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Apple Inc.

(NASDAQ (GS):AAPL)
Company Financials
Income Statement
Balance Sheet
Cash Flow Statement

Contact Information
Apple Inc.
1 Infinite Loop
Cupertino, CA 95014
CA Tel. 408-996-1010
Fax 408-974-2113

Type: Public
On the web: http://www.apple.com
Employees: 21,600
Employee growth: 21.4%

Computers are still an important part of its mix, but these days music-related products are at the top of Apple's playlist. The company scored a runaway hit with its digital music players (iPod) and online music store (iTunes). Apple's desktop and laptop computers -- all of which feature its OS X operating system -- include its Mac mini, iMac, and MacBook for the consumer and education markets, and more powerful Mac Pro and MacBook Pro for high-end consumers and professionals involved in design and publishing. Other products include mobile phones (iPhone), servers (Xserve), wireless networking equipment (Airport), and publishing and multimedia software. Its FileMaker subsidiary provides database software.

Key numbers for fiscal year ending September, 2007:
Sales: $24,006.0M
One year growth: 24.3%
Net income: $3,496.0M
Income growth: 75.8%

Officers:
CEO and Director: Steven P. (Steve) Jobs
COO: Timothy D. (Tim) Cook
SVP and CFO: Peter Oppenheimer

Competitors:
Dell
Hewlett-Packard
Microsoft

 
 
Stock Quote: Apple
 
Stock Chart: Apple
 
 
Company History: Apple Computer, Inc.

Incorporated: 1977
NAIC: 334111 Electronic Computer Manufacturing; 334119 Other Computer Peripheral Equipment Manufacturing; 511210 Software Publishers
SIC: 3571 Electronic Computers; 3577 Computer Peripheral Equipment Nec; 7372 Prepackaged Software

Apple Computer, Inc. designs, manufactures, and markets personal computers, software, networking solutions, and peripherals, including a line of portable digital music players. Apple's product family includes the Macintosh line of desktop and notebook computers, the iPod digital music player, the Mac OS X operating system, the iTunes Music Store, the Xserve G5 server, and Xserve RAID storage products. The company's products are sold online, through third-party wholesalers, and through its own chain of stores. Apple owns approximately 125 retail stores in the United States, as well as stores in Canada, Japan, and the United Kingdom.

Origins

Apple was founded in April 1976 by Steve Wozniak, then 26 years old, and Steve Jobs, 21, both college dropouts. Their partnership began several years earlier when Wozniak, a talented, self-taught electronics engineer, began building boxes that allowed him to make long-distance phone calls for free. The pair sold several hundred such boxes.

In 1976 Wozniak was working on another box, the Apple I computer, without keyboard or power supply, for a computer hobbyist club. Jobs and Wozniak sold their most valuable possessions, a van and two calculators, raising $1,300 with which to start a company. A local retailer ordered 50 of the computers, which were built in Jobs's garage. They eventually sold 200 to computer hobbyists in the San Francisco Bay area for $666 each. Later that summer, Wozniak began work on the Apple II, designed to appeal to a greater market than computer hobbyists. Jobs hired local computer enthusiasts, many of them still in high school, to assemble circuit boards and design software. Early microcomputers had usually been housed in metal boxes. With the general consumer in mind, Jobs planned to house the Apple II in a more attractive modular beige plastic container.

Jobs wanted to create a large company and consulted with Mike Markkula, a retired electronics engineer who had managed marketing for Intel Corporation and Fairchild Semiconductor. Chairman Markkula bought one-third of the company for $250,000, helped Jobs with the business plan, and in 1977 hired Mike Scott as president. Wozniak worked for Apple full time in his engineering capacity.

Jobs recruited Regis McKenna, owner of one of the most successful advertising and public relations firms in Silicon Valley, to devise an advertising strategy for the company. McKenna designed the Apple logo and began advertising personal computers in consumer magazines. Apple's professional marketing team placed the Apple II in retail stores, and by June 1977, annual sales reached $1 million. It was the first microcomputer to use color graphics, with a television set as the screen. In addition, the Apple II expansion slot made it more versatile than competing computers.

