1. Before the iPhone, there was the iPad…no, really!
Yeah, we mean it. The iPhone was released in 2007 and the iPad in 2010, but by many accounts (including that of Steve Jobs himself), Apple had started work on the iPad well before it started work on the iPhone. In fact, Jony Ive, Apple’s design wizard is believed to have been working on a few tablet prototypes for a while (since 2004). However, he and Jobs agreed that the phone was more important. And speaking of Mr Ive…
2. Jony Ive’s first Apple project was a…tablet!
Jony Ive was one of the people behind the design of the iPad. And in many ways, the release of the iPad completed a circle of sorts for him. For, when he joined Apple in 1991, his first project was actually to create an industrial design of a tablet. He called it the Macintosh Folio. And (gasp!), it worked with a stylus!
3. There could have been a tablet earlier, blame it on Newton!
The iPad was launched in 2010, but Apple might have launched a tablet much before that, but for a crucial decision. The company had a prototype of a tablet called the PenLite ready in 1993. It was supposed to be a full-fledged computer and drew inspiration from Apple’s very portable PowerBook Duo. However, the idea was dropped as some felt it was too similar to Apple’s touchscreen PDA (personal digital assistant, not THAT), the Newton. So you can not only blame Newton for bringing gravity into our lives but also for delaying the introduction of the iPad!
4. Is the codename OK? K!
All Apple products have a codename. The iPhone was Purple, the iPod was Dulcimer (yes), the Apple Watch was Gizmo and so on. Of course, the iPad had a codename too. Interestingly, when Ive started work on a tablet in 2004, it was under the codename Purple. But that name was passed on to the iPhone! So what was the iPad called? Well, a rather disappointing K48! Oh, we can feel your disappointment!
5. There is no native screen orientation
One of the fascinating facets of the iPad is that it can actually work in any sort of screen orientation – even upside down (unless it is running an app tailored for a particular orientation). The iPhone, on the other hand, can work in three screen orientations – it does not support an upside-down orientation. Interestingly, there is no native orientation of the iPad.
6. The button that disappeared…
The first four iPads not only had a power button on top and volume buttons on the right but also had a button just above the volume buttons. This was initially meant to lock the orientation of the iPad. However, it was later changed to mute the iPad. And by the time the fifth iPad appeared on the horizon, it had disappeared altogether and found its way into the Settings menu.
7. It caught on faster than the iPhone
In terms of being a trend, the iPad got off to a much faster start than the iPhone. The first iPhone took 73 days to pass the million unit sales market. The first iPad passed it in 28 days.
8. Ricky Gervais got an iPad from Jony Ive…
The creator of The Office and the host of the Golden Globes, Ricky Gervais, was surprised when he got a package from Apple. It contained an iPad 2 and it was sent to him by none other than Jony Ive himself. “So I got two parcels today. One was the new iPad 2 from its genius inventor Jony Ive (it’s a work of art),” a delighted Gervais wrote on his blog.
9. …but Jobs’ kids did not!
The media and some celebrities might have got their hands on Apple’s tablet very early, but Steve Jobs’ own children did not. Tech journalist Nick Bilton recalls that when he asked Jobs how his kids liked the iPad after its launch, his answer was that they had not tried it yet. Jobs was not a big fan of exposing children to technology and was known for limiting the use of technology at home.
10. “People Want Keyboards!” – guess who said this in 2003?
“We have no plans to make a tablet. It turns out people want keyboards. Tablets appeal to rich guys with plenty of other PCs and devices already,” the CEO of a tech company told tech journalist Walt Mossberg in 2003. Guess who it was. Well, we close this story with his name: Steve Jobs.