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Family of personal computers made by Apple

This article is about the family of personal computers. For the series of all-in-one computers, see iMac. For other uses, see Mac.

"Macintosh" redirects here. For the original Macintosh, see Macintosh 128K. For other uses, see Macintosh (disambiguation).

Mac is a brand of personal computers designed and marketed by Apple since 1984. The name is short for Macintosh (its official name until 1999), a reference to the McIntosh apple. The current product lineup includes the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro laptops, and the iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Studio, and Mac Pro desktops. Macs are currently sold with Apple's UNIX-based macOS operating system, which is not licensed to other manufacturers and exclusively bundled with Mac computers. This operating system replaced Apple's original Macintosh operating system, which has variously been named System, Mac OS, and Classic Mac OS.

 

Quick Facts Also known as, Developer ...

Jef Raskin conceived the Macintosh project in 1979, which was usurped and redefined by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs in 1981. The original Macintosh was launched in January 1984, after Apple's "1984" advertisement during Super Bowl XVIII. A series of incrementally improved models followed, sharing the same integrated case design. In 1987, the Macintosh II brought color graphics, but priced as a professional workstation and not a personal computer. Beginning in 1994 with the Power Macintosh, the Mac transitioned from Motorola 68000 series processors to PowerPC. Macintosh clones by other manufacturers were also briefly sold afterwards. The line was refreshed in 1998 with the launch of the iMac G3, reinvigorating the line's competitiveness against commodity IBM PC compatibles. Macs transitioned to Intel x86 processors by 2006 along with new sub-product lines MacBook and Mac Pro. Since 2020, Macs have transitioned to Apple silicon chips based on ARM64.

 

History

See also: History of Apple Inc.

1979–1996: "Macintosh" era

With a red background, Steve Jobs rests his forearms on a Macintosh computer.

Steve Jobs debuted the Macintosh in January 1984, photographed by Bernard Gotfryd. The Mac displays the shin-hanga (Japanese: 髪梳ける女; lit. 'hair combing woman') (original) by Goyō Hashiguchi.

In the late 1970s, the Apple II became one of the most popular computers, especially in education. After IBM introduced the IBM PC in 1981, its sales surpassed the Apple II. In response, Apple introduced the Lisa in 1983.[1] The Lisa's graphical user interface was inspired by strategically licensed demonstrations of the Xerox Star. Lisa surpassed the Star with intuitive direct manipulation, like the ability to drag and drop files, double-click to launch applications, and move or resize windows by clicking and dragging instead of going through a menu.[2][3] However, hampered by its high price of $9,995 (equivalent to $35,000 in 2024) and lack of available software, the Lisa was commercially unsuccessful.[1]

 

Parallel to the Lisa's development, a skunkworks team at Apple was working on the Macintosh project. Conceived in 1979 by Jef Raskin, Macintosh was envisioned as an affordable, easy-to-use computer for the masses. Raskin named the computer after his favorite type of apple, the McIntosh. The initial team consisted of Raskin, hardware engineer Burrell Smith, and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. In 1981, Steve Jobs was removed from the Lisa team and joined Macintosh, and was able to gradually take control of the project due to Wozniak's temporary absence after an airplane crash. Under Jobs, the Mac grew to resemble the Lisa, with a mouse and a more intuitive graphical interface, at a quarter of the Lisa's price.[4]

 

Upon its January 1984 launch, the first Macintosh was described as "revolutionary" by The New York Times.[5] Sales initially met projections, but dropped due to the machine's low performance, single floppy disk drive requiring frequent disk swapping, and initial lack of applications. Author Douglas Adams said of it, "…what I (and I think everybody else who bought the machine in the early days) fell in love with was not the machine itself, which was ridiculously slow and underpowered, but a romantic idea of the machine. And that romantic idea had to sustain me through the realities of actually working on the 128K Mac."[6] Most of the original Macintosh team left Apple, and some followed Jobs to found NeXT after he was forced out by CEO John Sculley.[7]

 

The first Macintosh nevertheless generated enthusiasm among buyers and some developers, who rushed to develop entirely new programs for the platform, including PageMaker, MORE, and Excel.[8] Apple soon released the Macintosh 512K with improved performance and an external floppy drive.[9] The Macintosh is credited with popularizing the graphical user interface,[10] Jobs's fascination with typography gave it an unprecedented variety of fonts and type styles like italics, bold, shadow, and outline.[11] It is the first WYSIWYG computer, and due in large part to PageMaker and Apple's LaserWriter printer, it ignited the desktop publishing market, turning the Macintosh from an early let-down into a notable success.[12] Levy called desktop publishing the Mac's "Trojan horse" in the enterprise market, as colleagues and executives tried these Macs and were seduced into requesting one for themselves. PageMaker creator Paul Brainerd said: "You would see the pattern. A large corporation would buy PageMaker and a couple of Macs to do the company newsletter. The next year you'd come back and there would be thirty Macintoshes. The year after that, three hundred".[13] Ease of use for computer novices was another incentive.[14] Peat Marwick was the first, largest, and for some time the only large corporate customer;[15] although the company said that its auditors used Macs because of their portability and not the user interface,[16] after it merged with the IBM PC-using KMG to form KPMG in 1987, the combined company retained Macs after studying both platforms.[14]

 

In late 1985, Bill Atkinson, one of the few remaining employees to have been on the original Macintosh team, proposed that Apple create a Dynabook, Alan Kay's concept for a tablet computer that stores and organizes knowledge. Sculley rebuffed him, so he adapted the idea into a Mac program, HyperCard, whose cards store any information—text, image, audio, video—with the memex-like ability to semantically link cards together. HyperCard was released in 1987 and bundled with every Macintosh.[17]

  

Macintosh Portable

In the late 1980s, Jean-Louis Gassée, a Sculley protégé who had succeeded Jobs as head of the Macintosh division, made the Mac more expandable and powerful to appeal to tech enthusiasts and enterprise customers.[18] This strategy led to the successful 1987 release of the Macintosh II, which appealed to power users and gave the lineup momentum. However, Gassée's "no-compromise" approach foiled Apple's first laptop, the Macintosh Portable, which has many uncommon power user features, but is almost as heavy as the original Macintosh at twice its price. Soon after its launch, Gassée was fired.[19]

 

