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Edit:Chris Clarke 2016-9-16
Love My Working Original iPhone
By Chris Clarke
The new iPhone 7 is packed with great tech and a fancy new shell. It's the best iPhone ever, Apple CEO Tim Cook said on stage earlier this month. And not for the first time. Apple says that about every new iPhone. Given the inexorable march of technology, it's probably true. But my favorite iPhone is not the best iPhone ever. It is nine years old. A fully functional original—no bloody 3G, 3GS, 4, 4S 5, 5S, 6, 6S, or 7.
I'll admit I was among the skeptics back in 2007 when Apple first announced it would be selling a phone. But somehow, swept up like so many others, I found myself a proud owner of that very first iPhone, which lives alongside my working models of nearly every mobile device Apple has ever made, an ever-growing collection.
That first one, though. I can't imagine my life without it.
Steve Jobs with the original iPhone in 2007.
Not that I was thinking about any of that at the time. I wasn't one of those guys who waited in line outside the Cingular store to get my grubby fanboy hands on this hot gadget. I left that up to my buddy at work, the kind of nerd happy to pitch a tent on the sidewalk to snag a brand spanking new iPhone.
I was a cord-cutter back before there was a name for us. I put XBMC on an actual Xbox, I ripped all my DVD's and torrented like it was going out of style. Why spend money when you could, you know, not? I loved my monthly T-mobile plan, and as much as I would have loved to try the new touchscreen Apple phone, the first iPhone required a minimum $499 cash plus a two-year contract with a hefty cancellation fee, a sign of things to come. I was not going to sign a contract that would lock me into two years of cell phone purgatory.
From 2007 until 2011, Steve Jobs continued his exclusive service agreement with AT&T (or Cingular, as it was at the time). This meant, to use an iPhone outside the AT&T network, you had to get your device "unlocked." Back then, there was no officially-supported method for pulling that off. Even if you paid out your contract and owned the device outright, AT&T and Apple made no provisions to open the phone to work on other networks.
So I kept my ear to the ground and followed the jailbreak community, the hardworking hackers devoted to ripping open the iPhone's software just because it was closed. It didn't take long for them to tear themselves an opening and do some sort of black magic to make the iPhone do their bidding, to free and then recapture its soul.
Once my buddy heard the announcement for the new iPhone 3G— "the best iPhone yet" coincidentally enough—he happily offloaded his first-generation classic for a small fee. So I began my collection of iPhones. I quickly learned the process for jailbreaking and unlocking that very first iPhone, which was not for the faint of heart. Back then, many an ambitious jailbreaker would wind up with a phone as useful as a brick, and worse, a voided the warranty. I was just lucky enough to make it through unscathed.
Technically iOS didn't even exist on the first iteration of iPhone. The operating system was instead billed as a version of OSX, the OS that runs on Macs. Nearly a year later it was redubbed iPhone OS, when Apple released the software development kit (SDK) to the public. It wouldn't be until 2010, with the release of the iPad, that Apple would adopt the now familiar term "iOS."
What do you do without an app store? Use Safari. A lot. To be fair, a full-fledged mobile browser was quite the revolution in 2007. But beyond that, there was very little else. According to Jobs, Safari was the future of apps. In this alternate future, third-party developers would go on to use the Safari engine to create Web 2.0 applications that could be accessed from the Internet. And they did at first, but mobile data bandwidth and data rate pricing in 2008 made web-based apps a nightmare, and so native apps were born. With an SDK in place, a legion of anxious software developers, guidelines in place, and an iPhone starving for software, it's no wonder the apps came. And kept coming, in a wave that hasn't let up since.
It was around that time I began to develop and test apps as part of my nine-to-five. That job entailed checking for bugs on as many different devices as possible, from the iPhone's earliest iterations to the "best iPhone ever" of the day. So when I inherited my same friend's iPhone 3G, but kept my original iPhone for testing purposes. Over the next few years I began to collect a growing number of devices to keep it company.
Soon the 3G was put on the shelf beside "the original," then the 3GS, 4, 4S, 5S, and 6. I also began collecting iPads after the first one was released in 2010. I still have my original iPad, along with an iPad 2, iPad 3, iPad Mini, iPad Air, and an iPad Pro all scattered somewhere around my desk. At first, keeping these devices around was an invaluable way to ensure my projects were in top-notch working condition across devices. Later, as technology progressed, they became less of a necessity and more of a accidental museum. A reminder of how we got here.
My original iPhone is still trucking. It might not have taptic feedback or a retina display, but it still makes great phone calls, delivers text messages, and can even send the occasional tweet. And forget "jet black" or whatever glossy rose gold abomination they come up with next; the styling of the first iPhone is still my favorite. Its shape, size and color are timeless. I would gladly fork over money to have the guts of iPhone 7 packed neatly inside the form factor of the iPhone.
from:The Site
By Chris Clarke
The new iPhone 7 is packed with great tech and a fancy new shell. It's the best iPhone ever, Apple CEO Tim Cook said on stage earlier this month. And not for the first time. Apple says that about every new iPhone. Given the inexorable march of technology, it's probably true. But my favorite iPhone is not the best iPhone ever. It is nine years old. A fully functional original—no bloody 3G, 3GS, 4, 4S 5, 5S, 6, 6S, or 7.