The earliest Apple IIs read and stored information on cassette tapes, which were unreliable and slow. By 1978 Wozniak had invented the Apple Disk II, at the time the fastest and cheapest disk drive offered by any computer manufacturer. The Disk II made possible the development of software for the Apple II. The introduction of Apple II, with a user manual, at a consumer electronics show signaled that Apple was expanding beyond the hobbyist market to make its computers consumer items. By the end of 1978, Apple was one of the fastest-growing companies in the United States, with its products carried by over 100 dealers.

In 1979 Apple introduced the Apple II+ with far more memory than the Apple II and an easier startup system, and the Silentype, the company's first printer. VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet for microcomputers, was also released that year. Its popularity helped to sell many Apple IIs. By the end of the year sales were up 400 percent from 1978, at over 35,000 computers. Apple Fortran, introduced in March 1980, led to the further development of software, particularly technical and educational applications.

In December 1980, Apple went public. Its offering of 4.6 million shares at $22 each sold out within minutes. A second offering of 2.6 million shares quickly sold out in May 1981.

Meanwhile Apple was working on the Apple II's successor, which was intended to feature expanded memory and graphics capabilities and run the software already designed for the Apple II. The company, fearful that the Apple II would soon be outdated, put time pressures on the designers of the Apple III, despite the fact that sales of the Apple II more than doubled to 78,000 in 1980. The Apple III was well received when it was released in September 1980 at $3,495, and many predicted it would achieve its goal of breaking into the office market dominated by IBM. However, the Apple III was released without adequate testing, and many units proved to be defective. Production was halted and the problems were fixed, but the Apple III never sold as well as the Apple II. It was discontinued in April 1984.

The problems with the Apple III prompted Mike Scott to lay off employees in February 1981, a move with which Jobs disagreed. As a result, Mike Markkula became president and Jobs chairman. Scott was named vice-chairman shortly before leaving the firm.

Despite the problems with Apple III, the company forged ahead, tripling its 1981 research and development budget to $21 million, releasing 40 new software programs, opening European offices, and putting out its first hard disk. By January 1982, 650,000 Apple computers had been sold worldwide. In December 1982, Apple became the first personal computer company to reach $1 billion in annual sales.

The next year, Apple lost its position as chief supplier of personal computers in Europe to IBM, and tried to challenge IBM in the business market with the Lisa computer. Lisa introduced the mouse, a hand-controlled pointer, and displayed pictures on the computer screen that substituted for keyboard commands. These innovations came out of Jobs's determination to design an unintimidating computer that anyone could use.

Unfortunately, the Lisa did not sell as well as Apple had hoped. Apple was having difficulty designing the elaborate software to link together a number of Lisas and was finding it hard to break IBM's hold on the business market. Apple's earnings went down and its stock plummeted to $35, half of its sale price in 1982. Mike Markkula had viewed his presidency as a temporary position, and in April 1983, Jobs brought in John Sculley, formerly president of Pepsi-Cola, as the new president of Apple. Jobs felt the company needed Sculley's marketing expertise.

1984 Debut of the Macintosh

The production division for Lisa had been vying with Jobs's Macintosh division. The Macintosh personal computer offered Lisa's innovations at a fraction of the price. Jobs saw the Macintosh as the "people's computer," designed for people with little technical knowledge. With the failure of the Lisa, the Macintosh was seen as the future of the company. Launched with a television commercial in January 1984, the Macintosh was unveiled soon after, with a price tag of $2,495 and a new 3-inch disk drive that was faster than the 5 1/4-inch drives used in other machines, including the Apple II.

Apple sold 70,000 Macintosh computers in the first 100 days. In September 1984 a new Macintosh was released with more memory and two disk drives. Jobs was convinced that anyone who tried the Macintosh would buy it. A national advertisement offered people the chance to take a Macintosh home for 24 hours, and over 200,000 people did so. At the same time, Apple sold its two millionth Apple II. Over the next six months Apple released numerous products for the Macintosh, including a laser printer and a hard drive.

Despite these successes, Macintosh sales temporarily fell off after a promising start, and the company was troubled by internal problems. Infighting between divisions continued, and poor inventory tracking led to overproduction. Although originally a strong supporter of Sculley, Jobs eventually decided to oust the executive; Jobs, however, lost the ensuing showdown. Sculley reorganized Apple in June 1985 to end the infighting caused by the product-line divisions, and Jobs, along with several other Apple executives, left the company in September. They founded a new computer company, NeXT Incorporated, which would later emerge as a rival to Apple in the business computer market.

