Knight-Ridder video predicted iPad-like tablet in 1994 (with video)

In the following video, Knight-Ridder predicted an iPad-like tablet in 1994 (of course, with iPad, the stylus is not included, but available if you’d like).

Also, check out the “news” list shown at the 6:59 mark:

[Attribution: TUAW, 9 to 5 Mac, paleofuture. Thanks to MacDailyNews readers too numerous to mention individually for the heads up.]

51 Comments

      1. Actually, released Newton was the smallest of three designs that were planned and designed since 1987.

        So yes, while Newton is the first actual PDA in contemporary meaning, it is also the first tablet.

  1. Looks like they all have PowerBook Duo with Duo Dock on their desks. Wow, 1994 was when the very first PowerPC Macs were released; most Macs in use were still “68k.” Pretty good speculation from 17 years ago.

    1. I would call this more than speculation. They do have a working prototype. They were a bit optimistic about customer loyalty to newspaper vendors. This story didn’t only predate iPads, it predates Google and their ad model. You can see that they were anticipating both in this story. This is fascinating.

  2. That was amazing how not far off they were. The concept of something close to printing but not a PC, post PC. Of course the iPad is much more, however the video almost sounds like iBooks. It is sad that the concept fell apart. MS’s inability to see a tablet as nothing more than a add on to a laptop stifled us for over a decade. Apple had all the vision and knowledge to get it done. I liked seeing all the old Mac’s in the background.

    Sad that the “news” is almost the same, those were headlines from that time.

  3. a few points of interest to me:

    – i wonder if steve new about this
    – despite this being mid 90’s and supposedly he says they were working with newspapers, newspapers did not see it coming when the ipad appeared

    1. I have a Dell monitor that rotates, attached to my iMac as a second monitor. You have to manually set the rotation settings in system preferences – no sensors in the monitor to tell the OS which way it’s oriented. But at least you can say – I have given up trying that trick with XP!

  4. Saw another vision of the future in 1966 on a show I think called “Star Trek” a communications device eerily similar to today’s cell phones. And the Pad that was used for Kirk’s daily report, although he did use a pen to sign it.

  5. Makes me wonder if Jobs of someone in Apple had seen this before work started on the iPad. Apple isn’t the only ones trying to bring us a great digital future, but they seem to be the leading edge.

  6. In 1994, the first Internet browser was a year away, and modems were painfully slow. No wonder they didn’t predict streaming media. As for what happened to the tech, Knight-Ridder was involved with lots of small experiments in digital delivery and computer-newspaper-broadcast collaborations, but nothing caught on. In some ways they were ahead of their times, in other areas they were stuck to the past.

    Full disclosure: I worked at The Miami Herald as a reporter in the late 1970s and tried out for a job working for Roger Fidler, then the paper’s design director.

    1. pretty sure I was using NCSA Mosaic – a web browser – in 1993

      at the time, the 14.4 modem didn’t *feel* painfully slow – especially compared to the 9600 baud modems which you could practically see throwing up plain text as fast as it could download it – it was exciting and new

      also almost all websites were all about the information – the text – rather than pretty pictures and, again, the hypertext transfer protocol was exciting and new…

    2. Actually on protocol browsers were new but clos dprotocol browsers like those that interfaced with Compuserve/ or BBS’s or America Online would download and format your info complete with photos etc right on your screen with interactive capability in layouts like that even with tiny bits of video occasionally.

      EVERYONE knew everything would eventual be dispalyed on a small magazine thing tablet device someday and everyone inthe magazine industry knew when it happened it woudl change the publishing business.

      vivzizi
      The running joke was “when they can read it electronically on the toilet the days of printed magazines and newspapers are over”.

      Literally that was the joke since the 1980’s.

  7. It was kinda spooky how accurate they were with the predictions. Color display, using a pointing device to click for more information, being able to select video and enhanced graphics, portability. That those ideas predated the mainstream web is pretty remarkable.

    What they didn’t get is how the web has taken over information distribution and multitude of ways information can be distributed (news services, focused websites like MDN, blogs, twitter, facebook…..).
    They missed the idea of using your finger to navigate. Only Apple got that one.
    They couldn’t predict wireless data transmission either.

    1. NCSA Mosaic came out in 1993. It already had color display and used point and click for more information. The idea was not yet “mainstream,” but the HTML with graphics, image map, etc. already existed in 1994. The researcher in the video was describing web. He just did not call it web, since most people still called the network ARPA or DARPA net. “internet” and “world wide web” were still new words.

  8. I love those circa 1994 Macintosh fonts used in the electronic newspaper. It brings back great memories for a fanboy since the debut of the Lisa computer, such as myself. Despite their share of bumps in the road, Jobs, Woz, and the rest of the innovative crew at Apple have surely changed the world for the better.

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