| Apple Inc. |
|
|
| Public (NASDAQ: AAPL, LSE: ACP, FWB: APC) |
| Founded | California (April 1 1976, as Apple Computer, Inc.) |
| Headquarters | 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino, California |
|
| Key people | Steve Jobs, CEO & Co-founder Steve Wozniak, Co-founder Timothy D. Cook, COO Peter Oppenheimer, CFO Philip W. Schiller, SVP Marketing Jonathan Ive, SVP Industrial Design Tony Fadell, SVP iPod Division Ron Johnson, SVP Retail Sina Tamaddon, SVP Applications Bertrand Serlet, SVP Software Engineering Scott Forstall, VP Platform Experience |
|---|
| Industry | Computer hardware Computer software Consumer electronics |
|---|
| Products | Mac (personal computer series), Mac OS X, Mac OS X Server, iPod, iPod Hi-Fi, QuickTime, iLife, iWork, Safari, Apple Remote Desktop, Xsan, Final Cut Studio, Aperture, Logic Pro, Cinema Display, AirPort, Xserve, Xserve RAID, iPhone, Apple TV |
|---|
|
Revenue | US$19.3 billion (TTM 1Q2006)[1] |
|---|
| Operating income | US$2.12 billion (TTM 1Q2006) (12.27% operating margin)[1] |
|---|
| Net income | US$1.73 billion (TTM 1Q2006) (9.97% profit margin)[1] |
|---|
| Employees | 17,787 full-time; 2,399 temporary (September 30 2006)[2] |
|---|
| Slogan | Think different. |
|---|
| Website | Apple.com |
|---|
Apple Inc. (
NASDAQ:
AAPL,
LSE:
ACP,
FWB:
APC) (formerly
Apple Computer, Inc.) is an
American multinational corporation with a focus on designing and manufacturing
consumer electronics and closely related
software products. Headquartered in
Cupertino,
California, Apple develops, sells, and supports a series of
personal computers,
portable media players,
computer software, and
computer hardware accessories. Apple also operates an online store for hardware and software purchases, as well as the
iTunes Store, which sells digital downloadable music,
audiobooks, games, music videos, TV shows, and movies. The company's best-known hardware products include the
Macintosh line of personal computers, the
iPod line of portable media players, and the
iPhone. Apple's software products include the
Mac OS X operating system, the
iLife suite of multimedia software, and
Final Cut Studio, a suite of professional audio- and film-industry software products..
Apple had worldwide annual sales in its fiscal year 2006 (ending
September 30 2006) of
US$19.3
billion.
[1]
The company, incorporated
January 3 1977,
[1] was known as "Apple Computer, Inc." for its first 30 years. On
January 9 2007, the company dropped "Computer" from its corporate name.
[3] The change followed Apple's announcement of its new iPhone
smartphone and Apple TV digital video system and reflects the company's ongoing expansion into the
consumer electronics market in addition to its traditional focus on personal computers.
[4]
Apple also operates 183 (as of June 2007)
retail stores in the
United States, and more in the
United Kingdom,
Japan,
Canada, and
Italy.
[5] The stores carry most of Apple's products as well as many third-party products and offer on-site support and repair for Apple hardware and software. Apple employs over 20,000 permanent and temporary workers worldwide.
[6]
For a variety of reasons, ranging from its
philosophy of comprehensive
aesthetic design to its countercultural, even
indie roots, as well as their
advertising campaigns, Apple has engendered a distinct reputation in the
consumer electronics industry and has cultivated a customer base that is unusually devoted to the company and its brand, particularly in the
United States.
[7]
History
The company introduced the
Apple II microcomputer in 1977. A few years later, in 1983, it introduced the
Lisa, the first commercial personal computer to employ a
graphical user interface (GUI), which was influenced in part by the
Xerox Alto. Lisa was also the first personal computer to have the
mouse. In 1984, the
Macintosh was introduced, which arguably advanced the concept of a new user-friendly graphical user interface. Apple's success with the Macintosh became a major influence in the development of graphical interfaces elsewhere, with major computer
operating systems, such as the
Commodore Amiga, and
Atari ST, appearing on the market within two years of the introduction of the Macintosh.
In 1991, Apple introduced the
PowerBook line of
portable computers. The 1990s also saw Apple's market share fall as competition from Microsoft Windows and the comparatively inexpensive
IBM PC compatible computers that would eventually dominate the market. In the 2000s, Apple expanded its focus on software to include professional and
prosumer video, music, and photo production solutions, with a view to promoting their products as a "digital hub". It also introduced the
iPod, the most popular digital music player in the world.
[8]
1976 to 1980: The early years


The
Apple I, Apple's first product. Sold as an assembled circuit board, it lacked basic features such as a keyboard, monitor, and case. The owner of this unit added a keyboard and a wooden case.
Apple was founded on
April 1 1976 by
Steve Jobs,
Steve Wozniak, and
Ronald Wayne[9] (and later incorporated
January 3 1977[2] without Wayne, who sold his share of the company back to Jobs and Wozniak) to sell the
Apple I personal computer kit. They were hand-built by Steve Wozniak
[11][12] in the living room of Jobs' parents' home, and the Apple I was first shown to the public at the
Homebrew Computer Club.
[13] Eventually 200 computers were built. The Apple I was sold as a motherboard (with CPU, RAM, and basic textual-video chips) — not what is today considered a complete
personal computer.
[14] The user was required to provide two different AC input voltages (the manual recommended specific transformers), wire an ASCII keyboard (not provided with the computer) to a DIP connector (providing logic inverter and alpha lock chips in some cases), and to wire the video output pins to a monitor or to an RF modulator if a TV set was used.
Jobs approached a local computer store,
The Byte Shop, which ordered fifty units and paid US$500 for each unit after much persuasion. He then ordered components from Cramer Electronics, a national electronic parts distributor. Using a variety of methods, including borrowing space from friends and family and selling various items including a
Volkswagen Type 2 bus, Jobs managed to secure the parts needed while Wozniak and Ronald Wayne assembled the Apple I.
