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The story behind the fake Google Switch

peter Written on 13th November 2008                                                                                                              22 COMMENTS some text
Peter Evers, Next Web Mobile editor

For this story I’m taking you back to an age long long ago, before the release of the Samsung Omnia, Blackberry Bold, T-Mobile G1 and iPhone 3G, even before the release of the Nokia N95 or the iPod Touch. Let me take you back to August 2006…

Philosophizing about a school project

Around this time students Egbert Veenstra, Sytse-Jan Kooistra and Sam Baas were philosophizing about a new school project they had to work on. And as they were having a drink and a laugh in the summer sun they came up with the perfect idea for their project. They realized that the phone as we knew it back in 2006 could be so much more and wanted to develop a new revolutionary phone. Well, develop…they obviously did not have the resources to actually build a new phone, but they were armed with a much bigger weapon: their creative minds. And as they put their minds to work they developed a concept of the ultimate new phone.

The ultimate new phone

Gmail - Scoop voor The Next Web? - ejpfauth@gmail.comIt had a touch screen that didn’t require a stylus, service-side processor power (whatever that is, but sounds really cool) and some ingenious ways for finger-touch text input. So they developed a concept phone by using some 3D designing software they used for their study and by making a picture of a table and a screenshot of their own phone’s screen they pulled together a nice mock-up. Now they only had to come up with a name and given the total switch their phone would make in people’s perception of a mobile phone they decided that it had to be named Switch. But while they were working on their project, they were also thinking of sending their concept phone to some leading tech blogs to see how hard it was to fool those guys. They only needed to associate their concept with a big company. Apple? Google? Microsoft?

Cupertino, California

Around the same time, but in a slightly different setting, Apple HQ in Cupertino, California, the research and development department of Apple was working on a new phone as well. A revolutionary phone. A phone that would totally change the way people thought about phones. Nearly six months later they finished it, not very surprising it was called the iPhone and CEO Steve Jobs was able to startle the world with a whole new concept. The world of mobile would never be the same again.

Get attention

Around this time, January 2007, the three Dutch students were watching Steve Jobs’ keynote as well. And as you can imagine they were stunned when they saw a real phone that was much like the idea they had been working on for the last six months. They were dedicated to get at least a bit of the attention and as soon as the rumors about Google creating a phone came around, they knew exactly what to do: leak their Google Switch to the biggest gadget blogs by sending some fake blurry pictures.

Gmail - Scoop voor The Next Web? - ejpfauth@gmail.comGmail - Scoop voor The Next Web? - ejpfauth@gmail.com

The hype they wanted

Now take a moment to Google “google switch”, do both an image search and a text search and have a glance at the results. The guys got what they wanted and created a hype in which all big gadget blogs were involved.

Ideas are open knowledge

But what’s the main takeaway of this story? It actually reminded me of a passage from my bible. My bible is written by marketing god Paul Arden, who was creative director at Saatchi&Saatchi and passed away earlier this year. His book is titled: It’s not how good you are, it’s how good you want to be. Allow me to cite a passage which is completely in line with this story:

“Ideas are open knowledge. Don’t claim ownership. They’re not your ideas anyway, they’re someone else’s. They are out there floating by on the ether. You just have to put yourself in a frame of mind to pick them up.”

Work ethic

I truly believe that finding an idea is by far the easiest part of innovation. Because 99% of every idea is about stuff that is already out there. If your idea isn’t based on a lot of stuff that’s already around, nobody would understand you. So if you look at this story from that perspective, it is not very surprising that three young Dutch guys and Apple had the same ideas around the same time. It’s all about what comes after the idea, about having the will, the believe, the drive, the energy, to make your idea happen. And if you have those qualities, and if you’re lucky, you might just become very very rich.

You can read the full story from the students themselves here.

The Innovation Problem, no one else cares.

steven Written on 29th May 2008                                                                                                              10 COMMENTS some text
Steven Carrol, Next Web WebTipr France

The value of an idea is often claimed to be worthless, those dismissing their value then claim execution is everything… On the contrary ideas are everything! They are mankind’s personal version of evolution and I’d say that was pretty important.

The Innovation Problem, no one else cares.Execution is way down in the hierarchal list of elements that make a venture successful (IMO). If I was to make a quick list of crucial elements required for success, it would be something like this:

  • Idea
  • Luck
  • Technical understand / ability
  • Hard work
  • Investment capital
  • Marketing magic

But intellectual property theft is rife within innovative industries. If people actually knew the full extent of the problem they would be astonished. Naive and eccentric inventors who come up with a ‘really good’ idea (often their first is the best) are generally completely ignorant to the potential traps that await them which threaten to exploit their genus while giving absolutely nothing in return.

The law is totally inadequate in protecting independent innovators from plagiarism. There are many well known techniques employed by the unscrupulous to circumvent the law. In general the law only works successfully for corporations with clout (who do protect their own ideas) and of course who are well versed in using it to avoid comeback when they ‘borrow’ others genius.

Good ideas just by their nature are viral, therefore it is somewhat natural that others will also try to emulate them. But when someone else taps them without recompense, clearly that is wrong, but all too often it is reality.

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