Guess Who: You Love Me, You Hate me, You Can’t Live Without Me

Originally published by David Sable on LinkedIn: Guess Who: You Love Me, You Hate me, You Can’t Live Without Me

Obnoxious, obsessive, offensive.

Addictive and compulsive.

My wife, Debbie, berating me for my smartphone behavior.

And on the tenth anniversary of the iPhone, I know that I’m not alone…nor is she.

But those comments are about my personal behavior and usage habits. Not about the iPhone.

She, as an iPhone user, would tell you how it’s changed her life for the better…while she shakes her head in dismay at how it’s changed mine not always so…

Check out this article from The New York Times from last October…she made me read it…twice:

“Married to Their Smartphones (Oh, and to Each Other, Too)”

And therein lies the dichotomy as we look back and contemplate what hath Apple wrought…

Forbes will help us set the stage:

"Jobs stood on stage on January 9, 2007 and unveiled “An iPod. A Phone. And an Internet communicator.” The iPhone was unlike anything that had come before it. It combined a mobile phone and a music player in an easy to use package, leveraging (some might say cannibalizing) the popularity of the iPod. That first iPhone introduced us to the concept of apps and social media on-the-go. Overnight, a new world of sharing (and oversharing) your every moment and meal with your followers became as simple as taking a picture, going to the Facebook for iPhone page in Safari on your iPhone, then resharing…In the decade that’s followed, the iPhone has triggered a societal shift. We are always connected…The iPhone and all the devices it’s inspired in the decade since its inception have gone beyond convenience to lifeline."

So, whether or not you think it was a phone mashed into a player or a camera glommed onto a phone or an artifact from an alien visit to earth, it beat the hell out of Maxwell Smart’s shoe phone, which up until then, according to Mel Brooks, was the ultimate multi-purpose communications device ever thought of…even better than Star Trek….

So did it disrupt? Let’s hold that thought for a moment of reverence for Alexander Graham Bell’s accidental invention and check out a typical analyst response that, in my book, misses the point entirely, published by CNN:

"Not all the disruption has been in Apple’s favor. Released a year and a half after the iPhone, Google’s Android mobile operating system has been the biggest competitor to Apple’s iOS. Android phones accounted for 84% of the market in the first quarter of this year, according to Gartner."

Initial disruption is never in the original disruptor’s favor forever – and that’s the point, no? It's not real disruption unless everything changes.