Since the Mac's debut, Sculley had opposed lowering the company's profit margins, and Macintoshes were priced far above entry-level MS-DOS compatible computers. Steven Levy said that though Macintoshes were superior, the cheapest Mac cost almost twice as much as the cheapest IBM PC compatible.[20][page needed] Sculley also resisted licensing the Mac OS to competing hardware vendors, who could have undercut Apple on pricing and jeopardized its hardware sales, as IBM PC compatibles had done to IBM. These early strategic steps caused the Macintosh to lose its chance at becoming the dominant personal computer platform.[21][22] Though senior management demanded high-margin products, a few employees disobeyed and set out to create a computer that would live up to the original Macintosh's slogan, "[a] computer for the rest of us", which the market clamored for. In a pattern typical of Apple's early era, of skunkworks projects like Macintosh and Macintosh II lacking adoption by upper management who were late to realize the projects' merit, this once-renegade project was actually endorsed by senior management following market pressures. In 1990 came the Macintosh LC and the more affordable Macintosh Classic, the first model under $1,000 (equivalent to $2,400 in 2024). Between 1984 and 1989, Apple had sold one million Macs, and another 10 million over the following five years.[23]

  

PowerBook 100

In 1991, the Macintosh Portable was replaced with the smaller and lighter PowerBook 100, the first laptop with a palm rest and trackball in front of the keyboard. The PowerBook brought $1 billion of revenue within one year, and became a status symbol.[24] By then, the Macintosh represented 10% to 15% of the personal computer market.[25] Fearing a decline in market share, Sculley co-founded the AIM alliance with IBM and Motorola to create a new standardized computing platform, which led to the creation of the PowerPC processor architecture, and the Taligent operating system.[26] In 1992, Apple introduced the Macintosh Performa line, which "grew like ivy" into a disorienting number of barely differentiated models in an attempt to gain market share. This backfired by confusing customers, but the same strategy soon afflicted the PowerBook line.[27] Michael Spindler continued this approach when he succeeded Sculley as CEO in 1993.[28] He oversaw the Mac's transition from Motorola 68000 series to PowerPC and the release of Apple's first PowerPC machine, the well-received Power Macintosh.[29]

 

Many new Macintoshes suffered from inventory and quality control problems. The 1995 PowerBook 5300 was plagued with quality problems, with several recalls as some units even caught fire[citation needed]. Pessimistic about Apple's future, Spindler repeatedly attempted to sell Apple to other companies, including IBM, Kodak, AT&T, Sun, and Philips. In a last-ditch attempt to fend off Windows, Apple yielded and started a Macintosh clone program, which allowed other manufacturers to make System 7 computers.[29] However, this only cannibalized the sales of Apple's higher-margin machines.[30] Meanwhile, Windows 95 was an instant hit with customers. Apple was struggling financially as its attempts to produce a System 7 successor had all failed with Taligent, Star Trek, and Copland, and its hardware was stagnant. The Mac was no longer competitive, and its sales entered a tailspin.[31] Corporations abandoned Macintosh in droves, replacing it with cheaper and more technically sophisticated Windows NT machines for which far more applications and peripherals existed. Even some Apple loyalists saw no future for the Macintosh.[32] Once the world's second largest computer vendor after IBM, Apple's market share declined precipitously from 9.4% in 1993 to 3.1% in 1997.[33][34] Bill Gates was ready to abandon Microsoft Office for Mac, which would have slashed any remaining business appeal the Mac had. Gil Amelio, Spindler's successor, failed to negotiate a deal with Gates.[35]

 

In 1996, Spindler was succeeded by Amelio, who searched for an established operating system to acquire or license for the foundation of a new Macintosh operating system. He considered BeOS, Solaris, Windows NT, and NeXT's NeXTSTEP, eventually choosing the last. Announced on December 20, 1996, Apple acquired NeXT on February 7, 1997, returning its co-founder, Steve Jobs.[31][36]

 

1997–2011: Steve Jobs era

 

Mac worldwide quarterly sales from 2006 to 2023

NeXT had developed the mature NeXTSTEP operating system with strong multimedia and Internet capabilities.[37] NeXTSTEP was also popular among programmers, financial firms, and academia for its object-oriented programming tools for rapid application development.[38][39] In an eagerly anticipated speech at the January 1997 Macworld trade show, Steve Jobs previewed Rhapsody, a merger of NeXTSTEP and Mac OS as the foundation of Apple's new operating system strategy.[40] At the time, Jobs only served as advisor, and Amelio was released in July 1997. Jobs was formally appointed interim CEO in September, and permanent CEO in January 2000.[41] To continue turning the company around, Jobs streamlined Apple's operations and began layoffs.[42] He negotiated a deal with Bill Gates in which Microsoft committed to releasing new versions of Office for Mac for five years, investing $150 million in Apple, and settling an ongoing lawsuit in which Apple alleged that Windows had copied the Mac's interface. In exchange, Apple made Internet Explorer the default Mac browser. The deal was closed hours before Jobs announced it at the August 1997 Macworld.[43]

 

Jobs returned focus to Apple. The Mac lineup had been incomprehensible, with dozens of hard-to-distinguish models. He streamlined it into four quadrants, a laptop and a desktop each for consumers and professionals. Apple also discontinued several Mac accessories, including the StyleWriter printer and the Newton PDA.[44] These changes were meant to refocus Apple's engineering, marketing, and manufacturing efforts so that more care could be dedicated to each product.[45] Jobs also stopped licensing Mac OS to clone manufacturers, which had cost Apple ten times more in lost sales than it received in licensing fees.[46] Jobs made a deal with the largest computer reseller, CompUSA, to carry a store-within-a-store that would better showcase Macs and their software and peripherals. According to Apple, the Mac's share of computer sales in those stores went from 3% to 14%. In November, the online Apple Store launched with built-to-order Mac configurations without a middleman.[41] When Tim Cook was hired as chief operations officer in March 1998, he closed Apple's inefficient factories and outsourced Mac production to Taiwan. Within months, he rolled out a new ERP system and implemented just-in-time manufacturing principles. This practically eliminated Apple's costly unsold inventory, and within one year, Apple had the industry's most efficient inventory turnover.[47]

  

The iMac G3's marketing heavily emphasizes its design and Internet capabilities for consumers.

 

The Power Mac G4 Cube advanced Apple's industrial design culture and manufacturing processes.