[15]
The
Apple II was introduced on
April 16 1977 at the first
West Coast Computer Faire. It differed from its major rivals, the
TRS-80 and
Commodore PET, because it came with color graphics and an open
architecture. While early models used ordinary cassette tapes as storage devices, this was quickly superseded by the introduction of a 5 1/4 inch
floppy disk drive and interface, the
Disk II.
Another key to business for Apple was software. The
Apple II was chosen by programmers
Dan Bricklin and
Bob Frankston to be the desktop platform for the first "
killer app" of the business world—the
VisiCalc spreadsheet program.
[16] VisiCalc created a business market for the Apple II, and the corporate market attracted many more software and hardware developers to the machine, as well as giving home users an additional reason to buy one—compatibility with the office.
[16] (See the timeline for dates of
Apple II family model releases—the 1977 Apple II and its younger siblings the II+, IIe, IIc, and II
GS.)
According to Brian Bagnall's book, "On the Edge" (pg. 109-112), Apple exaggerated their sales figures and that Apple was a distant 3rd place until VisiCalc came along. VisiCalc was first released on Apple II because Commodore and Tandy computers were tied up in VisiCalc's software development office due to their popularity. VisiCalc's association with Apple was thus pure happenstance, not a technical decision. And even after VisiCalc, Apple II didn't surpass the
Tandy TRS-80, whose sales were helped by the large number of
Radio Shack stores. However, VisiCalc did put Apple ahead of Commodore's PET, at least in the US. (Commodore later regained the lead for a while with the
Commodore 64 in the mid 80s, the best selling specific model of computer to date.)
[17]
By the end of the 1970s, Jobs and his partners had a staff of computer designers and a
production line. The Apple II was succeeded by the
Apple III in May 1980 as the company struggled to compete against
IBM and
Microsoft in the lucrative business and corporate computing market. The designers of the Apple III were forced to comply with Jobs' request to omit the cooling fan, and this ultimately resulted in thousands of recalled units due to overheating.
[18] An updated version, the Apple III+, was introduced in 1983, but it was also a failure due to bad press and wary buyers.
In the early 1980s, IBM and Microsoft continued to gain market share at Apple's expense in the personal computer industry. A fundamentally different business model evolved, once cloners forced-open through
reverse engineering the
IBM PC hardware standard. In response, IBM attempted and failed to establish a new proprietary
Micro Channel architecture. The IBM compatible hardware market became highly competitive, with clones running a bundled
MS-DOS from a floppy disk, or running a competing
IBM-style DOS such as
DR DOS.
Apple's sustained growth during the early 1980s was partly due to its leadership in the education sector, attributed to their adaptation of the programming language
LOGO, used in many schools with the Apple II. The drive into education was accentuated in
California with the donation of one Apple II and one Apple LOGO software package to each public school in the state. The deal concluded between Steve Jobs and Jim Baroux of LCSI, and having required the support of
Sacramento, established a strong and pervasive presence for Apple in all schools throughout California. The initial conquest of education environments was critical to Apple's acceptance in the home where the earliest purchases of computers by parents was in support of children's continued learning experience.
1981 to 1989: Lisa and Macintosh
Jobs and several other Apple employees including
Jef Raskin visited
Xerox PARC in December 1979 to see the
Alto computer. Xerox granted Apple engineers three days of access to the PARC facilities in return for selling them US$1 million in pre-IPO Apple stock (approximately US$18 million net).
It is said that Jobs was immediately convinced that all future computers would use a
GUI, and decided to turn over design of Apple's first project, the
Apple Lisa, to produce such a device. The Lisa was named after Jobs' daughter (however, an
acronym,
[19] Local Integrated Software Architecture, was coined). He was eventually pushed from the group due to infighting, and instead took over Jef Raskin's low-cost computer project, the
Macintosh. Branding the new effort as the product that would "save Apple", an intense
turf war broke out between the Lisa's "corporate shirts" and Jobs' Macintosh "pirates", both teams claiming they would ship first and be more successful. In 1983 the Lisa team won the race and Apple introduced the first personal computer to be sold to the public with a GUI. However, the Lisa was a commercial failure as a result of its high price tag (US$9,995) and limited software titles.
[19]
In 1984, drawing upon its experience with the Lisa, Apple next launched the Macintosh. Its debut was announced by a single national broadcast of the now famous US$1.5 million television commercial, "
1984", based on
George Orwell's novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four. The commercial was directed by
Ridley Scott and aired during
Super Bowl XVIII on
January 22 1984. Jobs' intention with the ad was to represent the IBM PC as
Big Brother, and the Macintosh as a nameless female action hero portrayed by
Anya Major. While the Macintosh initially sold well, follow-up sales were not particularly strong.
[20] The machine's fortunes changed with the introduction of the
LaserWriter, the first
laser printer to be offered at a reasonable price point, and
PageMaker, an early
desktop publishing (DTP) package. The Mac was particularly powerful in this market due to its advanced graphics capabilities, which were already necessarily built-in to create the Macintosh GUI. It has been suggested that the combination of these three products was responsible for the creation of the DTP market.
[21] As DTP became widespread, Apple's sales reached a series of new highs.
In anticipation of the Macintosh launch,
Bill Gates, co-founder and chairman of
Microsoft, was given several Macintosh prototypes in 1983 to develop software. While the company was indeed ready with its
BASIC and the
MultiPlan spreadsheet at the Macintosh's launch,
[20] in 1985 Microsoft launched Windows, its own GUI for IBM PCs. Although sales started slow, by the mid 1990s it became the most commonly-used desktop operating system, cutting deeply into the Macintosh's sales.
An internal power struggle developed between Jobs and new CEO
John Sculley in 1985.
[22] Apple's
board of directors sided with Sculley and Jobs was removed from his managerial duties.
[20] Jobs later resigned from Apple and founded
NeXT Inc., a computer company that built machines with futuristic designs and ran the UNIX-derived
NeXTStep operating system. Although powerful, NeXT computers never caught on with buyers, due in part to their high purchase price.
1989 to 1991: The Golden Age
Having learned several painful lessons after introducing the bulky
Macintosh Portable in 1989, Apple turned to industrial designers and adopted a product strategy based in three portable devices. One portable was built by
Sony, which at the time had a strong reputation for designing small, durable and functional electronics devices. Sony took the specs of the Mac Portable, put in a smaller two-hour battery, a much smaller (physically) 20
MB hard drive and a smaller nine-inch
passive matrix screen.
