`
`10/7/15, 6:11 PM
`
`ROBERTO BALDWIN GEAR 04.03.13 6:30 AM
`
`THE 12
`CELLPHONES
`THAT CHANGED
`OUR WORLD
`FOREVER
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`MOTOROLA ENGINEER
`MARTIN Cooper made
`telecommunications history when he
`placed the first cellphone call 40 years
`ago. And who did he call, you ask? His
`rivals at Bell Labs, of course. Oh snap!
`
`Still, it took another decade for the
`mobile phone to reach the masses,
`because Motorola didn’t make the
`DynaTAC available until March 1983.
`And in an example of just how quaint
`the tech business was back then,
`Motorola had a press event 10 years
`before the phone was on sale.
`
`Which brings us to April 3, 1973, when
`the company that eventually brought us
`the Razr and Droid introduced the
`mobile phone. Forty years later, we’re
`still dropping calls like bad habits and
`struggling to get a signal inside a
`supermarket. Not that it matters,
`because we rarely use our phones to
`make phone calls. Instead, they’re a
`gateway to our digital lives, a means of
`doing everything from sending texts to
`updating our status to posting photos
`and listening to music.
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`Thousands of phones have come and
`gone, and most of them seem to run on
`Android. But the number of handsets
`that could be called truly
`groundbreaking is surprisingly small.
`Here they are.
`
`Yeah, yeah, we’ve probably missed your
`favorite. And you’ll probably tell us
`about it in a comment typed on your
`phone.
`
`ABOVE:
` MOTOROLA
`DYNATAC 8000X --
`1983
`
`The DynaTAC was the first commercially
`available cellphone and the culmination
`of all the research Cooper had done
`since joining Motorola in 1954.
`
`The phone resembled those the military
`used in the field. The svelte handset
`weighed 28 ounces and was 10 inches
`tall, not including the antenna nearly as
`long as the phone. It wasn’t exactly
`something you could shove in a pocket
`or purse. Still, it wasn’t attached to a car
`and you could walk around with it, so
`there was that.
`
`Such mobility wasn’t cheap. The
`DynaTAC would dig a $4,000 hole into
`your bank account. But that didn’t stop
`early adopters from diving into the
`swanky world of mobile calling. The
`phone had a cameo alongside Gordon
`Gekko in Wall Street and with über-
`preppy Zack Morris on the teen drama
`Saved By the Bell.
`
`Photo: Motorola
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`MOTOROLA
`MICROTAC -- 1989
`
`The MicroTAC introduced the flip-phone
`form factor that would eventually be
`adopted by the StarTAC. Beyond setting
`the standard for phones, it popularized
`the idea of being able to put a mobile
`phone in your pocket.
`
`The phone, billed as the “MicroTAC
`Pocket Cellular Telephone,” was the
`The 12 Cellphones That Changed Our World Forever
`smallest available when it was released.
`It was a lilliputian 9 inches long when
`open and weighed a mere 12.3 ounces.
`DESIGN
`ENTERTAINMENT
`GEAR
`For the sake of comparison, the
`enormous Galaxy Note II is just shy of 6
`inches long and weighs 6.4 ounces.
`
`SCIENCE
`
`SUBSCRIBE
`
`SECURITY
`
`Still, the “little” phone packed a lot of
`amazing features, including security
`codes, currency calculator, hands-free
`operation and, perhaps most
`conveniently, a phone book to store
`names and numbers. It was the
`beginning of the end of having to
`actually remember anyone’s number.
`
`BUSINESS
`
`SHARE
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`SHARE
`9
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`TWEET
`3
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`Photo: Motorola
`
`PIN
`
`COMMENT
`0
`
`
`NOKIA 3210 -- 1999
`
`The Nokia 3210 was, for many people,
`the gateway drug of phones. It also was
`among the first to tuck the antenna
`inside the handset. (The Toshiba TCP-
`6000 was the first, but that was the
`phone’s only claim to fame.) The little
`Finnish candybar phone was the first
`mobile communication device of the
`masses.
