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Gadgets paved way for revolution

APPLE NEWTON

In 1993 Apple joined Psion, Sharp and oth­ers in putting togeth­er an elec­tron­ic orga­niz­er, but gave it a lot more “oomph”. The New­ton includ­ed hand­writ­ing recog­ni­tion, notes, names, dates and maps. The com­pa­ny described it as a Per­son­al Dig­i­tal Assis­tant (PDA); the name caught on and com­pa­nies like Hand­spring, sub­se­quent­ly acquired by Palm, took the con­cept for­ward. It would be over a decade, how­ev­er, before Apple took the step of intro­duc­ing a phone into the equa­tion in order to pick up emails – few peo­ple had emails to pick up in 1993 any­way. But it was the start of car­ry­ing dig­i­tal infor­ma­tion around.

TABLET COMPUTERS

By now the iPad is so well estab­lished it’s dif­fi­cult to under­stand that ear­ly attempts at a tablet com­put­er pret­ty much bombed imme­di­ate­ly. GRiD was one of the first com­pa­nies to try what was essen­tial­ly a PC that accept­ed pen input and Com­paq took it fur­ther with its Con­cer­to mod­el in 1992. The clever bit about the Con­cer­to was that it had a remov­able key­board. It was well reviewed but expen­sive; the com­pa­ny slashed the price, but by 1994 it had dis­con­tin­ued the mod­el and it would be over ten years before tablet com­put­ing tru­ly took off out­side a few nich­es.

PHONE EMAILERS

If you have a chance, have a look at some old episodes of TV’s The Appren­tice and you’ll see they’re using an unusu­al­ly bulky phone with a big screen. This was the Amstrad Em@iler, released in 2000, which aimed to deliv­er email with­out a com­put­er. From 2004, it also allowed peo­ple to video con­fer­ence. It was sub­sidised by adver­tis­ing deliv­ered to the owner’s hand­set. It worked but it was bulky for a domes­tic set­ting and the mar­ket failed to catch light. Mean­while, the cost of lap­tops was plum­met­ing and they sud­den­ly all had web­cams built in, so the appeal of what now looked like a rel­a­tive­ly restrict­ed device dimin­ished quick­ly.

PAGERS

Dur­ing the 1992 Gen­er­al Elec­tion, no politi­cian could be seen with­out his or her pager for fear of miss­ing a mes­sage from on high about how to answer a dif­fi­cult ques­tion. Motoro­la was the mar­ket leader, but impor­tant­ly RIM took a sig­nif­i­cant amount of sales very quick­ly, soon real­is­ing the impor­tance of being able to com­mu­ni­cate by text on the move. RIM would go on to cre­ate the Black­Ber­ry.

SONY WALKMAN

It may not be imme­di­ate­ly obvi­ous that music play­ers became a major fac­tor in the devel­op­ment of uni­fied com­mu­ni­ca­tions. Con­sid­er, though, that before we had the Walk­man from 1979, we weren’t in the habit of car­ry­ing tech­nol­o­gy around with us. It’s doubt­ful that peo­ple would have devel­oped MP3 play­ers, lead­ing to the iPod, with­out the Walk­man. It’s equal­ly doubt­ful that the iPhone would have exist­ed in its cur­rent form with­out the Walkman’s influ­ence and, although Apple’s phone was far from the first smart­phone, along with the Black­Ber­ry it was the one that took this sort of tech­nol­o­gy to the pop­u­lar mar­ket.