Vintage Mac Video
van Frank Lowney
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Omschrijving
Representing the early history of Apple Computer, Inc (now Apple, Inc.), these video clips reveal the ideas and personalities involved.
| Naam | Omschrijving | Releasedatum | Prijs | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | VideoApple's "1944" Internal Sales Promo | Entitled "1944," the almost 9-minute full version was Apple's in-house takeoff on "1984," the iconic first Macintosh TV ad that caused a sensation during that year's Super Bowl. Set as a World War II tale of good vs. IBM, it is a broadcast-quality production (said to have cost $50,000) that was designed to fire up Apple's international sales force at a 1984 meeting in Hawaii. A copy of "1944" was provided to me by one-time Apple employee Craig Elliott, now CEO of Pertino Networks, a cloud-computing startup located two blocks from Apple in Cupertino. Elliott, who worked at Apple from 1985 to 1996, says he has "never seen (the film) anywhere else" and that there has been "no additional circulation" as far as he knows. I couldn't find it online, either - the year 1984 was pre-World Wide Web, of course -- which doesn't mean it isn't out there. Two snippets from "1944," without any dialogue, do appear in another Jobs video - a photo-montage tribute to him made by Apple employees to mark his 30th birthday. After Jobs died last October, Elliott posted that birthday video to his Facebook page, from where it went viral before being knocked off the 'Net by Sony Music Entertainment because it used a Bob Dylan song. | 3-5-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 2 | VideoFuture Apple Table Technologies (1990) | Future Apple Table Technologies | 31-3-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 3 | VideoSteve Jobs Talks About the "Think Different" Campaign | The one-minute commercial featured black-and- white footage of 17 iconic 20th century personalities. In order of appearance they were: Albert Einstein, Bob Dylan, Martin Luther King, Jr., Richard Branson, John Lennon (with Yoko Ono), Buckminster Fuller, Thomas Edison, Muhammad Ali, Ted Turner, Maria Callas, Mahatma Gandhi, Amelia Earhart, Alfred Hitchcock, Martha Graham, Jim Henson (with Kermit the Frog), Frank Lloyd Wright and Pablo Picasso. The commercial ends with an image of a young girl opening her closed eyes, as if making a wish. The final clip is taken from the All Around The World version of the "Sweet Lullaby" music video, directed by Tarsem Singh; the young girl is Shaan Sahota, Singh's niece.[3] The thirty-second commercial was a shorter version of the previous one, using 11 of the 17 personalities, but closed with Jerry Seinfeld, instead of the young girl. In order of appearance: Albert Einstein, Bob Dylan, Martin Luther King, Jr., John Lennon, Martha Graham, Muhammad Ali, Alfred Hitchcock, Mahatma Gandhi, Jim Henson, Maria Callas, Pablo Picasso, followed by Jerry Seinfeld. This version aired only once, during the series finale of Seinfeld. Full text: Here?s to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They?re not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can?t do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do. - Apple Inc. | 15-2-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 4 | VideoSteve Jobs 2005 Stanford Commencement Address | Full Text: I am honored to be with you today at your commencement from one of the finest universities in the world. I never graduated from college. Truth be told, this is the closest I've ever gotten to a college graduation. Today I want to tell you three stories from my life. That's it. No big deal. Just three stories. The first story is about connecting the dots. I dropped out of Reed College after the first 6 months, but then stayed around as a drop-in for another 18 months or so before I really quit. So why did I drop out? It started before I was born. My biological mother was a young, unwed college graduate student, and she decided to put me up for adoption. She felt very strongly that I should be adopted by college graduates, so everything was all set for me to be adopted at birth by a lawyer and his wife. Except that when I popped out they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl. So my parents, who were on a waiting list, got a call in the middle of the night asking: "We have an unexpected baby boy; do you want him?" They said: "Of course." My biological mother later found out that my mother had never graduated from college and that my father had never graduated from high school. She refused to sign the final adoption papers. She only relented a few months later when my parents promised that I would someday go to college. And 17 years later I did go to college. But I naively chose a college that was almost as expensive as Stanford, and all of my working-class parents' savings were being spent on my college tuition. After six months, I couldn't see the value in