Dueling iPhone 'Untold Story' uh.. Stories

This is interesting. Wired's Fred Vogelstein has written a fascinating if overly-long look at the making of the iPhone:

It was a late morning in the fall of 2006. Almost a year earlier, Steve Jobs had tasked about 200 of Apple's top engineers with creating the iPhone. Yet here, in Apple's boardroom, it was clear that the prototype was still a disaster. It wasn't just buggy, it flat-out didn't work. The phone dropped calls constantly, the battery stopped charging before it was full, data and applications routinely became corrupted and unusable. The list of problems seemed endless. At the end of the demo, Jobs fixed the dozen or so people in the room with a level stare and said, "We don't have a product yet."

The effect was even more terrifying than one of Jobs' trademark tantrums. When the Apple chief screamed at his staff, it was scary but familiar. This time, his relative calm was unnerving. "It was one of the few times at Apple when I got a chill," says someone who was in the meeting.

Cool opening, right? Well, maybe you're not a "reader." If so, Valleywag offers up a 378-word version of the article that hits all the high points. Think of it as a Cliff Notes version of the story:

In its February issue, Wired promises "The Untold Story" of the iPhone. But as typical for the magazine, they instead deliver a rehash of things you mostly already know, spread over 3,336 lavish words. Here, instead, are 378 words, in bullet points, containing the truly juicy tidbits Wired writer Fred Vogelstein was able to turn up. My favorite? That when Steve Jobs gets really mad, he doesn't scream. He stares.

Discuss this Article 5

notawindowsuser
on Jan 10, 2008
This comment is a copy and paste from the reader comments at Valleywag, I think it says all that needs to be said. I was just thinking a minute ago that the Gizmodo Bill Gates interview sucked. I wouldn't be surprised if he declined to talk to you guys again. I checked your front page after having read the Wired article and expected that the "real" untold story would contain novel information. However, you've done the opposite. You have created a cheap rehash that displays not one whiff of authorial or even editorial skill and completely misses the broader important point that the Wired article was making (namely, that the iPhone's introduction was instrumental in beginning what we can only hope is eventually a total transformation of the wireless industry). You, sirs, are a low, low form of Ad-whores. Please remove yourself from the internet.
cesjr
on Jan 10, 2008
In Paulspeak, "overly long" means he didn't like it. Why? Because the article almost entirely praises Apple and the iPhone, of course.
DRWAM
on Jan 10, 2008
I would have to agree that it is 'overly long', but will disagree when Paul calls it 'fascinating', as I found it boring.
daveinla
on Jan 10, 2008
It's long and fascinating, like any insider story about the development of a product in a company like Apple. Jobs is a tyrant and a psycho pain in the a**, but thank him for bringing us good products like these. Andy Hertzfeld's book about the story of the development of the Macintosh is equally interesting but with original pictures and illustration.
brandon.pope
on Jan 10, 2008
I think someone may be spending too much time reading a blog he doesnt care for if he has already had time to develope what would constitute "Paulspeak"

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