Apple Computer, Inc.: A History Copyright 1998 by Leigh Kimmel For permission to quote or reprint, contact Leigh Kimmel In many ways, the computer has been the formative invention of the second half of the twentieth century, much as the automobile was for the first half. As rapid technological change has enabled computers to become ever more powerful and at the same time smaller and less expensive, they have moved into every aspect of life. When the first electronic computer, ENIAC, was built in the 1940's, it was a monstrosity of wires and vacuum tubes occupying an entire room and so hungry for power that legend tells of it dimming the lights of all Philadelphia when it was first turned on. Within a matter of years the transistor made it possible to make electronic devices several orders of magnitude smaller than previously imagined, and the subsequent development of integrated circuits further fueled the move to miniaturization. With VLSI (Very Large Scale Integration), it became possible to put the power of the earliest computers on a single piece of silicon, the microchip. Into this atmosphere of tremendous change came two young men, Steve Jobs and Stephen Wozniak. Each arrived at his interest in computers through a different route, but when they met one another, their ideas of the role of computing meshed and they began to seek a common vision. Jobs was a mystic who had come to believe that science and technology, not religious contemplation, was the key to human betterment, but continued to pursue his goals with a mystical fervor. Stephen Wozniak combined a more practical approach to hardware with a cheerful belief in the innate goodness of humanity. While Stephen Wozniak was still a high-school student experimenting with electronics, he came to recognize the important principle that design must work with the human element to be truly successful.1 The two of them worked together for a while in a partnership to make "blue boxes," illegal devices to enable people to manipulate telephone systems. After a few brushes with danger and the law, both young men decided to pursue a more legitimate line of business. However, their fondness for tinkering with electronics stayed with them. In 1976, while working on a video teletype terminal for a friend's computer company, Wozniak began to combine that design with an earlier design for a computer, replacing the panels of blinking lights which has served as a display with a video screen. He then tried to market his design to Hewlett-Packard, but they saw no future in the idea of a personal computer and turned him down. Steve Jobs then convinced him that the two of them (Wozniak and Jobs) could start their own business to make this computer. Jobs called the computer an Apple, recalling his days of seeking enlightenment in the orchards of a Hare Krishna commune.2 In August of 1976 Wozniak saw a demonstration of a crude color display called the Dazzler and became obsessed with incorporating a color display into the Apple. At the same time, he wanted to simplify the memory architecture of the computer. This led to an innovation in which he made the processor share the memory with the raster (video) display. Wozniak realized that a cathode ray tube (CRT) monitor spent a good fraction of its time whipping the electron gun back to start the next line. The processor would be allowed to use the memory during this time, while the monitor got the memory the rest of the time.3 The original Apple computer was made at Jobs' parents' home (where Jobs was living at the time), and sold as a partially assembled kit for computer hobbyists. Software was loaded from cassette tape. When the original interface for loading BASIC (a programming language) failed to work, Wozniak built his own. They also settled on the slogan of "Byte into Apple" for selling their computer. However, they quickly ran into trouble. Hobbyists were more interested in the Altair and other early kit computers, while the computer's $666.66 price drew fire from Fundamentalist Christians alarmed that this was the machine of the Beast. Jobs found a suitably mystical pat answer for the second, but the first problem proved more difficult to solve.4 In 1976, Jobs decided it was time to expand Apple's horizons, and sought contacts with venture capitalists. After an initial rebuff, he made the connection with Armas Clifford Markkula, who agreed to underwrite a bank loan of $250,000 to start a company that would build the Apple II. Thus was born Apple Computer, Inc. Formal papers were filed on January 3, 1977, and within three months it bought out the former partnership of Jobs and Wozniak which had built the original Apple.5 The newly formed company then moved out of Jobs's garage to new quarters in Cupertino. Now came the challenge of making the company work. Somehow they had to create a market for personal computers beyond the small core of hobbyists