Home >New Tattoo Designs Today > The lesson of Apple: design matters - Christian Science Monitor (blog)
The lesson of Apple: design matters - Christian Science Monitor (blog)
Posted on Saturday, September 17, 2011 by New Tattoo Designs Today
One man's relentless quest for simple, elegant design in everything from unseen circuit boards to hip retail outlets was evident in the very first Apple computers.
It was early 1984 when my wife and I unboxed our first Mac. Even in those days, the little computer had a design simplicity everyone from Cupertino, Calif., to rural China now associates with Apple: spare graphics, simple instructions, friendliness just this side of being cloying. When you booted up the beige unit, a Mac icon with a smiley face appeared. Cute, yes. But computers circa 1984 were unfriendly, buggy, mystifying machines that only a special priesthood knew how to operate.
Skip to next paragraphThe Mac cost us $2,500, which would be $5,400 in today's dollars. It had negligible memory. It couldn't even connect to the Internet because there was no civilian Internet. We were nevertheless sure that the future had arrived. The Mac was light enough to heft with one hand. All the code was hidden beneath a "desktop" with "icons" you moved with a "mouse." I've put quotes around those words because they were new concepts in 1984. They hadn't been focus-grouped. We didn't know we needed them. But they made sense immediately.
The programs were primitive. MacWrite let you format a document. MacPaint let you design a graphic. That theoretically eliminated professional typists and print jobbers. But early "desktop publishing" (another novel idea) had a homespun, made-on-a-Mac quality. You wouldn't have wanted to send out Mac-generated wedding invitations.
The early Mac also had a few simple games, a rudimentary tool for balancing your checkbook, and odd features like "FatBits" in which you could tweak images at the pixel level. FatBits was as aimlessly amusing as popping bubble wrap, but it introduced amateurs to the world of computer graphics. (Hey, I just clicked a pixel!)
Over the years, early adopters endured ribbing from friends and co-workers who couldn't believe we would settle for Apple's manifest limitations when we could have power (IBM), programming variety (Microsoft DOS), or a much cheaper price (Dell). As things turned out, of course, Apple is now the king of all media. Even die-hard PC lovers carry iPhones or listen to iPods or at the very least buy songs at the iTunes Store.
The story of Apple is the story of its founder -- his vision, discipline, and inventiveness; the near catastrophe that befell the company after he was ousted; and its spectacular triumph after his return. It is a tale that has already passed into legend, a case that will be studied in MBA programs for generations to come.
There are many threads to the Apple saga. They all lead back to Steve Jobs and his view that design is a discipline to be relentlessly pursued at every level – from circuit boards to plastic housing, supply chains to software, advertising to retail sales.
All of us have reason to be suspicious of design. We've seen enough pouty fashion models, costume jewelry, and extravagant-looking/cardboard-tasting baked goods to know that appearances can be deceiving. Mr. Jobs showed how when design permeates a product it taps into something deeper. In Leander Kahney's 2008 book "Inside Steve's Brain," onetime associate (and later rival) John Sculley describes a meeting between Jobs and one of his heroes, Polaroid inventor Edwin Land. Each man talked about how he could envision his baby (the Mac, the Polaroid camera) as a real thing before it was built.
"Both of them," said Mr. Sculley, "had this ability to – well, not invent products – but discover products. Both of them said these products have always existed, it's just that no one has ever seen them before."
There are plenty of beautifully designed products not sold at Apple Stores. What has been inspiring about Jobs is that he has hewed to a simple, functional, friendly design ethic for an entire career. That's not easy. The norm in everything from cars to websites to Swiss Army knives is to add features and services to satisfy every taste, to build Baroque cathedrals where once a simple house of worship stood. It takes a Jobs to enforce design discipline. That can produce great beauty and functionality, not to mention wealth.
Such geniuses are rare for a reason. The very large and messy enterprise called humanity can only tolerate so many artists and autocrats stamping their feet and demanding that others see the underlying vision they see. Every generation has a handful of such geniuses. We are better off for them – and probably better off that we aren't all that way.
John Yemma is the editor of The Christian Science Monitor.
--
Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHzirdeW-G5kC14kqb-BPJe2izTEg&url=http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/editors-blog/2011/0917/The-lesson-of-Apple-design-matters
~
Manage subscription | Powered by rssforward.com
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(1569)
-
▼
September
(49)
- Free tools for photos and more from your inbox
- Get creative with free photo and movie software
- From Picasso to Koons: NY exhibit shows jewelry, i...
- IES to Showcase Disruptive Design Technology at Gr...
- Fujitsu Driving Printed Circuit Board (PCB) Design...
- London Design Festival 2011: "Korean Design" at 10...
- Autodesk aims to take 3D design, engineering to th...
- Cortes' design wins Donut Art competition - Hudson...
- London Design Festival | Pawson's Perspectives - N...
- Arizona Court of Appeals hears Mesa tattoo case - ...
- The Pig with the Froggy Tattoo, Muppets Thanksgivi...
- The lesson of Apple: design matters - Christian Sc...
- Hadid to Design A Garage in Miami - New York Times
- High-Tech Meets High Fashion: Sprint and LG Mobile...
- Design 'tries too hard,' critic says - Edmonton Jo...
- 'Girl With the Dragon Tattoo' Parodied in New 'Mup...
- Tips to protect your Hotmail account
- Watch: 'The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo' meets 'Th...
- Newly Leaked Accessories Hint at Look of iPhone 5 ...
- Intelligent Design; the Little Light Bulb Maker Th...
- Design Unveiled for New Berkeley Art Museum and Pa...
- BMW Championship: PGA Tour players rip into Dubsdr...
- Architecture and Interior Design Firm, 38Spatial, ...
- Lexus vows to take some design risks - CNET
- Rocket design for giant leap gets go-ahead - Houst...
- Players: Design at Cog Hill is dreadful - Chicago ...
- BMW Championship: PGA Tour players rip into Dubsdr...
- "Monster rocket" design unveiled by NASA - CBS News
- Ian Schrager's designs on new boutique-hotel chain...
- American Design: So Hot Right Now - Core77.com (blog)
- Right at Home: Scandinavia, '70s, serenity among t...
- APNewsBreak: NASA unveils giant new rocket design ...
- Open-Silicon Awarded Patent for Low Power ASIC Des...
- APNewsBreak: NASA unveils giant new rocket design ...
- Windows 8 unveiled by Microsoft - CBC.ca
- element14-sponsored Global Study Identifies Design...
- Ikea Changes Design Of Popular Bookcase - NPR
- Planned community near Exxon campus establishes de...
- Planned community near Exxon campus establishes de...
- Michelle Obama hosts National Design Awards - Wash...
- James M. Mahoney Joins PCB Maker Mass Design as Ap...
- Illustra Media attests to the intelligent design o...
- FDA cites Medtronic drug pump's severe flaw - Minn...
- No bench design judged perfect sit for city - Pres...
- Richmond will seek relief from state design rules ...
- Altera Demonstrates Industry's First Model-Based F...
- Drawing on deep emotion to design the memorial to ...
- Chicago's Navy Pier Launches International Search ...
- Ford Evos to Debut at Frankfurt (Slideshow) - Wall...
-
▼
September
(49)