I'll admit I was among the skeptics back in 2007 when Apple first announced it would be selling a phone. But somehow, swept up like so many others, I found myself a proud owner of that very first iPhone, which lives alongside my working models of nearly every mobile device Apple has ever made, an ever-growing collection.
That first one, though. I can't imagine my life without it.
Steve Jobs with the original iPhone in 2007.
Splash
Not that I was thinking about any of that at the time. I wasn't one of those guys who waited in line outside the Cingular store to get my grubby fanboy hands on this hot gadget. I left that up to my buddy at work, the kind of nerd happy to pitch a tent on the sidewalk to snag a brand spanking new iPhone.
I was a cord-cutter back before there was a name for us. I put XBMC on an actual Xbox, I ripped all my DVD's and torrented like it was going out of style. Why spend money when you could, you know, not? I loved my monthly T-mobile plan, and as much as I would have loved to try the new touchscreen Apple phone, the first iPhone required a minimum $499 cash plus a two-year contract with a hefty cancellation fee, a sign of things to come. I was not going to sign a contract that would lock me into two years of cell phone purgatory.
From 2007 until 2011, Steve Jobs continued his exclusive service agreement with AT&T (or Cingular, as it was at the time). This meant, to use an iPhone outside the AT&T network, you had to get your device "unlocked." Back then, there was no officially-supported method for pulling that off. Even if you paid out your contract and owned the device outright, AT&T and Apple made no provisions to open the phone to work on other networks.
So I kept my ear to the ground and followed the jailbreak community, the hardworking hackers devoted to ripping open the iPhone's software just because it was closed. It didn't take long for them to tear themselves an opening and do some sort of black magic to make the iPhone do their bidding, to free and then recapture its soul.
Once my buddy heard the announcement for the new iPhone 3G— "the best iPhone yet" coincidentally enough—he happily offloaded his first-generation classic for a small fee. So I began my collection of iPhones. I quickly learned the process for jailbreaking and unlocking that very first iPhone, which was not for the faint of heart. Back then, many an ambitious jailbreaker would wind up with a phone as useful as a brick, and worse, a voided the warranty. I was just lucky enough to make it through unscathed.
Collection of iPhones(iphone)
Technically iOS didn't even exist on the first iteration of iPhone. The operating system was instead billed as a version of OSX, the OS that runs on Macs. Nearly a year later it was redubbed iPhone OS, when Apple released the software development kit (SDK) to the public. It wouldn't be until 2010, with the release of the iPad, that Apple would adopt the now familiar term "iOS."
What do you do without an app store? Use Safari. A lot. To be fair, a full-fledged mobile browser was quite the revolution in 2007. But beyond that, there was very little else. According to Jobs, Safari was the future of apps. In this alternate future, third-party developers would go on to use the Safari engine to create Web 2.0 applications that could be accessed from the Internet. And they did at first, but mobile data bandwidth and data rate pricing in 2008 made web-based apps a nightmare, and so native apps were born. With an SDK in place, a legion of anxious software developers, guidelines in place, and an iPhone starving for software, it's no wonder the apps came. And kept coming, in a wave that hasn't let up since.
It was around that time I began to develop and test apps as part of my nine-to-five. That job entailed checking for bugs on as many different devices as possible, from the iPhone's earliest iterations to the "best iPhone ever" of the day. So when I inherited my same friend's iPhone 3G, but kept my original iPhone for testing purposes. Over the next few years I began to collect a growing number of devices to keep it company.
Soon the 3G was put on the shelf beside "the original," then the 3GS, 4, 4S, 5S, and 6. I also began collecting iPads after the first one was released in 2010. I still have my original iPad, along with an iPad 2, iPad 3, iPad Mini, iPad Air, and an iPad Pro all scattered somewhere around my desk. At first, keeping these devices around was an invaluable way to ensure my projects were in top-notch working condition across devices. Later, as technology progressed, they became less of a necessity and more of a accidental museum. A reminder of how we got here.
My original iPhone is still trucking. It might not have taptic feedback or a retina display, but it still makes great phone calls, delivers text messages, and can even send the occasional tweet. And forget "jet black" or whatever glossy rose gold abomination they come up with next; the styling of the first iPhone is still my favorite. Its shape, size and color are timeless. I would gladly fork over money to have the guts of iPhone 7 packed neatly inside the form factor of the iPhone.
So when that time of year rolls around and the Apple marketing machine touts the next greatest iPhone, I always pull out the original, power it up, and think to myself, nah. Thiswill always be the greatest iPhone ever.
from:The Site