The Macintosh personal computer finally moved Apple into the business office market. Corporations saw its ease of use as a distinct advantage. It was far cheaper than the Lisa and had the necessary software to link office computers. In 1986 and 1987 Apple produced three new Macintosh personal computers with improved memory and power. By 1988, over one million Macintosh computers had been sold, with 70 percent of sales to corporations. Software was created that allowed the Macintosh to be connected to IBM-based systems. Apple grew rapidly; income for 1988 topped $400 million on sales of $4.07 billion, up from income of $217 million on sales of $1.9 billion in 1986. Apple had 5,500 employees in 1986 and over 14,600 by the early 1990s.

In 1988, Apple management had expected a worldwide shortage of memory chips to worsen. They bought millions when prices were high, only to have the shortage end and prices fall soon after. Apple ordered sharp price increases for the Macintosh line just before the Christmas buying season, and consumers bought the less expensive Apple line or other brands. In early 1989, Apple released significantly enhanced versions of the two upper-end Macintosh computers, the SE and the Macintosh II, primarily to compete for the office market. At the same time IBM marketed a new operating system that mimicked the Macintosh's ease of use. In May 1989 Apple announced plans for its new operating system, System 7, which would be available to users the next year and allow Macintoshes to run tasks on more than one program simultaneously.

Apple was reorganized in August 1988 into four operating divisions: Apple USA, Apple Europe, Apple Pacific, and Apple Products. Dissatisfied with the changes, many longtime Apple executives left. In July 1990, Robert Puette, former head of Hewlett-Packard's personal computer business, became head of the Apple USA division. Sculley saw the reorganization as an attempt to create fewer layers of management within Apple, thus encouraging innovation among staff. Analysts credit Sculley with expanding Apple from a consumer and education computer company to a business computer company, one of the biggest and fastest-growing corporations in the United States.

Competition in the industry of information technology involved Apple in a number of lawsuits. In December 1989 for instance, the Xerox Corporation, in a $150 million lawsuit, charged Apple with unlawfully using Xerox technology for the Macintosh software. Apple did not deny borrowing from Xerox technology but explained that the company had spent millions to refine that technology and had used other sources as well. In 1990 the court found in favor of Apple in the Xerox case. Earlier, in March 1988, Apple had brought suits against Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard, charging copyright infringement. Four years later, in the spring of 1992, Apple's case was dealt a severe blow in a surprise ruling: copyright protection cannot be based on "look and feel" (appearance) alone; rather, "specific" features of an original program must be detailed by developers for protection.

Mismanagement, Crippling an Industry Giant: 1990s

Apple entered the 1990s well aware that the conditions that made the company an industry giant in the previous decade had changed dramatically. Management recognized that for Apple to succeed in the future, corporate strategies would have to be reexamined. Apple had soared through the 1980s on the backs of its large, expensive computers, which earned the company a committed, yet relatively small following. Sculley and his team saw that competitors were relying increasingly on the user-friendly graphics that had become the Macintosh signature and recognized that Apple needed to introduce smaller, cheaper models, such as the Classic and LC, which were instant hits. At a time when the industry was seeing slow unit sales, the numbers at Apple were skyrocketing. In 1990, desktop Macs accounted for 11 percent of the PCs sold through U.S. computer dealers. In mid-1992, the figure was 19 percent.

But these modestly priced models had a considerably smaller profit margin than their larger cousins. So even if sales took off, as they did, profits were threatened. In a severe austerity move, Apple laid off nearly 10 percent of its workforce, consolidated facilities, moved production plants to areas where it was cheaper to operate, and drastically altered its corporate organizational chart. The bill for such forward-looking surgery was great, however, and in 1991 profits were off 35 percent. But analysts said that such pitfalls were expected, indeed necessary, if the company intended to position itself as a leaner, better-conditioned fighter in the years ahead.

Looking ahead is what analysts say saved Apple from foundering. In 1992, after the core of the suit that Apple had brought against Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard was dismissed, industry observers pointed out that although the loss was a disappointment for Apple, the company wisely had not banked on a victory. They credited Apple's ambitious plans for the future with quickly turning the lawsuit into yesterday's news.

