The iPhone is boring, and I'm OK with that
What was once exciting soon becomes boring.
I remember the excitement that came with the launch of the first iPhone.
It was a device that pivoted Apple and the entire smartphone market,
forever changing the technology landscape
But now, some nine years on, the iPhone has become boring.
Let me explain what I mean by boring. First off, it doesn't mean that
I'm not using my iPhone as much as I once did. In fact, I use my iPhone
more than any device I've ever owned. It's usually the first device I
pick up in the morning, and the last device I handle before going to
sleep.
What I mean by boring is that the iPhone has reached a point where
innovation appears to have slowed down. Take a look at what the first
few years of the iPhone brought to the table - on-screen keyboards,
apps, iMessage, FaceTime, Touch ID and such - and compare this to what
we've seen lately - things such as bigger handsets, Apple Pay, different
colors, Live Photo, 3D Touch.
You've got to admit that the pace of innovation has slowed down
somewhat. Moreover, the innovations that are being added are appealing
to a smaller and smaller subset of users (I rarely hear or see anyone
using the Live Photo or 3D Touch features).
According to that piece, what would make the iPhone exciting again is turning it into an Android smartphone.
Despite not agreeing with the piece, I can't be all that hard on it
either, because if you asked me for a list of things that I'd want added
to the iPhone to make it "exciting" again, I don't think I could do
much better.
And why should I? After all, I pay Apple big bucks to do that creative thinking for me.
But one thing's for sure, "lighter and thinner" just doesn't seem to be cutting it anymore.
I'm also not surprised that the iPhone has become boring. It's the
natural order of things. There's a point that products reach - PCs,
cars, TVs, cameras, vacuum cleaners... you name it - where, beyond
which, we buy them not out of desire, but rather a necessity.
Combine
that with fast upgrade cycles and shorter attention spans and I'm
surprised the iPhone did as well as it had. It certainly outlived its
larger cousin, the iPad, which went from thrilling to dreary in under
six years.
But I'm also OK with the iPhone becoming boring (and as a technologist, I really shouldn't be OK with that).
Why? Because it means that we're moving away from that period of
rapid change into a point where a smartphone doesn't feel totally
obsolete in 12 months. In fact, I can see someone being happy with a
modern smartphone for three years before actually needing to upgrade.
That
might not be good for companies that are trying to sell smartphones,
but it's good for consumers' pockets, not to mention the environment.
There is, after all, more to life than buying new smartphones.
Before I go, let me be clear about one thing - saying that the iPhone
has become boring is not the same as saying it's doomed. Just as people
still buy PCs, cars, TVs, cameras, vacuum cleaners and the like, people
will be buying iPhones for years - possibly decades - to come.
Source : zdnet
Comments
Post a Comment