’ve developed such an intuitive and groundbreaking design, why replace it with a full touch screen?

“We spent weeks working on ideas to create data with the wheel, but it just didn’t work out,” explains Fadell. And yet Jobs didn’t want to give up: “Keep trying!” In the end, the team opted for the classic approach, which we still find on smartphones today.

Tony Fadell details the first iPhone and other secrets from his life as an Apple inventor in his recently published book, “Build: An Unorthodox Guide to Making Things Worth Making.”

updates
This story has already appeared on Watson, but due to current events, we have decided to revise and republish it.

(t-online/arg)

Source: Watson

Share
Published by
Ella

Recent Posts

Terror suspect Chechen ‘hanged himself’ in Russian custody Egyptian President al-Sisi has been sworn in for a third term

On the same day of the terrorist attack on the Krokus City Hall in Moscow,…

1 year ago

Locals demand tourist tax for Tenerife: “Like a cancer consuming the island”

class="sc-cffd1e67-0 iQNQmc">1/4Residents of Tenerife have had enough of noisy and dirty tourists.It's too loud, the…

1 year ago

Agreement reached: this is how much Tuchel will receive for his departure from Bayern

class="sc-cffd1e67-0 iQNQmc">1/7Packing his things in Munich in the summer: Thomas Tuchel.After just over a year,…

1 year ago

Worst earthquake in 25 years in Taiwan +++ Number of deaths increased Is Russia running out of tanks? Now ‘Chinese coffins’ are used

At least seven people have been killed and 57 injured in severe earthquakes in the…

1 year ago

Now the moon should also have its own time (and its own clocks). These 11 photos and videos show just how intense the Taiwan earthquake was

The American space agency NASA would establish a uniform lunar time on behalf of the…

1 year ago

This is how the Swiss experienced the earthquake in Taiwan: “I saw a crack in the wall”

class="sc-cffd1e67-0 iQNQmc">1/8Bode Obwegeser was surprised by the earthquake while he was sleeping. “It was a…

1 year ago