Wired: ‘Tony Fadell Is Trying to Build the iPod of Crypto’
The incomparable Steven Levy, writing for Wired:
One of his dreams was to extend the screen along the edge of the
unit, so people could label it. None of the E Ink displays he saw
could do what he wanted, so he contacted an old friend, the UK
venture capitalist Hermann Hauser, who had once been involved in
an unsuccessful ebook device with advanced E Ink. That company,
Plastic Logic, was now based in Dresden, Germany, and was making
custom E Ink displays. And they could bend! The curved display had
at that point been used only by an obscure Russian phone called
the YotaPhone. Fadell wanted to produce hundreds of thousands of
screens with a dramatically sharper curve and at a low cost.
I will say, the Stax looks cool.
After breakfasting at the bistro, I spent an hour with him trying
to get set up to trade crypto and buy NFTs. While getting the
wallet to authenticate me was easy, getting the currency needed to
buy the funky artworks Rogers likes proved frustratingly
difficult, and apparently impossible to complete in the time we
had. “Crypto is where the internet was in 1993,” he finally said,
in a tone somewhere between wistful and pissed off. That doesn’t
bother him too much — the iPod, after all, came out in the early,
awkward days of digital music and took a few years to catch on.
“The only question in my brain is, are we the Apple of Web3?”
Rogers says. “Or are we the BlackBerry or Nokia of Web3?”
I’m unconvinced there will be an Apple of Web3.