New photos show prototype board used to create original iPhone

Posted:
in iPhone edited March 2019
Photos have emerged of one of Apple's original development prototype boards for the 2007 iPhone, effectively detailing the device's exploded internals.

2006 iPhone prototype board


The unit was an engineering validation test (EVT) sample intended for staff working mostly on the iPhone's software and wireless technology, for instance porting the Darwin kernel over from Mac OS X, The Verge said. Those people wouldn't have been aware of the product's final form, and some versions of the board are said to have been without the depicted screen, requiring an external component or RCA display.

Many of the elements on the board represent parts that would eventually make their way into the final product, such as a 30-pin connector, a SIM card slot, and Wi-Fi and Bluetooth antennas. Others are unique, including an RJ11 phone jack for testing voice calls, and two mini USB connections for accessing processor and baseband chips.

The application processor is a Samsung K4X1G153PC, combining Samsung memory with an ARM1176JZF to run iPhone OS. Also present is 4 gigabytes of Samsung NAND storage, removable in this case so that software changes can be tested by swapping cards.

The NAND card.
The NAND card.


Despite appearances a home/menu button is actually situated to the left of the display. Power and volume buttons are also on the board, though trying to turn it on now simply brings up an Apple logo. During the iPhone's development in 2006 and 2007, engineers would have had deeper command access.

2006 iPhone prototype board


The exploded layout made it easier to debug and alter the prototype. DIP switches, for example, could route signals along different paths.

One unusual point is that if the board is connected to a modern computer, iTunes will detect it as an iPhone needing to be restored.

Apple ultimately launched the first-generation iPhone on June 29, 2007. The company is said to have moved on to smaller test boards for later models, in some cases integrating security shields to block prying eyes.

It turns out that I have a slightly better version of this iPhone prototype photo, plus two more from that same day, Feb 4, 2006. //cc @stroughtonsmith pic.twitter.com/DCOPyOFMUu

— Ken Kocienda (@kocienda)

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 5
    Dead_PoolDead_Pool Posts: 129member
    This is really cool. The beginning of the greatest consumer product (and greatest computer) ever made.
    lkruppStrangeDaysdewmedesignrwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 5
    That's a sweet array of RCA jacks.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 5
    rrrobrrrob Posts: 18member
    Looks legit. Reminds me of the mortables (sic—that’s what we called them) Motorola used at the time for the same reasons. The other reason for the exploded nature of the board was that initial bring-up of the hardware might involve adding jumper wires and making component changes to correct for errors in the preliminary schematics. Much easier to perform when almost every circuit trace isn’t buried in the board beneath the tightly spaced components as they are in the finished product!
    edited March 2019 designrwatto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 5
    maestro64maestro64 Posts: 5,043member
    That is pretty much how R&D is done, Red boards are common so people know it is not a real product. That board is made to do hardware debug to make sure all the hardware feature work and so you can easily put an analyzer on the board and look at the signal.
    designrwatto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 5
    rrrobrrrob Posts: 18member
    That's a sweet array of RCA jacks.
    At first I thought they were BNC connectors for RF test connections, but I realized you were right after reading the original Verge article. They’re what really marked this as something other than a “normal” cellphone development board.
    king editor the gratewatto_cobra
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