Recently Martin Cooper gave an interview to CNN, he said:
We knew that someday everybody would have a [cell] phone, but it was hard to imagine that that would happen in my lifetime. And now we’ve got almost five billion phones in the world… Phones have gotten so complicated, so hard to use, that you wonder if this is designed for real people or for engineers
Martin also said that ” Phones have gotten so complicated, so hard to use, that you wonder if this is designed for real people or for engineers.” Somehow, he is right because not every simple person can use a phone, before using a phone you have to read tutorials and guides, but for geeks it’s easy. He said that ” We’re going to have a lot of different kinds of phones when our industry grows up — some that are just plain, simple telephones. In fact, my wife and I started a company, and she designed the Jitterbug, which is just a simple telephone.” He is right again, 30 years ago, there was only one kind of phone that only make a call. But today mobile phones are life of people, you can read emails, listen to songs, browse web and lot of other stuff.
Martin used to have an iPhone, but he gave the iPhone to his grandson and he is currently using the Motorola Droid. He said that ” I think that the Android phones are catching up now, the latest version of the Android phones are every bit as good, if not better, than the iPhone.” I think that’s a slap on Steve Jobs face.
Check out the whole interview over at CNN
via Gizmodo