Apple Event Monday!! By (no) coincidence next week is also the 30th Anniversary of Mac PowerBook launch at Comdex Las Vegas (last one in October and my first one!) 🚀

PowerBook *redefined* portables. It also solidified the Apple design group. What a story of innovation💡 1/ Apple Mac PowerBook Model 100
2/ To appreciate Monday and amount I believe (guessing) Mac will evolve, one should look back at the PowerBook innovation.

1990-1991 was peak vintage Apple in many ways. Mac had a high computer share 13% WW (best ever). ~14.4M PCs sold. 2.1M Macs. Windows 3.0 just a year old.
3/ Almost no PCs sold were portables (~300-400K). The whole problem with PC portables was that no one wanted them. They were under powered and EXPENSIVE ($5000 in 1990). While this prediction was awful in hindsight, at the time it was entirely conventional wisdom. Making the laptop commonplace. Real future is laptops will r
4/ American PC makers (built in US) struggled with miniaturization, costs, etc. Japan was land of making things small. Sony in particular. This was at a time when many in the US were deeply concerned/feared a Japanese dominance in electronics including computers.
5/ BUT out of that came Compaq in Texas (Halt and Catch Fire) who had built a remarkable business in PC clones. Compaq came out with an early portable, “lunchbox” form factor used by insurance agents and the like.

The LTE released in 1989 was a hit. A travel weight of just 7lbs. Compaq LTE
6/ It ran an original PC chip but was quickly updated with the 286, then 386. I traveled to Comdex with this one. It had an exotic 3lb NiMH battery good 2-3 hours.

Ballmer used to carry 3 or 4 batteries and exhaust them all on long plane flights to Europe. Yep like 20lbs of PC. The Executive Computer/Peter H. Lewis A Notebook That Can Pr
7/ Two problems. First, Windows was terrible for portables. It had no notion of power mgmt. No ability to know if the network was down or non-existent. We did all sorts of crazy stuff with AUTOEXEC to configure things. Few used Windows at all. Just 1-2-3, WordPerfect, MS-DOS. Taking Windows on the road is improving but no one needs it.
8/ Second, you might notice something is missing…I’ll wait…

There’s no pointing device. Because no one used Windows, these laptops did not include a “mouse”.

Also, no one had invented one yet.
9/ No worries. Microsoft’s small team building enabling hardware (a Paul Allen original) to the rescue (also Logitech and others). Microsoft built a track ball that literally hung off the side, gripping on to whatever plastic was there. AWFUL! Oh, there’s a kids version too 🤣🤣
10/ PC industry experimented with all sorts of ways of doing a mouse. Compaq added a screen mounted trackball to the LTE. IBM famously introduced the pointing stick (I hated that). Later Dell had both trackpad/stick. Microsoft improved it’s heinous trackball.
11/ Back at Apple portables were hurting. Apple had released Apple Portable the same time as the LTE. It weighed 15+lbs and was a ginormous beast consistent with the likes of Toshiba T1000 (!) DOS laptop (7+ lbs). Macintosh Portable
12/ Apple really needed a reset and the LTE served as much as one as failure of the Portable would. There were many issues. The biggest one was that now the company was in a hurry.

Apple was strong, but the PC ecosystem was moving VERY quickly.

The mantra was TIME TO MARKET. The Mac Portable brought into sharper focus a growing recogn
13/ That quote is from a Case Study on PowerBook that I got to teach at Harvard Business School on sabbatical in 1998 and was super popular. You can check it out here$. store.hbr.org/product/apple-… Cover
14/ One of the problems Apple saw was organizationally there was no significant industrial design team. Mostly vendors. Bob Brunner had been a contractor in design & resisted full time because of a lack of commitment. This project changed that and design was a key part. The case: Industrial Design at Apple During the period in which the Postaff, there really could be no direction- setting. 99 Subse
15/ The team embarked on a very fast schedule. Up until then Apple hardware was viewed as a goal of being perfect. Much of the project was hurry hurry pace. Super different than past projects.