who had previously been buying kit computers. They ultimately settled upon a strategy of starting with the hobbyist market and then expanding from that base to pull in professionals with small operations. For this they emphasized the Apple's ability to automate various processes such as controlling appliances.6 Jobs pioneered the Apple II's attractive plastic case, believing that an ugly computer would turn away the very group of people they were looking to attract. He absolutely wanted to avoid the rough home-brew look of many hobbyist computers, and tried several designers before he could get one to create the look he wanted.7 In 1978 Apple introduced the enhanced Apple II (the Apple II+), which was the first personal computer to have a floppy disk drive. Previously size had restricted disk drives to mainframes, while users of personal computers had to make do with cassette tapes, which were slow and frequently tangled or broke.8 Apple also innovated in its first advertising campaign. Instead of restricting itself to the technical periodicals, as had been the practice with previous computers, Apple also bought advertising space in popular press magazines such as Playboy. Its advertisements emphasized the practical utility of a home computer for such things as household finances and income taxes.9 In its early days Apple had a "loan to own" program which enabled each employee to obtain an Apple computer after a year on the job.10 Although contemporary writers seem to think of this as a revolutionary, even New Age, innovation that proves Apple's new humanism, it actually hearkens back to the days of Henry Ford, who paid all his workers at his factory enough that they could actually have a reasonable hope of owning a Model T of their own within a few years. In 1981 Jobs started toying with the idea of creating a "book-sized" Apple, to be known as the IIb. However, it didn't go anywhere because he feared that it would compete with the Macintosh. However, after being showed a picture of an early Toshiba portable, he decided to do it one better by coming up with a design that would include a built-in disk drive. The technical challenge of fitting all the components into a package little bigger than a three-ring notebook excited him.11 However, not all was well within Apple. Some of the problems were caused by the company growing faster than its organizational structures could handle. Apple stock was a major source of friction in the early company. Some employees received stock options while others did not. Salaried employees had far better opportunities to buy stock than did hourly employees. Sometimes it was easier for well-connected outsiders to buy stock than it was for employees. When the board decided to make Apple a public company in 1980, the friction became even more intense, exacerbated by the fact that Jobs feared losing control to the shareholders.12 Apple actually went public on December 12, 1980. Within that single days, the price of a share of Apple stock went from twenty-two dollars to twenty-nine. Apple was the most successful initial public offering since Ford Motor Company went public in 1956. Apple hit the Fortune 500 faster than any company had previously done, and soon was worth more than many major corporations.13 However, the management crisis within Apple could no longer be ignored. Apple's rapid growth had outstripped its leaders' ability to handle the situation, until it became absurdly bureaucratized, with memos on every conceivable thing, including how to write a proper memo. Jobs was alienating everyone with his intrusive, antagonistic management style. The board finally determined that something had to change, and the best way to do this was to bring in a new chief executive officer. The man they chose for this role was John Sculley, a college-educated PepsiCo executive.14 By 1983 Apple Computer was in serious trouble. The promised Apple III had been a failure, and the Lisa seemed ready to follow it. The entrance of IBM into the computer market seemed the death knell for Apple. They were putting a port on their personal computers which enabled those machines to "talk" with IBM mainframes. By contrast, Jobs adamantly insisted that each Apple computer should be totally self-contained. And an even worse problem was coming -- the Macintosh was aimed at the same market as the Lisa, but instead of pooling resources, the two divisions saw each other as enemies.16 Jef Raskin came up with the idea for the Macintosh in 1979. The central component of this concept was the mouse, which would enable the computer to run on a graphical user interface instead of a command line. When first presented with the idea, Jobs adamantly opposed it. However, he soon came to see its merits. When he did, he took over the project entirely, alienating Raskin, who subsequently left.17 In 1979 Xerox had permitted Steve Jobs and several other