`
`Its monochromatic screen did more than
`give you a heads up about incoming
`calls. It introduced a generation to the
`greatest mobile-phone game ever:
`Snake. The addictive game, based on
`computer game from the 1970s,
`featured a snake that grew as it
`consumed pixels. The object was to
`make the longest snake possible
`without having it eat itself.
`
`And you thought Angry Birds was silly.
`
`Nokia sold 160 million T9-enabled 3210s
`before replacing it with 3310 in late
`2000.
`
`Photo: Nokia
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`The 12 Most Influential Cell Phones | Gadget Lab | Wired.com
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`10/7/15, 6:11 PM
`
`SONY ERICSSON
`T68I -- 2002
`
`The T68i was the bridge between dumb
`phones and smartphones and, it could
`be argued, the most awesome cellphone
`ever. It included such groundbreaking
`features at Bluetooth, two-way MMS,
`simple WAP browsing and e-mail. And it
`had a cool color screen, a first for
`Ericsson.
`
`The phone was so far ahead that it
`appeared in the Bond film Die Another
`Day. If it was good enough for 007, it
`was good enough for you. And it proved
`that people wanted more from their
`phones than calls and texts. Although
`the phone never saw the sales numbers
`of the Nokie 3210, it enjoyed a cultlike
`following.
`
`Photo: Sony Ericsson
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`The 12 Most Influential Cell Phones | Gadget Lab | Wired.com
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`10/7/15, 6:11 PM
`
`DANGER
`HIPTOP/SIDEKICK --
`2002
`
`While the suits and salesmen went nuts
`for RIM’s BlackBerry, the rest of us
`typed texts on our own QWERTY
`keyboard six-shooter, the Danger
`Hiptop. The phone, aka the T-Mobile
`Sidekick, was just as connected as a
`BlackBerry sans BBM, but didn’t make
`you look like a dork.
`
`The Hiptop had online connectivity and
`a huge (for the time) 2.6-inch screen that
`flipped out, making it the swtichblade of
`the truly connected nerd. It came with a
`monochrome screen to start, but that
`soon gave way to color.
`
`Designed by Danger, the Hiptop’s OS
`supported apps and could communicate
`not only via SMS but also with instant
`messaging services like AOL’s AIM.
`Adored by nerds and teenage girls alike,
`the Hiptop was the first real smartphone
`to hit the market.
`
`Photo: Danger
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`BLACKBERRY 6210 --
`2003
`
`While the T68i put e-mail in your pocket,
`and the Hiptop made nerds drool, it was
`the BlackBerry 6210 that made
`cellphones indispensable to the
`business world by giving us instant,
`always-on access to our e-mails.
`
`Little did we know that blessing would
`become a curse.
`
`Its QWERTY keyboard and solid ability
`to actually, you know, make phone calls
`introduced the world to the modern
`BlackBerry experience of web browsing,
`e-mails, BlackBerry Messenger and
`SMS. It jump-started the smartphone
`market and spawned a class of humans
`known as crackberry addicts.
`
`The combination of leading-edge
`technology and an excellent keyboard
`allowed RIM to utterly dominate the
`smartphone sector until a small
`company in Cupertino, California,
`decided to join the party.
`
`Photo: BlackBerry
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`10/7/15, 6:11 PM
`
`TREO 600 -- 2003
`
`After filling the pockets of nerds with its
`PDA (personal digital assistants), Palm
`set its sights on the mobile phone
`market with the Treo brand. The phone
`set the standard for smartphone
`features that followed.
`
`The Treo 600 came with a camera, an
`MP3 player and an OS that would
`influence the iOS dock and the Android
`homescreen. Apps? Mappable keys?
`Everything laid out in a neat grid? Yeah,
`the Treo had all that, with a QWERTY
`keyboard.
`
`The Treo’s 2.5-inch screen held a world
`of possibilities. Unfortunately, Palm was
`slow to update its OS and couldn’t keep
`up with the competition, even after
`releasing the Palm Pre with WebOS.
`
`Photo: PalmOne
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`MOTOROLA RAZR --
`2004
`
`The Razr was the first must-have phone.
