folklore.org

Topics
Software Design (44)
Personality (33)
Management (30)
Technical (20)
Lisa (17)
Hardware Design (15)
Apple Spirit (13)
Marketing (12)
Origins (10)
Prototypes (10)
Personality Clashes (8)
The Launch (8)
Buildings (6)
Inspiration (6)
QuickDraw (6)
3rd party developers (5)
Celebrities (5)
Lisa Rivalry (5)
Reality Distortion (5)
Recruiting (5)
User Interface (5)
Apple II (4)
Documentation (4)
Hardware (4)
Industrial Design (4)
MacPaint (4)
Quitting (4)
Bugs (3)
Credit (3)
Early Programs (3)
Microsoft (3)
The Press (3)
Allnighters (2)
Compensation (2)
Recreation (2)
Retreats (2)
Social Life (2)
Testing (2)

Authors
Andy Hertzfeld (92)
Bruce Horn (6)
Caroline Rose (3)
Tom Zito (3)
David Ramsey (2)

Characters
Steve Jobs (81)
Andy Hertzfeld (46)
Burrell Smith (42)
Bill Atkinson (40)
Bud Tribble (23)
Steve Capps (18)
Bruce Horn (17)
Jef Raskin (17)
Steve Wozniak (15)
Bob Belleville (14)
Susan Kare (12)
Larry Kenyon (11)
Rod Holt (11)
Brian Howard (10)
Jerome Coonen (10)
Jerry Manock (9)
Dan Kottke (7)
Joanna Hoffman (7)
John Sculley (7)
Mike Murray (7)
Bill Gates (6)
Donn Denman (6)
Larry Tesler (6)
Mike Markkula (6)
Alan Kay (5)
Chris Espinosa (5)
George Crow (5)
Rich Page (5)
(4)
Caroline Rose (4)
Charles Simonyi (4)
Mike Boich (4)
Randy Wigginton (4)
Bill Budge (3)
Dan Cochran (3)
Dan Smith (3)
Frank Ludolph (3)
Jean-Louis Gassee (3)
John Couch (3)
John Warnock (3)
Mike Scott (3)
Neil Konzen (3)
Terry Oyama (3)
Tom Malloy (3)
Wayne Rosing (3)
Wendell Sander (3)
Bob Anders (2)
Bob Bishop (2)
Brad Hacker (2)
Bruce Daniels (2)
David Ramsey (2)
Debi Coleman (2)
Dick Huston (2)
Folon (2)
Lynn Takahashi (2)
Mac Team (2)
Pat Sharp (2)
Patti King (2)
Regis McKenna (2)
Rich Williams (2)
Steve Hayden (2)
Ted Kaehler (2)
Tom Petrie (2)
Tom Whitney (2)
Victor Bull (2)
The Original Macintosh
Anecdotes about the development of Apple's original Macintosh computer, and the people who created it. (119 stories)
“Relative judgments have no place in art.” -- Alan Kay

Visit the Image Gallery (14 images) or view recent comments.

  
Page  1  2   3   4   5   6   7   8    

I'll Be Your Best Friend
Burrell Smith was creative in more than just engineering
Date: August 1979
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Origins, Personality, Hardware Design,Apple II
Comments: 13
Rating:  (4.37)

We'll See About That
Burrell proves his mettle with the 80k language card.
Date: November 1979
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Hardware Design, Technical,Apple II
Comments: 6
Rating:  (4.16)

Scrooge McDuck
The very first image on the very first Macintosh
Date: February 1980
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Origins, Hardware Design, Prototypes
Comments: 11
Rating:  (4.57)

It's The Moustache That Matters
Burrell wants to get promoted to engineer
Date: September 1980
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Management, Personality
Comments: 6
Rating:  (4.66)

Good Earth
The original Mac team's original office
Date: October 1980
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Apple Spirit, Origins, Management, Buildings
Comments: 7
Rating:  (3.75)

I Invented Burrell
Burrell imitates Jef
Date: 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Personality
Comments: 7
Rating:  (4.63)

Texaco Towers
The office where the Mac became real
Date: January 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Origins, Lisa,Buildings
Comments: 6
Rating:  (3.50)

Black Wednesday
A shakeup in Apple II engineering frees me up to work on the Macintosh
Date: February 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Origins, Apple II, Management,Recruiting
Comments: 5
Rating:  (4.87)

Reality Distortion Field
Bud defines Steve's unique talent
Date: February 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Management, Personality,Reality Distortion
Comments: 14
Rating:  (4.53)

Nybbles
My first job on the Macintosh project
Date: February 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Hardware Design, Prototypes, Software Design, Early Programs, Technical
Comments: 4
Rating:  (3.80)

He's Only in Field Service
The SCC gets designed into the Mac
Date: March 1981
Author: steve blank
Topics: Hardware,Hardware Design
Comments: 5
Rating:  (4.26)