Jobs's top priority was "to ship a great new product".[48] The first is the iMac G3, an all-in-one computer that was meant to make the Internet intuitive and easy to access. While PCs came in functional beige boxes, Jony Ive gave the iMac a radical and futuristic design, meant to make the product less intimidating. Its oblong case is made of translucent plastic in Bondi blue, later revised with many colors. Ive added a handle on the back to make the computer more approachable. Jobs declared the iMac would be "legacy-free", succeeding ADB and SCSI with an infrared port and cutting-edge USB ports. Though USB had industry backing, it was still absent from most PCs and USB 1.1 was only standardized one month after the iMac's release.[49] He also controversially removed the floppy disk drive and replaced it with a CD drive. The iMac was unveiled in May 1998, and released in August. It was an immediate commercial success and became the fastest-selling computer in Apple's history, with 800,000 units sold before the year ended. Vindicating Jobs on the Internet's appeal to consumers, 32% of iMac buyers had never used a computer before, and 12% were switching from PCs.[50] The iMac reestablished the Mac's reputation as a trendsetter: for the next few years, translucent plastic became the dominant design trend in numerous consumer products.[51]

 

Apple knew it had lost its chance to compete in the Windows-dominated enterprise market, so it prioritized design and ease of use to make the Mac more appealing to average consumers, and even teens[citation needed]. The "Apple New Product Process" was launched as a more collaborative product development process for the Mac, with concurrent engineering principles. From then, product development was no longer driven primarily by engineering and with design as an afterthought. Instead, Ive and Jobs first defined a new product's "soul", before it was jointly developed by the marketing, engineering, and operations teams.[52] The engineering team was led by the product design group, and Ive's design studio was the dominant voice throughout the development process.[53]

 

The next two Mac products in 1999, the Power Mac G3 (nicknamed "Blue and White") and the iBook, introduced industrial designs influenced by the iMac, incorporating colorful translucent plastic and carrying handles. The iBook introduced several innovations: a strengthened hinge instead of a mechanical latch to keep it closed, ports on the sides rather than on the back, and the first laptop with built-in Wi-Fi.[54] It became the best selling laptop in the U.S. during the fourth quarter of 1999.[55] The professional-oriented Titanium PowerBook G4 was released in 2001, becoming the lightest and thinnest laptop in its class, and the first laptop with a wide-screen display; it also debuted a magnetic latch that secures the lid elegantly.[56]

  

The Dual USB "Ice" iBook represents a design shift away from color, toward white polycarbonate.

The design language of consumer Macs shifted again from colored plastics to white polycarbonate with the introduction of the 2001 Dual USB "Ice" iBook. To increase the iBook's durability, it eliminated doors and handles, and gained a more minimalistic exterior. Ive attempted to go beyond the quadrant with Power Mac G4 Cube, an innovation beyond the computer tower in a professional desktop far smaller than the Power Mac. The Cube failed in the market and was withdrawn from sale after one year. However, Ive considered it beneficial, because it helped Apple gain experience in complex machining and miniaturization.[57]

 

The development of a successor to the old Mac OS was well underway. Rhapsody had been previewed at WWDC 1997, featuring a Mach kernel and BSD foundations, a virtualization layer for old Mac OS apps (codenamed Blue Box), and an implementation of NeXTSTEP APIs called OpenStep (codenamed Yellow Box). Apple open-sourced the core of Rhapsody as the Darwin operating system. After several developer previews, Apple also introduced the Carbon API, which provided a way for developers to more easily make their apps native to Mac OS X without rewriting them in Yellow Box. Mac OS X was publicly unveiled in January 2000, introducing the modern Aqua graphical user interface, and a far more stable Unix foundation, with memory protection and preemptive multitasking. Blue Box became the Classic environment, and Yellow Box was renamed Cocoa. Following a public beta, the first version of Mac OS X, version 10.0 Cheetah, was released in March 2001.[58]

  

The "Sunflower" iMac G4 is an industrial design innovation.

In 1999, Apple launched its new "digital lifestyle" strategy of which the Mac became a "digital hub" and centerpiece with several new applications. In October 1999, the iMac DV gained FireWire ports, allowing users to connect camcorders and easily create movies with iMovie; the iMac gained a CD burner and iTunes, allowing users to rip CDs, make playlists, and burn them to blank discs. Other applications include iPhoto for organizing and editing photos, and GarageBand for creating and mixing music and other audio. The digital lifestyle strategy entered other markets, with the iTunes Store, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and the 2007 renaming from Apple Computer Inc. to Apple Inc. By January 2007, the iPod was half of Apple's revenues.[59]

 

New Macs include the white "Sunflower" iMac G4. Ive designed a display to swivel with one finger, so that it "appear[ed] to defy gravity".[60] In 2003, Apple released the aluminum 12-inch and 17-inch PowerBook G4, proclaiming the "Year of the Notebook". With the Microsoft deal expiring, Apple also replaced Internet Explorer with its new browser, Safari.[61] The first Mac Mini was intended to be assembled in the U.S., but domestic manufacturers were slow and had insufficient quality processes, leading Apple to Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn.[62] The affordably priced Mac Mini desktop was introduced at Macworld 2005, alongside the introduction of the iWork office suite.[63]

 

Serlet and Tevanian were both initiating the secret project asked by Steve Jobs to propose to Sony executives, in 2001, to sell Mac OS X on Vaio laptops.[64] They showed them a demonstration at a golf party in Hawaii, with the most expensive Vaio laptop they could have acquired.[65] But due to bad timing, Sony refused, arguing their Vaio sales just started to grow after years of difficulties.[66]

 

Intel transition and "back to the Mac"

With PowerPC chips falling behind in performance, price, and efficiency, Steve Jobs announced in 2005 the Mac transition to Intel processors, because the operating system had been developed for both architectures since the beginning.[67][68] PowerPC apps run using transparent Rosetta emulation,[69] and Windows boots natively using Boot Camp.[70] This transition helped contribute to a few years of growth in Mac sales.[71]

  

Steve Jobs unveiled the first MacBook Air at Macworld 2008.

After the iPhone's 2007 release, Apple began a multi-year effort to bring many iPhone innovations "back to the Mac", including multi-touch gesture support, instant wake from sleep, and fast flash storage.[72][73] At Macworld 2008, Jobs introduced the first MacBook Air by taking it out of a manila envelope, touting it as the "world's thinnest notebook".[74] The MacBook Air favors wireless technologies over physical ports, and lacks FireWire, an optical drive, or a replaceable battery. The Remote Disc feature accesses discs in other networked computers.[75] A decade after its launch, journalist Tom Warren wrote that the MacBook Air had "immediately changed the future of laptops", starting the ultrabook trend.[76] OS X Lion added new software features first introduced with the iPad, such as FaceTime, full-screen apps, document autosaving and versioning, and a bundled Mac App Store to replace software install discs with online downloads. It gained support for Retina displays, which had been introduced earlier with the iPhone 4.[77] iPhone-like multi-touch technology was progressively added to all MacBook trackpads, and to desktop Macs through the Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad.[78][79] The 2010 MacBook Air added an iPad-inspired standby mode, "instant-on" wake from sleep, and flash memory storage.[80][81]

 

After criticism by Greenpeace, Apple improved the ecological performance of its products.[82] The 2008 MacBook Air is free of toxic chemicals like mercury, bromide, and PVC, and with smaller packaging.[74] The enclosures of the iMac and unibody MacBook Pro were redesigned with the more recyclable aluminum and glass.[83][84]

 

On February 24, 2011, the MacBook Pro became the first computer to support Intel's new Thunderbolt connector, with two-way transfer speeds of 10 Gbit/s, and backward compatibility with Mini DisplayPort.[85]

 

2012–present: Tim Cook era

 

The 2013 Mac Pro was controversial among professional users. One of the reasons was the lack of internal expandibility due to the absence of expansion slots or the like, which was a side-effect of the exotic and compact design (height c. 25 cm).

