BEST LOGIC COMPUTER EDUCATION |
The first iPhone was invented in 1983!
Naturally, this wasn’t anything like the rectangular cell
phone we know today. It was a land line phone with, instead of a touch screen, a
built in stylus controlled interface.
It was designed by Apple designer Hartmut Esslinger, and
foreshadows the touchscreen designs used by the iPad and iPhone today. He had
also developed the Apple IIc, the first “portable” computer by Apple. It was
never released to the public, but was kept in the Apple archives until the
design was released in 1997 after Steve Jobs rejoined the company.
This iPhone isn’t the only prototype of Apple that never saw
the light of day. Apple had toyed around with the iPad design for years before
its launch. What’s interesting is that the 1983 iPhone device resembles an iPad
with a phone, but iPads still lack this conventional phone call technology
despite everything else they do. Perhaps the iPad appliance will enter that
direction in its next iteration.
One
third of U.S. High School students now have iPhones.
A recent semi-annual teenager survey by market research firm
Piper Jaffray found that 34% of surveyed students now own an iPhone. This is an
all time high, and double of what they saw last year. The reason for this, as
explained by analyst Gene Munster is that the new low cost offerings by Apple
have allowed many teens to get a phone. In even better news for Apple, 40% of
the High School Students expressed their intent to buy an iPhone in the next 6
months, which is also at an all time high for the survey.
On a related note, 34% of students also said they had
tablets. 70% of those are iPads. 19% of them said they would buy a tablet
within 6 months, and 80% of those said it would be an iPad. Given most of our
readers are in High School, let us know.
iPhones can survive falls of over 13,000 feet.
A skydiver lost his iPhone 4 in midair after jumping from 13,500
feet. Using a GPS tracking app, Jarrod McKinney was able to locate his runaway
phone a half mile away on top of a building. Thankfully the phone landed on a
building and not on a person’s head, or McKinney would be in a lot of trouble.
The screen was cracked, but not only was he able to track it
down, he was also still able to answer incoming calls with it! McKinney must
have been surprised by the device’s durability, especially since the same phone
had previously cracked after falling a few feet off of a bathroom shelf.
All advertisements for the iPhone show a time of 9:42.
Believe it or not, there is actually a logical reason for
this! Whenever Apple releases a new product, they like to have the big reveal
occur 40 minutes into each presentation. Therefore, the images onscreen show a
time of 9:40...plus a minute or two because Apple knows the lead-up will never
take EXACTLY 40 minutes.
Unlike the iPhone, the iPad ads all show a time of 9:41.
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