leading people from Apple to visit their Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) and witness demonstrations of the Xerox Alto. This was a computer that actually ran a primitive but functioning system based upon the graphical user interface and the mouse. At the time Xerox regarded Apple as a partner rather than a competitor, but once Apple developed the concept in its own way and successfully marketed it in the Macintosh, recriminations quickly followed. These culminated in a lawsuit, which was subsequently thrown out of court on the grounds that the "look and feel" of the interface was too vague to be defined and Apple had clearly not stolen any Xerox code to create the Macintosh operating system.18 The Macintosh was an extraordinarily visionary computer when it was first developed. The Macintosh could be called the first virtual reality machine: its interface was a consistent virtual reality, in which the icons -- tiny pictures on the screen -- represented real things. These symbols -- documents, folders, trash can, etc. -- were borrowed from the familiar reality of the office. In the years since its introduction it has become familiar, but when it was first introduced, it was derided as a toy, unworthy of real computer users. Subsequently its fundamental concept has been incorporated everywhere, not only in other computer operating systems but also in run-time applications such as the control panels of high-end photocopy machines. Although the Macintosh will eventually pass into the electronic graveyard, its legacy will continue.19 Shortly before the introduction of the Macintosh, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates stated that it was the only microcomputer beside the IBM PC that was worth writing software for.20 In retrospect that may seem ironic, since Microsoft Windows and the Mac OS have become fierce rivals. But one must remember that in 1984 there was a wide variety of computers and operating systems, all mutually incompatible, which have since been forced out of business by market selection pressures, leaving only Windows and the Macintosh operating systems as contenders in the personal computing arena. Difficulties with hardware design also led to some choices that would prove visionary, particularly in floppy disks. The Mac became the first major computer to use the 3.5 inch microfloppy disk because of a problem with the original "Twiggy" high-performance 5.25 inch drive. The latter was one of Apple's own innovations, but various technical problems made it almost impossible to manufacture reliably. Almost all the drives coming off the assembly line were defective in one way or another, and the few usable ones were woefully inadequate for the projected demand of the Mac. By contrast, a Japanese company known as Alps was prepared to produce a new drive which Sony had developed. This used a smaller disk enclosed in a rigid plastic case with a metal shutter, more robust than the paper-sleeve floppies which could lose data simply by being bent in carrying.21 That too has become the norm, until many people have forgotten how innovative the microfloppy was at that time, and how pervasive the 5.25-inch disk was. The public got the first inkling of the Macintosh on January 23, 1984, when Apple ran an enigmatic Orwellian advertisement during the Superbowl. This video clip featured a young woman rebel running into a theater full of staring human drones and smashing a giant telescreen on which Big Brother yammered away. The following Monday, Steve Jobs unveiled the Macintosh to the world with a demonstration of a program which allowed the computer to synthesize digital speech.22 The early acceptance of the Macintosh was hampered by the lack of application software, a deficiency partly compounded by Apple's strict rules on distribution of materials for software developers. Because Apple was refusing to allow mail-order companies to sell Macintoshes, it also forbade mail-order distribution of Inside Macintosh, the guidebook to the Macintosh architecture which was the programmer's bible for the system. Apple also put very tight restrictions on the Apple Certified Developer Program, by which software developers were able to obtain Macs at a discount and receive informational materials. A few daring employees worked around these restrictions to get development materials into the hands of every software programmer possible, under the idea that each Mac out in the field would help sell additional Macs simply through its presence.23 The Mac posed some difficult challenges for programmers accustomed to computers that were restricted to displaying standard ASCII characters in a grid of twenty-four lines by eighty columns. Because of the Mac's graphical orientations, programmers now had 160,000 individual pixels to deal with, and had to do it in a memory space so limited that they kept running out, leading to