Due to deteriorating health, Steve Jobs resigned as CEO on August 24, 2011, after which he died that year on October 5. Tim Cook was named as his successor.[86] Cook's first keynote address launched iCloud, moving the digital hub from the Mac to the cloud.[87][88] In 2012, the MacBook Pro was refreshed with a Retina display, and the iMac was slimmed and lost its SuperDrive.[89][90]

 

During Cook's first few years as CEO, Apple fought media criticisms that it could no longer innovate without Jobs.[91] In 2013, Apple introduced a new cylindrical Mac Pro, with marketing chief Phil Schiller exclaiming "Can't innovate anymore, my ass!"[citation needed]. The new model had a miniaturized design with a glossy dark gray cylindrical body and internal components organized around a central cooling system. Tech reviewers praised the 2013 Mac Pro for its power and futuristic design;[92][93] however, it was poorly received by professional users, who criticized its lack of upgradability and the removal of expansion slots.[94][95]

 

The iMac was refreshed with a 5K Retina display in 2014, making it the highest-resolution all-in-one desktop computer.[96] The MacBook was reintroduced in 2015, with a completely redesigned aluminum unibody chassis, a 12-inch Retina display, a fanless low-power Intel Core M processor, a much smaller logic board, a new Butterfly keyboard, a single USB-C port, and a solid-state Force Touch trackpad with pressure sensitivity. It was praised for its portability, but criticized for its lack of performance, the need to use adapters to use most USB peripherals, and a high starting price of $1,299 (equivalent to $1,700 in 2024).[97] In 2015, Apple started a service program to address a widespread GPU defect in the 15-inch 2011 MacBook Pro, which could cause graphical artifacts or prevent the machine from functioning entirely.[98]

 

Neglect of professional users

 

The 13 inches (330 mm) and 15 inches (380 mm) MacBook Pros (2016–19) were criticized for its keyboard's unreliability, and the USB-C-only port configuration.

The Touch Bar MacBook Pro was released in October 2016. It was the thinnest MacBook Pro ever made, replaced all ports with four Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) ports, gained a thinner "Butterfly" keyboard, and replaced function keys with the Touch Bar. The Touch Bar was criticized for making it harder to use the function keys by feel, as it offered no tactile feedback. Many users were also frustrated by the need to buy dongles, particularly professional users who relied on traditional USB-A devices, SD cards, and HDMI for video output.[99][100] A few months after its release, users reported a problem with stuck keys and letters being skipped or repeated. iFixit attributed this to the ingress of dust or food crumbs under the keys, jamming them. Since the Butterfly keyboard was riveted into the laptop's case, it could only be serviced at an Apple Store or authorized service center.[101][102][103] Apple settled a $50M class-action lawsuit over these keyboards in 2022.[104][105] These same models were afflicted by "flexgate": when users closed and opened the machine, they would risk progressively damaging the cable responsible for the display backlight, which was too short. The $6 cable was soldered to the screen, requiring a $700 repair.[106][107]

 

Senior Vice President of Industrial Design Jony Ive continued to guide product designs towards simplicity and minimalism.[108] Critics argued that he had begun to prioritize form over function, and was excessively focused on product thinness. His role in the decisions to switch to fragile Butterfly keyboards, to make the Mac Pro non-expandable, and to remove USB-A, HDMI and the SD card slot from the MacBook Pro were criticized.[109][110][111]

 

The long-standing keyboard issue on MacBook Pros, Apple's abandonment of the Aperture professional photography app, and the lack of Mac Pro upgrades led to declining sales and a widespread belief that Apple was no longer committed to professional users.[112][113][114][115] After several years without any significant updates to the Mac Pro, Apple executives admitted in 2017 that the 2013 Mac Pro had not met expectations, and said that the company had designed themselves into a "thermal corner", preventing them from releasing a planned dual-GPU successor.[116] Apple also unveiled their future product roadmap for professional products, including plans for an iMac Pro as a stopgap and an expandable Mac Pro to be released later.[117][118] The iMac Pro was revealed at WWDC 2017, featuring updated Intel Xeon W processors and Radeon Pro Vega graphics.[119]

 

In 2018, Apple released a redesigned MacBook Air with a Retina display, Butterfly keyboard, Force Touch trackpad, and Thunderbolt 3 USB-C ports.[120][121] The Butterfly keyboard went through three revisions, incorporating silicone gaskets in the key mechanism to prevent keys from being jammed by dust or other particles. However, many users continued to experience reliability issues with these keyboards,[122] leading Apple to launch a program to repair affected keyboards free of charge.[123] Higher-end models of the 15-inch 2018 MacBook Pro faced another issue where the Core i9 processor reached unusually high temperatures, resulting in reduced CPU performance from thermal throttling. Apple issued a patch to address this issue via a macOS supplemental update, blaming a "missing digital key" in the thermal management firmware.[124]

 

The 2019 16-inch MacBook Pro and 2020 MacBook Air replaced the unreliable Butterfly keyboard with a redesigned scissor-switch Magic Keyboard. On the MacBook Pros, the Touch Bar and Touch ID were made standard, and the Esc key was detached from the Touch Bar and returned to being a physical key.[125] At WWDC 2019, Apple unveiled a new Mac Pro with a larger case design that allows for hardware expandability, and introduced a new expansion module system (MPX) for modules such as the Afterburner card for faster video encoding.[126][127] Almost every part of the new Mac Pro is user-replaceable, with iFixit praising its high user-repairability.[128] It received positive reviews, with reviewers praising its power, modularity, quiet cooling, and Apple's increased focus on professional workflows.[129][130]

 

Apple silicon transition

 

The 2021 iMac was praised for its colorful and slim design.

 

The 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros (2021-present) received widespread acclaim for its significantly improved port selection (pictured) and thermals.