it. I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was going to help me figure it out. And here I was spending all of the money my parents had saved their entire life. So I decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out OK. It was pretty scary at the time, but looking back it was one of the best decisions I ever made. The minute I dropped out I could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me, and begin dropping in on the ones that looked interesting. It wasn't all romantic. I didn't have a dorm room, so I slept on the floor in friends' rooms, I returned coke bottles for the 5¢ deposits to buy food with, and I would walk the 7 miles across town every Sunday night to get one good meal a week at the Hare Krishna temple. I loved it. And much of what I stumbled into by following my curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless later on. Let me give you one example: Reed College at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction in the country. Throughout the campus every poster, every label on every drawer, was beautifully hand calligraphed. Because I had dropped out and didn't have to take the normal classes, I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this. I learned about serif and san serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great. It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can't capture, and I found it fascinating. None of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life. But ten years later, when we were designing the first Macintosh computer, it all came back to me. And we designed it all into the Mac. It was the first computer with beautiful typography. If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts. And since Windows just copied the Mac, it's likely that no personal computer would have them. If I had never dropped out, I would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do. Of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in college. But it was very, very clear looki | 15-2-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 5 | Jerry Manock Remembers Steve Jobs | When you think of notable, early Apple employees, you think of the big names like Steve Wozniak, Andy Hertzfeld, and John Sculley. Beyond these key names are a multitude of lesser-known people who played a crucial role in the early years of the company. One such employee is Jerry Manock, who worked on the Apple II, the Disk II, the III, and Lisa before joining the original Macintosh design team. Manock worked closely with Steve Jobs during his tenure at Apple which stretched from 1977 to 1984. He worked with Steve Wozniak on the Apple II. While Wozniak developed the logic board and internal hardware, Manock was responsible for much of the design of the Apple II. Manock's also know for his choice of Pantone 453, the light beige color that characterized Apple's early computers. Manock now lives in Burlington, Vermont with his wife and family. He has his own design firm and teaches product design courses at the University of Vermont. He recently talked about these early years with Seven Days,a local arts-oriented newspaper that's available in Vermont and online. Manock only had kind things to say about Steve Jobs in his interview. He fondly recalled a time that Jobs recognized Manock for his early contributions to Apple during an annual meeting. Manock attended the meeting unannounced and Jobs spotted him in the audience. He also has some strong criticism of today's design methods that use computers and not hands-on time with the actual materials. You can read the rest of the interview at Seven Days's website. | 10-2-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 6 | VideoEvery Apple Design Ever in 30 Seconds | Very fast paced | 10-2-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 7 | VideoNeXT, OpenStep and the return of Steve Jobs to Apple | John Gruber: If you want a visceral sense of just how far Apple has come since the NeXT acquisition and Steve Jobs?s return, you?ll do no better than watching this video from Macworld Expo 1997. Then-CEO Gil Amelio rambles on and on, woefully unprepared and unrehearsed. Then, Jobs takes the stage, unusually-dressed but with a tight presentation and an actual plan. Then Amelio returns to preside over what must be the worst and most awkward product introduction in company history. | 8-2-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 8 | VideoBill Gates on Steve Jobs' Passing | Gates takeaway: You only have just so much time | 25-1-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 9 | John Sculley-Truth About Me, Apple and Steve Jobs | David Greelish, computer historian with Classic Computing, recently had the opportunity to speak with John Sculley, former Apple CEO (1983-1993) and discuss, in a great of detail, Mr. Sculley?s life and times at Apple. Mr. Greelish thinks that Mr. Sculley has taken a bad rap for firing Steve Jobs. That?s not what