freezes and crashes. Jobs' insistence on a uniform look and feel across the platform meant that many features were burned into the ROM rather than being open for programmers to tweak. As compensation, five hundred basic routines were stored in ROM, but the programmers had to learn how to properly invoke this genie in order to use it well.24 Initial sales of the Macintosh lagged far behind expectations. Hoping to improve their figures, the Macintosh division came up with a revolutionary marketing promotion in the fall of 1984. Called "Test Drive a Macintosh," this allowed people to borrow Macs from their computer dealers to try out. The idea was to get potential customers hooked on the Mac interface so that they would buy it rather than having to return it. Unfortunately it coincided with the Christmas rush, and dealers simply wanted no part of the additional hassle involved in administering loaner units. In retrospect, Mac evangelist Guy Kawasaki called it: "Right thing, wrong way."25 The "Test Drive a Macintosh" program also was problematic in that it was primarily aimed at consumers instead of businesses, and made potential business customers feel it demonstrated that Apple lacked discipline and focus.26 Apple then decided to market the Macintosh most strongly to the university market, and developed the Apple University Consortium. In this plan, Apple would sell Macs to universities for a flat $1,000 apiece if the university would commit to buy two million dollars worth of Macs for resale to their students. After some initial resistance, this program proved to be one of Apple's biggest marketing successes, to the point that Apple proved unable to keep up with the demand and some universities had to use lotteries and similar schemes to parcel out the first shipments of Macs. Some students even violated the purchase agreements and subsequently resold their Macs at tidy profits. On the whole, the program was a success, which led to other computer companies beginning to market computer directly to individual students rather than only to the universities themselves.27 In 1985 Apple introduced the Macintosh Office, a concept that would allow small groups of five to twenty-five people to work together. This involved four major components: Macintoshes, the AppleTalk networking protocol, peripherals such as laser printers, and productivity software. Unfortunately, it lacked a fileserver (a device that functions as a traffic cop, making sure that the hardware and software works together instead of squabbling among themselves and resulting in network crashes), which made this concept little better in practice than the earlier method of "SneakerNet" (hand-carrying floppy disks from one computer to another). This greatly reduced its effectiveness and led Jean-Louis Gass, head of Apple-France, to refuse to let it go on the market there.28 The development of the Macintosh Office created some troubling problems, often growing directly from some of the presuppositions Steve Jobs had designed into the Macintosh. The original Macintosh File System (the MFS) had never been designed to cope with large-volume storage systems such as a hard disk, since consumers were not supposed to need so much storage. Therefore, a new filing system would have to be developed to deal with these large disks in a shared environment. Because so many people had already purchased Macs with the old file system and had large amounts of data on disks using that system, the new system, the Hierarchical File System (HFS), would have to be compatible with it, necessitating various compromises. (This "installed user base" problem is a computer-age parallel to the problems faced by those designing the NTSC2 "compatible color" television standard to work with the existing black-and-white sets as well as the new color ones).29 Apple's salvation came in the form of the LaserWriter, the first laser printer for the personal computer market. At that time daisy-wheel printers were the norm for high-quality printing (the other alternative at the time was the dot-matrix printer, generally with a nine-pin printhead that created crude, marginally-readable characters useful only for rough drafts). Many people at Apple thought that designing a $7000 printer was purest insanity, but a few dedicated individuals campaigned for it until it became a reality.30 The LaserWriter soon found a niche among publishing services companies and desktop publishers who needed a high-quality printer capable of handling multiple fonts, type sizes and graphics with ease. Desktop publishing really came into its own with the advent of the LaserWriter, which enabled layout people to print high-quality set-up pages as a unit instead of having to painstakingly assemble them on markup boards as had been the previous practice. Jobs wanted to create a true notebook Mac by the end of 1986. At the April board meeting he