
Early iPhone prototypes from 2006 show a "Sony-inspired" design (left) compared to an iPod mini-like design (right).
Apple's iPhone 4/4S design was influenced by principles extolled by a Sony designer, according to court documents filed in the ongoing Apple v. Samsung lawsuit in California. The unredacted filings, made in preparation of a jury trial scheduled to begin on Monday, July 30, reveal some of the inner workings of Apple's otherwise secretive design process.
According to internal Apple communications, then-executive Tony Fadell circulated an article among those involved in the iPhone project which outlined various qualities that a mobile device should have according to a Sony industrial designer. The Sony designer described "portable electronic devices that lacked buttons and other 'excessive ornamentation,' fit in the hand, were 'square with a screen' and had 'corners [which] have been rounded out.'"
An Apple industrial designer then mocked up CAD drawings using these precepts. The CAD drawings bear a striking resemblance to what is now the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S. The other design direction Apple had been heavily considering up to that point used an "extruded" aluminum shell that more closely resembled the iPod mini or second-generation iPod nano. The mock-up eventually resulted in Apple moving away from the extruded design toward the iPhone that we know today.
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