was declining. The company’s stock price, which had been above $60, fell 50% in one day, and by
early December it was below $15.
None of this deterred Jobs from continuing to push for distinctive, even distracting, new design.
When flat-screen displays became commercially viable, he decided
it was time to replace the
iMac, the translucent consumer desktop computer that looked as if it were from a
Jetsons
cartoon.
Ive came up with a model that was somewhat conventional, with the guts of the computer attached
to the back of the flat screen. Jobs didn’t like it. As he often did, both at Pixar and at Apple, he
slammed on the brakes to rethink things. There was something about the design that lacked purity,
he felt. “Why have this flat display if you’re going to glom all this stuff on its back?” he asked Ive.
“We should let each element be true to itself.”
Jobs went home early that day to mull over the problem, then called Ive to come by. They
wandered into the garden, which Jobs’s wife had planted with a profusion of sunflowers. “Every
year I do
something wild with the garden, and that time it involved masses of sunflowers, with a
sunflower house for the kids,” she recalled. “Jony and Steve were riffing on their design problem,
then Jony asked, ‘What if the screen was separated from the base like a sunflower?’ He got
excited and started sketching.” Ive liked his designs to suggest a narrative, and he realized that a
sunflower shape would convey that the flat screen was so fluid and responsive
that it could reach
for the sun.
In Ive’s new design, the Mac’s screen was attached to a movable chrome neck, so that it looked
not only like a sunflower but also like a cheeky Luxo lamp. Indeed it evoked the playful
personality of Luxo Jr. in the first short film that John Lasseter had made at Pixar. Apple took out
many patents for the design, most crediting Ive, but on one of them, for “a
computer system
having a movable assembly attached to a flat panel display,” Jobs listed himself as the primary
inventor.
In hindsight, some of Apple’s Macintosh designs may seem a bit too cute. But other computer
makers were at the other extreme. It was an industry that you’d expect to be innovative, but
instead it was dominated by cheaply designed generic boxes. After a few ill-conceived stabs at
painting on blue colors and trying new shapes, companies such as Dell, Compaq, and HP
commoditized computers by outsourcing manufacturing and competing on price. With its spunky
designs and its pathbreaking applications
like iTunes and iMovie, Apple was about the only place
innovating.
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