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How the Iphone Changed the World

  • Writer: Megan Gerrard
    Megan Gerrard
  • Jan 10, 2017
  • 3 min read

Ten years ago today, Steve Jobs first unveiled the original Iphone to the world. That was unassuming little slate has since gone on to change the world, totally redefining the way we do things in ways you may not even have realised.

The most obvious impact it's had on the technology sector has been on phone design. Prior to the launch of the Iphone, mobile handsets came in all kinds of shapes and sizes - there were flip phones, sliders, and even whatever the hell the Nokia N-Gage was.

Now, however, every single smartphone on the market is a flat, uniform glass slab. While designs like the Moto Razr might inspire pangs of nostalgia, the enduring popularity of the Iphone-style form factor suggests that it really is the best option for smartphones.

By the same token, it also helped to popularise touchscreens as a form of interaction. While touch-enabled devices existed before the Iphone, it was one of the first to really popularise technology, and one could argue that without it, we wouldn't have the current crop of tablets, detachable, convertibles and 2-in-1s that we do today.

Apps

Apps, too, only took off in the post-Iphone age. The introduction of the App Store prompted the creation of a wave of centralised distribution platforms for lightweight, third-party software packages. Of course, there are now apps for almost anything, from booking a holiday, to watching TV, to even doing your laundry. Apps have completely changed many business models, too go-to examples being Uber and Airbnb, which have both made millions with nothing more than an app.

Like these services, a huge proportion of apps are reliant on the cloud, and it's not unreasonable to suggest that the Iphone's influence has had a huge role in creating modern cloud technologies. Mobile devices have traditionally been more limited that PCs in terms of both processing power and storage space, which means that developers have had to turn to the cloud when writing Iphone apps in order to make up the shortfall. It's driven consumer cloud take up as well, and services like Dropbox and ICloud have done a lot to get the public on board with the concept of cloud computing.

Mobility

Part of the reason that Iphone owners adopted cloud technologies so quickly is that the device quickly led to a massive increase in mobility. The ability to check emails, view and edit documents, and quickly and efficiently browse the web meant that people didn't need to be shackled to their desks in order to get work done. Once this trend started to develop, more and more technologies started emerging to support this. Cloud-based sharing, synced storage and even social media all allow people to do traditionally office-based jobs from wherever they are in the world.

Continuing the trend set by texting, social media and instant messaging apps cemented society's switch from longer, more time-consuming forms of communication to instant, bite-sized updates. Twitter in particular- 70% of whose users are primarily mobile - has become simultaneously a source of breaking news, a professional networking tool, and a personal blogging platform. We can get instant updates from anywhere in the world at a push of a button, in 140 characters or less.

Social Life and Privacy

The rise of smartphones, spurred by the Iphone, has also had a negative effect on socialising. It's all too easy to become engrossed in your phone when you should instead be spending time with friends and loved ones, checking Twitter or reading a slack notification rather than chatting with the people you're with. And being able to instantly answer a daft question you can think of has killed the art of the 'pub chat'. Rather than spending half an hour having an entertaining argument over whether the first Superman film made more money than than first Batman film, you can simply look it up - thereby killing a perfectly good conversation.

Privacy has taken a series of huge body blows since the launch of the Iphone. Social media encourages us to broadcast pictures of ourselves, our personal information, and even minute-to-minute updates on our lives; and that's on top of all the location and usage information that we give up as the price of admission for using these services in the first place. If you collated all of this data from a person's smartphone, you would have a near-complete record of their private and public life.

 
 
 

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