I didn't go into much detail, and this topic doesn't interest me that much to go into a great deal of detail anyhow! I watched the Gadget Shows top ten gadgets of the decade and haven't done a study...I'm starting to get confused by your arguments.
On the Gadget Show, they mentioned a particular mainstream Nokia. I don't even own a mobile so I may be wrong, but I don't recall everyone including 8 year olds oening mobiles back in the 90s. Of course for best gadget there needs to be a particular model, and I'd cite the Gadget Shows choice, assuming they did their homework.You're talking about mobile phones as the gadget of the decade, but they really took off in a big way in the 90's.
Which wouldn't exist without the touchscreen and design. A gadget is the sum of it's parts. A gadget without software is rubbish. Software without a good gadget is rubbish. iPhone has them both.You mention the iPhone as a great contender, but its strength is in the software and apps such as iTunes.
?? GPS requires a gadget to run. You can't just use it! So the 'gadget' would be whatever popular TomTom or whatever make made it 'the thing to own'.You talk GPS, but GPS is a service and not a gadget.
There is nothing unique in this world. Everything has been done before, often and surprisingly back in the 50-70s when you go to the roots of technology! The fact someone else may have done something first doesn't mean it was a worthwhile gadget. The awards are 'best gadget' and not 'best innovations'. They are for gadgets people want to own or which have greatly influenced the market.In an earlier post you mentioned the PS2 due to the sales figures, but then talk iPhone and conveniently ignore that it has sold around 6-7 million units. Surely, by your reckoning, the Nokia 3310 or Razr3, each with over 100 million units sold in the decade, far better derserve a place as gadget of the decade? And the iPhone hasn't done anything that wasn't already in place. Music on mobiles? Check. Games on mobiles? Check. Apps on mobiles? Check.
Of course, the iPhone has done it better, in a neater, more desirable, package.
That's a fair point. In that respect it could be argued XB360 is a worthwhile gadget as the 'online gaming' gadget, while iPhone is the 'portable music' gadget.Live and the 360 go hand in hand in the same way that the iPhone does with iTunes and the app store, that GPS does with the various receivers and software and that mobile phones do with the mobile networks.