Apple’s ‘slapband’ iWatch patent looks a lot like this forgotten Nokia concept
Long before the iPhone changed
how we think of cellphones, Nokia was dabbling in even more radical cellphone
concepts.
The Nokia 888, a concept from
designer Tamer Nakisci, was a flexible design that could fit around your wrist,
lay flat for reading, and take on a few other shapes. I haven’t thought much
about the 888 since it won Nokia’s Benelux design contest in 2005, but
after AppleInsider dug up Apple’s slapband-esque iWatch patent yesterday
(below), Nakisci’s concept feels strangely relevant.
As he envisioned it, the 888
featured a liquid battery, a flexible touchscreen, and relied on speech
recognition rather than a keyboard. If that sounds to you like shades of what
we’re hearing about the iWatch coupled with Apple’s Siri virtual assistant,
you’re not alone.
To be clear, I’m not implying
Apple in any way stole this design concept. It’s just interesting to see how
close we are today toward building devices that once seemed
impossible.
Here’s how Nakisci described
the functionality of the 888′s form to Yanko Design:
You don’t have to carry it in
your pocket or on your wrist. You can carry it anywhere, in any form. You can
roll it, bend it, put on your clothes like a clip. It also makes some form
changes that makes it more ergonomical: i.e., when you want to talk on the
phone, the body form turns into the form of the good old telephone. You can
personalize these forms and record them. So it fits you the best in the way that
you have chosen. The functions that it has also create a feeling of electronical
pet, as it senses your moves, understands what you want, responds to you in the
best way. It learns you, to fit you better. Also e-motions lets you send forms
to the other 888 users. It could be the shape of a heart or a small dance. This
way you can talk without words.
Like any great concept design,
Nakisci’s vision was far beyond the technology available at the time. It may
even be too advanced to build today; Apple’s iWatch concept still relies on a
wireless connection with your iPhone to fetch data, which removes the need for
bulky cellular electronics and a bigger battery.anywhere in the
patent):
A wearable video device
arranged to be worn by an end-user, comprising: a flexible substrate having a
flat state and a curled state; a flexible display disposed upon a first surface
of the flexible substrate, wherein in the curled state the flexible substrate
conforms to an appendage of the end-user, the flexible substrate further
comprising: an electronic module in communication with the flexible display, the
electronic module providing information to the display, at least a part of which
is presented in real time for presentation by the flexible display; and a
mechanism for detecting an end portion of the flexible display, the detection
for adjusting the arrangement of information shown on the flexible display to
match the size of the appendage the wearable video device is mounted
on.
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