More Like A Porsche
The design of the Macintosh case
Date: March 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Industrial Design,Hardware,Prototypes
Comments: 9
Rating:  (4.35)

Bicycle
Rod wants to change the name of the project
Date: April 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Management, Apple Spirit
Comments: 11
Rating:  (3.58)

A Message For Adam
We encounter Adam Osborne at the West Coast Computer Faire
Date: April 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Personality,Personality Clashes
Comments: 4
Rating:  (4.67)

The Apple II was officially introduced at the First West Coast Computer Faire in April 1977, one of the very first trade shows dedicated to the newly emerging microcomputing industry. I loved the Computer Faires because they were attended by passionate hobbyists in the days before commercial forces completely dominated.

In April 1981, a few members of the Mac team took off the afternoon and drove up to San Francisco to visit the seventh West Coast Computer Faire at Brooks Hall. The biggest splash at the show was the unveiling of the Osborne I, from a brand new company named Osborne Computer, which was touted as the world's first portable computer.

The Osborne I was the brain-child of Adam Osborne, who was a well known figure in the world of early microcomputers. Adam was a technical writer who founded a publishing company to publish crucial information about microprocessors and software that was sorely lacking at the time, which was eventually sold to McGraw-Hill. He became a controversial columnist, opining on the industry from his pulpit in InfoWorld and other publications. He had a populist vision of computing, touting a no-frills, low cost, high volume approach to the business.

In 1980, he decided to put his theories into practice, and founded the Osborne Computer Company to design, manufacture and market the Osborne 1, which was a low cost, one-piece, portable computer complete with a suite of bundled applications. He recruited Lee Felsenstein, already a microcomputing legend as the master of ceremonies of the Home Brew Computer Club, to design the hardware. Now, they were introducing the fruits of their labor at the West Coast Computer Faire, as Apple had done four years earlier.

The Osborne 1 was on display at their crowded booth near the center of Brooks Hall. It looked a lot like an oversized lunch box, with a keyboard on the back of the lid, crammed full with two floppy drives and a tiny, 5 inch monitor in its center. We were a little surprised, because it looked uncannily like some of Jef Raskin's early sketches for the Macintosh, which Steve had recently abandoned for a vertically oriented design. Portable was sort of a euphemism as the thing weighed around 25 pounds, but at least it fit under an airline seat, barely. As Macintosh elitists, we were suitably grossed out by the character-based CP/M applications, of course, which seemed especially clumsy on the tiny, scrolling screen.

We worked our way up to the front of the crowd to get a good look at the units that were on display. We started to ask one of the presenters a technical question, when we were suprised to see Adam Osborne himself standing a few feet from us, looking at our show badges, preempting the response.

"Oh, some Apple folks", he addressed us in a condescending tone, "What do you think? The Osborne 1 is going to outsell the Apple II by a factor of 10, don't you think so? What part of Apple do you work in?"

When we told him that we were on the Mac team, he started to chuckle. "The Macintosh, I heard about that. When are we going to get to see it? Well, go back and tell Steve Jobs that the Osborne 1 is going to outsell the Apple II and the Macintosh combined!"

So, after returning to Cupertino later that afternoon, we told Steve about our encounter with Adam Osborne. He smiled, with a sort of mock anger, and immediately grabbed the telephone on the spare desk in Bud's office, and called information for the number of the Osborne Computer Corporation. He dialed the number, but it was answered by a secretary.

"Hi, this is Steve Jobs. I'd like to speak with Adam Osborne."

The secretary informed Steve that Mr. Osborne was not available, and would not be back in the office until tomorrow morning. She asked Steve if he would like to leave a message.

"Yes", Steve replied. He paused for a second. "Here's my message. Tell Adam he's an asshole."

There was a long delay, as the secretary tried to figure out how to respond. Steve continued, "One more thing. I hear that Adam's curious about the Macintosh. Tell him that the Macintosh is so good that he's probably going to buy a few for his children even though it put his company out of business!"

Early Demos
Various demos showed off what the hardware could do
Date: April 1981
Author: Andy Hertzfeld
Topics: Hardware Design, Prototypes, Software Design. Early Programs
Comments: 7
Rating:  (4.15)

Page  1  2   3   4   5   6   7   8    


Login
Account Name:

Password:

Create a new account

Search

Recently Added
First day with the Macintosh team
He's Only in Field Service
Revolution in the Valley

Overall Favorites
Switcher
Black Wednesday
The Times They Are A-Changin'
Can We Keep The Skies Safe?
Busy Being Born

External Links
Stanford Library's Early Mac Site
Apple Computer History Weblog
Online Exhibit of Rare Mac Artifacts
Slashdotted!
In Search of the Valley

Creative Commons License The text of this site is licensed under a Creative Commons License.