happened, and so here is the full story according to Mr. Sculley himself. The following interview took place during the last week of 2011. The complete, 80-minute audio interview is available in two audio files ? Part 1 (43.1 MB) and Part 2 (37.3 MB) ? but Mr. Greelish asked The Mac Observer if they would transcribe it for the record, with his full permission. This eBook, also with Mr. Greelish's permission, assembles all of the audio and text transcript into one package | 16-1-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 10 | VideoSteve Jobs Image Rendered on an Apple IIc | This is an Applesoft BASIC program that renders a photo of Steve Jobs on an Apple IIC sporting a 1 megahertz 8-bit processor. The program was created by Chris Baird who notes that the video speed jumps to 600% at about 45 seconds in. | 2-1-12 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 11 | VideoThe "Blue Busters" Video | When IBM was the company to beat, this pep video for the sales force was developed and shown internally (only). | 29-12-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 12 | VideoSteve Jobs on Gaming (1990) | This video of Steve Jobs from 1990 is an interesting artifact for a couple of reasons. For one thing, it?s the clip in which Steve pioneered his famous ?bicycle for the mind? analogy, which I?ve always felt is one of the most beautiful things ever said about computers. What is also interesting, though, is how gung ho Steve Jobs is about video games in this clip, even going as far as to suggest that video games are the future of learning, and even the future of the Library of Congress. What?s odd about this is that both Steve Jobs and Apple were fairly hostile to gaming on the Mac and even iOS until the iPod touch and the App Store showed them how lucrative it could be. Now iOS is the biggest handheld gaming platform in the world, but it wasn?t always that way, and Apple for years could literally have not given two figs for gaming. In light of this, Steve Jobs?s perspective on gaming makes a lot more sense after watching this clip. He sees interactive simulation to be a key to learning, but not shooting aliens on Strogos. As such, the iPad is really the complete fulfillment of his dream for the computer as a gaming platform, isn?t it? | 22-12-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 13 | VideoSteve Jobs Espouses Apple Philosophy 1980 | VHS tape (poor quality in some parts) illustrating that many of the ideas that Steve Jobs espoused thirty years later were already formed to a surprising degree in 1980 | 5-12-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 14 | VideoSteve Jobs Brainstorms with NeXT Team | The creation of NeXT and the sequential pivoting of the company from hardware to software to acquisition is one of the most fascinating episodes in the career of Steve Jobs. Unfortunately, it?s also one of the least documented. | 22-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 15 | Video1990 Steve Jobs NeXT Chalk Talk on Marketing | In these three videos (combined into one here), Jobs sits down with the NeXt crew to discuss what they need to do to provide excellent products. He sits them down to tell them what other companies are doing, and then tries to figure out how to do it better. He looks for weak points in their strategies that he can exploit to come up ahead. He looks for what the market wants so that he can make something that will feed it. Some of the companies that he examines include IBM, Sun, and HP. We know these names today. IBM is still a company that helps make hardware, Sun snow part of Oracle, and HP continues to be an OEM for PC's. Apple, as we know, does all of those things. Apple makes their own hardware and their own software. Steve wanted Apple to do more than one thing, so that buyers into the Apple market would buy into everything else so that everything would just fall into place. That same logic, is the magic behind Apple's multi- billion dollar company today. They are in the personal computer business, the tablet computer business, the smartphone business, the music business, the video business, the software business, the accessory business, and more. Taking a look at just how Jobs brainstormed with his workers, with these outside-the-box brainstorming sessions, we can see why Apple is as successful as it is today. | 21-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 16 | VideoSteve Jobs: A Legacy of Vision and Leadership | Speakers: Bill Atkinson, member of original Macintosh team at Apple; creator of QuickDraw, MacPaint, HyperCard Jean-Louis Gassée, Spent 10 years at Apple, in France and then in Cupertino as head of Macintosh product development. Now a venture investor at Allegis Capital Andy Hertzfeld, Developer on original Macintosh team, now a software engineer at Google Regis McKenna, High tech marketing guru who worked with Jobs and Apple during its formative years Deborah Stapleton, Handled the investor relations and