[23]
Called the
PowerBook 100, this landmark product was introduced in 1991 and established the modern form and
ergonomic layout of the
laptop computer.
[23] This solidified Apple's reputation as a quality manufacturer, both of desktop and now portable machines.
[24] The same year, Apple introduced a massive upgrade to the Mac OS, in the form of
System 7. Although resource-hungry (for the era), System 7 dramatically improved the Macintosh experience, adding color to the interface, simplifying common operations, and introducing a number of powerful new networking capabilities. System 7 would be the basis for the Mac OS until 2001.
The success of the PowerBook and several other Apple products during this period led to increasing revenue.
[22] The computer press listened to Apple press releases with rapt attention and speculation was rife about what projects from Apple's famed Advanced Technology Group would next come to market. Apple merely had to mention a technology,
Taligent for instance, for people to christen it the "new standard".
[25] For some time, it appeared that Apple could do no wrong, introducing fresh new products and generating increasing profits in the process. The
magazine MacAddict named the period between 1989 to 1991 the "first golden age" of the Macintosh.
The continuing development of
Microsoft Windows had given birth to an interface that was competitive with Apple's. Combined with a huge base of low-cost computers and peripherals and an improving software suite, an increasing number of potential customers turned to the "
Wintel" standard.
Apple, relying on high profit margins to maintain their massive R&D budget, never developed a clear response. Instead they sued
Microsoft for
theft of
intellectual property, in
Apple Computer, Inc. v. Microsoft Corporation.
[26] The lawsuit dragged on for years before finally being thrown out of court. Worse, the lawsuit distracted management while a deep rot developed within the engineering ranks, which became increasingly unmanageable. At first there was little outward sign of the problem, but a series of major product flops and missed deadlines destroyed Apple's reputation of invincibility.
At about the same time, Apple branched out into consumer electronics. One example of this product diversification was the
Apple QuickTake digital camera, one of the first digital cameras brought to the consumer market. A more famous example was the
Newton,
termed a "
Personal digital assistant" or "PDA" by Sculley, that was introduced in 1993. Though it failed commercially, it defined and launched a new category of computing and was a forerunner of devices such as
Palm Pilot,
PocketPC, and eventually the
iPhone.
During the 1990s, Apple greatly expanded its computer lineup. It offered a multitude of models ("
Quadra 840av", "
Performa 6116"), but many felt Apple failed to adequately differentiate one model from another and the cost of supporting so many products adversely affected profitability. Apple lost market share to Microsoft Windows, particularly
Windows 95 — a major turning point in the history of the rival Windows operating system.
1994 to 1997: Attempts at reinvention


The
Apple Newton was Apple's first foray into the
PDA markets, as well as one of the first in the industry. A financial flop, it helped pave way for the
Palm Pilot and Apple's own
iPhone in the future.
By the mid-90s, Apple realized that it had to reinvent the Macintosh in order to stay competitive in the market. The needs of both computer users and computer programs were becoming, for a variety of technical reasons, harder for the existing hardware and operating system to address.
In 1994 Apple surprised its loyalists by allying with its long-time competitor IBM and CPU maker
Motorola in the so-called
AIM alliance. This was a bid to create a new computing platform (the
PowerPC Reference Platform or PReP), which would use IBM and Motorola hardware coupled with Apple's software. The AIM alliance hoped that PReP's performance and Apple's software would leave the PC far behind, thus countering Microsoft, which had become Apple's chief competitor.
As the first step toward launching the PReP platform, Apple started the
Power Macintosh line in 1994, using IBM's
PowerPC processor. This processor utilized a
RISC architecture, which differed substantially from the Motorola
68k series that had been used by all previous Macs. Apple's OS was rewritten so that most software for the older Macs could run on the PowerPC series (in
emulation).
Throughout the mid to late 1990s, Apple tried to improve its operating system's multitasking and memory management. After first attempting to modify its existing code, Apple realized that it would be better to start with an entirely new operating system and then modify it to fit the Macintosh interface. Apple did some preliminary work with IBM towards this goal with the
Taligent project, but that project never produced a replacement operating system. A new internal effort,
Copland, ran afoul of Apple's now uncontrollable engineering and became a massive failure. A fresh attempt was made with the
Gershwin operating system.
In 1995 Apple tried to break into the gaming industry with the
Apple Pippin. Despite the success of competing game consoles like
Sony PlayStation,
Nintendo 64, and
Sega Saturn, Pippin experienced very limited success and as little as 5000 units were sold worldwide
[27] and there was a very small variety of games available for those who did own a console. Overall this was a failure for Apple; its scope was more general in purpose than serious gaming, leaving the console expensive and underpowered compared with its rivals.
Next, the company considered its options for an
operating system, investigating
Be Inc.'s
BeOS,
NeXT's
NeXTSTEP OS, and also Microsoft's
Windows NT. NeXTSTEP was chosen, and this supplied the platform for the modern
Mac OS X. On
February 7 1997, Apple completed its purchase of NeXT and its NeXTSTEP operating system, in the process bringing Steve Jobs back to Apple.
[28] On
July 9 1997,
Gil Amelio was ousted as CEO of Apple by the board of directors after overseeing a 3-year record-low stock price and crippling financial losses. Jobs stepped in as the interim CEO and began a critical restructuring of the company's product line.
At the 1997
Macworld Expo,
Steve Jobs announced that Apple would be entering into partnership with
Microsoft. Settlement discussions regarding Apple's
"Look and Feel" lawsuit and the
QuickTime piracy lawsuit resulted in a five-year commitment from Microsoft to release
Microsoft Office for Macintosh as well as a US$150 million investment in non-voting Apple stock. (This event is often inaccurately described as a "bailout" of Apple by Microsoft. At the time Apple had a little over US$1 billion in
cash and cash equivalents according to their
10-Q statement.