`The thin flip phone was stylish and, if
`the commercials were to believed,
`would stick like a knife if dropped onto
`the floor.
`
`While throwing the phone at walls like a
`knife was a bad idea, the Razr had a
`great four-year run, selling 130 million
`units. Is there any wonder why?
`
`The Razr looked like it was straight out
`of the future. The numerical keyboard
`was cut from a single piece of metal. Its
`clamshell aluminum body and colored
`glass screen were gorgeous. And the
`damn thing worked like a charm. It was
`the last dumb phone that truly mattered.
`
`Never mind that it also was the last
`Motorola phone that truly mattered.
`
`Photo: Ariel Zambelich/Wired
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`MOTOROLA ROKR --
`2005
`
`The Rokr was the first phone to play
`nicely with iTunes, and it was such a big
`deal that Steve Jobs himself introduced
`the phone to the public. Too bad it was
`a horrible, horrible phone.
`
`Sure it worked with iTunes, but it held
`no more than 100 songs. And getting
`them onto the phone was as quick and
`comfortable as a root canal without
`anesthesia. And then there was the UI.
`Dear god, the UI. Sluggish doesn’t begin
`to describe it.
`
`Still, the Rokr was a milestone because
`it opened the door to the phone as a
`media player. It could have been the
`iPhone. Instead, it inspired Apple to
`make the iPhone.
`
`Photo: Motorola
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`NOKIA N95 -- 2007
`
`The N95 expanded on ideas first seen in
`the T68i, with features usually found in
`smartphones and without the gigantic
`physical QWERTY keyboard form factor.
`It was stylish and functional, two things
`sorely missing in the smartphone world.
`
`The N95 wasn’t the first to feature GPS
`with optional turn-by-turn navigation, a
`5-megapixel camera that shot video, or
`a radio tuner. But it packaged those
`features in a gorgeous phone. It made
`design matter. The front of the phone
`slid up to reveal a numeric keyboard
`and slid down to reveal media buttons
`that controlled the onboard MP3 player.
`
`It looked good, had a ton of functions
`and, thanks to the camera flash, those
`late-night photos at the club actually
`looked good.
`
`Photo: Nokia
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`APPLE IPHONE --
`2007
`
`This is the phone that changed
`everything. It was the first smartphone
`with features people wanted, even if
`they didn’t know it yet. It was different in
`every way, from its stunning design to
`its ease of use to the things it would
`allow us to do.
`
`Of course, we didn’t see that at first. All
`we could do was gripe about an app
`store with empty shelves, a single
`button on the bezel and the fact we
`couldn’t cut-and-paste anything. It
`seems so quaint now, when so much of
`what iOS pioneered has become the
`norm for smartphones.
`
`No less important was how Apple
`changed how handset makers dealt with
`carriers. The balance of power shifted
`from the likes of AT&T and Verizon to
`Apple and Samsung.
`
`Nearly six years and five iterations later,
`the iPhone still sets the standard.
`
`Photo: Ariel Zambelich/Wired
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`
`HTC DREAM -- 2008
`
`The Dream, marketed as the T-Mobile
`G1 here in the United States, was the
`first Android phone when it hit the
`market in 2008. That made it the first
`phone to challenge the iPhone in the
`touchscreen smartphone wars.
`
`At first, it was a QWERTY-only affair, but
`the update to Android 1.5 introduced an
`onscreen keyboard so you no longer
`had to slide the screen up to tap out
`messages. The 3.2-inch screen
`showcased the operating system that
`Google purchased from Android Inc.
`
`While the HTC Dream and the first
`version of Android were a bit of a dud
`next to the iPhone, the operating system
`and phones that ran it became more and
`more impressive as the years passed.
`Now Android devices are on par, or
`better than, the phone from Cupertino.
`
`But as we’ve seen before, all of this
`could change. Like Apple did before, a
`company with zero history in the phone
`market could emerge with a new and
`exciting way to call your friends and tell
`them, “Hey, guess what I’m doing,” and
`change the industry again.
`
`Photo: HTC
`
`http://www.wired.com/2013/04/influential-cellphones/
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`10/7/15, 6:11 PM
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