public relations programs for Pixar until shortly before the company was bought by Disney Larry Tesler, former VP of Advanced Technology and Chief Scientist at Apple Moderator: Paul Freiberger, Wrote about Silicon Valley during the early years of the personal computer revolution; Principal, Cue Communications Steve Jobs gave the world the Macintosh, iPod, iPhone, iPad, Pixar ? and defined a whole generation of personal technology through his creativity and achievement in technology innovation. Join us for this special program as colleagues and friends of Jobs share what he meant to them, and how his unique personal approach can continue to inspire us. | 20-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 17 | VideoWWDC 1996 Steve Jobs's Vision for Apple | This Q&A session represents the first public iteration of Steve Jobs' vision for a rejuvenated Apple Computer. Inc | 20-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 18 | VideoComputer Chronicles interview with Apple Lisa VP John Couch | While not really a well-known beyond Cupertino, Couch was at one point the top executive in charge of the LISA project. Could would subsequently leave Apple for a few years before returning in 2002 as Apple?s VP of Education, which at the time was an entirely new position. For those interested in the Apple hierarchy, Couch reports directly to Tim Cook. | 16-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 19 | VideoComputerworld Interview of Steve Jobs (1995) | Computerworld - In 1995, Steve Jobs was on the cusp of middle age -- 40 years old -- when he sat down for an extensive and revealing one-on-one interview by the Computerworld Information Technology Awards Foundation as part of an oral history project. The Foundation also produced the Computerworld Honors Program, whose executive director, Daniel Morrow, conducted this interview. When Jobs sat down for this interview, which was recorded on videotape, his return to Apple was still two years away -- and his once and future company was struggling to remain relevant. The products that would turn Apple around in the first decade of the 21st century -- Mac OS X, the iPod, the iPhone, the iPad, the iTunes store -- did not exist. | 7-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 20 | VideoNova Interview of Steve Jobs (1990) | NOVA video taped an interview with Steve Jobs in 1990 which was apparently never edited or aired. This is that unedited tape. | 7-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 21 | VideoLouis Rukeyser Interviews Steve Jobs (1996) | ... right before he rejoined Apple. | 7-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 22 | VideoSiri Talks to Mac 512e | Remember that scene in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home where Scotty converses with a vintage Mac by picking up the mouse and intoning "Computer..." to it? Well, YouTube regular "napabar" has gone one better by getting Siri on an iPhone 4S to create a text file on a mint- condition Mac 512K. Talk to the iPhone 4S, and moments later a text file appears on the Mac 512K. As with many attempts to use older technology -- in this case, a 27-year-old Mac -- a bridge between the old and the new is needed. In the following video, you can see how napabar does this. He uses Siri's capability to write and send an email using voice to move a message to his Mac, which runs an AppleScript to extract the text in the message, then move it to a bridge PowerBook that is sharing the Mac 512K's floppy drive (remember those) via AppleTalk. Sure, there are probably easier ways to do this, but it's still amazing that an Apple machine over a quarter-century old can be integrated with the latest Apple technology. In many ways, it demonstrates the continuity of some of the underpinnings of the Mac architecture that allow things like this to be accomplished -- even if the process is somewhat convoluted. | 7-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 23 | VideoCity of Cupertino Tribute to Steve Jobs | The company was founded in Cupertino and operated out of a garage in the city, with Apple opening its own campus ? driving jobs in the area, ultimately focusing the eyes of world on the world?s most successful technology company. Apple is even in the process of developing its new ?Spaceship? campus, which will see the company expand its operations with a new complex that can house more than 10,000 employees. Recognising the impact Steve Jobs had on the area, the Cupertino City Council has posted its own Steve Jobs tribute video, created by city staff, to it?s YouTube channel ? highlighting his references to the city and what it meant for the area as a whole. | 1-11-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 24 | VideoIntroduction of the First iPod | The initial reaction from the public is not good. Most critics think it?s too expensive and does too little. ?All that hype for an MP3 player? Break- thru digital device?? said one commentor on