[29] Microsoft later sold its shares for a tidy profit.) Jobs also announced that
Internet Explorer would be shipped as the default browser on the Macintosh. Microsoft chairman
Bill Gates appeared at the expo on the large screen, explaining Microsoft's plans for the software they were developing for the Macintosh, and saying that he was very excited to be helping Apple. This was met with a less than positive response from the audience. Steve Jobs said:
On
November 10 1997, Apple announced a new online
retail store, based upon the
WebObjects application server the company had acquired in its purchase of
NeXT. The new direct sales outlet was also tied to a new build-to-order manufacturing strategy and announced at the same time as new machines using the G3
PowerPC processor.
1998 to 2005: New beginnings
On
August 15 1998, Apple introduced a new all-in-one Mac computer reminiscent of the original
Macintosh 128K: the
iMac. The iMac design team was led by
Jonathan Ive, who would come later to design the
iPod and the
iPhone.
[30][31] While not groundbreaking from a technological standpoint, the iMac featured an innovative new translucent plastic exterior, originally in
Bondi Blue, but later many other colors. The iMac proved phenomenally successful, selling close to 800,000 units in its first five months and significantly boosting the company's revenue and profitability. Thanks in part to the iMac; fiscal 1998 was Apple's first profitable year since 1993. Some consider the iMac an industrial design icon of the late 90s, and its designer, Jonathan Ive, has won awards for its innovation.
[32]
At the
National Association of Broadcasters convention, Apple purchased the Final Cut software from
Macromedia, beginning its entry into the
digital video editing market, and signaling a return to application development after a decade long policy of delegating non-system software to its
Claris subsidiary.
iMovie was released in 1999 for consumers, and
Final Cut Pro was released for professionals in the same year. Final Cut Pro has gone on to be a significant video-editing program. Similarly, in 2000 Apple bought
Astarte's DVDirector software, which morphed into
iDVD (for consumers) and
DVD Studio Pro (for professionals) at the
Macworld Conference and Expo of 2001.
In 2001, Apple introduced
Mac OS X, the operating system based on NeXT's
OPENSTEP and
BSD Unix. Aimed at consumers and professionals alike, Mac OS X aimed to marry the stability, reliability and security of the
Unix operating system with the ease of use afforded by a completely overhauled user interface. To aid users in moving their applications from
Mac OS 9, the new operating system allowed the use of OS 9 applications through Mac OS X's
Classic environment. Apple's
Carbon API also allowed developers to adapt their OS 9 software to use Mac OS X's features often with a simple recompile.
On
May 19 2001, after much speculation, Apple announced the opening of the first official
Apple Retail Stores, to be located in major U.S. consumer locations. These stores were designed for two purposes: to stem the tide of Apple's declining share of the computer market and to counter a poor record of marketing Apple products by third-party retail outlets. The company faced challenges to balance the deployment of its own retail stores with its dependence on, and the demands of, its existing channel partners and dealers. Apple slowly built up the number of stores in the U.S., (now totaling 183 as of June 2007)
[5][33] later opening stores in
Canada,
Japan,
United Kingdom, recently
Italy, and has plans for a
France location. These efforts in retail succeeded and proved to be very profitable, averaging annual returns of US$4,032 per square foot of every store, the most in retail. These returns bested retail favorites such as
Best Buy at $930 and
Tiffany's at $2666.
On
October 23 2001 Apple introduced its first
iPod portable
digital audio player and released it on
November 10 of that year. The product has proven phenomenally successful; over 100 million units have been sold.
[34] Apple's
iTunes Store was introduced soon after, offering online music downloads for US 99¢ a song and integration with the iPod. The service quickly became the market leader in online music services, with over 3 billion downloads by August 2007.
[35]
In 2002 Apple purchased
Nothing Real and their advanced digital compositing application
Shake, raising Apple's professional commitment even higher. In the same year they also acquired
Emagic, and with it, obtained their professional-quality music productivity application
Logic, which led to the development of their consumer-level
GarageBand application. With
iPhoto's release in 2002, this completed Apple's collection of consumer and professional level creativity software, with the consumer-level applications being collected together into the
iLife suite.
Apple's design team progressively abandoned the flashy colors of the
iMac G3 era in favor of white
polycarbonate for consumer lines such as the
iMac and
iBook, as well as the educational
eMac, and metal enclosures for the professional lines. This began with the 2001 release of the
titanium PowerBook and was followed by the 2001 white iBook, the 2002 flat-panel iMac, the 2003
Power Mac G5, and the 2004 Apple Cinema Displays. Divergent to this consumer/professional identity, the low-cost
Mac mini has an aluminum case while featuring the distinctive white polycarbonate top.
2005 to present: The Intel partnership


Targeted at a professional audience, the
MacBook Pro (15.4" widescreen) was Apple's first laptop with an Intel microprocessor. It was announced in January 2006, and hit the shelves around March. The less expensive
MacBook (13.3" widescreen) caters to the consumer market.
:
In the
Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) keynote address on
June 6 2005, Steve Jobs officially announced that Apple would begin producing Intel-based Mac computers beginning in 2006.
[36] Jobs confirmed
rumors that the company had secretly been producing versions of its current operating system Mac OS X for both PowerPC and Intel processors for the previous five years and that the transition to Intel processor systems would last until the end of 2008.
[37]
On
January 10 2006, Apple released its first Intel chip computers, a new
notebook computer known as the
MacBook Pro (with a 15.4" screen) and a new (though cosmetically identical) iMac with purportedly two to three times faster performance compared with its predecessor. Both used Intel's
Core Duo chip technology. Later in February, Apple introduced the new Intel-based Mac mini, running up to four times faster and also featuring
Front Row, available with a Core Duo or Core Solo (single core) processor. In February 2006, the Apple Online Store sold its last 17" iMac G5, Apple ended the life of its 15" PowerBook G4 on
February 22 2006, and the G4 Mac mini was removed from the Apple online store on
February 28 2006 and replaced with the Intel Core Mac mini. On
March 10 2006 Apple retired the iMac G5 and on May 16
2006, replaced the
iBook G4 and the 12"
PowerBook G4 with the
MacBook. On
August 7 2006, the PowerMac was replaced with the
Mac Pro, completing the transition of all Mac computers, well in advance of their original prediction. On
September 6 2006, Apple updated its iMac line to include new
Intel Core 2 Duo processors, and adding a model with a 24" screen to the line-up, as well as quietly bumping the speeds of their
Mac mini. The
Xserve was transitioned in mid-November 2006. On
October 24 2006 the MacBook Pros were fitted with Intel Core 2 Duo processors as well, running up to 39% faster than the original Intel Core Duo MacBook Pros. The MacBooks were fitted with the Core 2 Duo processors on
November 8, and run up to 25% faster than the Core Duo ones according to Apple's tests.