In addition to remaining faithful to its central business of computer making (the notebook PowerBook series, released in 1991, garnered a 21 percent market share in less than six months), Apple intended to ride a digital wave into the next century. The company geared itself to participate in a revolution in the consumer electronics industry, in which products that were limited by a slow, restrictive analog system would be replaced by faster, digital gadgets on the cutting edge of telecommunications technology. Apple also experimented with the interweaving of sound and visuals in the operations of its computers.

For Apple, the most pressing issue of the 1990s was not related to technology, but concerned capable and consistent management. The company endured tortuous failures throughout much of the decade, as one chief executive officer after another faltered miserably. Scully was forced out of his leadership position by Apple's board of directors in 1993. His replacement, Michael Spindler, broke tradition by licensing Apple technology to outside firms, paving the way for ill-fated Apple clones that ultimately eroded Apple's profits. Spindler also oversaw the introduction of the Power Macintosh line in 1994, an episode in Apple's history that typified the perception that the company had the right products but not the right people to deliver the products to the market. Power Macintosh computers were highly sought after, but after overestimating demand for the earlier release of its PowerBook laptops, the company grossly underestimated demand for the Power Macintosh line. By 1995, Apple had $1 billion worth of unfilled orders, and investors took note of the embarrassing miscue. In a two-day period, Apple's stock value plunged 15 percent.

After Spindler's much publicized mistake of 1995, Apple's directors were ready to hand the leadership reins to someone new. Gil Amelio, credited with spearheading the recovery of National Semiconductor, was named chief executive officer in February 1996, beginning another notorious era of leadership for the beleaguered Cupertino company. Amelio cut Apple's payroll by a third and slashed operating costs, but drew a hail of criticism for his compensation package and his inability to relate to Apple's unique corporate culture. Apple's financial losses, meanwhile, mounted, reaching $816 million in 1996 and a staggering $1 billion in 1997. The company's stock, which had traded at more than $70 per share in 1991, fell to $14 per share. Its market share, 16 percent in the late 1980s, stood at less than 4 percent. Fortune magazine offered its analysis, referring to Apple in its March 3, 1997 issue as "Silicon Valley's paragon of dysfunctional management."

Amelio was ousted from the company in July 1997, but before his departure a significant deal was concluded that brought Apple's savior to Cupertino. In December 1996, Apple paid $377 million for NeXT, a small, $50-million-in-sales company founded and led by Steve Jobs. Concurrent with the acquisition, Amelio hired Jobs as his special advisor, marking the return of Apple's visionary 12 years after he had left. In September 1997, two months after Amelio's exit, Apple's board of directors named Jobs interim chief executive officer. Apple's recovery occurred during the ensuing months.

Jobs assumed his responsibilities with the same passion and understanding that had made Apple one of the greatest success stories in business history. He immediately discontinued the licensing agreement that spawned Apple clones. He eliminated 15 of the company's 19 products, withdrawing Apple's involvement in making printers, scanners, portable digital assistants, and other peripherals. From 1997 forward, Apple would focus exclusively on desktop and portable Macintoshes for professional and consumer customers. Jobs closed plants, laid off thousands of workers, and sold stock to rival Microsoft Corporation, receiving a cash infusion of $150 million in exchange. Apple's organizational hierarchy underwent sweeping reorganization as well, but the most visible indication of Jobs's return was unveiled in August 1998. Distressed by his company's lack of popular computers that retailed for less than $2,000, Jobs tapped Apple's resources and, ten months after the project began, unveiled the massively successful iMAC, a sleek and colorful computer that embodied Apple's skill in design and functionality.

Because of Jobs's restorative efforts, Apple exited the 1990s as a pared-down version of its former self, but, importantly, a profitable company once again. Annual sales, which totaled $11.5 billion in 1995, stood at $5.9 billion in 1998, from which the company recorded a profit of $309 million. In 1999, sales grew a modest 3.2 percent, but the newfound health of the company was evident in a 94 percent gain in net income, as Apple's profits swelled to $601 million. Further, Apple's stock mustered a remarkable rebound, climbing 140 percent to $99 per share in 1999. By the decade's end, "interim" was dropped from Jobs's corporate title, signaling Jobs's return on a permanent basis and fueling optimism that Apple could look forward to a decade of vibrant and consistent growth.

