In case you didn’t see one of the endless internet posts on the subject — it’s the 10th anniversary of the iPhone’s release. Hurray! Amongst the commentary about how the iPhone “changed everything” emerged one actually interesting bit: A look at some clumsy early prototypes of the combination iPod, phone and internet communicator.
Image: Getty
Ken Kocienda, the creator of the iPhone’s software keyboard, posted a photo of two early iPhone prototypes to commemorate the smartphone’s anniversary. But aside from it’s cereal box toy look, the prototypes also had funky names.
Kocienda said Apple’s Project Purple Team, responsible for early iPhone development, called them “Wallabies”.
Here are two iPhone prototypes. We called them Wallabies. I used these devices to make the software keyboard. pic.twitter.com/qbofBL3RUt
— kocienda (@kocienda) June 29, 2017
Why was the iPhone named after a small kangaroo? Kocienda doesn’t really know, but those are the prototypes he used to create the popular on-screen keyboard.
“Hardware and software projects at Apple usually get code names,” Kocienda told Gizmodo over Twitter. “I never knew why these iPhone prototypes were called Wallabies.”
Hardware and software projects at Apple usually get code names. I never knew why these iPhone prototypes were called Wallabies.
— kocienda (@kocienda) June 29, 2017
The two prototypes seem very blocky (and are probably heavy) and have giant bezels. Appropriate for a model more than a decade old. The design obviously took several leaps before reaching the final version. Maybe that’s why it was called a wallaby?