Some of the First Apple Computer Photos Ever::
Paul Terrell opened the Byte Shop in Mountain View, California in December of 1975. It was one of the first computer stores in the world, and did a lot to help popularize a business which just barely existed at the time. And it earned an even more legendary spot in tech history in 1976, when a couple of local proto-computer geeks tried to convince Terrell to sell the rudimentary PC they'd cobbled together.
Those geeks were Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. They called their machine the Apple-1, and it was a do-it-yourself kit; any buyers would have to solder the necessary chips onto the circuit board themselves, then supply accoutrements such as a power supply, keyboard and display.
Terrell was intrigued, but told Jobs that what he really needed were fully-assembled computers. In fact, if Jobs could come back with an assembled version of the Apple-1, the Byte Shop would buy fifty of them. Jobs did, and the Byte Shop became the first Apple dealer (it eventually offered the Apple-1 in a wooden case with keyboard and power supply).
Terrell's deal helped turn Apple from a project into a company. Just as important, it steered Jobs and Woz in the direction of making gadgets which were unusually approachable. Apple kept that concept going with 1977's Apple II. It's still at it today.
I've written about Terrell before; here's an old post which is mostly him telling the Apple-1 story in greater detail. But he knocked my socks off recently when he used Facebook to share some photos of the first Apple-1 from his fifty-machine order, which he took in 1976, when there were very, very few Apple products in existence. They're Polaroids — which seems like the right sort of photos for them to be, somehow — and if you know of any earlier Apple photos which survive, I'm impressed. Here they are, with Paul Terrell's kind permission.
This is the naked-but-assembled Apple-1 with an uncased keyboard (the aesthetic kind of reminds me of the original iMac, with its see-through case):
Paul
Terrell opened the Byte Shop in Mountain View, California in December
of 1975. It was one of the first computer stores in the world, and did a
lot to help popularize a business which just barely existed at the
time. And it earned an even more legendary spot in tech history in 1976,
when a couple of local proto-computer geeks tried to convince Terrell
to sell the rudimentary PC they'd cobbled together.
Those geeks were Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak. They called their
machine the Apple-1, and it was a do-it-yourself kit; any buyers would
have to solder the necessary chips onto the circuit board themselves,
then supply accoutrements such as a power supply, keyboard and display.
Terrell was intrigued, but told Jobs that what he really needed were
fully-assembled computers. In fact, if Jobs could come back with an
assembled version of the Apple-1, the Byte Shop would buy fifty of them.
Jobs did, and the Byte Shop became the first Apple dealer (it
eventually offered the Apple-1 in a wooden case with keyboard and power
supply).
Terrell's deal helped turn Apple from a project into a company. Just
as important, it steered Jobs and Woz in the direction of making gadgets
which were unusually approachable. Apple kept that concept going with
1977's
Apple II. It's still at it today.
I've written about Terrell before; here's an
old post
which is mostly him telling the Apple-1 story in greater detail. But he
knocked my socks off recently when he used Facebook to share some
photos of the first Apple-1 from his fifty-machine order, which he took
in 1976, when there were very, very few Apple products in existence.
They're Polaroids — which seems like the right sort of photos for them
to be, somehow — and if you know of any earlier Apple photos which
survive, I'm impressed. Here they are, with Paul Terrell's kind
permission.
This is the naked-but-assembled Apple-1 with an uncased keyboard (the aesthetic kind of reminds me of the
original iMac, with its see-through case):
Read more: http://techland.time.com/2012/11/22/behold-some-of-the-first-apple-computer-photos-ever/#ixzz2DJyMund3
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