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Decade of mobile: From the first camera phone to the iPhone 3GS - Recombu

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Decade of mobile: From the first camera phone to the iPhone 3GS

By Andrew Lim on Sunday, 27th December 2009

It's almost 2010 so we thought we'd take a look at what's happened in mobile over the past ten years. Everything has happened. No, really, have a look. From the first camera phone, to the first 3G network, to Windows Mobile, to the iPhone – it's been an incredible ten years. We can't imagine what the next ten years hold but we expect it will blow our phone-loving minds away.

2000 Sharp launches the first ever camera phone, the J-SH04. This year also sees the first Bluetooth-enabled mobile phone and headset.

2001 The first commercial 3G network is launched in Japan. Europe follows suit shortly afterwards and 3 launches the first commercial UK 3G network two years later.

2002 RIM launches its first BlackBerry smart phone. Sony Ericsson launches the T68i, the first phone to support MMS, allowing users to send longer text messages and even pictures.

2003 The Windows Mobile brand is launched with Windows Mobile 2003. Windows Mobile is widely used by businesses to do work on the move.

2004 Motorola launches a very thin clamshell phone called the Razr in the US and it soon becomes a global success. It's still one of the best selling handsets of all time.

2005 Sony Ericsson launches a superb new camera phone called the K750i and a great music phone called the W800i. These two handsets establish Sony Ericsson as a serious consumer player.

2006 Nokia launches the very simple Nokia 6300, one of the best-selling phones of the past ten years. HTC launches its own brand and LG turns its brand around by launching a fashionable phone called the Chocolate. RIM also revamps its lineup with a phone called the BlackBerry Pearl.

2007 Apple launches the iPhone in the US, Nokia launches a fantastic smart phone called the N95 in Europe and Samsung beats Motorola to second spot for global sales.

2008 The first Android phone is launched, the T-Mobile G1 (aka HTC Dream). The G1 receives a mixed response but manufacturers are keen to engage with this new OS. iPhone SDK and iPhone 3G announced - native iPhone apps go wild.

2009 Palm launches a brand new operating system called webOS and a shiny phone called the Pre. Apple launches the iPhone 3GS and Motorola makes a comeback with the Dext and Milestone.

2010 There are rumours that Apple is going to launch a larger iPhone/tablet device. Palm will hopefully announce a new phone at CES and everyone hopes that Nokia will unveil something amazing.

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  • Interestingly, that Sharp J-SH04 featured a 110,000-pixel (0.11MP) CMOS image sensor, and a 256-colour (8 bit) display. How things have come along!
  • Hamranhansenhansen 1 hour ago
    The way the iPhone changed the Web has been amazing. Before the iPhone there was a separate baby Web for phones, made with a unique kind of code, and demanding a separate stylesheet. Then the iPhone came in with a full HTML5 desktop class browser that ignored the mobile stylesheet entirely and showed you the real Web. Since then, other mobiles have added a similar browser due to Apple open sourcing their browser core (WebKit) and we take it for granted that we can see the real Web on mobiles. Many Web developers are now standard HTML5-focused instead of proprietary IE-focused, which means the Web is opening back up as well as unforking. Just 3 years ago before the iPhone, this was almost unimaginable. The Web on mobiles has also taught many people that the Web is not a Microsoft thing, in fact it's the opposite of Microsoft: universal, standardized, fast-moving, cheap, easy, inventive.
  • @Hamranhansenhansen

    I don't think the rise of browser-agnostic website has anything to do with iPhone at all. It has been growing steadily, far before the inception of iPhone, supported by the growth of Firefox and other (and to some point, Safari on OSX) standard-compliant browsers.

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