[38]
Apple's current operating system,
Mac OS X v10.4 "Tiger", runs natively on the new Intel machines, as do the
Darwin open source underpinnings. Many applications, such as iLife '06, also run natively on Intel chips. Other applications (including Microsoft Office) which have not been updated to run on the Intel architecture, run using a technology known as
Rosetta. Because Rosetta is a translation software that allows PowerPC programs to run on Intel processors, these PowerPC programs run slower than native applications. Programs compiled only for the PowerPC must be recompiled to run at full speed on the new Intel machines. Programs that have been designed to run on both PowerPC and Intel chips can be certified by Apple as "Universal".
[39] The Intel-based machines also do not support Classic, which allows Mac OS X to run applications written for OS 9 and earlier, so applications that require this environment will not run on these machines. Apple currently has no plans to bring Classic support to the Intel platform.
The Intel chip also allows the new machines to run the Windows operating system. On
March 16 2006 a bootloader CD image and a how-to for getting XP on your MacBook Pro, iMac, or mini was released to the Internet as an entry into a US$13,000 contest. Many hackers attempted over three months to win the prize by becoming the first to run Windows natively on a new Intel Mac. The Intel-based Macs are now the only computers officially capable of running both Mac OS X and Windows without emulation (a pre-release version of Mac OS X for Intel was patched to run on non-Apple PCs through the
OSx86 community; however such procedure is not permitted by the Apple
EULA). Further, on
April 5 2006, Apple announced a new piece of software called
Boot Camp that helps users install Windows XP on their Intel Mac alongside Mac OS X. Apple has said that Boot Camp will be included, as standard, in Apple's next OS release (
10.5, “Leopard”).


The first Intel-based Macintosh desktop: The
iMacThe Apple/Intel partnership coined several
catch phrases among Apple fans and technology reporters. Some of the most widespread ones include "Mactel" and "Macintel", a response to the phrase "
Wintel", which is an informal
moniker that describes all Intel-powered systems running the Microsoft Windows operating system. Another is "ICBM", for "Intel-chip-based Mac." Apple itself has not publicly used these terms.
Apple's success during this period, beginning in 1997 (the first year the company turned a profit after losses through 1995 and 1996),
[40] but accelerating between 2003 to 2005, was evident in its skyrocketing stock. Between early 2003 and January 2006, the price of a share of Apple's stock increased more than tenfold, from a little more than US$6 per share (split-adjusted) to more than US$80 per share. On
January 13 2006, Apple's
market cap surpassed that of
Dell.
[41] Nearly ten years prior, in 1997, Dell's CEO,
Michael Dell, had asserted that if he ran Apple he would "shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders."
[42]
Delivering his keynote at Macworld 2007 (
January 9 2007), Steve Jobs announced a change of name: Apple Computer Inc. would from that point be known as Apple Inc. The event also saw the announcement of the
iPhone, and the
Apple TV. The following day, Apple shares hit US$97.80, then an all-time high. In May 2007, Apple's share price passed the US$100 mark.
[43]
On
February 7 2007, Apple indicated that it would be willing to sell music on the iTunes store without
Digital Rights Management (DRM) protection (allowing tracks to be played on any compatible player) if major record labels would agree to drop that anti-piracy technology.
[44] On
April 2 2007, Apple and record label
EMI jointly-announced the removal of anti-piracy technology from EMI's catalog in the iTunes Store, effective in May.
[45]
The company’s investment in R&D, measured as a percentage of revenues, has declined over the past few years. Though Apple investment in R&D has increased from $446 million in 2002 to $712 million in 2006, its R&D investment as a percentage of total revenues has declined from 7.8% in 2002 to 3.8% in 2006. Microsoft Corporation — one of the major competitors of the company — has invested 16.1% of its total revenues on R&D, in the fiscal year 2007.
[46]
Current products
Hardware


The
Mac mini, Apple's low-cost desktop computer.
Apple introduced the Apple Macintosh family in 1984 and today makes consumer, professional, and educational computers. The Mac mini is the company's consumer sub-desktop computer, introduced in January 2005 and designed to motivate Windows users to switch to the Mac computer platform. The
iMac is a consumer desktop computer that was first introduced by Apple in 1998, and its popularity helped save the company. The iMac is similar in concept to the original Macintosh in that the monitor and computer are housed in a single unit. It is now in its third major design iteration, and has been upgraded many times (including a switch to Intel processors) using the same design. The Power Mac brand was replaced in 2006 with the
Mac Pro, featuring two 64-bit
dual-core Xeon "Woodcrest" processors, available in speeds of 2, 2.66, and 3
GHz. The Mac Pro is capable of supporting up to four 750 GB hard drives for a total of 3
TB of internal hard disk space and has 8
DIMM slots for up to 16 GB of
RAM. On its promotional website, Apple says that the "Mac Pro not only completes the Mac transition to Intel processors but delivers advanced performance, workstation graphics, and up to 4.9 million possible configurations." Apple's server range includes the
Xserve, a dual core, dual processor 1U server, and the
Xserve RAID for server storage options.
Apple introduced the
iBook consumer portable computer as a companion to the iMac; it is Apple's lowest-cost portable computer. The iBook brand was replaced on May 16
2006 with the
MacBook featuring the Intel Core Duo processor, 13 inch widescreen, and available black color on the high-end model. The MacBook Pro is the professional portable computer alternative to the MacBook. The MacBook Pro is marketed as being intended for professional and creative users and replaced the PowerBook models, which were introduced in 1991.
On
October 23 2001, Apple introduced the
iPod digital music player. Initially equipped with a 5 GB hard drive and a monochrome screen, models today can store up to 160 GB and display video, play games, and support a wide range of third-party add-on devices. As of September 2007, Apple currently sells the
iPod shuffle.
iPod nano,
iPod classic and
iPod touch, as well as the
iPhone which includes iPod functionality.