In April 2018, Bloomberg reported Apple's plan to replace Intel chips with ARM processors similar to those in its phones, causing Intel's shares to drop by 9.2%.[131] The Verge commented on the rumors, that such a decision made sense, as Intel was failing to make significant improvements to its processors, and could not compete with ARM chips on battery life.[132][133]

 

At WWDC 2020, Tim Cook announced that the Mac would be transitioning to Apple silicon chips, built upon an ARM architecture, over a two-year timeline.[134] The Rosetta 2 translation layer was also introduced, enabling Apple silicon Macs to run Intel apps.[135] On November 10, 2020, Apple announced their first system-on-a-chip designed for the Mac, the Apple M1, and a series of Macs that would ship with the M1: the MacBook Air, Mac Mini, and the 13-inch MacBook Pro.[136] These new Macs received highly positive reviews, with reviewers highlighting significant improvements in battery life, performance, and heat management compared to previous generations.[137][138][139]

 

The iMac Pro was discontinued on March 6, 2021.[140] On April 20, 2021, a new 24-inch iMac was revealed, featuring the M1 chip, seven new colors, thinner white bezels, a higher-resolution 1080p webcam, and an enclosure made entirely from recycled aluminum.[141][142]

 

On October 18, 2021, Apple announced new 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros, featuring the more powerful M1 Pro and M1 Max chips, a bezel-less mini-LED 120 Hz ProMotion display, and the return of MagSafe and HDMI ports, and the SD card slot.[143][144][145]

 

On March 8, 2022, the Mac Studio was unveiled, also featuring the M1 Max chip and the new M1 Ultra chip in a similar form factor to the Mac Mini. It drew highly positive reviews for its flexibility and wide range of available ports.[146] Its performance was deemed "impressive", beating the highest-end Mac Pro with a 28-core Intel Xeon chip, while being significantly more power efficient and compact.[147] It was introduced alongside the Studio Display, meant to replace the 27-inch iMac, which was discontinued on the same day.[148]

 

Post-Apple silicon transition

At WWDC 2022, Apple announced an updated MacBook Air based on a new M2 chip. It incorporates several changes from the 14-inch MacBook Pro, such as a flat, slab-shaped design, full-sized function keys, MagSafe charging, and a Liquid Retina display, with rounded corners and a display cutout incorporating a 1080p webcam.[149]

 

The Mac Studio with M2 Max and M2 Ultra chips and the Mac Pro with M2 Ultra chip was unveiled at WWDC 2023, and the Intel-based Mac Pro was discontinued on the same day, completing the Mac transition to Apple silicon chips.[150] The Mac Studio was received positively as a modest upgrade over the previous generation, albeit similarly priced PCs could be equipped with faster GPUs.[151] However, the Apple silicon-based Mac Pro was criticized for several regressions, including memory capacity and a complete lack of CPU or GPU expansion options.[150][152] A 15-inch MacBook Air was also introduced, and is the largest display included on a consumer-level Apple laptop.[153]

 

The MacBook Pro was updated on October 30, 2023, with updated M3 Pro and M3 Max chips using a 3 nm process node, as well as the standard M3 chip in a refreshed iMac and a new base model MacBook Pro.[154] Reviewers lamented the base memory configuration of 8 GB on the standard M3 MacBook Pro.[155] In March 2024, the MacBook Air was also updated to include the M3 chip.[156] In October 2024, several Macs were announced with the M4 series of chips, including the iMac, a redesigned Mac Mini, and the MacBook Pro; all of which included 16 GB of memory as standard. The MacBook Air was also upgraded with 16 GB for the same price.[157]

 

Current Mac models

See also: List of Mac models

Overview of current Mac lineup

MacBook Air, entry-level lightweight laptop

MacBook Air, entry-level lightweight laptop

MacBook Pro, high-performance workstation laptop

MacBook Pro, high-performance workstation laptop

iMac, all-in-one desktop

iMac, all-in-one desktop

Mac Mini, entry-level desktop

Mac Mini, entry-level desktop

Mac Studio, compact workstation desktop

Mac Studio, compact workstation desktop

Mac Pro, expandable workstation tower

Mac Pro, expandable workstation tower

More information Release date, Model ...

Marketing

 

The "1984" advertisement debuted during Super Bowl XVIII.

The original Macintosh was marketed at Super Bowl XVIII with the highly acclaimed "1984" ad, directed by Ridley Scott. The ad alluded to George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, and symbolized Apple's desire to "rescue" humanity from the conformity of computer industry giant IBM.[160][161][162] The ad is now considered a "watershed event" and a "masterpiece."[163][164] Before the Macintosh, high-tech marketing catered to industry insiders rather than consumers, so journalists covered technology like the "steel or automobiles" industries, with articles written for a highly technical audience.[165][166] The Macintosh launch event pioneered event marketing techniques that have since become "widely emulated" in Silicon Valley, by creating a mystique about the product and giving an inside look into its creation.[167] Apple took a new "multiple exclusives" approach regarding the press, giving "over one hundred interviews to journalists that lasted over six hours apiece", and introduced a new "Test Drive a Macintosh" campaign.[168][169]

 

Apple's brand, which established a "heartfelt connection with consumers", is cited as one of the keys to the Mac's success.[170] After Steve Jobs's return to the company, he launched the Think different ad campaign, positioning the Mac as the best computer for "creative people who believe that one person can change the world".[171] The campaign featured black-and-white photographs of luminaries like Albert Einstein, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr., with Jobs saying: "if they ever used a computer, it would have been a Mac".[172][173] The ad campaign was critically acclaimed and won several awards, including a Primetime Emmy.[174] In the 2000s, Apple continued to use successful marketing campaigns to promote the Mac line, including the Switch and Get a Mac campaigns.[175][176]

 

Apple's focus on design and build quality has helped establish the Mac as a high-end, premium brand. The company's emphasis on creating iconic and visually appealing designs for its computers has given them a "human face" and made them stand out in a crowded market.[177] Apple has long made product placements in high-profile movies and television shows to showcase Mac computers, like Mission: Impossible, Legally Blonde, and Sex and the City.[178] Apple is known for not allowing producers to show villains using Apple products.[179] Its own shows produced for the Apple TV+ streaming service feature prominent use of MacBooks.[180]

 

The Mac is known for its highly loyal customer base. In 2022, the American Customer Satisfaction Index gave the Mac the highest customer satisfaction score of any personal computer, at 82 out of 100.[181] In that year, Apple was the fourth largest vendor of personal computers, with a market share of 8.9%.[182]

 

Hardware

 

A Mac Pro from 2019 being used for color grading.

Apple outsources the production of its hardware to Asian manufacturers like Foxconn and Pegatron.[183][184] As a highly vertically integrated company developing its own operating system and chips, it has tight control over all aspects of its products and deep integration between hardware and software.[185]

 

All Macs in production use ARM-based Apple silicon processors and have been praised for their performance and power efficiency.[186] They can run Intel apps through the Rosetta 2 translation layer, and iOS and iPadOS apps distributed via the App Store.[187] These Mac models come equipped with high-speed Thunderbolt 4 or USB 4 connectivity, with speeds up to 40 Gbit/s.[188][189] Apple silicon Macs have custom integrated graphics rather than graphics cards.[190] MacBooks are recharged with either USB-C or MagSafe connectors, depending on the model.[191]

 

Apple sells accessories for the Mac, including the Studio Display and Pro Display XDR external monitors,[192] the AirPods line of wireless headphones,[193] and keyboards and mice such as the Magic Keyboard, Magic Trackpad, and Magic Mouse.[194]

 

Software

 

The latest release of macOS, Sequoia, was released in 2024.

