Love Notes to Newton

I'd somehow failed to notice that a documentary about the Apple Newton had been released: Love Notes to Newton is a mix of historical footage about the machine's development and tributes to the dwindling band of Newton aficionados who have tried hard to keep their Newtons in daily use in the modern world where the smartphone in your Pocket utterly outclasses its ancestor.

It's fair to say that the Newton was an inspiring failure: Palm were the most visibly successful company that tried to follow in the Newton's footsteps, but they didn't ever get beyond the geek market. [note]I know: I owned several Palm products, and a number of Psions before that.[/note] While few users refer to their smartphones as a PDA that's just what it is. The biggest difference between a smartphone/PDA and a Newton is that the Newton's operating system took great pains to revolve around collections of object-oriented data that it made available to any other program on the device, where modern smartphones run standalone Apps and tend to have tighter constraints on what data is visible to different apps. To a large extent, if you can trust Newton fans to be objective for a minute, is that smartphones substitute sheer processor horsepower for smart software.

It's tantalising to wonder what could have happened if the Newton had survived a bit longer after the return of Steve Jobs to Apple: might the improvements in Newton OS 2 (and whatever might have come to pass in Newton OS 3 if they'd got that far) have allowed the platform to flourish, or was it unfortunate enough to be a revolutionary product from a company that couldn't afford to wait for it to outgrow the bad reputation it was saddled with because they over-promised what it was one day going to be capable of, and doubly cursed because it was a highly visible effort by a recently ousted CEO to be a visionary in the mould of his predecessor/successor?

The thing is, right now Apple's iOS team would look at this documentary and think it couldn't happen to them. It not only can, but one day it almost certainly will.[note]If Apple are lucky, whatever comes in the wake of the success of iOS will be an Apple product that somehow delivers sufficient backwards-compatibility - if only in terms of the multimedia formats it supports - to lock customers into the Apple ecosystem. If Apple are unlucky, the story of iOS 16 will be that everyone flocking to whatever new toys Android/Microsoft/Samsung/Huawei have in the market and nobody will care what iOS 19 brings to the party.[/note]

Anyway, Love Notes to Newton is definitely worth a watch if you have any sense of how things were when John Sculley was running the show and it wasn't at all clear where Apple's next hit product was coming from.

[Via 512 Pixels]