2005: iPod Evolved
Having established the iPod as the premiere portable digital music device, Steve Jobs decided to expand its influence and market share by branching the brand out into several related spinoff products. Recognizing that different music consumers had distinctly different needs and budgets, Jobs eventually launched variations such as the iPod Nano and the iPod Touch, both of which were offered in several different configurations and price points. In this image from the 2005 Macworld Expo on January 11th, Jobs unveils the iPod Shuffle for the first time.
2007: iPhone Madness Begins
Having pioneered and transformed both the home computing and digital music industries, Steve Jobs set his sights on the mobile phone market. On January 9th, 2007 he made history – again – when he unveiled the first iPhone at the Macworld Conference in San Francisco (seen here). More than just a mobile phone, the iPhone included a digital music player and a camera, and it even had Internet capabilities. The device was an instant success and quickly gained a devoted following. It remains, in many ways, the most coveted mobile device on the market.
2010: iPad Breaks New Ground
When Steve Jobs revealed Apple's latest innovation, the iPad, at a special event on January 27th, 2010, it became apparent that soon he would transform yet another industry – tablet computing. Reminiscent of a super-sized version of the iPhone, the iPad bridged the gap between smartphones and laptop computers. Almost immediately surrounded by a rush of imitators, the iPad retains a dominant slice of the market share: In 2010, it was responsible for more than 75 percent of all tablet sales, and nearly 15 million of the devices were sold worldwide that year.
2010: The Beatles Go Digital
One of the iTunes Store's most famous holdouts was, until late 2010, the Beatles. The iconic band joined the iconic brand three years after legal wrangling between Apple Inc. and the group's label, Apple Records, was finalized. Steve Jobs teased music fans in a 2007 Apple keynote by playing "Lovely Rita" on an iPhone, in what may have been a sly hint that the Fab Four's catalog would soon be available.
2011: Apple in the Cloud
Returning from a break due to his failing health at an Apple keynote in 2011, Steve Jobs announced the company's improved and expanded iCloud storage system. Riffing off of Apple services that had been available since 2000, the iCloud service lets consumers store music, photos, documents – essentially their entire digital life – for simple synching across Apple devices.
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I am very devastated that Steve died.I think he was a rather remarkable man.Here are some photos from London, UK that I shot!
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Untitled by chrissananda, on Flickr
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Untitled by chrissananda, on Flickr
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Untitled by chrissananda, on Flickr
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Untitled by chrissananda, on Flickr
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Untitled by chrissananda, on Flickr
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Untitled by chrissananda, on Flickr
[img:$uid]http://farm7.st.../img:$uid]Fiat 500 in Camden! by chrissananda, on Flickr [Edited 10/11/11 13:58pm] Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/srr636
My Blog: http://fullofbeautifuldis...umblr.com/ My Twitter: www.twitter.com/chrissyharman My Flickr:www.flickr.com/chrissananda | |
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I have thought of this man so many times in the last 6 days. I keep playing his words and they are all so true. I hope young people listen to him and follow their curiosity verses being too practical. Stay foolish is so true. You can not be afraid of looking foolish. There came a time when the risk of remaining tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom. Anais Nin. | |
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LOL. How is bring yet another example of the pre iphone a backtrack. It seems some people are in complete denial than anything came before the apple version.
Are you seriously suggesting that the Prada, a touch screen black slab with music player is nothing like the iphone.
errrr ok. With that logic, I think Apple invented everything ! . | |
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I think you are getting crossed wired. I never said that applesoft was a GUI. I was using both applesoft and xerox as points to prove that Steve Jobs was never an innovator. He was are Marketeer. And a damn good one.
He didn't innovate with a Apples first machine, nor a GUI, more the iphone, nor the ipad. That are all simply improvements in existing designs. That is not inovation.
The ipod was a bigger leap forward than other products, but even then, there were already good USB stick players out and wild.
I think its a pointless agruement. Its clear that the cult of Apple blissfully ignore what came before. My best mate is an apple head and he thinks they came up with everything. Everytime I show him what came before. He just goes silent, then changes his tact to words like "better" and "desirable".
Its just like MJ fans.
I'm no Apple hater, I have a 27" i7 imac as my main PC.
Steve jobs was a great marketeer, not a innovator. But lets not take my word for it, try Steve Wozniak, someone far better placed that you and I.
Go to BBC iplayer and watch the "Click" tribute to Stevie Jobs. Wozniak quite clearly points out that Jobs came up with no innovation, and that his strength was in Marketing. . | |
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You're gonna need to name some of them. MP3 players at that time were either bulky and slow or small with minimal storage.
I think you need to watch that video again, because your summary doesn't match what I saw. Woz said that Steve was a manager of the little details and understood that they mattered, saying that the "tiny little nuances in between one product and another make a huge difference." He went on to say that, while Steve "never did the real right-down-to-the-guts of the technology, the actual design," he managed it, understood it, knew who to trust as far as the tech people went, and basically knew what should and shouldn't be included in the products. How is that saying he wasn't an innovator? Innovation doesn't have to mean starting something from scratch. Just to name one example, the iPod was the first MP3 player of its kind (truly portable, spacious, good battery life, fast file transfers) and it blew everything else out of the water. That's innovation. And since everyone agrees that Steve had a big hand in deciding what did and didn't make it into the products, he certainly deserves some of the credit for innovating. "Whitney was purely and simply one of a kind." ~ Clive Davis | |
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I never said Steve Jobs came up with everything. I even clearly give credit to Alan Kay and his team at Xerox Parc as laying the foundation. That doesn't mean Steve Jobs isn't a visionalry and an innovator. It took what came before him and made it far better than what exisited before. He also had an amazing ability to know what, out of the many things that came before him, were worth persuing and which werent. Comapre Steve Jobs to the executives at Xerox. They owned a GUI based object oriented OS/programming language and didn't even know what they had.
The other part I question about what you've said is how you diminish Steve Jobs the visionary, but want to build up Bill Gates as a visionary because he wrote a new implementation of an existing programming language. That's certainly not visionary.
If you want to say Alan Kay is more of a visionalry than Steve Jobs, I would have less of an argument. After all, Alan Kay drew this concept 40 years ago
[img:$uid]http://edibleapple.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/kay-children.gif[/img:$uid]
Yet Alan Kay gives Steve Jobs all the credit in the world.
Those are the two comptuer people I've listened to and been inspired by the most in my career - Steve Jobs and Alan Kay. | |
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