Main article: macOS

See also: Architecture of macOS and Mac operating systems

Macs run the macOS operating system, which is the second most widely used desktop OS according to StatCounter.[195] Macs can also run Windows, Linux, or other operating systems through virtualization, emulation, or multi-booting.[196][197][198]

 

macOS is the successor of the classic Mac OS, which had nine releases between 1984 and 1999. The last version of classic Mac OS, Mac OS 9, was introduced in 1999. Mac OS 9 was succeeded by Mac OS X in 2001.[199] Over the years, Mac OS X was rebranded first to OS X and later to macOS.[200]

 

macOS is a derivative of NextSTEP and FreeBSD. It uses the XNU kernel, and the core of macOS has been open-sourced as the Darwin operating system.[201] macOS features the Aqua user interface, the Cocoa set of frameworks, and the Objective-C and Swift programming languages.[202] Macs are deeply integrated with other Apple devices, including the iPhone and iPad, through Continuity features like Handoff, Sidecar, Universal Control, and Universal Clipboard.[203]

 

The first version of Mac OS X, version 10.0, was released in March 2001.[204] Subsequent releases introduced major changes and features to the operating system. 10.4 Tiger added Spotlight search;[205] 10.6 Snow Leopard brought refinements, stability, and full 64-bit support;[206] 10.7 Lion introduced many iPad-inspired features;[69] 10.10 Yosemite introduced a complete user interface revamp, replacing skeuomorphic designs with iOS 7-esque flat designs;[207] 10.12 Sierra added the Siri voice assistant and Apple File System (APFS) support;[208] 10.14 Mojave added a dark user interface mode;[209] 10.15 Catalina dropped support for 32-bit apps;[210] 11 Big Sur introduced an iOS-inspired redesign of the user interface,[211] 12 Monterey added the Shortcuts app, Low Power Mode, and AirPlay to Mac;[212] and 13 Ventura added Stage Manager, Continuity Camera, and passkeys.[213]

 

The Mac has a variety of apps available, including cross-platform apps like Google Chrome, Microsoft Office, Adobe Creative Cloud, Mathematica, Visual Studio Code, Ableton Live, and Cinema 4D.[214] Apple has also developed several apps for the Mac, including Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, iWork, GarageBand, and iMovie.[215] A large amount of open-source software applications run natively on macOS, such as LibreOffice, VLC, and GIMP,[216] and command-line programs, which can be installed through Macports and Homebrew.[217] Many applications for Linux or BSD also run on macOS, often using X11.[218] Apple's official integrated development environment (IDE) is Xcode, allowing developers to create apps for the Mac and other Apple platforms.[219]

 

The latest release of macOS is macOS 15 Sequoia, released on September 16, 2024.[220]

 

Timeline

Timeline of Mac model families

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See also: Timeline of the Apple II series, List of Mac models, and Timeline of Apple Inc. products

Source: Glen Sanford, Apple History, apple-history.com

 

References

Further reading

External links

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Family of personal computers made by Apple

This article is about the family of personal computers. For the series of all-in-one computers, see iMac. For other uses, see Mac.

"Macintosh" redirects here. For the original Macintosh, see Macintosh 128K. For other uses, see Macintosh (disambiguation).

Mac is a brand of personal computers designed and marketed by Apple since 1984. The name is short for Macintosh (its official name until 1999), a reference to the McIntosh apple. The current product lineup includes the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro laptops, and the iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Studio, and Mac Pro desktops. Macs are currently sold with Apple's UNIX-based macOS operating system, which is not licensed to other manufacturers and exclusively bundled with Mac computers. This operating system replaced Apple's original Macintosh operating system, which has variously been named System, Mac OS, and Classic Mac OS.

 

Quick Facts Also known as, Developer ...

Jef Raskin conceived the Macintosh project in 1979, which was usurped and redefined by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs in 1981. The original Macintosh was launched in January 1984, after Apple's "1984" advertisement during Super Bowl XVIII. A series of incrementally improved models followed, sharing the same integrated case design. In 1987, the Macintosh II brought color graphics, but priced as a professional workstation and not a personal computer. Beginning in 1994 with the Power Macintosh, the Mac transitioned from Motorola 68000 series processors to PowerPC. Macintosh clones by other manufacturers were also briefly sold afterwards. The line was refreshed in 1998 with the launch of the iMac G3, reinvigorating the line's competitiveness against commodity IBM PC compatibles. Macs transitioned to Intel x86 processors by 2006 along with new sub-product lines MacBook and Mac Pro. Since 2020, Macs have transitioned to Apple silicon chips based on ARM64.

 

History

See also: History of Apple Inc.

1979–1996: "Macintosh" era

With a red background, Steve Jobs rests his forearms on a Macintosh computer.

Steve Jobs debuted the Macintosh in January 1984, photographed by Bernard Gotfryd. The Mac displays the shin-hanga (Japanese: 髪梳ける女; lit. 'hair combing woman') (original) by Goyō Hashiguchi.

In the late 1970s, the Apple II became one of the most popular computers, especially in education. After IBM introduced the IBM PC in 1981, its sales surpassed the Apple II. In response, Apple introduced the Lisa in 1983.[1] The Lisa's graphical user interface was inspired by strategically licensed demonstrations of the Xerox Star. Lisa surpassed the Star with intuitive direct manipulation, like the ability to drag and drop files, double-click to launch applications, and move or resize windows by clicking and dragging instead of going through a menu.[2][3] However, hampered by its high price of $9,995 (equivalent to $35,000 in 2024) and lack of available software, the Lisa was commercially unsuccessful.[1]

 

Parallel to the Lisa's development, a skunkworks team at Apple was working on the Macintosh project. Conceived in 1979 by Jef Raskin, Macintosh was envisioned as an affordable, easy-to-use computer for the masses. Raskin named the computer after his favorite type of apple, the McIntosh. The initial team consisted of Raskin, hardware engineer Burrell Smith, and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. In 1981, Steve Jobs was removed from the Lisa team and joined Macintosh, and was able to gradually take control of the project due to Wozniak's temporary absence after an airplane crash. Under Jobs, the Mac grew to resemble the Lisa, with a mouse and a more intuitive graphical interface, at a quarter of the Lisa's price.[4]

 