demonstrated a four-by-five-inch flat display screen on an Apple IIe, then pitched a scheme for laboratories to develop a production model of this technology. However, past problems led the board members to believe that Jobs would not be able to keep a development program on track and under budget. Based upon his problems with the Macintosh division, they decided not to create another division for him.31 In late 1985, conflict between Jobs and Sculley came to a head. When it became clear that the power at Apple was behind Sculley, Jobs left to form his own company. It was a particularly unpleasant parting, since Jobs spared no effort to make it clear that he was starting NeXT Computers as much as an act of spite as from a desire to do something new.32 Jobs' habits of ignoring the realities of engineering and marketing to follow his own aesthetic urges showed most disastrously in his design for the NeXT Cube. The case for this computer was to be a perfect one foot cube of cast magnesium, painted black. Since it was to have no angle whatsoever, it could not slip out of a regular mold. Therefore the designers then had to create a special mold that would disassemble to let the resulting case escape. Magnesium was a tricky metal to work with, and the black paint proved even worse, showing every minuscule defect. Jobs then insisted that his company would do all its manufacturing rather than outsourcing the board-stuffing (soldering components onto circuit boards), and then developed a fully automated plant in which he arranged and painted the robots according to his aesthetic sense, ignoring the ballooning costs. His arrogance resulted in a computer that was grossly overpriced for the power it provided and which promptly failed in the market.33 In February of 1987 Apple introduce two Macintoshes that broke away from Jobs' closed-system vision. The Macintosh II (not to be confused with the Apple II) was an expandable system that would take an external color monitor, while the SE would add an expansion slot to the classic one-box Macintosh. Both machines would have internal hard drives.34 One thing that helped the Macintosh II in the business market was its appearance -- with its separate CPU case and monitor, it looked like a serious business computer (i.e.. like an IBM PC) rather than a toy. This made it easier for business users to convince management and purchasing departments to buy Macintoshes instead of IBM machines. In 1988 Apple introduced the IIx, the first Mac to use a high-density floppy drive (the SuperDrive or FDHD -- Floppy Drive High Density) which could read DOS disks as well as Mac disks. It was also the first Mac to use the Motorola 68030 processor. In that same year, the first Macintosh viruses appeared. However, they remained less common, less virulent and less destructive than PC viruses.35 1989 brought more changes with the Mac IIx and IIcx. However, the long-awaited Mac Portable proved to be a bloated monstrosity, weighing in at 15.7 pounds, and quickly flopped in the market. True notebook Macs would wait for two more years, while more Mac users turned to DOS for their mobile computer needs.36 In 1991, the first truly usable laptop Macs appeared in the form of the PowerBooks, while Apple also introduced its first tower-case Macs, the 68040-based Quadras.37 In 1992 Apple finally broke from its long-standing rule of selling only to dealers who could offer full support for users. With the introduction of the stripped-down Performa systems, Apple allowed Mac systems to be sold through retail outlets such as Sears, Circuit City and Office Max. Not long afterward, Apple finally allowed mail-order catalog dealers such as MacWarehouse and MacMall to sell systems. At first they could sell only Performas, but that restriction soon fell and the authorized catalog resellers could sell all Macintosh systems.38 In 1993 John Sculley resigned, to be succeeded by Mike Spindler.39 Sculley's departure after over a decade at the head of Apple began a period of unsettled leadership that has continued to the present. In 1994 Apple finally brought RISC (Reduced Instruction Set Computer) to the desktop with the PowerMac, based upon the PowerPC 601 chip. The PowerPC was the result of collaboration between Apple, Motorola and IBM. The first three PowerMacs, the 6100, 7100 and 8100, were comparable the 68040-based Quadra 610, 650 and 800 respectively. Although they used the same basic case configurations, they incorporated numerous new power-user features such as built-in Ethernet and AV circuitry.40 Yet again Apple was in the forefront of innovation, but failed to adequately market its product to a broad range of users, which meant that the PowerMac did not reach as many customers as it might have. On November 7, 1994, Apple announced that it would finally license the Macintosh operating system and permit other manufacturers to build clones. This plan