[47]
On
July 13 2006, Apple partnered with
Nike to introduce the
Nike+iPod Sports Kit enabling runners to sync and monitor their runs with
iTunes and the
Nike+ website. The 100 millionth iPod was sold on
April 9 2007.
[48]
At the
Macworld Conference & Expo in January 2007, Steve Jobs revealed the long anticipated
iPhone, a convergence of an Internet-enabled
smartphone and video iPod. The iPhone combines a 2.5G
quad band GSM and
EDGE cellular phone with features found in hand held devices, running a scaled-down versions of Apple's Mac OS X, with various applications such as
Safari web browser, e-mail, and
navigation. The iPhone features a 3.5 inch touch screen display,
Bluetooth,
WiFi (both "b" and "g"), and comes in 4 and 8 GB models. The iPhone first became available on
June 29 2007.
Additionally at the conference, Jobs demonstrated the
Apple TV, (previously known as the iTV), a set-top video device intended to bridge the sale of content from iTunes with high-definition televisions. The device links up to a user's TV and syncs, either via WiFi or a wired network, with one computer's
iTunes library and streams from an additional four. The Apple TV incorporates a 40 GB hard drive for storage, includes outputs for
HDMI and
component video, and plays video at a maximum resolution of
720p. It was later updated to include a 160 GB drive for even more space for media.
Apple sells a variety of computer accessories for Mac computers including the
AirPort wireless networking products,
Apple Cinema HD Display and
Apple Displays computer displays,
Mighty Mouse and
Apple Wireless Mouse computer mice, the
Apple Wireless Keyboard computer keyboard, and the
Apple USB Modem. The Apple wireless mouse was replaced by the wireless Mighty Mouse.
Environmental issues
Since 2004,
Greenpeace has attacked Apple for not setting a timeline to remove
PVC and
BFRs, which still exist in recent products such as the
iPod nano and
MacBook; and for not promoting a global end-of-life take back plan for Apple hardware (although it does within
Europe and
Japan where this is required by law); as well as for not having reusable components.
[49] As of December 2006, Greenpeace ranked Apple last out of ten electronics companies in dealing with toxic substances in their products, mostly due to a lack of relevant documentation and timelines.
[50] On
May 2 2007, Steve Jobs released an open letter named
A Greener Apple,
[51] responding to some of the allegations. In his letter, Jobs stated:
A study in January 2006 by the
United States Environmental Protection Agency found that Apple's hardware compares favorably with that of its major competitors on environmental friendliness.
[52]
On
June 5 2007, Apple updated their MacBook Pro product line. This hardware update is environmentally notable because
LEDs fully replaced
cold cathode lamps in the 15 inch MacBook Pro's display backlighting,
[53] a first for Apple laptops (the iPod has had LED backlighting since its creation in 2001). This ameliorates Apple's environmental stance, as cold cathode lamps do contain
mercury, whereas LEDs do not.
Former
Vice President of the United States and
environmentalist Al Gore is a member of Apple's
board of directors.
Software
Apple develops its own
operating system to run on Macs,
Mac OS X. Apple also independently develops computer software titles for its Mac OS X operating system. Much of the software Apple develops is bundled with its computers. An example of this is the consumer-oriented iLife software package which bundles
iDVD,
iMovie,
iPhoto,
iTunes,
GarageBand, and
iWeb. For presentation and page layout,
iWork is available, which includes
Keynote,
Pages, and
Numbers. iTunes,
QuickTime media player, and
Safari web browser are available as free downloads for both Mac OS X and Windows.
Apple also offers a range of professional software titles. Their range of server software includes the operating system
Mac OS X Server;
Apple Remote Desktop, a remote systems management application;
WebObjects,
Java Web application server; and
Xsan, a
Storage Area Network file system. For the professional creative market, there is
Aperture for professional
RAW-format
photo processing;
Final Cut Studio, a video production suite;
Logic, a comprehensive music toolkit and
Shake, an advanced effects composition program.
Apple also offers online services with
.Mac which bundles
.Mac HomePage,
.Mac Mail,
.Mac Groups,
.Mac iDisk,
.Mac Backup,
.Mac Sync, and Learning Center online tutorials.
Leopard OS X v. 10.5 is due to come out October 26, 2007.
Corporate affairs
Critics of Apple commonly point to their
vertically-integrated business model, where all the hardware and operating system software comes from one company. Although the Apple II was very open, the Macintosh was originally closed and proprietary, and during the Mac's early history Apple generally refused to adopt prevailing industry standards for hardware, instead creating and implementing their own (for example,
ADB and
NuBus).
This trend was largely reversed in the late 1990s beginning with Apple's adoption of the
PCI bus in the
7500/
8500/
9500 Power Macs. Apple has since adopted
USB,
AGP,
HyperTransport,
Wi-Fi, and other industry standards in its computers and was in some cases a leader in the adoption of such standards.
FireWire is an Apple-originated standard which has seen widespread industry adoption after it was standardized as
IEEE 1394.
However, the iPod remains a mostly closed and vertically-integrated platform. Although Apple provides documented interfaces for hardware accessories, developers have no supported way to add features to the software (such as decoding of additional formats). Although the iPod supports the mainstream
MP3 and
AAC formats, there is not support for other proprietary formats, like
Windows Media (this can be converted to AAC with iTunes on Windows),
RealAudio and the open
Ogg Vorbis format. Apple has refused to license its
FairPlay DRM system to other online music vendors.
[44] The company added Windows PC support with their second generation iPod series.
Ever since the first Apple store opened, Apple has wanted third parties to sell their products and software inside their stores. This allows, for instance, Nikon and Canon to sell their Mac-compatible digital cameras and camcorders inside the store. Adobe, the largest Apple software partner, also sells its Mac-compatible software, as does Microsoft, who sells Microsoft Office for the Mac. A notable exception are books published by
John Wiley & Sons. The publisher's line of books were banned from
Apple Stores in 2005 because Steve Jobs disagreed with their editorial policy.
[54]
Mission Statement
"Apple is committed to bringing the best personal computing experience to students, educators, creative professionals and consumers around the world through its innovative hardware, software and Internet offerings."
