Last Updated:
A decade on, these innovations remain relevant not because they were first, but because they were right and addressed real behaviours rather than imagined futures.
Apple got rid of the jack and launched the first wireless earphones in 2016
As soon as 2026 ushered in, everyone online collectively decided that this year had taken us back to 2016. As we live in tumultuous times, the security of an era gone by brings a sense of security and joy that is currently lacking in the present day. 2016 marks a time before the pandemic, civil wars and the complications that social media brought in. It seemingly is taking us back to a time when times were still relatively simple, and technology was still blooming with fun and exciting innovations.
What made 2016 significant was the combination of practicality, design, and technology
that felt accessible while still being forward-thinking. We saw various innovations disrupting
their respective industries. Ten years later, its impact is still visible in the products and
innovations we rely on every day.
Below are 8 iconic products and innovations from 2016 that didn’t just survive the hype
cycle, but they defined the next decade
Dyson Supersonic Hair Dryer
When Dyson introduced the Supersonic in 2016, it challenged what a hair dryer was
supposed to be, for the first time in over two decades. The motor was no longer in the head. Heat was controlled rather than extreme. Noise was reduced through acoustic engineering. Airflow became precise, digitally balanced, and deliberately directed. Drawing on five years of research and hundreds of prototypes, Dyson applied its digital motor technology and intelligent heat control to rethink a category that had seen little meaningful design evolution in over 22 years.
As James Dyson noted at launch, the goal was simple but radical, to solve everyday hair problems through engineering, not styling shortcuts. Today, it is no longer a novelty; it is a benchmark.
Why it’s iconic: It created the beauty tech category, proving that consumers will invest in
performance, not just promises.
Apple iPhone 7 and AirPods
When Apple removed the headphone jack with the iPhone 7, the backlash was immediate. Many called it unnecessary. But that single decision accelerated the shift to wireless audio. Soon after, AirPods arrived, offering a seamless, cord-free experience that redefined everyday listening. What initially felt disruptive quickly became the norm. Today, wireless earbuds are standard, and entire accessory ecosystems exist because of this shift.
Why it is iconic: It reshaped consumer behaviour and pushed the industry into the wireless
era faster than anyone expected.
Google Pixel
Google’s first in-house smartphone combined Android software with proprietary hardware, delivering features like a standout camera, Google Assistant, and fast updates. It set a benchmark for phones designed by software companies and raised expectations for how software integration could enhance daily device use.
Why it’s iconic: It influenced modern smartphones’ cameras, AI, and software design.
Amazon Echo & Alexa
Alexa wasn’t the first voice assistant, but it was the first to be invited into their homes. By making voice interaction casual and ambient, Amazon changed how we interact with technology altogether. Today, voice interfaces are everywhere, from homes to cars to
workplaces.
Why it’s iconic: It introduced voice as a daily interface, not a gimmick
Tesla Autopilot Goes Mainstream
While autonomous driving existed before, Tesla Autopilot was the first system ordinary people used in real-world conditions. It shifted public imagination from “someday” to “this is already happening.” By 2026, driver assistance systems are standard, but Tesla made
the idea culturally acceptable first.
Why it’s iconic: It reframed cars as software platforms, not just machines.
Nike HyperAdapt 1.0
Straight out of Back to the Future, Nike’s self-lacing shoes felt excessive and that was the point. They weren’t meant to be mass market immediately; they were a statement of intent. Today, adaptive fit, smart apparel, and connected wearables owe a nod to this bold experiment.
Why it’s iconic: It blurred the line between fashion, sport, and technology.
GoPro Hero5 Black
Waterproof without a case, voice-controlled, and capable of 4K, the Hero5 was built for moments, not manuals. It empowered users to document life as it happened. Even as smartphones improved, GoPro retained its place by owning a specific kind of storytelling.
Why it’s iconic: It made everyone a creator, long before “creator economy” was a buzzword.
Instagram Stories
In one move, Instagram reshaped content creation, brand storytelling, and news consumption. Stories prioritised authenticity, speed, and impermanence – values that still dominate social media today. It was launched as a direct competitor for Snapchat; however, it became a lot more than it initially intended. It was designed as a more casual, limited-time method to allow users to give their connections a more behind-the-scenes look into their lives. The feature quickly grew in popularity, eventually surpassing Snapchat’s daily user count.
Why it’s iconic: It changed how stories are told, not just where.
A decade on, these innovations remain relevant not because they were first, but because they were right. Each addressed real behaviours rather than imagined futures. Their
longevity is a reminder that impact is defined by how seamlessly technology fits into everyday life.
January 24, 2026, 12:33 IST