was based upon the Common Hardware Reference Platform (CHRP, pronounced "chirp") which was designed to create a common standard for future computers and make ports of both operating systems and application software easier.41 By the middle of 1995, many people were seriously questioning Apple's commitment to allow clone manufacturers to begin operations. Only Power Computing was scheduled to build mainstream systems for the general public, while the other four licensees were to produce specialized systems for niche markets.42 In 1996 Apple licensed the Pippin platform, a stripped-down computer design that superficially resembled a game console such as the Sega Genesis or SuperNintendo. Bandai produced the first machine on this system, which they called the @World (pronounced "at-world"). Although this machine would connect to a color television instead of a regular computer monitor and sported a boomerang-shaped control bar, it was capable of connecting to the Internet. At its introduction the pundits generally panned it as a toy, but enough people purchased it over the following year and started exploring the Internet via their new accounts that old-time Internet users have begun complaining about the flood of clueless newbies who seem unable to learn from working on the 'Net.43 On January 31, 1996, after low Christmas sales led to a loss of $61 million, Apple replaced Spindler with Gil Amelio, who radically streamlined Apple's operations. He reduced the number of Macintosh motherboard designs from five to two and consolidated Apple's six hardware architectures into a single core Mac system. He also reorganized Apple's corporate structure into two fundamental divisions, the Macintosh group (in charge of hardware) and AppleSoft (in charge of software).44 In July of 1997, with continued economic failure, Amelio found himself following Spindler through the out door. Some pundits speculated that this was at least partly engineered by Steve Jobs, who had returned to Apple in December of 1996.45 Amidst this turmoil, Apple shipped its long-promised System 8, but with no licensing agreement to enable clone manufacturers to ship the new system software with their computers. Licensees could still buy retail copies of the system software to include with their hardware, so the impact was not so severe as it could have been, but the uncertainty as to the relationship of the licensees to Apple severely disturbed confidence. Shortly before Amelio's resignation, the licensees had been negotiating a new license agreement which would have altered royalty schemes and opened the door for PowerBook clones. With Amelio replaced by Steve Jobs, long known to be hostile to the idea of licensing the Macintosh, the negotiations screeched to a halt, leaving everything in limbo.46 On September 2, Apple terminated the licensing program for good, acquiring the core assets of its main clone manufacturer, Power Computing. Official Apple statements cited a 10% loss of market share to the clones as the reason for this move. Subsequently Motorola and IBM decided to abandon their Mac clones, and Umax worked out a deal that would limit it to those markets that Apple did not want, particularly the Far East and the domestic market for under-$1000 systems.47 On November 10, 1997, Apple interim CEO Steve Jobs announced a new direction for the corporation, with radical changes in the way it would design, build and sell computers. The new G3 series computers were to have significantly better price structures and performance than competing Pentium-based machines running Windows operating systems. At the same time, Apple was also opening a new form of retail sales, the Apple Store, a World-Wide-Web-based system by which customers could order Macs electronically with customizable specifications, instead of having to buy from a set range of models and subsequently add additional memory, hard drives, etc.48 The very next day, Apple reported half a million dollars of sales through the Apple Store in its first twelve hours of operations.49 Apple Computer is now at a crossroads. Steve Jobs may be able to save the company he created, or he may instead manage to destroy it. The history of Apple has been littered with brilliant innovations which were ruined by poor marketing strategies. It has often been commented that Apple Computer has brilliant design and lousy marketing, while Microsoft has lousy design and brilliant marketing. Apple's "hippie" legacy, which gave Apple its casual dress code and incredible development enthusiasm, may have also played a major role in retarding its success in the market. By rejecting the importance of the bottom line as a "heartless" capitalistic cruelty, Apple may well have lost its ability to compete successfully because it is unable to respond to the realities of the market. