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This is what high-end smartphones looked like in 2007: Smartphones were an established consumer-electronics market with...
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doesn’t invent new products, they just make them...way they should have been made.
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This is what high-end smartphones looked like in 2007: Smartphones were an established consumer-electronics market with...
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jazz-claire reblogged this from crookedindifference and added:
This is so true… i wonder what the new bandwagon will be?
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marcohamersma reblogged this from marco and added:
de recente evolutie van de smartphone, en de komende revolutie van de Tablet.
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Speculation by Marco Arment (lead developer...have on the netbook market
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Marco Arment asks if the iPad...iPhone did to smartphone design.
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kaylatruong reblogged this from crookedindifference and added:
I’m sort of excited for what might come up next.
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Marco has a fabulous look at...the iPhone changed the smartphone design and function. He...
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A smartphone retrospective
This is what high-end smartphones looked like in 2007:
Smartphones were an established consumer-electronics market with devices that people thought were pretty cool, but often frustrating and with serious shortcomings and design flaws.
Then this happened:
Other manufacturers had neglected touchscreens for years, but Apple figured out how to do a touchscreen well, and did.
Fans of the former types of smartphones and much of the tech press declared this smartphone useless or not capable enough because of its lack of a keyboard, its non-removable battery, its lack of expansion slots or ports, and other hardware features in which Apple chose differently from what most other manufacturers were doing.
That ended up not mattering. Now, most high-end smartphones look like this:
In early 2010, subcompact, inexpensive computers (a.k.a. “netbooks”) looked like this:
Netbooks were an established consumer-electronics market with devices that people thought were pretty cool, but often frustrating and with serious shortcomings and design flaws.
Then this happened:
Other manufacturers had neglected tablets for years, but Apple figured out how to do a tablet well, and did.
Fans of netbooks and much of the tech press declared this subcompact, inexpensive computer useless or not capable enough because of its lack of a keyboard, its non-removable battery, its lack of expansion slots or ports, and other hardware features in which Apple chose differently from what most other manufacturers were doing.
That ended up not mattering. And now, other manufacturers are scrambling to build tablet products as quickly as possible.
How do you think the subcompact, inexpensive computer category will look in three years?
I’m sort of excited for what might come up next.