The case study has a recreated project timeline. Project Timeline
16/ Trackpad was a huge interesting design challenge. Mac portable had a bolt on. Breakthrough idea was to add a palm rest, moving keyboard up risked making device bigger but design said “we can give a feel of smaller”. Plus repetitive stress injury prevention was big. And feet! Alternate trackball positioning.
17/ This and the amazing efforts at shrinking components led to a break through and iconic design.

Difficult to explain how impressive the device was— holistic—h/w & s/w together. Also “What’s On Your PowerBook” adverts. Here’s my fav w/ Henry Rollins. Some detailed 170 photos. Advertisement of Henry Rollins musician “What’s On Your Photos of the powerbook 170
18/ Reviews 💯 “Sturdy, ergonomic design, excellent weight, and a centrally located trackball make carrying and using a PowerBook a snap. Fax capabilities are closely integrated with applications software and easy to use. Remote networking software has superb security features.” Full text of BYTE review from a scanned article in 3 photos.
19/ Design really proved itself in the creation of the PowerBook. After this project the design team was staffed/centralized even as Apple swung the pendulum from functional organization to product unit organization.

Models 140/170 were all in house as would be future products.
20/ There was also a collaboration with Sony to develop the entry model 100 (3 models introduced). This cemented a long-lasting partnership.

Originally PowerBook was a placeholder for fast time to market. But it sold 400,000 units in first year, $1 billion. NY Times (nice ad!): Apple's New Vision for Notebooks 170, Apple scrimped on feat
21/ This really capped off the second peak period for Apple (and high water mark for share). One thing I observed going to MacWorld was that the Apple community drove those sales, but the community was not growing. Every Mac owner bought a PowerBook, but few new to Mac buyers.
22/ Over the next few years Apple would release innovative hardware as it transitioned to PowerPC chips. PowerBooks were always better than PCs in h/w + s/w, but struggled w/raw performance especially as OS grew.

PCs didn’t catch up in portables for 20± yrs (Win 7 Ultrabooks).
23/ But then came a transition to Intel and the MacBook Air. It didn’t matter that there were many PCs smaller/ lighter (including from SONY!) and many that fit in a yellow envelope. Apple had made significant improvements in OS s/w. And like PowerBook redefined a form factor. Steve Jobs with MacBook Air in yellow envelope
24/ BTW what was Microsoft doing at that October 1991 Comdex? We were busy convincing people that Windows NT would eventually ship and be better than OS/2 (this was still before the “separation”). In ‘91 it was still “New Technology”. My Comdex demo: Windows for Pen Computing 🙀 NT Looks real at Comdex
25/ The innovation in M1++ and MacOS is so deep and such a stepwise change in computing. Monday will be crazy. Watch carefully.

PS: Code name for PowerBook project was “TIM” b/c “Time To Market” was all over whiteboards and (apparently) someone asked “What is this TIM?” // END Quote from article saying Time To Market becomes TIM
26/ Was asked to clarify definitions of portable categories. This was a huge area where reviews/stores/press spun their collective wheels debating. I couldn't find something like this on line so here you go (I just made this up). Examples of Luggable, Portable, Laptop, Notebook, Sub-notebo
27/ Another question: external monitors. Super interesting. Around 1992 is when presenting from a PC became a thing. Whenever you presented you had to inform ahead of time "Mac or PC", different non-adaptable connectors; getting analog sync working was awful!
28/ Mentioned in comment: mouse for HP Omnibook Subnotebook (~B5), a remarkable machine. First device to use all Flash memory (on PCMCIA cards). We did a special build of Word/Excel to fit on 4MB card w/trimmed down Windows 3.x. Amazing amazing. The mouse:
No SoundCloud, but I do have a Substack. If you liked this type of strategic look at where our industry came from and big moments, I’m writing about my journey inside the PC revolution. Please check it out—right now writing about HTML disrupting Office. …rdcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/051-html-opp….

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More from @stevesi

12 Oct
One of the more fascinating things to hear about is how "overly complicated" or "over-engineered" crypto is compared to what we use today. Look I have no idea how things end up or where we're going.

BUT I do know from where we came. 1/
2/ It is 1994 and the "internet" as most know it is months old. (Yes, WWW started a few years earlier, and I was using email and CHAT a decade earlier...)

