September 12, 2014, 2:00 PM — A year is a long time in smartphone technology today, so remember if you can the changes that have taken place over the last decade.
In 2004, Apple had only just started working on development of its iPhone and no one outside the company knew about it, Samsung was focused on the South Korean market, and the hottest thing in wireless was the success of the I-mode mobile Internet service in Japan.
As I watched Apple's launch of its new iPhones and smartwatch this week, I was reminded of a trip I took exactly a decade ago to the ITU's Telecom Asia expo in Busan, South Korea. As Tokyo correspondent for IDG, I was used to seeing advanced phones in Japan but some of the handsets in South Korea looked positively futuristic. Recalling those phones, it's amazing to think how technology has changed in the last decade, and how smartphones have changed our lives.
Samsung Satellite TV Phone
It seems improbable, but satellite TV direct to cellphones was a dream of Japanese and South Korean engineers in 2004. The service was broadcast from a custom satellite and didn't require the bulky dishes usually associated with satellite TV reception in homes. Samsung's SCH-B100 had a flip-out screen for watching the programs and packed an MPEG4 video recorder function with a two-hour memory. The 14-channel service cost US$11 per month at the time and was successful for a while, but was later eclipsed by free terrestrial TV and online streaming. In Japan, the service never achieved success.
Pantech Body Temperature Cellphone
If you think swiping left and right on a bulky smartwatch looks goofy, you probably don't remember Pantech's G670 cellphone. The phone had a body temperature sensor on it's rear that required it to be held up and pressed against the user's forehead to take a measurement.
NTT DoCoMo Fuel Cell Charger
Back then as now, battery life was a headache for phone users. NTT DoCoMo thought it had an answer with a portable fuel cell that could generate power from a little bit of methanol. The idea was that small methanol cartridges would be sold in convenience stores and, when your phone ran out of power, you could snap it in the charger cradle, squirt in some methanol in and back in business. Fuel cells were seen at the time as an answer to the on-the-go charging needs of phone and laptop PC users in part because the power generation was immediate. The charger never came to market, but some companies are still pursuing fuel cell technology.
Samsung Hard Disk Phone