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Motorola DynaTAC
The 1984
Motorola DynaTAC was the first commercial cell phone in the United
States. It offered 30 minutes of talk time and 8 hours of standby, plus
an LED display for dialing or to bring up one of 30 phone numbers
stored in the phone. It was priced at $3,995,
Motorola MicroTAC
Fortunately,
by 1989 Motorola had created the MicroTAC, the first mobile phone that
you could fit into your pocket. The MicroTAC was also the first "flip"
phone, where the phone's plastic covered the microphone. It cost between
$2,495 and $3,495 at the time
IBM Simon
IBM's Simon
Personal Communicator phone, from 1994, was arguably the world's first
smartphone, combining a phone and PDA into one device. Simon was able to
send and receive emails and faxes, and offered now-standard "apps" like
a calendar, calculator, and note pad - even with handwritten or typed
annotations. BellSouth Cellular initially offered the Simon throughout
its 15 state service area for $899 with a two-year service contract.
RIM BlackBerry 957
It's hard to leave out the RIM BlackBerry, although RIM (now BlackBerry) seems to be on the wane. Our original review of the BlackBerry 957
praised it for its high-contrast monochrome display, its tiny physical
keyboard, the side-mounted jog dial, and the Esc key. For years,
BlackBerrys were the smartphone to have, even after the first iPhones became available. People loved the keyboard, and still do.
Motorola StarTAC
Motorola's
StarTAC was the first "clamshell" phone, where the phone essentially
folded up in half, rather than just flipping to cover the mouthpiece,
like the MicroTAC. The 1996 phone weighed just 88 grams and sold for
about $1,000, making it one of the first popular cell-phone model
Samsung Uproar M100
The Samsung Uproar
was the first MP3 phone. The phone included RealNetworks's RealJukebox
for managing MP3 files, and a separate USB cable for downloading MP3
files to its 64MB of RAM for storing music, then about two hours' worth
Sanyo 5300
The 2003 Sanyo 5300
was the first to include an integrated camera, launching the craze for
camera phones and helping to put an eventual, serious dent in the
point-and-shoot digital camera industry. Still, the 5300 only allowed
640-by-480 images.
Motorola Razr
The 2004 Razr V3
was slim and sexy, and Motorola sold more than 130 million units of the
thing, making it the best-selling clamshell phone in the world. It
quickly became the "It Phone" to have, but also plunged in popularity
after discounts made it less than exclusive
LG VX8000
The 2005 LG VX8000
may have had an awkward name, but the phone was the first to usher in
3G calling inside the United States, with the Verizon V-Cast service.
Ironically, we found everything but V-Cast compelling, as the
initial video clips weren't that impressive. The phone also lacked email
and a Web browser, features that would become indispensible on
successive high-speed smartphones.
Apple iPhone
What can we say about the original iPhone?
Apple's flagship phone of 2007 wasn't much of a phone, but everything
else it could do screamed "the future": an integrated touch screen, an
app store (that came later in 2008) that launched an entirely new
industry of mobile app development, and MP3s that could be bought online
and stored on the phone. The smartphone revolution was here to stay, as
well as the enormous market for mobile apps.
HTC G1
The HTC G1
from 2008 (as a Google-branded developer model) featured a trackball,
tiny screen, and Android 1.6 OS. Android? Yes, Android. Google's
open-source OS might not have been much to look at it when it first
launched, but the pricing (free for OEMs), incentives for developers
helped make Android the world's most popular OS, and the G1 started it
all.
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