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Notes Lee Butcher. Accidental Millionaire: The Rise and Fall of Steve Jobs at Apple Computer. (New York: Paragon House, 1988), 34. Ibid, 62-63. Michael Moritz. The Little Kingdom: The Private Story of Apple Computer. (New York: William Morrow and Company, 1984), 156-157. Butcher, 72-74. Ibid. 82-87. Ibid. 90-91. Ibid. 93-94. Ibid. 106-107. Ibid. 115. Frank Rose. West of Eden: The End of Innocence at Apple Computer. (New York: Viking, 1989), 40. Ibid. 110. Butcher, 128-129. Ibid. 132-133. Ibid. 166. John Sculley, with John A. Byrne. Odyssey: Pepsi to Apple... A Journey of Adventure, Ideas, and the Future. (New York: Harper & Row, 1987), 131. Butcher, 149-151. Ibid. 136. Randall E. Stross. Steve Jobs and the NeXT Big Thing. (New York: Atheneum, 1993), 40-43. Steven Levy. "Ten Years After," MacWorld, 11 (February 1994), 208. Moritz, 325. Rose, 62-69. Guy Kawasaki. The Macintosh Way. (Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foresman, 1990), 16. Ibid. 35. Rose, 117-118. Kawasaki, 20. Butcher, 184. Stross, 56-66. Kawasaki, 22. Rose, 182. Kawasaki, 22-23. Rose, 261-262. Butcher, 202-205. Stross, 117-124. Sculley, 383. Cheryl England. "The Macintosh Decade," MacUser, 10 (January 1994), 88. Ibid. 89. Ibid. 91. Ibid. 92. Ibid. 93. Lon Poole and Galen Gruman. "The Power Macintosh Arrives," MacWorld, 11 (May 1994), 92. Henry Norr. "Here Come the Clones," MacUser, 11 (February 1995), 76-77. Charles Piller. "Is Apple Serious About Clones?" MacWorld, 12 (August 1995), 98. Henry Bortman and the MacUser Staff. "Looking into Apple's Future." MacUser 12 (October 1996), 72. Cameron Crotty. "Apple's New CEO Gets Tough." MacWorld 13 (July 1996), 36A-36B. Andrew Gore. "Apple after Amelio," MacUser, 13 (October 1997), 24-25. Stephen Beale. "Mac OS 8 Ships with No License Deal." MacWorld 14 (October 1997), 34-36. Galen Gruman. "Why Apple Pulled the Plug." MacWorld 14 (November 1997), 31. "Press Release: Apple's New Direction" (http://product.info.apple.com/pr/ press.releases/1998/q1/971110.pr.rel.dirction.html) updated Thursday, November 13, 1997 by "webrose" (webrose@apple.com). "Press Release: Apple's On-Line Store Sells Half a Million Dollars in First 12 Hours"(http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1998/q1/971111.pr.rel. onlinestor.html) updated Thursday, November 13, 1997 by "webrose" (webrose@apple.com). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bibliography Beale, Stephen. "Mac OS 8 Ships with No License Deal." MacWorld 14 (October 1997), 34-36. Bortman, Henry and the MacUser Staff. "Looking into Apple's Future." MacUser 12 (October 1996), 66-79. Butcher, Lee. Accidental Millionaire: The Rise and Fall of Steve Jobs at Apple Computer. New York: Paragon House, 1988. Crotty, Cameron. "Apple's New CEO Gets Tough." MacWorld 13 (July 1996), 36A-36B. England, Cheryl. "The Macintosh Decade," MacUser, 10 (January 1994), 84-93. Gore, Andrew. "Apple after Amelio," MacUser, 13 (October 1997), 24-25. Gruman, Galen. "Why Apple Pulled the Plug." MacWorld 14 (November 1997), 31-36. Kawasaki, Guy. The Macintosh Way. Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foresman, 1990. Levy, Steven. "Ten Years After," MacWorld, 11 (February 1994), 205-208. Moritz, Michael. The Little Kingdom: The Private Story of Apple Computer. New York: William Morrow and Company, 1984. Norr, Henry. "Here Come the Clones," MacUser, 11 (February 1995), 76-81. Piller, Charles. "Is Apple Serious About Clones?" MacWorld, 12 (August 1995), 98-103. Poole, Lon and Galen Gruman. "The Power Macintosh Arrives," MacWorld, 11 (May 1994), 92-101. "Press Release: Apple's New Direction" (http://product.info.apple.com/pr/ press.releases/1998/q1/971110.pr.rel.dirction.html) updated Thursday, November 13, 1997 by "webrose" (webrose@apple.com). "Press Release: Apple's On-Line Store Sells Half a Million Dollars in First 12 Hours" (http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1998/q1/ 971111.pr.rel.onlinestor.html) updated Thursday, November 13, 1997 by "webrose" (webrose@apple.com). Rose, Frank. West of Eden: The End of Innocence at Apple Computer. New York: Viking, 1989. Sculley, John, with John A. Byrne. Odyssey: Pepsi to Apple... A Journey of Adventure, Ideas, and the Future. New York: Harper & Row, 1987. Stross, Randall E. Steve Jobs and the NeXT Big Thing. New York: Atheneum, 1993. Copyright 1998 by Leigh Kimmel For permission to quote or reprint, contact Leigh Kimmel This paper was originally written as part of a class in the history of American business, taught by Dr. Jonathan Bean, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale © WebRing Inc. The Apple History Webring << Prev | Hub | Sites | Join | Random | Next >> Want to look for other titles of interest? Search: All ProductsBooksPopular MusicClassical MusicVideoDVDToys & GamesComputer & Video GamesElectronicsSoftwareTools & HardwareLawn & PatioKitchenCamera & PhotoWireless Phones Keywords: Hosting by WebRing.