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- The Early Years
- The Macintosh Computer
- The iMac and the iPod
- The iPhone
- Every Product Apple Has Made So Far
- How Did Apple Get Started?
- What Was Apple’s First Product?
- What was the second Apple product?
- How Did the Evolution of Apple Computers Continue?
- What Was Apple’s First Phone?
- How Many Apple Products Have Been Sold?
- You might also like.
- Money & Finance
- Planes, Trains and Automobiles
All the apple computers
24‑inch model
Say hello.
27‑inch model
Ready for big things.
Which iMac is right for you?
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Apple Footer
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A History of Apple Computers
Easyturn / Getty Images
Before it became one of the wealthiest companies in the world, Apple Inc. was a tiny start-up in Los Altos, California. Co-founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, both college dropouts, wanted to develop the world’s first user-friendly personal computer. Their work ended up revolutionizing the computer industry and changing the face of consumer technology. Along with tech giants like Microsoft and IBM, Apple helped make computers part of everyday life, ushering in the Digital Revolution and the Information Age.
The Early Years
Apple Inc. — originally known as Apple Computers — began in 1976. Founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak worked out of Jobs’ garage at his home in Los Altos, California. On April 1, 1976, they debuted the Apple 1, a desktop computer that came as a single motherboard, pre-assembled, unlike other personal computers of that era.
The Apple II was introduced about a year later. The upgraded machine included an integrated keyboard and case, along with expansion slots for attaching floppy disk drives and other components. The Apple III was released in 1980, one year before IBM released the IBM Personal Computer. Technical failures and other problems with the machine resulted in recalls and damage to Apple’s reputation.
The first home computer with a GUI, or graphical user interface — an interface that allows users to interact with visual icons — was the Apple Lisa. The very first graphical interface was developed by the Xerox Corporation at its Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) in the 1970s. Steve Jobs visited PARC in 1979 (after buying Xerox stock) and was impressed and highly influenced by the Xerox Alto, the first computer to feature a GUI. This machine, though, was quite large. Jobs adapted the technology for the Apple Lisa, a computer small enough to fit on a desktop.
The Macintosh Computer
In 1984, Apple introduced its most successful product yet — the Macintosh, a personal computer that came with a built-in screen and mouse. The machine featured a GUI, an operating system known as System 1 (the earliest version of Mac OS), and a number of software programs, including the word processor MacWrite and the graphics editor MacPaint. The New York Times said that the Macintosh was the beginning of a «revolution in personal computing.»
In 1985, Jobs was forced out of the company over disagreements with Apple’s CEO, John Scully. He went on to found NeXT Inc., a computer and software company that was later purchased by Apple in 1997.
Over the course of the 1980s, the Macintosh underwent many changes. In 1990, the company introduced three new models — the Macintosh Classic, Macintosh LC, and Macintosh IIsi — all of which were smaller and cheaper than the original computer. A year later Apple released the PowerBook, the earliest version of the company’s laptop computer.
The iMac and the iPod
In 1997, Jobs returned to Apple as the interim CEO, and a year later the company introduced a new personal computer, the iMac. The machine became iconic for its semi-transparent plastic case, which was eventually produced in a variety of colors. The iMac was a strong seller, and Apple quickly went to work developing a suite of digital tools for its users, including the music player iTunes, the video editor iMovie, and the photo editor iPhoto. These were made available as a software bundle known as iLife.
In 2001, Apple released its first version of the iPod, a portable music player that allowed users to store «1000 songs in your pocket.» Later versions included models such as the iPod Shuffle, iPod Nano, and iPod Touch. By 2015, Apple had sold 390 million units.
The iPhone
In 2007, Apple extended its reach into the consumer electronics market with the release of the iPhone, a smartphone that sold over 6 million units. Later models of the iPhone have added a multitude of features, including GPS navigation, Touch ID, and facial recognition, along with the ability to shoot photos and video. In 2017, Apple sold 223 million iPhones, making the device the top-selling tech product of the year.
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Every Product Apple Has Made So Far
Check out the groundbreaking technology of the biggest electronics company in the U.S. with this comprehensive list of all Apple products! A timeline shows us just how much Apple has changed the core of the tech industry in only four decades, bringing the abstract concept of computing from college campuses to our pockets. What’s different now that our world is full of Apple products? History has been changed, plain and simple!
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It’s been more than 42 years since “the two Steves” first created a hand-built computer designed for the American home, and since then, the company has created billions of different, creative, world-changing Apple products. History was made with each new innovation, whether it be the now-ubiquitous iPhone, the convenient idea of the personal computer, or the industry-creating tablet. We’ve created this innovative look back at all Apple products to list off each incredible marvel by year, from super-successful, like the company-saving iPod, to the duds like the Apple Bandai Pippin. In our Apple timeline, you can see how much the company changed and how a few pivotal moments have revolutionized the entire technological world.
How Did Apple Get Started?