2001: iPod, Catalyst to Growth

Apple's turnaround was confirmed in the first years of the 21st century, as the company strode toward its 30th anniversary exuding an unprecedented degree of strength. At the heart of the company's surging growth was a digital music player branded as iPod. Introduced in late 2001, the device featured five gigabytes (GB) of storage, enabling the user to store approximately 1,000 songs on a player that was smaller than a deck of playing cards. Retailing for $399, the iPod represented another example of Apple's skill in designing an elegant and functional product, a product that became one of the most sought after consumer electronics items during the first half of the decade. Succeeding generations of iPods hit the market and scored resounding success, driving the company's financial growth. A 10 GB model was introduced in mid-2002, followed by the iPod Mini, iPod Shuffle, and iPod Nano, together representing a massive new source of revenue for the company. The fifth generation of the iPod debuted in 2005, a device available in a 30 GB or 60 GB model that was capable of storing and playing video files. By the time the video iPod arrived in stores, Apple derived roughly 35 percent of its revenue from iPods. Between 2001 and 2005, thanks primarily to the popularity of iPods, the company's sales nearly tripled, increasing from $5.3 billion to $13.9 billion. Apple controlled more than 75 percent of the $2.5 billion digital audio player market in the United States.

As the company enjoyed escalating sales midway through the decade, it also celebrated the success of a new dimension to its business. In 2001, the company opened its first retail outlet, a 6,000-square-foot store located in Tysons Corner, Virginia, that became the first unit of a chain of Apple-owned stores. By 2005, the company operated nearly 125 stores in the United States and a handful of stores in Canada, Japan, and the United Kingdom. With an expanding retail arm devoted to highlighting an impressively popular selection of products, Apple approached its 30th anniversary in a stronger position than ever before in its history. In the years ahead, the company's well-established ability to develop singular products for the digital marketplace promised to deliver impressive growth and excite the interests of consumers worldwide.

Principal Subsidiaries

Apple Computer, Inc. Limited (Ireland); Apple Computer Limited (Ireland); Apple Computer International (Ireland).

Principal Competitors

Compaq Computer Corporation; Dell Computer Corporation; International Business Machines Corporation; Microsoft Corporation; Hewlett-Packard Company.

Further Reading

Ahrens, Frank, "Apple Set to Open in Japan First Retail Store Outside United States," America's Intelligence Wire, November 27, 2003.

"Apple Crumble," Economist (US), July 12, 1997, p. 54.

Bartholomew, Doug, "What's Really Driving Apple's Recovery," Industry Week, March 15, 1999, p. 34.

Breen, Christopher, "Video iPod Arrives," Macworld, December 2005, p. 18.

Burrows, Peter, "Apple May Be Holding Back the Music Biz," Business Week, December 19, 2005, p. 40.

"Dell CEO Says iPod Helped Turn Around Apple," PC Magazine Online, November 15, 2005.

"An Even Better iPod," PC Magazine Online, May 17, 2002.

"Everybody Wants a Piece of the iPod," America's Intelligence Wire, October 27, 2003.

Fawcett, Neil, "Can Microsoft Put Apple Together Again?," Computer Weekly, August 14, 1997, p. 17.

Frieberger, Paul, and Michael Swaine, Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer, Berkeley, Calif.: Osborne-McGraw-Hill, 1984.

Hogan, Thom, "Apple: The First Ten Years," A+: The #1 Apple II Magazine, September 1987.

Kirkpatrick, David, "The Second Coming of Apple," Fortune, November 9, 1998, p. 86.

Kupfer, Andrew, "Apple's Plan to Survive and Grow," Fortune, May 4, 1992.

Merrion, Paul, "Inventor of Music Player Takes a Bite Out of Apple," Crain's Chicago Business, November 28, 2005, p. 2.

Pollack, Andrew, "Apple Shows Products for Its Macintosh Line," Time, March 4, 1992.

Quittner, Joshua, "Apple Turnover?," Time, October 2, 1995, p. 56.

Rebello, Kathy, "Apple's Daring Leap into the All-Digital Future," Business Week, May 25, 1992.

Rebello, Kathy, Michele Galen, and Evan I. Schwartz, "It Looks and Feels As If Apple Lost," Business Week, April 27, 1992.

