On June 29, 2007 -- the original iPhone went on sale and unleashed an unrivaled period of creative innovation and destruction in the mobile phone business. In case you have forgotten, the original iPhone lacked "critical" features including:
But the iPhone had one great feature: it had a compelling user experience. You just picked it up, and it was a joy to use, compared to earlier mobile devices. It may not have had all the features of other phones, but it was, quite simply, the best phone that had ever been available.
In case you have forgotten what the phone world was like pre-iPhone, the phone market could be broken into three areas:
In short these phones did the job, but they were not compelling consumer devices that allowed you to lead your digital life. Other people's descriptions of these devices maybe less forgiving and less polite.
The original iPhone has unleashed 5 years of innovation and change in so many areas that it would be impossible to list all of them in this blog, but here are some notable results:
In the process of so much innovation and change, companies that did not adapt and tried to do things the old way lost market share ... or worse. It is also interesting to look at what categories the smartphone has subsumed including:
The smartphone has become the digital Swiss Army Knife, and the TSA still allows it on the plane.
What is going to happen in the next 5 years in smartphones is a topic for an entirely different blog. But this rate of change that you have seen in the last 5 years will happen in the next 5 years ... and it may even continue to accelerate.
I was going to finish of this blog with a flippant comment that people in the mobile industry who cannot handle this rate of change should go to the PC industry for a quiet life, but then I remembered that the same forces of change that were unleashed on the smartphone industry, are being released on the PC industry.
A tip to those companies in the PC industry who are trying to maintain the old ways (if it is not already too late) -- don't.
Would have to be selective on who we give louder phones too