It is 10 years to the day since Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone, an
iconic device that has completely transformed the consumer technology
landscape.
Jobs first revealed the smartphone on stage at the
Macworld conference on Jan. 9, 2007. The then-Apple CEO described the
iPhone as “three things – a widescreen iPod with touch controls, a
revolutionary mobile phone and a breakthrough Internet communications
device.”
“These are not three separate devices – these are one
device and we are calling it iPhone,” Jobs added. “Today, Apple is
going to reinvent the phone.”
Apple has sold more than a billion iPhones since Jobs took to the stage at Macworld in San Francisco. In a blog post
Sunday the tech giant noted that the iPhone has inspired other products
such as the iPad and Apple Watch, as well as millions of apps.
The iPhone has had a massive impact on many aspects
of consumer technology, according to Jackdaw Research analyst Jan
Dawson. “Smartphones are easily the most ubiquitous consumer technology
item out there, and the iPhone really pioneered the modern conception of
the smartphone,” he explained, via email. “But smartphones are also at
the core of all kinds of other things, from wearables to apps to
services like Uber and AirBnb. So much of what we use in our daily lives
today has smartphones at the center, and it was the iPhone that kicked
off the mainstreaming of the smartphone.”
Apple unveiled its latest iPhones – the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, in September, and speculation is mounting about the eagerly-anticipated iPhone 8, which is expected to launch later this year.
Rumored iPhone 8 features include an Organic Light-Emitting Diode (OLED) display
that could offer greater power efficiency and image quality than
Apple’s current Liquid Crystal Display LCD technology. The iPhone 8 may
also have an edge-to-edge display and an embedded virtual home button, according to media reports.
“iPhone is an essential part of our customers' lives,
and today more than ever it is redefining the way we communicate,
entertain, work and live,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook, in the company’s
blog post. “iPhone set the standard for mobile computing in its first
decade and we are just getting started. The best is yet to come.”
Apple, however, saw iPhone sales decline in its 2016 fiscal year, the first such fall since the device was introduced in 2007.
The Cupertino, Calif.-based firm faces stiff
competition in the smartphone space. While arch-rival Samsung suffered a
setback with its Galaxy Note7 snafu, great things are expected from the South Korean firm’s Galaxy S8, which is expected to make its debut in mid-April.
Dawson told FoxNews.com that a major challenge facing
the iPhone is that smartphones have reached a saturation point in major
mature markets and among wealthier customers in emerging markets.
“There are still some people left who will buy a premium smartphone like
the iPhone, but in order to grow the iPhone business, it has to win
share from Android unless something changes dramatically in the pricing
and positioning of the phone,” he explained, via email. “The other
challenge is that the iPhone is now so mature as a product that you no
longer have the same drive to replace it every two years – a two, three
or even four year old iPhone can still function just fine, and so the
push to buy a new one every year or two isn’t as strong as in the past.”
With so many iPhones already in use around the world
and the device reaching an important milestone, Apple clearly needs to
make a big splash with iPhone 8.
“Apple needs to continue innovating and releasing new
technologies and features that are unique to new iPhones in order to
convince people to upgrade the phones they have,” wrote Dawson.
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