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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Smartphone revolution blazes on as iPhone turns 10

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NEW YORK: The smartphone continues to change the world a decade after the debut of the iPhone, even as Apple is under pressure to come up with a new wonder. The iPhone — introduced by late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs on January 9, 2007 — set the stage for mobile computing and an entire industry revolving around it. The handsets built on successful iPod digital music players and featured touch screens at a time when the smartphone market was ruled by BlackBerry devices with keypads. Jobs billed his smartphone approach as blending liberal arts, design and technology.


What was not obvious at the time was how iPhone’s focus on apps would send people rocketing along a path to tweeting, Snapping, Pokemon Go, live streaming video, and more. “Apple gets credit for the apps that brought the mobile computing platform to your pocket,” Gartner analyst Brian Blau said at the Consumer Electronics Show that ends on Sunday in Las Vegas. “Today, it is hard to make a consumer electronics product without (Internet) connectivity.” Smartphones are even playing a big role in the virtual reality trend, with people using handsets as screens inserted into headsets for exploring fantasy realms.


Apple does not attend CES. But its trend-setting power is felt here from cars boasting “infotainment” systems that synch with iPhones, to smart-home networks controlled by mobile apps and rival smartphones mirroring iPhone features.


“The iPhone changed the world because mobile computing is now part of everyone’s daily life,” Blau said.


The iPhone, in a way, was a seed around which the consumer electronics industry has crystalised, according to Maxwell Ramsey of mobile phone news website phoneArena.com.


“It’s pretty remarkable what it did,” Maxwell said of the iPhone.


“We are still riding that wave from 2007. No doubt about it.” Putting the internet in people’s pockets, and on tablet computers, has profoundly changed the way people watch films, get news, socialise and work.


Insiders at the CES trade show cited the iPhone as the main impetus for the revolutionary shift to mobile computing lifestyles. “It turned the industry on its head,” Maxwell said at CES.


“It figuratively destroyed a lot of companies, and changed the landscape.” The iPhone powered Apple’s money-making machine, but sales began to decline last year in the increasingly saturated and competitive smartphone market. Apple chief executive Tim Cook and other top executives saw their compensation for 2016 cut because internal income targets were missed, according to a filing on Friday with US regulators.


“The two financial measures used to evaluate executive performance under our annual cash incentive programme, net sales and operating income, declined from our record-breaking 2015 levels,” Apple said in the filing.” — AFP


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