Rose, Frank, West of Eden, New York: Penguin Books, 1989.

Schlender, Brent, "Something's Rotten in Cupertino," Fortune, March 3, 1997, p. 100.

Seitz, Patrick, "Apple Sees Healthy "iPod Economy,'" Investor's Business Daily, December 5, 2005, p. A5.

"Will Apple Push 'Intel Inside'?," Business Week Online, December 16, 2005.

Wong, May, "Apple Sets Pace in Consumer Electronics," America's Intelligence Wire, December 15, 2005.

Zachary, G. Pascal, and Stephen Kreider Yoder, "Apple Moves Its Microsoft Battle to the Marketplace," Wall Street Journal, April 16, 1992.

— Scott Lewis; Updated by Jeffrey L. Covell


 

Microcomputer design and manufacturing company, the first successful personal-computer company. It was founded in 1976 by Steven P. Jobs and Stephen G. Wozniak, whose first computer was manufactured in the Jobs family's garage. The Apple II (1977), with its plastic case and colour graphics, launched the company to success, earning Apple over $100 million by 1980, the year the company first offered stock to the public. The 1981 introduction of IBM's PC, running a Microsoft Corp. operating system, marked the beginning of long-term competition for Apple in the personal-computer market. The Macintosh, introduced in 1984, was the first personal computer to use a graphical user interface and a mouse. The "Mac" initially sold poorly, and Jobs left the company in 1985, but eventually it found its niche in the desktop publishing market. Meanwhile, Microsoft's Windows operating system eroded Apple's market share. Apple recalled Jobs in 1997. He returned the company to profitability by introducing more innovative products, such as the iMac. Apple introduced iTunes, software for playing music that has been converted to the MP3 format, and the iPod portable MP3 music player in 2001; in 2003 the company began selling downloadable copies of major record company songs in MP3 format over the Internet.

For more information on Apple Inc., visit Britannica.com.

 
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Apple Computer, Inc.

Company Bio

On April 1, 1976, Steve Jobs, a former programmer for Atari, and Steve Wozniak, a programmer for Hewlett-Packard, founded Apple Computer. They created the company in an effort to sell a computer that Wozniak had designed, known as the "Apple I." The machine was designed in Steve Jobs' bedroom and the prototype was built in his garage. The Apple I was actually a bare circuit board, without any type of housing. It was released with a retail price of 666 dollars.

In 1977 Apple was incorporated and the company released the Apple II, a technologically superior machine. The Apple II was the first computer to offer the option of a color monitor with its color interface. Through Steve Jobs' encouragement to software developers, over 16,000 applications were written for the Apple II. It became a popular personal computer and made the company a major success. Sales rose to the rate of a million dollars a year. By December 1982, Apple's annual sales rate would reach $1 billion. From 1978 to 1983 Apple's compound growth rate was more than 150% per year.

In 1981 Steve Jobs introduced the Apple III computer. Because of a design flaw, the first 14,000 units were recalled, causing sales to taper off. By 1983, Jobs figured that the company could use a professional CEO, feeling that he did not have the necessary experience to keep the position himself. He personally recruited John Sculley, then the President of Pepsi Co., as Apple's new CEO. That same year, Apple announced its release of the first personal computer that would be almost entirely mouse-based, called the "Lisa." Unfortunately, the machine's thousand-dollar retail price was not accessible for the general public and the Lisa did not sell well, despite the exorbitant development costs that Apple had invested.

Steve Jobs then became part of a smaller project team at Apple, to work on the design of a proposed $500 computer system for the home market. The system was later named the Macintosh. The emphasis in the design of the Macintosh was on simplicity, geared to appeal to the average user. The Macintosh was eventually fitted with a number of the Lisa's features. Like the Lisa, the Macintosh's operating system used a graphical user interface (GUI) and lacked function keys, encouraging users to rely on the mouse to navigate. The early Macintosh contained 128K of memory, which was twice that of the equivalent PC at the time, and a 32-bit microprocessor which outclassed the standard PC's 16-bit microprocessor.

Steve Wozniak left Apple in 1985 he went on to found a new company. The same year, Jobs also left the company, in the midst of an internal power struggle, and was replaced as Apple's Chairman of the Board of Directors by the man he had hired four years earlier, John Sculley.

