Most people really don't realize just how capable those devices were for their time, and still to this day how they had some super neat features. It is no coincidence that the same team members were involved with Android and WebOS.
Some of the things that were amazing: - totally proxied IM support, across AIM, MSN and Yahoo chat. (they never got to Google) It having a proxy in the middle meant you never lost a message in a tunnel and weren't constantly bouncing on and off. Battery life was great despite it being on constantly.
- first true push email for the consumer market. Send an email to a @tmail address and it would be delivered in a second or two.
- true multitasking and background apps
- crazy neato programming APIs that you still dont see reproduced. One of the neatest that made multiplayer gaming nice on the device was what they called "The Funnel". Everybody had a Sidekick username, and your app could send a packet of information to any other Sidekick as long as you knew their username. That was guaranteed to be delivered and guaranteed to be delivered in sequence. Made all sorts of neat social / sharing apps dead simple to write.
They did so much right, but in the end they couldn't survive the paradigm shift of touchscreen, and there is no doubt they were starting to crumble a bit under the weight of their legacy codebase and platform.
But so, so far ahead of their time. I've never been so giddy than when I first brought one home.
I have a Sidekick4G on the way to replace my Nexus. Miss the keyboard, hope I can get some of the magic back.
Or being bought out by Microsoft.
Telepathy offers the same API over various backends (via Tubes - http://telepathy.freedesktop.org/wiki/Tubes). Telepathy is already heavily used in Gnome and some apps are starting to use Tubes (http://people.collabora.co.uk/~cassidy/talks/TelepathicDeskt...).
Tablets have been out for forever, and some of them have even been well made only to be ABANDONED by the makers.
It's been blisteringly obvious for a decade that tablets are the future of mobile computing.
The real lesson here is that marketing and sales matter. Apple, as a company, rarely invents new things. Rather it executes on old ideas that other companies failed to execute on.
Apple connects the market to the innovative technology and that is what really pays. Inventing stuff is useless if the public doesn't understand.
Moral: Steal a good idea, make it really easy to use, and don't skimp on your sales pitch.
i've worked with stuff from HP, Lenovo, all using Windows Tablet edition. NOTHING came even near the iPad in usability. fucking booting that thing? field force users HATED these crapfests.
the tablet notebook pc is dead, the industry is switching in droves to the iPad. not nerds, business people.
Android will catch up, the HP PalmOS stuff looks nice too. But the iPad was a true first.
Just like the Sidekick:iPhone relationship, there were a few tablets that didn't suck too much, but the parent companies tended to hamstring them. They would stop supporting them, they wouldn't do proper marketing, and basically they would constantly trip over their own feet. Suits were calling them dead before they even had a chance to be born. It wasn't a technology failure it was a business failure. Hence, Steve Jobs to the rescue.
What really surprises me is that the likes of Palm never got their act together in this space. Apple have shown it was ripe for the taking. Palm had years of experience and a great user base (I was a Palm user for years).
But this is all grist to the mill of the ideas versus execution debate. It's not the idea (although good ones help) but the execution that's key
During that first boom, several operating systems were developed which were intended for exclusive pen or touch use. These include PenPoint OS, Magic Cap and Newton OS. Apple fans tend to remember Newton, but the other two are long forgotten.
Really?
When the iPad came out, there was a lot of argument whether it meant anything - lots of people thought it would be a failure. "Just a big iPhone", as so many people said.
There were three kinds of iPad naysayers:
1. iPad sucks compared to the tablets released in the 90s. They had more features.
2. There is no market for tablets, tablets are dead. It's been tried and failed.
3. The iPad isn't useful for anything. It's just a big iPhone.
(1) is wrong because it fails to recognize "ease of use" and "style" as features.
(2) is wrong because the market was not educated on tablets and therefore tablets were not truly tested -- no one did the sales and marketing work that is necessary to introduce a new technology.
(3) is wrong because, like usual, people with only a hammer can't imagine using a screwdriver. It's necessary to educate people on the value of innovative technology. Future-oriented product people such as myself were waiting impatiently for both the iPhone and iPad since the 90s when they first became technically feasible. They were held back by entrenched telecom monopolies, bad UX, and poor marketing/sales.
Oh my... Guess I am really old.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SideKick)
edit: but it's interesting. When the iPhone was first shown, I had a Sony Ericsson P-800 phone. I wondered what was the big deal about Apple's gizmo.
And no other phone since got voice dialing as right as the SE...
The keyboard however, was really, really good!
Anyone notice the Kin device that was like a small Sidekick?