Will a new iPhone connector burn the Apple faithful?
Are you ready to throw away your accessories and start again?
Apple rumours are a dime a dozen, but talk of a new connector on the iPhone 5 is getting louder. The current 30-pin connector has remained consistent with every iteration of the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. This consistency has certainly worked to Apple’s advantage when it came to building a thriving ecosystem of speaker docks, sound system connectors, car mounts, chargers and other iGadget accessories. I’d say this ecosystem has long been part of the iPhone’s attraction and one of its key strengths over the ever-improving Android.
The consistency of the iGadget connector has also meant that hand-me-down iPhones could remain useful. My old iPhone 3G is now in the hands of my young son (although it’s been locked down to become little more than an iPod). While this might deprive Apple of a sale in the short-term, in the long-term it brings another iGadget user into the fold who will certainly favour Apple when the time comes for him to buy his own gadgets.
Meanwhile my original iPhone 2G, shipped over from the US, lives on an iPod dock in the bathroom. The ability for my family to mix and match our iGadgets between chargers and sound docks is one of the key benefits which has seen me resist the lure of Android and stick with the iPhone. My colleague Charles Wright recently jumped ship to the Samsung Galaxy S III and I agree with much of his reasoning. I’ve also become “disillusioned with Apple”, as Charles puts it. To be honest my home has become a little too iCentric to easily make the shift. But all this could change with the iPhone 5.
Are you ready to throw away your accessories and start again?
Apple rumours are a dime a dozen, but talk of a new connector on the iPhone 5 is getting louder. The current 30-pin connector has remained consistent with every iteration of the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. This consistency has certainly worked to Apple’s advantage when it came to building a thriving ecosystem of speaker docks, sound system connectors, car mounts, chargers and other iGadget accessories. I’d say this ecosystem has long been part of the iPhone’s attraction and one of its key strengths over the ever-improving Android.
The consistency of the iGadget connector has also meant that hand-me-down iPhones could remain useful. My old iPhone 3G is now in the hands of my young son (although it’s been locked down to become little more than an iPod). While this might deprive Apple of a sale in the short-term, in the long-term it brings another iGadget user into the fold who will certainly favour Apple when the time comes for him to buy his own gadgets.
Meanwhile my original iPhone 2G, shipped over from the US, lives on an iPod dock in the bathroom. The ability for my family to mix and match our iGadgets between chargers and sound docks is one of the key benefits which has seen me resist the lure of Android and stick with the iPhone. My colleague Charles Wright recently jumped ship to the Samsung Galaxy S III and I agree with much of his reasoning. I’ve also become “disillusioned with Apple”, as Charles puts it. To be honest my home has become a little too iCentric to easily make the shift. But all this could change with the iPhone 5.