- Modified Mission Statement
"Apple ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple II and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the Macintosh. Today, Apple continues to lead the industry in innovation with its award-winning computers, OS X operating system and iLife and professional applications. Apple is also spearheading the digital media revolution with its iPod portable music and video players and iTunes online store, and has entered the mobile phone market this year with its revolutionary iPhone."
[55]
Headquarters

Apple Inc.'s world corporate headquarters are located in the middle of
Silicon Valley, at 1
Infinite Loop,
Cupertino,
California. This Apple campus has six buildings which total
850,000 sq ft (79,000 m²). and was built in 1993 by Sobrato Development Cos.
[56]
In 2006, Apple announced its intention to build a second campus on 50 acres assembled from various contiguous plots. The new campus, also in Cupertino, will be about one mile east of the current campus.
[57]
CEOs
Current board of directors
Current executives
- Steve Jobs, chief executive officer
- Timothy D. Cook, chief operating officer
- Peter Oppenheimer, chief financial officer
- Philip W. Schiller, senior vice president of worldwide product marketing
- Tony Fadell, senior vice president of iPod division
- Jonathan Ive, senior vice president of industrial design
- Bertrand Serlet, senior vice president of software engineering
- Ron Johnson, senior vice president of retail
- Sina Tamaddon, senior vice president of applications
- Scott Forstall, vice president of platform experience
- Donald Rosenberg, senior vice president, general counsel and secretary
Advertising
Since the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984 with the
1984 Super Bowl commercial to the more modern '
Get a Mac' adverts, Apple has been recognized for its efforts towards effective advertising and marketing for its products, though it has been criticized for the content of more recent campaigns.
Logos


The original Apple logo featuring
Isaac Newton under the fabled apple tree.


The white Apple logo, used from 1999 to present
- See also: U+F8FF or , seen as the Apple logo in some fonts.
Apple’s first logo, designed by Jobs and Wayne, depicts
Sir Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree. Almost immediately, though, this was replaced by
Rob Janoff’s “rainbow Apple,” the now-familiar
rainbow-colored silhouette of an apple with a bite taken out of it, possibly as a tribute to
Isaac Newton's discoveries of the gravity (the apple), and the separation of light by prisms (the colors). This was one of several designs Janoff presented to Jobs in 1976.
[58]
While it is generally accepted to have been in reference to Isaac Newton, some believe that the bitten apple is a
homage to the mathematician
Alan Turing, on whose deathbed an apple laced with cyanide was found. Turing, one of whose favorite films was Disney's
Snow White, is regarded as one of the fathers of the computer.
[59]
In 1999, Apple began enforcing the use of a strictly
monochrome logo—supposedly at the insistence of a newly re-inaugurated Jobs—nearly identical in shape to its previous rainbow incarnation. However, no specific color is prescribed; for example, it is grey on the Power Mac G5, Mac Mini, and iMac, black on the Aluminum iMac, blue (by default) in Mac OS X, chrome on the 'About this Mac' panel and the boot screen in Mac OS X 10.3 and 10.4, red on many software packages, and white on the iBook, PowerBook G4, PowerBook G3 (late models), MacBook, and MacBook Pro. The logo's shape is one of the most recognized brand symbols in the world, identifies all Apple products and retail stores (the name "Apple" is usually not even present), and notably included as
stickers in nearly all Macintosh and iPod packages through the years.
Slogans
Apple's first slogan, "
Byte into an Apple", was coined in the late 1970s. Once Apple started selling more than just computers, slogans were created for each individual product, rather than for the company itself. For example, the slogan "iThink, therefore iMac", was used in 1998 to promote the iMac. Several company-directed slogans are marketed today; however Apple tends to focus mainly on marketing its products individually.
Litigation
Apple's earliest court action dates to 1978 when
Apple Records,
The Beatles-founded record label,
filed suit against Apple Computer for
trademark infringement. The suit settled in 1981 with an amount of US$80,000 being paid to
Apple Corps. As a condition of the settlement, Apple Computer agreed to stay out of the music business. The case arose in 1989 again when Apple Corps sued over the Apple II
GS, which included a professional synthesizer chip, claiming violation of the 1981 settlement agreement. In 1991 another settlement of around US$26.5 million was reached.
[60] In September 2003 Apple Computer was sued by Apple Corps again, this time for introducing the iTunes Music Store and the iPod, which Apple Corps believed was a violation of the previous agreement by Apple Computer not to distribute music.
[61] The trial in the UK ended on
May 8 2006 with victory for Apple Computer. The judge ruled the company's iTunes Music Store did not infringe on the trademark of Apple Corps and ordered Apple Corps to pay the legal costs.
[62] A new settlement was announced on
February 5 2007 giving Apple, Inc. control over the Apple mark with Apple Corps licensed to use it. Portions of the settlement are confidential, but each side will pay its own legal costs. As the Beatles' songs are not available for download from any legal music download sites, including the iTunes Music Store, Jobs' highly public nod to the Beatles (playing "
Lovely Rita" on the iPhone) during his
January 9 2007 Macworld keynote fueled widespread speculation about a deal to sell Beatles songs on iTunes. A spokewoman for Apple Corps said the settlement had no bearing on any such matter.
[63]
Of the matter, Steve Jobs said "We love the Beatles, and it has been painful being at odds with them over these trademarks. It feels great to resolve this in a positive manner, and in a way that should remove the potential of further disagreements in the future."
[64]
In a more recent previously unrelated lawsuit, Apple entered into a
class action settlement,
[65] upheld on
December 20 2005 following an appeal, regarding the battery life of
iPod music players sold prior to May 2004. Eligible members of the class are entitled to extended warranties, store credit, cash compensation, or battery replacement.
Creative also recently filed a patent dispute alleging that Apple infringed on one of Creative's patents for their
Zen player with the iPod and iPod nano.
[66] On
August 23 2006, Apple and Creative settled their patent disputes by paying
Creative US$100 million.
On
January 10 2007,
Cisco sued Apple for the iPhone, since Cisco has held the trademark on the name "iPhone" since 2000. Cisco had refused rights to use the name "iPhone" on multiple occasions. Apple and Cisco had been in talks for a while about use of the name, though Apple had been denied the use of the name on several occasions leading up through
January 9. Cisco alleged that Apple created a front company to attempt to acquire the name through other means, but failed also. During the 2007 Macworld Expo, Apple used Cisco's "iPhone" name anyway.
