Three Apple products make 'Time' magazine's best gadgets of the decade list
"Time" magazine has selected what it calls the most significant ten gadgets that made their first appearance in the 2010s -- and Apple has three entries.
The original Apple iPad from 2010
The devices in Time magazine's list of "the decade's most important and influential gadgets" include ones from all the major technology firms such as Apple, Google, and Microsoft. However, only Apple is listed more than once.
Time does not number its list, and it says the set isn't a ranked top ten, but instead is a collection of devices that all do one thing.
"[They] tell the story of a new way of thinking, a slow-moving paradigm shift set to change the way we approach the personal technology we interact with on a daily basis," says Time.
Such a device is the iPad, Apple's first entry on the list.
"Before the iPad's introduction in 2010, the idea of a 'tablet computer' was mostly relegated to slick science fiction movies and unwieldy laptop-adjacent monstrosities running terrible software," explains Time. "Apple's iPad -- like the iPhone before it -- resulted in a cultural shift for personal computing, and set the tone for the next decade of portable devices."
Time also says that competitors have had "ample time" to catch up, they haven't. The magazine makes the same point about Apple's next entry on the list, too.
"While many have tried, no one has been able to match the polish and performance of the Apple Watch, which set the standard for what a smartwatch could do."
While calling the original version a tool for "fashion-deficient nerds," Time says the Apple Watch has now become a "mainstream accessory."
Apple's AirPods
There's no such qualification for Apple's third entry, as Time says AirPods "quickly became an icon in their own right."
"AirPods even carry social significance," the magazine continues, "transforming them into earbuds that double as a not-so-subtle status indicator."
Microsoft also gains a spot on the list for its Xbox Adaptive Controller.
"Unfamiliar with the Adaptive Controller?" asks Time. "That's OK! But the elegantly executed idea has opened up a world of delight for gamers with disabilities."
The other devices on Time's list range from the Tesla Model S car to the Raspberry Pi. Google's Chromecast gets a mention, as does Amazon's Echo and the Nintendo Switch.
Time magazine has previously included the iPhone X as one of the best inventions of 2017 and used iPhones to shoot magazine covers for its 'Firsts' documentary series.
The original Apple iPad from 2010
The devices in Time magazine's list of "the decade's most important and influential gadgets" include ones from all the major technology firms such as Apple, Google, and Microsoft. However, only Apple is listed more than once.
Time does not number its list, and it says the set isn't a ranked top ten, but instead is a collection of devices that all do one thing.
"[They] tell the story of a new way of thinking, a slow-moving paradigm shift set to change the way we approach the personal technology we interact with on a daily basis," says Time.
Such a device is the iPad, Apple's first entry on the list.
"Before the iPad's introduction in 2010, the idea of a 'tablet computer' was mostly relegated to slick science fiction movies and unwieldy laptop-adjacent monstrosities running terrible software," explains Time. "Apple's iPad -- like the iPhone before it -- resulted in a cultural shift for personal computing, and set the tone for the next decade of portable devices."
Time also says that competitors have had "ample time" to catch up, they haven't. The magazine makes the same point about Apple's next entry on the list, too.
"While many have tried, no one has been able to match the polish and performance of the Apple Watch, which set the standard for what a smartwatch could do."
While calling the original version a tool for "fashion-deficient nerds," Time says the Apple Watch has now become a "mainstream accessory."
Apple's AirPods
There's no such qualification for Apple's third entry, as Time says AirPods "quickly became an icon in their own right."
"AirPods even carry social significance," the magazine continues, "transforming them into earbuds that double as a not-so-subtle status indicator."
Microsoft also gains a spot on the list for its Xbox Adaptive Controller.
"Unfamiliar with the Adaptive Controller?" asks Time. "That's OK! But the elegantly executed idea has opened up a world of delight for gamers with disabilities."
The other devices on Time's list range from the Tesla Model S car to the Raspberry Pi. Google's Chromecast gets a mention, as does Amazon's Echo and the Nintendo Switch.
Time magazine has previously included the iPhone X as one of the best inventions of 2017 and used iPhones to shoot magazine covers for its 'Firsts' documentary series.
Comments
The conclusion:
"Using a modified Julian date, the 2020s will begin on Jan. 1, 2021, Dr. Mac Low said.
But that is out of sync with common usage. According to Emily Brewster, a senior editor at Merriam-Webster, a decade in popular culture is not defined by scientific convention. Because of this, the 2020s will begin on Jan. 1, 2020, and end on Dec. 31, 2029, Ms. Brewster said.
“It is interesting that there is this arbitrariness,” she said. “It’s unconventional, like language.”
This is one of those cases where common usage and understanding effectively overrule the logical alternative.
...uh, the AW5 looks almost identical to the 0, so Time claiming the original is for fashion-deficients is absurd.
Uh no. Sorry, but a petulant man-child caked in so much makeup and comb-overs that he looks like a monster on par with his IQ and poor understanding of the world, and now makes fun of women, children, and the disabled, will never be person of the year.
probably next decade too when man gets to mars.
Now, during a gig, I choose a title on my tablet, and not only is the sheet available instantly, the app also calls up the correct patches on my keyboards (yes, wirelessly). Footswitch page changes are just as significant, too.
I could NEVER go back. Well, perhaps kicking and screaming.
So far, we have no new amazing tech.
On vertical rockets like the DC-X:
On the inherent problem of energy density from lithium ion batteries (skip to 13:40 if you want the short version):
On the hyper loop car tunnel:
Why Musk Mars's is just vaporware, achieving what Apollo did fifty years ago and running into the same challenges as everyone else these past fifty years: