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  • When Apple holds an event, it makes history.

  • But when you look back on all Apple has done, I am fascinated by one singular Apple event that happened 10 years ago.

  • A lot went wrong, and nothing like it will ever happen again.

  • I'm talking about September 9th, 2014, the day Apple shoved a U2 album on everyone's iPhone.

  • But U2 was not the only debacle to come from that beautiful day.

  • This was the iPhone 6 event, which gave us BendGate and a botched iOS release.

  • It was the debut of the Apple Watch, pitched as a luxury item, costing as much as 17 grand for the fanciest of fancy pants customers.

  • This also was when Tim Cook introduced Apple Pay with the bold promise of replacing your wallet.

  • Newsflash, we still need wallets.

  • But most folks just remember it as the day when Apple installed a U2 album on every device.

  • Whether you wanted it or not, and it ticked off so many people.

  • I'll get more into that, but so many things went wrong around this iPhone launch that we have to talk about it.

  • So as we get ready for the iPhone 16 and the Watch 10 event in just a few weeks, here's one more thing.

  • Let's look back on the awkward moments from the iPhone 6 event, and how much has changed in the decades since.

  • I'm Bridget Carey, and this is one more thing.

  • The iPhone 6 was the first time Apple had the iPhone in two sizes.

  • There was an iPhone 6 Plus.

  • It measured in at 5.5 inches.

  • Now that's totally not a plus size by today's standards.

  • The plus size screen is now 6.7 inches in diameter.

  • The iPhone 6 also was one of the thinnest iPhones, which turns out might've caused some problems.

  • Shortly after its release, some folks reported that the phone casing would bend under pressure, like if it's in a tight pants pocket, and that gave us the term bendgate.

  • At the time, Apple said bent iPhones were extremely rare, but surely no phone was thinner ever since the 6.

  • Perhaps Apple didn't want another bendgate, but we could be going back to super thin designs.

  • Rumor has it that Apple is working on a slim iPhone 17.

  • Now Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says it would have a mixed titanium aluminum frame for strength and just have one camera on the back.

  • And we might say goodbye to the plus size altogether.

  • That's next year.

  • Now some are saying this new model could be five millimeters thin.

  • That would make it the thinnest iPhone ever.

  • So 10 years after the iPhone 6 Plus, we could be going back to something that looks like the iPhone 6 Plus.

  • Bendgate was a rough time because it came right as Apple was recovering from a bad iOS 8 update.

  • A week after iOS 8 released, Apple pushed out a version 8.0.1 to fix some bugs, but it came with bigger bugs and it borked some iPhones.

  • Users reported that it was breaking cellular reception with the iPhone showing no service on the display and others noticed problems with Touch ID.

  • Apple had to pull back the update.

  • This event made reporters like me warn people to never download an Apple update on the first day it comes out.

  • I still get weird about downloading iOS updates right away.

  • The following year, in 2015, Apple opened up the iOS beta program to the public for the first time.

  • Perhaps it's one way Apple makes sure it doesn't have another problematic update like that again.

  • When Tim Cook introduced the Apple Watch, it wouldn't reach consumer wrists for another seven months.

  • There was a lot of time to wait and speculate.

  • Folks were wondering, why do you even need a smartwatch?

  • And Apple was marketing this in many different ways.

  • You see, Apple wanted it to be for both runners and the high-end fashion crowd.

  • Remember, at this point, every tech company was making smartwatches.

  • So Apple went all out on the luxury angle to stand apart.

  • There were three versions, the entry-level aluminum and glass watch sport model.

  • It started at about $350.

  • There was a stainless steel version started at roughly $550, but the big daddy was the Apple Watch Edition, a luxury model made of 18 karat gold.

  • Starting price was $10,000, and it went up to 17 grand.

  • Vogue gave it a 12-page cover spread.

  • But here's the thing, unlike a real luxury watch, computer screens are not an heirloom.

  • You can't pass this down to your kids.

  • So it was a doomed idea, and it flopped.

  • It did, in fact, become obsolete.

  • Apple will no longer fix it, and the software has not been updated beyond Watch OS 4.3.2.

  • That's back in 2018.

  • A decade later, we still have three versions, and the luxury aspect is really about which wrist strap you buy.

  • Hermes sells a band for $590, more than the cost of buying two Apple Watches.

  • But all those fashion bands might as well head to the landfill.

  • The 10th edition of the Apple Watch is rumored to have a whole new design with a new system for connecting the bands.

  • So these current bands that just kinda slide in and out of the slot here, they're likely incompatible.

  • Will people be quick to upgrade if they're losing all of their investment on the bands?

  • I mean, at least when I buy a new pair of pants, the belt I bought is still compatible.

  • Apple Pay was introduced as a way to replace the wallet, but not every retailer was playing along at first.

  • Stores like Home Depot and Walmart did not take Apple Pay.

  • And 10 years later, you still can't use it at Home Depot or Walmart.

  • But many other retailers did eventually get on board, and it seems to be almost everywhere.

  • I could pay for the New York City subway by just tapping my iPhone now.

  • But it still struggles to be a wallet replacement because of driver's licenses.

  • Only some states are compatible with putting their licenses in the Apple wallet.

  • So wallets are not dead.

  • If you're like me and you love those wild lounge fly wallets, you can still keep buying them with Apple Pay, ironically.

  • That September event was jam-packed, and it was a live event, which sadly I think is something Apple won't do again.

  • But even with all of this news, Tim Cook wanted one more thing to close out the gathering.

  • In a celebratory moment for the iTunes Store, which at this point was around for a decade, the band U2 performs this new song for the crowd.

  • And then Bono gets on stage with Cook to tease up that Apple should pay him to give this whole album to every iTunes customer.

  • If we gave it away for free, but first you would have to pay for it, because we're not going in for the free music round here.

  • And with that magic instant, everyone got Songs of Innocence on their machines.

  • And then everyone was left confused on how to remove Songs of Innocence from their machines.

  • If you don't follow Apple news, I guess you just woke up and you were like, oh, what is Bono doing on my iPhone?

  • Now I'm old enough to remember when devices came with free media all the time.

  • Windows 95 came with a free movie file of the Weezer Buddy Holly music video, and one of the earliest Samsung Galaxy phones.

  • It was called the Samsung Vibrant on T-Mobile.

  • In 2010, it came with an entire copy of the Avatar movie loaded on it.

  • And I swear to you, that's how I watched Avatar for the first time on a four inch screen, just like how James Cameron wanted.

  • But back to Bono, although it was a free thing and Americans love free things, they do not love having this music appear on their machines because it was so woven in with their iTunes music library.

  • It was in the iCloud and you couldn't just delete it out of the iCloud, at least not at first.

  • Like if you just shuffled, you had U2 suddenly playing.

  • It was so bad that Bono apologized for the stunt and Apple had to provide a whole fix just to help people remove it.

  • It went so poorly that I don't think we're gonna get a free piece of media again, unless you count free trials of subscriptions because now so much has shifted to streaming services.

  • And think about how much is different from a decade ago in music ownership.

  • We had MP3 libraries and iPods and then they took away our CD drives.

  • And I guess you could buy an external CD drive, but not anymore on Apple because the super drive is no longer available as of just a few weeks ago.

  • We had this method of buying and storing music, but the environment changed around this method.

  • So I don't blame consumers.

  • Ownership just became obsolete when the infrastructure of ownership changed.

  • Now doing this story made me realize that my digital music library over the years is just rotting on some drive somewhere because I stream everything.

  • I realized it's been years since I purchased any song and that kind of freaked me out because you don't really own anything if the digital rights to a song you love leaves a streaming service.

  • It's a bit of a mission now to get MP3s and figure out where it all lives and how to move files around.

  • But there is still a desire with customers for some sort of physical device that you could take music with you and also let you disconnect.

  • Just look at Urban Outfitters.

  • It is selling old iPods.

  • The company Retrospect refurbishes old iPods and it inspired me to get back to our past.

  • So I bought one.

  • This is a first generation iPod mini from 2004.

  • I'm gonna play around with this a bit and I'm gonna report later on what it's like going back to just a simple MP3 player, even when iTunes software really isn't a thing anymore.

  • Let me know what you're looking for in the next iPhone event or let me know if you have any experience going back to iPods.

  • But even if you don't comment, I'll still do a show about it with or without you.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • I'll catch you next Friday for one more thing.

When Apple holds an event, it makes history.

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