Ten years ago, Apple's iPhone 3G brought speed and apps to the smartphone

Posted:
in iPhone edited June 2018
Apple and Steve Jobs unveiled the first iPhone with third-party apps ten years ago on June 8, 2008 setting the table for the explosive growth of Apple in the following decade.

Steve Jobs iPhone announcement


The iPhone, all observers agree, changed the world of phones and consumer electronics altogether, when it arrived in June of 2007. But some forget that the original iPhone was extremely expensive, didn't offer third-party apps and was exclusive to AT&T and its substandard EDGE wireless network.

That changed a year later with the iPhone 3G, which was unveiled by Apple on June 8, 2008, ten years ago Saturday. The 3G may look very different from the iPhones of today, but it put Apple on the path towards the iPhone that we all know.

The Unveiling





The iPhone 3G was unveiled at that year's World Wide Developer's Conference in San Francisco. Steve Jobs began the keynote by pointing out that Apple, at the time, had "three parts" -- the Mac, the music business, and the iPhone.

The iPhone 3G itself was one of Jobs' famous "one last thing" reveals, as he didn't get to the new product until more than an hour and twenty minutes into the keynote. After announcing that Apple hold sold 6 million of the original iPhone in just shy of a year, Jobs listed the "new challenges" for the iPhone going forward: 3G networking, enterprise support, third-party application support, the ability to sell the product in more countries, and affordability.

"As we arrive at iPhone's first birthday, we're gonna take it to the next level, and today we're introducing the iPhone 3G," Jobs said. "We've learned so much with the first iPhone. We've taken everything we've learned and more, and we've created the iPhone 3G."

The original iPhone 3G keynote


Plastic on the back, and with solid metal buttons, the iPhone 3G had a 3.5-inch display, and a "flush headphone jack," which drew applause. Speed was emphasized- with 3G speeds that "approach Wi-Fi," Jobs said. There was even a side-by-side slide comparing the 3G to long-forgotten rivals like the Nokia N95 and Palm Treo 750.

The other big selling point was affordability. The iPhone 3G started at $199 under subsidized contract for the 8GB model, with immediate availability in 22 countries, and more than 50 more later that year.

The keynote itself had begun with the second version of the iPhone software, then called simply "iPhone OS 2.0" (the iOS naming convention wouldn't debut until until 2010). A software development kit (SDK) had announced the previous October and released in March, giving third-party developers access to the iPhone for the first time. Apple had also aggressively marketed the SDK to the enterprise market.

New features for the new software included contact search -- which, no, had not been available in the first iPhone -- and and full iWork and Microsoft Office support. Also new was the ability to save images, support for several foreign languages and parental controls.

Also introduced at that keynote was MobileMe, Apple's ill-fated mobile services suite, which famously caused one of Jobs' most-famous meltdowns.

The 3G keynote is memorable for another, not-so-happy reason. It was one of the events in which Jobs' appearance, in which he appeared thin and gaunt, was a major topic of conversation and concern about the CEO's health. Jobs was indeed facing a health crisis for which he would undergo surgery the following month. Jobs would step down from Apple three years later, passing away in October of 2011.

On the market




The iPhone 3G arrived a little over a month after the keynote, on July 11, 2008. Reviews were positive; Walt Mossberg, in the Wall Street Journal, called it "newer, faster, cheaper" while citing "hidden costs" tied to the subsidies and data plans.

The device was a big hit. By that December, it already had 30 percent of the smartphone market share in the U.S., taking share away from Nokia, Research in Motion (BlackBerry) and Microsoft. In fact, the iPhone was almost solely responsible for smartphone growth itself.

Needham and company showed the quick growth:

Needham 2008 graph


Apple revealed in earnings the following year that it had sold 6.9 million units of the 3G in its first quarter available, besting the 6.1 million of the original iPhone sold in its first five quarters.

The 3G was succeeded by the 3GS in 2009, although as of early 2017, it remained in active use in some countries.

The AT&T iPhone exclusivity would end when the iPhone 4 became available on Verizon Wireless in 2011. The top iPhone standard would remain 3G, until the arrival of the LTE-supported iPhone 5 in 2012.

One AppleInsider editor dug out his old iPhone 3G, and it still worked. Here it is side-by-side with the iPhone X, to give you a sense of the differences:

iPhone X and 3G, today


iPhone X and 3G, back

Legacy of iPhone 3G

The primary legacies of the iPhone 3G are that it was the first iPhone with access to a faster network, to the App Store, and perhaps most importantly, with widespread affordability. It may look small, slow, and nearly non-functional compared to the devices of today, but the iPhone 3G certainly represented a huge leap for Apple, and its product category, ten years ago.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 15
    MplsPMplsP Posts: 3,931member
    Wow - that means I’ve had an iPhone for 10 years!