MacRumors forums. ?The Reality Distiortion Field? is starting to warp Steve?s mind if he thinks for one second that this thing is gonna take off.? Others riff on the name iPod: ?Idiots Price Our Devices?; ?I prefer Owning Disks?; ?I Prefer Other Devices.? | 23-10-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 25 | VideoThe History of Podcasting at GCSU | This video was done with TimeLine 3D, ScreenFlow and GarageBand. | 22-10-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 26 | VideoGCSU iPod Dance Video | Additional video clips and information about GCSU's pioneering effort in mobile education may be accessed at: http://ipod.gcsu.edu | 19-10-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 27 | VideoSteve Jobs's Thirtieth Birthday Present | Shared by: Craig Elliott?Apple employee 8128, who worked at Apple from 1985-1996. For Steve Jobs' thirtieth birthday, his then Apple coworkers made a video the celebrate his life to that point. The video, dug up by Harry McCracken at Technologizer, is set to My Back Pages by Bob Dylan, one of Jobs' favorite musicians and inspirations, is filled with images from Jobs' first 30 years. The video starts with these words: To Steven Jobs on his thirtieth birthday. For the first thirty years of your life, you make your habits. For the last thirty years of your life, your habits make you. Old Hindu Proverb. Tragically, Jobs didn't live to see his second thirty years, something that none of them could have foreseen when the video was made. | 7-10-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 28 | VideoHere's to the Crazy One (Steve Jobs Narrating) | This is one of the few "landmark" Apple ads. It evoked the spirit of nonconformity and attempted to mix that with what could be done with an Apple computer. It said nothing about the company or its products except the Apple logo and the words "Think Different in the last few frames. | 7-10-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 29 | VideoAncient Apple II Makes Music For Even More Ancient Player Piano | http://science.discovery.com/tv/how-its-made/ | 2-6-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 30 | VideoApple Lisa disassembly - | The Apple Lisa was a personal computer designed by Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple, Inc.) during the early 1980s. The Lisa project was started at Apple in 1978[1] and evolved into a project to design a powerful personal computer with a graphical user interface (GUI) that would be targeted toward business customers. In 1982, Steve Jobs was forced out of the Lisa project,[2] so he joined the Macintosh project instead. The Macintosh is not a direct descendant of Lisa, although there are obvious similarities between the systems and the final revision, the Lisa 2/10, was modified and sold as the Macintosh XL. The Lisa was a more advanced system than the Macintosh of that time in many respects, such as its inclusion of protected memory, cooperative multitasking, a generally more sophisticated hard disk based operating system, a built-in screensaver, an advanced calculator with a paper tape and RPN, support for up to 2 megabytes (MB) of RAM, expansion slots, a numeric keypad, data corruption protection schemes such as block sparing, non-physical file names (with the ability to have multiple documents with the same name), and a larger higher-resolution display. It would be many years before many of those features were implemented on the Macintosh platform. Protected memory, for instance, did not arrive until the Mac OS X operating system was released in 2001. The Macintosh featured a faster 68000 processor (7.89 MHz) and sound. The complexity of the Lisa operating system and its programs taxed the 5 MHz Motorola 68000 microprocessor so that consumers said it felt sluggish, particularly when scrolling in documents. | 20-5-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 31 | VideoWe Are Apple: Leading The Way | You can easily detect the disco influence in this Apple marketing film titled "We Are Apple: Leading The Way," This video was shown at the introduction of the Mac. There are some memorable moments -- like a guy carrying a 60-lb. Apple Lisa under his arm like it was a MacBook Air. Most of all, it's the screechy Irene Cara-like disco soundtrack, heavily copying from "What a Feeling" from the movie Flashdance, that makes your stomach churn. | 25-2-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 32 | VideoSteve Jobs Intros the "1984" Video | Many people have seen the 1984 SuperBowl commercial introducing the Macintosh to the masses. In the fall of 1983, Jobs gave a preview of this spot to an enthusiastic crowd of Apple shareholders and insiders. With full Reality Distortion Field in place, a young, passionate Steve Jobs describes the history of computing, IBM?s missed opportunities, and their current threats to Apple and the computing industry. | 24-2-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 33 | VideoSteve