What is the history of the Apple company? The company was founded in a garage by two college dropouts on April 1, 1976. Those two dropouts famously became known as “the Steves”; any brief history of Apple has to give a quick nod to Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, famous for their computer wizardry and marketing wizardry respectively. Steve Jobs, who since his death has been glorified in several films and documentaries, would leave the company but then return to help save it from foundering in the late 1990s. The Apple company history is in some respects the history of the entire computer industry: Apple played a key role in moving this technology into homes and consumers’ hands.
What Was Apple’s First Product?
What was the first Apple product? It was a computer, more specifically the 1976 Apple I, which had distinctly convenient computer terminal circuitry and usability. Jobs and Wozniak had to sell Jobs’s VW Microbus and Wozniak’s expensive calculator to pay for their new creation.
Source: Wikimedia.org by Binarysequence
What was the second Apple product?
It was the Apple II, which changed the world of computing and is still one of the company’s most famous computers. It was able to display color graphics, which was exceptional at the time, and was considered to be one of the main three personal computers of 1977.
How Did the Evolution of Apple Computers Continue?
In our Apple computer timeline with pictures, you can see that the Apple II and its successors would keep the company going throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. Other important early Apple computers were the Macintosh 512K and the Macintosh SE. As you follow our Apple computer models timeline, you can see how quickly the company got out of hand, diversifying and expanding to dozens of models per year. This was changed when Jobs returned in 1997 and forced the company to look at its old Apple products and limit its scope a great deal. That’s around when the modern, sleek designs of the iMac and iBook were created.
Here’s a short timeline of Apple computers:
- Apple I — 1976
- Apple II — 1977
- Apple III — 1980
- Apple Lisa — 1983
- Macintosh 128K and 512K — 1984
- Apple Lisa II — 1984
- Macintosh XL — 1985
- Macintosh Plus — 1986
- Macintosh SE — 1987
- Macintosh II — 1987
- Macintosh Portable — 1989
- Macintosh LC — 1990
- Macintosh Classic — 1990
- Macintosh Quadra — 1991
- PowerBook — 1991
- Macintosh Performa — 1992
- Power Macintosh — 1995
- Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh — 1997
- iMac — 1998
- iBook — 1999
- eMac — 2002
- Mac mini — 2005
- MacBook — 2006
- MacBook Pro — 2006
- MacBook Air — 2008
What Was Apple’s First Phone?
While the Apple Newton and eMate 300 were the first PDA experiments, which would later resemble the earliest iPhones, Apple’s first official smartphone was actually the ROKR E1, which was released in 2005. This product was very limited but laid the groundwork for the first Apple iPhone; history focuses on that product and has somewhat forgotten the ROKR. June 29, 2007, was the first Apple iPhone release date. History, our timeline tells us, was made that day, as millions of iPhones and smartphone imitations have been sold since.
Here’s a timeline of the iPhone:
- iPhone 1 — 2007
- iPhone 3G — 2008
- iPhone 3GS — 2009
- iPhone 4 — 2010
- iPhone 4S — 2011
- iPhone 5 — 2012
- iPhone 5c — 2013
- iPhone 6 — 2014
- iPhone 6 Plus — 2014
- iPhone 6S — 2016
- iPhone 6S Plus — 2016
- iPhone 7 — 2016
- iPhone 7 Plus — 2016
- iPhone SE — 2016
- iPhone X — 2017
- iPhone 8 — 2017
- iPhone 8 Plus — 2017
- iPhone X — 2017
- iPhone XS — 2018
- iPhone XS Max — 2018
- iPhone XR — 2018
How Many Apple Products Have Been Sold?
The company has sold 2 billion iOS devices, which only truly counts the past few years. Count the Apple II and its ancient products and the total figure is likely millions more; the Apple II sold somewhere between 5 and 6 million units, for instance.
With our infographic, you can see at a glance how Apple has changed over the years, going from being consistently and primarily a computer company to consistently and primarily a device company, with newer inventions like the iPad and the Apple Watch keeping us on our toes. But in all cases, Apple has been a company focused on the consumer — maybe not what they say they want but what goes beyond their wildest expectations. Check out our video about the history of Apple to learn more.
You might also like.
Money & Finance
The key to maintaining financial health is not only in the planning and managing of one’s personal assets but in understanding the basics and evolution of the economy. The economy affects every part of our lives, yet many school districts do not offer economics and graduating without it is possible. In our households, money is rarely discussed, except for the idea of running out of it. Let’s all start taking a proactive approach to becoming well-rounded in economics and finance, in order to make better everyday decisions for ourselves, and generations to come.
Planes, Trains and Automobiles
Transportation has shaped our society across the broadest possible spectrum from both practical purposes, as a tool for survival, to aesthetics, as a personal expression and style and a millennium worth of history and science from the Orient Express offering transportation in 1883 to the Japanese Bullet train today that travels 200 MPH, vehicles are critical to our existance and at the same time sensationalized in film, as depicted in James Bond films and unusual video game vehicles. Few things we own have as much importance as the vehicles we own or dream to own one day .
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