[67] On
February 22 2007 Cisco and Apple announced an agreement under which both companies would be allowed to use the iPhone name worldwide.
[68]
In July 2007, Colorado-based photographer Louis Psihoyos filed suit against Apple for allegedly ripping his "wall of videos" imagery to advertise for Apple TV. According to Psihoyos, Apple had been negotiating with Psihoyos for rights to the imagery, but backed out and promptly used the imagery anyway.
[69]
Stock option backdating investigation
On
June 29 2006, Apple announced that an internal investigation "discovered irregularities related to the issuance of certain stock option grants made between 1997 and 2001."
[70] A Special Committee reported the findings of the stock backdating investigation three months later on
October 4 2006, stating "the investigation found no misconduct by any member of Apple's current management team", … "the most recent evidence of irregularities relates to a January 2002 grant", and "stock option grants made on 15 dates between 1997 and 2002 appear to have grant dates that precede the approval of those grants". The Special Committee also reported that "in a few instances, Apple CEO Steve Jobs was aware that favorable grant dates had been selected, but he did not receive or otherwise benefit from these grants and was unaware of the accounting implications."
[71] Documents were subsequently faked to indicate a special board meeting had occurred and that the options had been granted on that day.
[72] The backdating gave Jobs a potential net gain of more than US$20 million had he exercised his options.
[73]
On
April 24 2007, the SEC announced it had filed charges against former Apple chief financial officer
Fred D. Anderson and former Apple general counsel
Nancy R. Heinen for their alleged roles in backdating Apple options.
[74] Anderson immediately settled the charges for a payment of a civil penalty of US$150,000 and disgorgement of "ill-gotten gains" of approximately US$3.49 million.
[74] Heinen was charged with, among other things, violating the anti-fraud provisions of the
Securities Act of 1933 and the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, lying to Apple's auditors, and violating prohibitions on circumventing internal controls, based on the options awarded to Steve Jobs (dated
October 19 2001 but allegedly granted in December 2001) and also option grants awarded to top company executives, including Heinen (dated
January 17 2001, but allegedly granted in February 2001.
[74]) The SEC is seeking injunctive relief, disgorgement, and money penalties against Heinen, in addition to an order barring her from serving as an officer or director of a public company.
[74] The charges against Heinen remain pending.
[74]
In late April 2007, the SEC announced that it would not bring action against Apple due to its "swift, extensive, and extraordinary cooperation in the Commission's investigation." Most analysts took this statement to mean that Apple was in the clear, and Steve Jobs personally read the statement to concerned shareholders at a meeting.
Culture
Apple was one of several highly successful companies founded in the 1970s that bucked the traditional notions of what a corporate culture should look like in terms of organizational hierarchy (flat versus tall, casual versus formal attire, et cetera). Other highly successful firms with similar cultural aspects from the same time period include
Southwest Airlines and
Microsoft, and the relative success of these firms (whether a result of their cultural differences or not) resulted in the widespread adoption of informal corporate culture within the technology industry. Originally, the company stood in opposition to staid competitors like IBM more or less by default, thanks to the influence of its founders; Steve Jobs often walked around the office barefoot even after Apple was a
Fortune 500 company. By the time of the
"1984" TV ad, this trait had become a key way the company differentiated itself from its competitors.
[75]
Apple Fellows
As the company has grown and been led by a series of chief executives, each with his own idea of what Apple should be, some of its original character has arguably been lost, but Apple still has a reputation for fostering individuality and excellence that reliably draws talented people into its employ, especially after Jobs' return. To recognize the best of its employees, Apple created the Apple Fellows program. Apple Fellows are those who have made extraordinary technical or leadership contributions to
personal computing while at the company. The Apple Fellowship has so far been awarded to a few individuals including
Bill Atkinson,
[76] Steve Capps,
[77] Rod Holt,
[76] Alan Kay,
[78][79] Guy Kawasaki,
[78][80] Don Norman,
[78] Rich Page,
[76] and
Steve Wozniak.
[76]
Users
According to surveys by
J. D. Power, Apple has the highest brand and repurchase loyalty of any computer manufacturer. While this brand loyalty is considered unusual for any product, Apple appears not to have gone out of its way to create it. At one time,
Apple evangelists were actively engaged by the company, but this was after the phenomenon was already firmly established. Apple evangelist
Guy Kawasaki has called the brand fanaticism "something that was stumbled upon".
[81] Apple has, however, supported the continuing existence of a network of
Mac User Groups in most major and many minor centers of population where Mac computers are available.
Mac users meet at the European
Apple Expo and the San Francisco
Macworld Conference & Expo trade shows where Apple introduces new products each year to the industry and public. Mac developers in turn gather at the annual Apple
Worldwide Developers Conference.
Apple Store openings can draw crowds of thousands, with some waiting in line as much as a day before the opening or flying in from other countries for the event.
[82] The
New York City Fifth Avenue "Cube" store had a line as long as half a mile; a few Mac fans took the opportunity of the setting to propose marriage.
[83] The Ginza opening in Tokyo was estimated in the thousands with a line exceeding eight city blocks.
[84]
John Sculley told
The Guardian newspaper in 1997: "People talk about technology, but Apple was a marketing company. It was the marketing company of the decade."
[85]
Market research indicates that Apple draws its customer base from an unusually artistic, creative, and well-educated population, which may explain the platform’s visibility within certain youthful, avant-garde subcultures.
[86]
Criticism
Apple has received criticism for not notifying users of system vulnerabilities until a fix is released,
[87] and has been accused of pressuring journalists to release their sources, with regards to leaked information about new Apple products.
[88] Apple also has received criticism for its
iPhone and
iPod integration with
iTunes for not facilitating creation of software to run and maintain those devices using different applications tools besides iTunes.
[89]
Apple also has been investigated and criticized for possible
sweatshop conditions in factories in
China where
contract manufacturers make its
iPod .
[90] Apple also has received criticism and two
class-action lawsuits at both state and federal level about its
iPhone product only allowed service through
AT&T and the recent software update that made the iPhone useless if it was to be unlocked using a different tool that cited
monopolistic and
antitrust allegations between the two companies
[91]
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- History