Jobs on "Blue Boxes" | Before the Mac, before the Apple II, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak made their first product: a digital Blue Box for hacking into telephone systems. In this clip from the 1998 documentary Silicon Valley: A 100 Year Renaissance, Jobs describes how the capability of this device so impressed two young teenagers that they began to realize the power of ideas and the potential of technology to control vast amounts of information. If we hadn’t made blue boxes, there would have been no Apple. They also realized the importance of good product packaging – nice wooden shipping case! | 21-2-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 34 | Raskin Invents First Mac | Aza Raskin on how his dad helped invent the first Mac | 15-2-11 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 35 | VideoSteve Jobs Intros the First iMac | Steve Jobs Intros the First iMac | 18-12-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 36 | VideoSteve Jobs Intros NeXT Step R3 | The foundations of modern MacOS X | 30-11-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 37 | VideoApple Design History Examples | Key design elements of Apple computers over 30 years | 27-7-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 38 | VideoTribute to Apple History (iPadItalia) | In honor of the Italian release of the iPad, iPadItalia has created one of the best Apple- oriented videos I've ever seen. In 10 minutes (yes, it's quite long for this type of thing), the video lovingly covers Apple from its origin in 1976 right up to today when those in Italy, and many other countries, can finally get their hands on the magical and revolutionary iPad. The video is totally professional and really deserves recognition. With frenetic energy, just about every Apple product is displayed. It is a valentine to Steve Jobs, even showing him age from 15 to 55, and ending up with rejoicing over the European introduction of the iPad. This is a video that will warm every fanboy's heart and really captures the excitement that we've felt about Apple over the last 34 years. Enjoy! | 29-5-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 39 | VideoAnatomy of Apple Design | Transparent House used its visualization capabilities to create a tribute to a company they greatly admire on the occasion of the iPad release. The idea was to show a glimpse into the history of this product giant by modeling some of the innovative products they've developed in their 3+ decade history. The animation was done entirely using 3Ds Max and V-Ray render and took about 10 days to complete. Professionally done 3D visualization is the perfect tool to present concepts or new products in a beautiful, photoreal style, while creating a mood with music and conveying a message, through on-screen text or narration. This animation was an artistic exercise and not intended for commercial use. The animation is not affiliated with Apple or any third-party companies. We hope this animation will be used mainly as an educational tool for the 3d visualization or/and design industry. Soundtrack:Oleg Galkin | 2-3-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 40 | VideoApple Concept Video on Education (1997) | This movie was included in CDs demonstrating Apple's vision to technology in 1997. Notice the idea of a tablet with video conferencing capabilities. Does the promise for education still hold true today? | 26-1-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 41 | VideoThe 1984 iPhone OS | This is a retro look at the iPhone imagining what it would look like if developed in 1984 using the MacOS of that day. | 25-1-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 42 | VideoSteve Jobs on Paul Rand (1993) | Fantastic interview by Doug Evans and Alan Pottasch with Steve Jobs from 1993 about Paul Rand, widely regarded as one of the greatest corporate identity designers ever (think IBM, UPS, ABC). Rand designed the logo for NeXT (below), which very quickly helped to build the company’s brand without a massive ad campaign. | 25-1-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 43 | VideoApple Web Site 1976-1994 | This is an imaginative video showing what Apple's web site would have looked like during the years 1976 to 1994, before there actually was a web of any commercial consequence. | 22-1-10 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 44 | VideoPlea for a Newton Comeback | The Newton (1993-1998) was a brilliant precursor to what we now call mobile computing but was a bit too far ahead of its time. This video was produced by a Newton user a few years ago. It is his plea for a Newton comeback. | 30-11-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 45 | VideoSteve Jobs: Seldom Seen Photographs | This video was exported from Keynote. It traces the history of Steve Jobs from 1976 to 2004. | 8-11-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 46 | VideoSteve Jobs: CEO of the Decade | This