Upon its January 1984 launch, the first Macintosh was described as "revolutionary" by The New York Times.[5] Sales initially met projections, but dropped due to the machine's low performance, single floppy disk drive requiring frequent disk swapping, and initial lack of applications. Author Douglas Adams said of it, "…what I (and I think everybody else who bought the machine in the early days) fell in love with was not the machine itself, which was ridiculously slow and underpowered, but a romantic idea of the machine. And that romantic idea had to sustain me through the realities of actually working on the 128K Mac."[6] Most of the original Macintosh team left Apple, and some followed Jobs to found NeXT after he was forced out by CEO John Sculley.[7]

 

The first Macintosh nevertheless generated enthusiasm among buyers and some developers, who rushed to develop entirely new programs for the platform, including PageMaker, MORE, and Excel.[8] Apple soon released the Macintosh 512K with improved performance and an external floppy drive.[9] The Macintosh is credited with popularizing the graphical user interface,[10] Jobs's fascination with typography gave it an unprecedented variety of fonts and type styles like italics, bold, shadow, and outline.[11] It is the first WYSIWYG computer, and due in large part to PageMaker and Apple's LaserWriter printer, it ignited the desktop publishing market, turning the Macintosh from an early let-down into a notable success.[12] Levy called desktop publishing the Mac's "Trojan horse" in the enterprise market, as colleagues and executives tried these Macs and were seduced into requesting one for themselves. PageMaker creator Paul Brainerd said: "You would see the pattern. A large corporation would buy PageMaker and a couple of Macs to do the company newsletter. The next year you'd come back and there would be thirty Macintoshes. The year after that, three hundred".[13] Ease of use for computer novices was another incentive.[14] Peat Marwick was the first, largest, and for some time the only large corporate customer;[15] although the company said that its auditors used Macs because of their portability and not the user interface,[16] after it merged with the IBM PC-using KMG to form KPMG in 1987, the combined company retained Macs after studying both platforms.[14]

 

In late 1985, Bill Atkinson, one of the few remaining employees to have been on the original Macintosh team, proposed that Apple create a Dynabook, Alan Kay's concept for a tablet computer that stores and organizes knowledge. Sculley rebuffed him, so he adapted the idea into a Mac program, HyperCard, whose cards store any information—text, image, audio, video—with the memex-like ability to semantically link cards together. HyperCard was released in 1987 and bundled with every Macintosh.[17]

  

Macintosh Portable

In the late 1980s, Jean-Louis Gassée, a Sculley protégé who had succeeded Jobs as head of the Macintosh division, made the Mac more expandable and powerful to appeal to tech enthusiasts and enterprise customers.[18] This strategy led to the successful 1987 release of the Macintosh II, which appealed to power users and gave the lineup momentum. However, Gassée's "no-compromise" approach foiled Apple's first laptop, the Macintosh Portable, which has many uncommon power user features, but is almost as heavy as the original Macintosh at twice its price. Soon after its launch, Gassée was fired.[19]

 

Since the Mac's debut, Sculley had opposed lowering the company's profit margins, and Macintoshes were priced far above entry-level MS-DOS compatible computers. Steven Levy said that though Macintoshes were superior, the cheapest Mac cost almost twice as much as the cheapest IBM PC compatible.[20][page needed] Sculley also resisted licensing the Mac OS to competing hardware vendors, who could have undercut Apple on pricing and jeopardized its hardware sales, as IBM PC compatibles had done to IBM. These early strategic steps caused the Macintosh to lose its chance at becoming the dominant personal computer platform.[21][22] Though senior management demanded high-margin products, a few employees disobeyed and set out to create a computer that would live up to the original Macintosh's slogan, "[a] computer for the rest of us", which the market clamored for. In a pattern typical of Apple's early era, of skunkworks projects like Macintosh and Macintosh II lacking adoption by upper management who were late to realize the projects' merit, this once-renegade project was actually endorsed by senior management following market pressures. In 1990 came the Macintosh LC and the more affordable Macintosh Classic, the first model under $1,000 (equivalent to $2,400 in 2024). Between 1984 and 1989, Apple had sold one million Macs, and another 10 million over the following five years.[23]

  

PowerBook 100

In 1991, the Macintosh Portable was replaced with the smaller and lighter PowerBook 100, the first laptop with a palm rest and trackball in front of the keyboard. The PowerBook brought $1 billion of revenue within one year, and became a status symbol.[24] By then, the Macintosh represented 10% to 15% of the personal computer market.[25] Fearing a decline in market share, Sculley co-founded the AIM alliance with IBM and Motorola to create a new standardized computing platform, which led to the creation of the PowerPC processor architecture, and the Taligent operating system.[26] In 1992, Apple introduced the Macintosh Performa line, which "grew like ivy" into a disorienting number of barely differentiated models in an attempt to gain market share. This backfired by confusing customers, but the same strategy soon afflicted the PowerBook line.[27] Michael Spindler continued this approach when he succeeded Sculley as CEO in 1993.[28] He oversaw the Mac's transition from Motorola 68000 series to PowerPC and the release of Apple's first PowerPC machine, the well-received Power Macintosh.[29]

 

Many new Macintoshes suffered from inventory and quality control problems. The 1995 PowerBook 5300 was plagued with quality problems, with several recalls as some units even caught fire[citation needed]. Pessimistic about Apple's future, Spindler repeatedly attempted to sell Apple to other companies, including IBM, Kodak, AT&T, Sun, and Philips. In a last-ditch attempt to fend off Windows, Apple yielded and started a Macintosh clone program, which allowed other manufacturers to make System 7 computers.[29] However, this only cannibalized the sales of Apple's higher-margin machines.[30] Meanwhile, Windows 95 was an instant hit with customers. Apple was struggling financially as its attempts to produce a System 7 successor had all failed with Taligent, Star Trek, and Copland, and its hardware was stagnant. The Mac was no longer competitive, and its sales entered a tailspin.[31] Corporations abandoned Macintosh in droves, replacing it with cheaper and more technically sophisticated Windows NT machines for which far more applications and peripherals existed. Even some Apple loyalists saw no future for the Macintosh.[32] Once the world's second largest computer vendor after IBM, Apple's market share declined precipitously from 9.4% in 1993 to 3.1% in 1997.[33][34] Bill Gates was ready to abandon Microsoft Office for Mac, which would have slashed any remaining business appeal the Mac had. Gil Amelio, Spindler's successor, failed to negotiate a deal with Gates.[35]

 

In 1996, Spindler was succeeded by Amelio, who searched for an established operating system to acquire or license for the foundation of a new Macintosh operating system. He considered BeOS, Solaris, Windows NT, and NeXT's NeXTSTEP, eventually choosing the last. Announced on December 20, 1996, Apple acquired NeXT on February 7, 1997, returning its co-founder, Steve Jobs.[31][36]

 

1997–2011: Steve Jobs era

 

