The recent history of tech innovation is littered with gadgets that seemed a great idea – on paper, at least.
Apple Newton
Launched 1993
Killed off February 1998
Why? An A5-sized "personal digital assistant" with handwriting recognition, the Newton didn't assist much and couldn't read writing well. It was the brainchild of John Sculley, the man who fired Steve Jobs. One of Jobs' first acts on returning to Apple was to kill off the device.
Palm Pre Multimedia smartphone
Launched June 2009
Killed off Late 2010
Why? The Pre had everything – wireless charging, multitasking, touchscreen, dinky size – except sales. Apple threatened to sue over its multitouch screen; the company struggled, and eventually was bought by HP. The innovation of its multitasking interface lives on … in Apple's recently launched iOS 7.
Microsoft Kin Social networking mobile
Launched 6 May 2010
Killed off 30 June 2010
Why? Microsoft spent $1bn and 18 months after its purchase of the Danger phone company producing the Kin – intended to be a "social phone". It sold a total of 8,810 units; the phones were slow, hard to use, and cost more than an iPhone.
HP Touchpad
Launched 1 July 2011
Killed off 18 August 2011
Why? HP reckoned Apple's iPad lit the way to corporate profits. The 10in Touchpad was nice, but no cheaper, and corporate clients just weren't interested – and there were no apps. HP sold remaining stock for $99; that helped more than 900,000 sell in all, proving that pricing works. The cost for HP was a $3.3bn writedown.
BlackBerry PlayBook
Launched April 2011
Killed off June 2013
Why? Like HP, BlackBerry also thought the iPad was a nice idea, but lacked corporate appeal. Its 7in Playbook could run Flash, but had no useful apps – nor did it even have BlackBerry's famed corporate email in its first release. In total, fewer than 2.5m units sold; total writedowns are $500m.