Apple’s First iPhone Was Made in 1983
The first iPhone
was actually dreamed up in 1983. Forget that silly old touchscreen,
this iPhone was a landline with full, all-white handset and a built-in
screen controlled with a stylus.The
phone was designed for Apple by Hartmut Esslinger, an influential
designer who helped make the Apple IIc computer (Apple’s first
“portable” computer) and later founded Frogdesign. The 1983 iPhone
certainly fits in with Esslinger’s other designs for Apple. It also
foreshadows the touchscreens of both theiPhone and iPad.
Images
of the 1983 iPhone have been circling the web for a while but there has
been renewed interest in Apple’s early designs and history thanks to a
peak inside Stanford University’s massive trove of Apple documents. The
archives are a close-guarded secret but Stanford is starting to grant
access to select journalists and organizations. The archives were
donated in 1997 after Steve Jobs rejoined the company and document much
of the design and personnel changes that took place in the 1980s.
The
1983 iPhone is just one of many prototypes buried in Apple’s past.
There’s even a device that looks eerily similar to an iPad. Despite the
phone’s age, it actually looks like a cool concept that could easily be
updated into a modern consumer product by replacing simple stylus screen
with an iPad-like interface.
Mashable
has reached out to Stanford to get a private look into the material.
Stay tuned for more, but in the mean time, take a look at some pics of
the iPhone that never was.
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