In June 1993, John Sculley left the company and Michael Spindler was appointed as the new CEO of Apple Computer. That year marked the release of the "Newton" MessagePad, the first "personal digital assistant" or "PDA." The company announced numerous layoffs and executive-level changes. The Apple II was discontinued. In the next year, Apple began to license its Mac OS, with the intention of getting other computer manufacturers involved in producing "clone" or "Apple-compatible" computers, and expanding its share of the personal computer market.

After a period of product shortages and declining sales, Apple's board of director's appointed a new CEO in 1996, Gilbert F. Amelio, formerly of National Semiconductor Corporation. After Apple discontinued its release of a major OS upgrade, the company announced that it would be purchasing NeXT Software for $400 million. NeXT was run by Apple's cofounder Steve Jobs. Apple revealed that it would be releasing a new operating system that would partially be based on NeXT technology. Jobs was welcomed back on board at Apple, though only as a consultant.

In 1997, Apple's sales were dropping steadily, partially due to licensees who were manufacturing Macintosh clones. Apple's sales were also hurt because the Microsoft Corporation's Windows operating system, which closely resembled its own. Amelio laid off thirty percent of Apple's entire workforce in an attempt to make the company profitable once again. Later in 1997, Apple's board of director's dismissed Amelio as the company's CEO and gave Jobs was an "expanded role" at Apple. Jobs assembled his own board of directors, including himself and his friend and CEO of Oracle, Larry Ellison. Jobs' salary was set at one dollar a year. He proceeded to buy back the licenses that Apple had sold to clone vendors.

By August 1997 Jobs was being referred to as Apple's "interim CEO." On August 6, at the MacWorld convention in Boston, Jobs dropped a bombshell when he announced an alliance with Microsoft. Among the terms of the agreement were a cross-platform license, Microsoft's agreement to purchase $150 million in Apple stock, long-term rights to produce Microsoft Office products for the Mac, and the use of Microsoft's Internet Explorer as the Mac OS' default web browser. Microsoft agreed to pay an undisclosed sum to Apple to put an end to long-standing arguments concerning the similar graphical user interface of Microsoft Windows operating system.

Apple's Macintosh computers continue to inspire a loyal customer base and remain the machine of choice for many users, including sound engineers, graphic designers, small colleges, and large universities. ~ All Game Guide

Developed/Manufactured

Peter's Magic Adventure (Macintosh), Wiggleworks Story Pack 2 (Macintosh), Spectre VR (Macintosh), Mac OS X (Macintosh), Mac OS X v 10.2 Jaguar (Macintosh), Apple Adventure (Apple II), Vortex [iPod] (Mobile), Texas Hold'em [iPod] (Mobile), Pippin ()

 
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Wikipedia: Apple Inc.
Apple Inc.
Type Public (NASDAQAAPL, LSEACP, FWB: APC)
Founded Flag of California 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 Green_Arrow_Up_Darker.svg (TTM 1Q2006)[1]
Operating income US$2.12 billion Green_Arrow_Up_Darker.svg (TTM 1Q2006)
(12.27% operating margin)[1]
Net income US$1.73 billion Green_Arrow_Up_Darker.svg (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. (NASDAQAAPL, LSEACP, 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,[3] was known as "Apple Computer, Inc." for its first 30 years. On January 9 2007, the company dropped "Computer" from its corporate name.[4] 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.[5]

Apple also operates 183 (as of June 2007) retail stores in the United States, and more in the United Kingdom, Japan, Canada, and Italy.[6] 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.[7]

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.[8]

History

Main article: History of Apple Inc.

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.[9]

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.
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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[10] (and later incorporated January 3 1977[3] 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 IIGS.)

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.[citation needed]

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

The rebel from Apple's 1984 ad, set in a dystopian future modeled after the Orwell novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, set the tone for the introduction of the Macintosh
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The rebel from Apple's 1984 ad, set in a dystopian future modeled after the Orwell novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, set the tone for the introduction of the 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]

The Macintosh 128K, the first Macintosh computer
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The Macintosh 128K, the first Macintosh computer

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

The Macintosh Portable was Apple's first "portable" Macintosh computer, released in 1989.
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The Macintosh Portable was Apple's first "portable" Macintosh computer, released in 1989.

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[citation needed]. 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