    How things have changed - both technology and our expectations of it. 
    mike egglestonracerhomie3lostkiwiwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 15
    eriamjheriamjh Posts: 1,645member
    I liked the feel of the 3G (I had a 3GS) in my hand.   Curved just right.  

     Apple got so much grief in 2007 when the first iPhone was not 3G.   Many didn’t consider the first 3G phone to be that great, but rather... late.

    But it was great because iOS still was better than everything else.   Right, RIM/Blackberry?
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 15
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    eriamjh said:
    I liked the feel of the 3G (I had a 3GS) in my hand.   Curved just right.  

     Apple got so much grief in 2007 when the first iPhone was not 3G.   Many didn’t consider the first 3G phone to be that great, but rather... late.

    But it was great because iOS still was better than everything else.   Right, RIM/Blackberry?
    Apple has gotten “grief” from the tech wannabe crowd since day one. They’re used to it and ignore it. They don’t care what some blogger says.
    racerhomie3lostkiwimacxpressStrangeDayschasmwatto_cobrajony0
  • Reply 4 of 15
    asciiascii Posts: 5,936member
    The 3G was the first iPhone I bought, it really was a massive leap in network interface over older devices. 4G is great, and most carriers have fully paid for their 4G networks at this point and can afford to offer great plans (such as unlimited data). 5G will be a game changer. I actually think only businesses, universities, hospitals etc will need a wired connection going forward. All consumers devices will come ubiquitous cellular. It will get to the point where you will be surprised if the salesman tells you the thing you're buying doesn't have a cellular modem.
  • Reply 5 of 15
    claire1claire1 Posts: 510unconfirmed, member
    Wow Blackberry never hit 20% marketshare??? I remember Blackberry being HUGE back then, can't believe iPhone is now much much bigger.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 15
    eriamjheriamjh Posts: 1,645member
    lkrupp said:
    Apple has gotten “grief” from the tech wannabe crowd since day one. They’re used to it and ignore it. They don’t care what some blogger says.
    Yeah.   Actually, even though Apple kicks ass,  makes the most money, has the fastest hardware, huge sales, tech blogs still talk about how much of a failure it is.   

    Apple’s failures make more money than most companyies’ biggest successes, but fuck Apple, eh?   LOL says my AAPL stock.  
    chasmwatto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 15
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,808member
    Scratchgate!!!

    I too liked the feel of this iPhone in my hand. It fit right, the plastic wasn't slippery and it was just a good phone for a smartphone back then. I didn't feel the need to have a case on it either unlike the phones of today. Eventually, I hope Apple uses something other than aluminum to make a phone out of. 
    edited June 2018 StrangeDays
  • Reply 8 of 15
    StrangeDaysStrangeDays Posts: 12,879member
    My first iphone as well. I still prefer its curved shape and considered it a perfect object in hand. It really did foster a very personal connection with the tool...
    edited June 2018 watto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 15
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,808member
    My first iphone as well. I still prefer its curved shape and considered it a perfect object in hand. It really did foster a very personal connection with the tool...
    Then Steve had to ruin it with the candy bar design we have today!
  • Reply 10 of 15
    christopher126christopher126 Posts: 4,366member
    I bought two original iPhones for myself and my daughter ( Day one). I asked her how are you enjoying your iPhone? She said, Dad my whole life is in this phone!

    i got the 3G. She was in med school (got her mother’s brains) and sent her video of me kayaking...she said, Dad, you got the 3g!!  :)

    Thanks Stevo, you made look like a hero! :)


    watto_cobra
  • Reply 11 of 15
    StrangeDaysStrangeDays Posts: 12,879member
    macxpress said:
    My first iphone as well. I still prefer its curved shape and considered it a perfect object in hand. It really did foster a very personal connection with the tool...
    Then Steve had to ruin it with the candy bar design we have today!
    The “candy bar” design was the dense, narrow nokia phones in the ‘90s before the flatter razor and modern smartphone form factor. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 15
    The 3G and 3GS were great phones.  But they did suffer from a large crack developing on the back from the middle of the dock and going up. 

    Those models do feel great in the hand.  But I did prefer the Leica look of the 4 which also had a nicer screen.
    cornchipwatto_cobra
  • Reply 13 of 15
    JFC_PAJFC_PA Posts: 932member
    A great ride! I look forward to each new iteration. Always some surprises and a terrific experience all around. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 14 of 15
    columbuscolumbus Posts: 282member
    I didn't like the design as I felt it lost something from the original. It was necessary for pragmatic reasons though, but I greatly preferred the 4/4s/5/5s designs.

    Looking back on the introduction I was reminded how it was also the first iPhone with GPS - the previous model relied on far less accurate  WiFi and Cell Tower triangulation. That opened up many more possibilities for location based services. So I would also include that as one of its legacies.

    edited June 2018 cornchipwatto_cobra
  • Reply 15 of 15
    cornchipcornchip Posts: 1,950member
    “And metal buttons!”
    watto_cobra
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