Fortune Magazine video outlines the reasons underlying this recognition. | 7-11-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 47 | VideoThe Crazy Ones | This is one of the few "landmark" Apple ads. It evoked the spirit of nonconformity and attempted to mix that with what could be done with an Apple computer. It said nothing about the company or its products except the Apple logo and the words "Think Different in the last few frames. | 18-9-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 48 | VideoiPod + iTunes Ads From the Past | This is a medley of iPod + iTunes ads done with PulpMotion 2. It's actually a remake of something I did in 2006 for a presentation but never used. A new template in PulpMotion called "Time Machine" inspired this remake attempt. | 24-6-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 49 | VideoRetro MacCast: 118: Rob Janoff | Interview with Rob Janoff, creator of the first Apple logo -- the multicolored one. | 25-5-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 50 | VideoApple's "Future Shock" Video (1988) | This video provides insight into Apple thinking about the future in 1988. | 20-2-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 51 | VideoUnboxing a 20th Century Anniversary Mac | Unboxing a 20th Century Anniversary Mac in 2008 | 11-2-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 52 | VideoThe Apple Lisa in 2008 | The Apple Lisa 24 years later (2008). | 11-2-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
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53 |
World's Oldest Podcast | The Wizard of Menlo Park, Thomas Edison, Does a Podcast: Mary Had a Little Lamb. This is the first recording ever (1877) and, so, is also the oldest known podcast. Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville was actually the first man to make a recording of voice before Edison on April 9th 1860. It’s a clip of a woman singing the French song “Au Clair de la Lune“. http://www.mamalisa.com/?t=es&p=161&c=22 | 11-2-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 54 | VideoThe Macintosh Software Dating Game (1983) | Steve Jobs as MC with Bill Gates, Mitch Kapor as "contestants. | 29-1-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 55 | Video2004 Remake of the Apple Macintosh "1984" Commercial | This is the 2004 remake of the classic 1984 "Super Bowl" Mac ad. Note the clever addition of the iPod | 29-1-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 56 | VideoThe Making of "1984" | Behind the scenes: the Making of "1984" | 29-1-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 57 | VideoSteve Jobs Introduces the Macintosh (1984) | Steve Jobs Introduces the Macintosh (1984) | 29-1-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
| 58 | VideoThe Original "1984" Apple Macintosh Commercial | "1984" is an American television commercial which introduced the Apple Macintosh personal computer for the first time. It was conceived by Steve Hayden, Brent Thomas and Lee Clow at Chiat/Day, Venice, produced by New York production company Fairbanks Films, and directed by Ridley Scott. Anya Major performed as the unnamed heroine and David Graham as Big Brother. Its only daytime televised broadcast was on January 22, 1984 during the third quarter of Super Bowl XVIII.[3] Chiat/Day also ran the ad one other time on television, in December 1983 in Twin Falls, Idaho, so that the advertisement could be submitted to award ceremonies for that year.[4][5] In addition, starting on January 17, 1984 it was screened prior to previews in movie theaters for a few weeks.[4] It has since been seen on television commercial compilation specials, as well as in "Retro-mercials" on TV Land. "1984" used the unnamed heroine to represent the coming of the Macintosh (indicated by her white tank top with a cubist picture of Apple’s Macintosh computer on it) as a means of saving humanity from "conformity" (Big Brother). These images were an allusion to George Orwell's noted novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four, which described a dystopian future ruled by a televised "Big Brother". The rows of marching minions have direct cinematic parallels with the rows of marching minions in the opening scenes of the classic dystopian film Metropolis. Originally a subject of contention within Apple, it has nevertheless consistently been lauded as a classic, winning critical acclaim over time. It is now considered a watershed event and a masterpiece in advertising, and is widely regarded as one of the most memorable and successful American television commercials of all time. The commercial was rebroadcasted in an updated version in 2004 on its 20th anniversary, with the heroine modified to be listening to an iPod. Viewers generally saw the Big Brother target of the Apple ad as being Microsoft, with the original villain, IBM, being all but forgotten. | 29-1-09 | Gratis | Bekijk in iTunes |
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