I'm showing WWW to anyone who would watch. One person who was assigned by SteveB to watch a demo stopped by my office.
3/ Their job was to put together a monthly CDROM of all the marketing and sales materials for Microsoft products and DHL it to every subsidiary around the world. They would then translate and localize, then print (everything was print) them for local use.
Read 15 tweets
11 Oct
050. The Team's Plan in the Face of Disruption in “Hardcore Software”—previously detailed an Office team facing cacophony of “Office is being disrupted” BUT we still needed a plan—the first plan as an integrated team. And yes, people would quit! 1/10 …rdcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/050-the-team…
2/ While lots of technology forces were in play, none of them were close to Win32 in being able to build rich creation products. HTML 3.2+JS was getting better for display but connectivity was not yet uniform and browsers were not clearly converging. There was a force though…
3/ That force was business and enterprise sales. Business PCs were going in everywhere and were a *nightmare* to manage with the dreaded “cost of ownership”. Problem was Word, Excel, etc. treated deployment and mgmt as lowest priority and last to get done. Ack!
Read 10 tweets
11 Oct
1/ @MichaelDell's new book is out "Play Nice But Win" which is a perfect title for one of the most successful, yet low-key and humble CEOs of any industry who is also the OG PC leader. *Everyone* in tech should read this book. Some of what I felt...smile.amazon.com/Play-Nice-But-… book cover
2/ Michael's first book (Direct from Dell) is a great story of the nuts and bolts of Dell. Definitely an important book. This book is much more "inside his head" and at times "emotional" about his journey, and reflective. Also Michael is the "last" PC era founder still CEO!
3/ From my perspective it is really several key stories woven together (literally in alternating chapters):
• Founding and Managing of Dell and Michael's upbringing
• Definitive book on the BS of corporate raiding
• Private v. Public company dynamics
• Transforming a tech Co
Read 26 tweets
4 Oct
Disruption is now business canon, even though it has legit critics and isn't general as many think. What was it like face "disruption" right when the paper/book came out in late 90s? Here's "Hardcore Software" on gaining org alignment for "Office9". 1/13 …rdcoresoftware.learningbyshipping.com/p/049-go-get-t…
2/ My favorite thing about disruption is how stories are always told after-the-fact when everything seems so clean and neat. Or conversely when everyone is quick to say and agree "ripe for disruption". Few consider the variable of time. Everything much more difficult. Book photo innovator's dilemma.
3/ In early 1997, Office had just really taken off on Windows with Windows 95. It was a huge hit and half of Microsoft's revenue. The internet was happening at the same time. And then "Innovator's Dilemma" came out. Everyone was being disrupted. (Annual report) Revenue from annual report. Platforms showing 5.97B and Appl
Read 14 tweets
25 Sep
“If you ain’t out on a iPhone 13 Pro nature walk, then where you aaaat?”

I think by now many know the new iPhone has macro and closeup capabilities. They are really cool. But just how cool? I’ll show you some first shots but the real cool is the march of innovation. 1/
2/ When portrait mode came out wrote this on how the phone is a revolution in tools and tools are what come to define the changes in the world we live in. Cinematic mode shows how much this has evolved. ♻️ “Nikon versus Canon: A Story Of Technology Change” link.medium.com/QRaWOdlAQjb
3/ Some shots with the new macro mode.
Read 17 tweets
20 Sep
iOS and iPadOS 15: MacStories Review // Worthwhile read for a lot of details about releases.

If you’ve been looking at Apple software releases for any time then you know “major”, “minor”, or “incremental” are all the wrong descriptors and upset me! 🙀 1/ macstories.net/stories/ios-an…
2/ What Apple does is “relentless execution” coupled with a “long-term and focused point of view”.

And they do that by releasing Every. Single. Year. At. The. Same. Time.

I guess after all this time, this fact is so taken for granted that we sometimes fail to appreciate it.
3/ This goes back to Apple history and failure to delivery the OS releases reliably. Of course everyone was failing to release software on time back then (even on mainframes). But Apple, much like Microsoft, teetered between betting too big and scrambling something out the door.
Read 18 tweets

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