Mac worldwide quarterly sales from 2006 to 2023

NeXT had developed the mature NeXTSTEP operating system with strong multimedia and Internet capabilities.[37] NeXTSTEP was also popular among programmers, financial firms, and academia for its object-oriented programming tools for rapid application development.[38][39] In an eagerly anticipated speech at the January 1997 Macworld trade show, Steve Jobs previewed Rhapsody, a merger of NeXTSTEP and Mac OS as the foundation of Apple's new operating system strategy.[40] At the time, Jobs only served as advisor, and Amelio was released in July 1997. Jobs was formally appointed interim CEO in September, and permanent CEO in January 2000.[41] To continue turning the company around, Jobs streamlined Apple's operations and began layoffs.[42] He negotiated a deal with Bill Gates in which Microsoft committed to releasing new versions of Office for Mac for five years, investing $150 million in Apple, and settling an ongoing lawsuit in which Apple alleged that Windows had copied the Mac's interface. In exchange, Apple made Internet Explorer the default Mac browser. The deal was closed hours before Jobs announced it at the August 1997 Macworld.[43]

 

Jobs returned focus to Apple. The Mac lineup had been incomprehensible, with dozens of hard-to-distinguish models. He streamlined it into four quadrants, a laptop and a desktop each for consumers and professionals. Apple also discontinued several Mac accessories, including the StyleWriter printer and the Newton PDA.[44] These changes were meant to refocus Apple's engineering, marketing, and manufacturing efforts so that more care could be dedicated to each product.[45] Jobs also stopped licensing Mac OS to clone manufacturers, which had cost Apple ten times more in lost sales than it received in licensing fees.[46] Jobs made a deal with the largest computer reseller, CompUSA, to carry a store-within-a-store that would better showcase Macs and their software and peripherals. According to Apple, the Mac's share of computer sales in those stores went from 3% to 14%. In November, the online Apple Store launched with built-to-order Mac configurations without a middleman.[41] When Tim Cook was hired as chief operations officer in March 1998, he closed Apple's inefficient factories and outsourced Mac production to Taiwan. Within months, he rolled out a new ERP system and implemented just-in-time manufacturing principles. This practically eliminated Apple's costly unsold inventory, and within one year, Apple had the industry's most efficient inventory turnover.[47]

  

The iMac G3's marketing heavily emphasizes its design and Internet capabilities for consumers.

 

The Power Mac G4 Cube advanced Apple's industrial design culture and manufacturing processes.

Jobs's top priority was "to ship a great new product".[48] The first is the iMac G3, an all-in-one computer that was meant to make the Internet intuitive and easy to access. While PCs came in functional beige boxes, Jony Ive gave the iMac a radical and futuristic design, meant to make the product less intimidating. Its oblong case is made of translucent plastic in Bondi blue, later revised with many colors. Ive added a handle on the back to make the computer more approachable. Jobs declared the iMac would be "legacy-free", succeeding ADB and SCSI with an infrared port and cutting-edge USB ports. Though USB had industry backing, it was still absent from most PCs and USB 1.1 was only standardized one month after the iMac's release.[49] He also controversially removed the floppy disk drive and replaced it with a CD drive. The iMac was unveiled in May 1998, and released in August. It was an immediate commercial success and became the fastest-selling computer in Apple's history, with 800,000 units sold before the year ended. Vindicating Jobs on the Internet's appeal to consumers, 32% of iMac buyers had never used a computer before, and 12% were switching from PCs.[50] The iMac reestablished the Mac's reputation as a trendsetter: for the next few years, translucent plastic became the dominant design trend in numerous consumer products.[51]

 

Apple knew it had lost its chance to compete in the Windows-dominated enterprise market, so it prioritized design and ease of use to make the Mac more appealing to average consumers, and even teens[citation needed]. The "Apple New Product Process" was launched as a more collaborative product development process for the Mac, with concurrent engineering principles. From then, product development was no longer driven primarily by engineering and with design as an afterthought. Instead, Ive and Jobs first defined a new product's "soul", before it was jointly developed by the marketing, engineering, and operations teams.[52] The engineering team was led by the product design group, and Ive's design studio was the dominant voice throughout the development process.[53]

 

The next two Mac products in 1999, the Power Mac G3 (nicknamed "Blue and White") and the iBook, introduced industrial designs influenced by the iMac, incorporating colorful translucent plastic and carrying handles. The iBook introduced several innovations: a strengthened hinge instead of a mechanical latch to keep it closed, ports on the sides rather than on the back, and the first laptop with built-in Wi-Fi.[54] It became the best selling laptop in the U.S. during the fourth quarter of 1999.[55] The professional-oriented Titanium PowerBook G4 was released in 2001, becoming the lightest and thinnest laptop in its class, and the first laptop with a wide-screen display; it also debuted a magnetic latch that secures the lid elegantly.[56]

  

The Dual USB "Ice" iBook represents a design shift away from color, toward white polycarbonate.

The design language of consumer Macs shifted again from colored plastics to white polycarbonate with the introduction of the 2001 Dual USB "Ice" iBook. To increase the iBook's durability, it eliminated doors and handles, and gained a more minimalistic exterior. Ive attempted to go beyond the quadrant with Power Mac G4 Cube, an innovation beyond the computer tower in a professional desktop far smaller than the Power Mac. The Cube failed in the market and was withdrawn from sale after one year. However, Ive considered it beneficial, because it helped Apple gain experience in complex machining and miniaturization.[57]

 

The development of a successor to the old Mac OS was well underway. Rhapsody had been previewed at WWDC 1997, featuring a Mach kernel and BSD foundations, a virtualization layer for old Mac OS apps (codenamed Blue Box), and an implementation of NeXTSTEP APIs called OpenStep (codenamed Yellow Box). Apple open-sourced the core of Rhapsody as the Darwin operating system. After several developer previews, Apple also introduced the Carbon API, which provided a way for developers to more easily make their apps native to Mac OS X without rewriting them in Yellow Box. Mac OS X was publicly unveiled in January 2000, introducing the modern Aqua graphical user interface, and a far more stable Unix foundation, with memory protection and preemptive multitasking. Blue Box became the Classic environment, and Yellow Box was renamed Cocoa. Following a public beta, the first version of Mac OS X, version 10.0 Cheetah, was released in March 2001.[58]

  

The "Sunflower" iMac G4 is an industrial design innovation.

In 1999, Apple launched its new "digital lifestyle" strategy of which the Mac became a "digital hub" and centerpiece with several new applications. In October 1999, the iMac DV gained FireWire ports, allowing users to connect camcorders and easily create movies with iMovie; the iMac gained a CD burner and iTunes, allowing users to rip CDs, make playlists, and burn them to blank discs. Other applications include iPhoto for organizing and editing photos, and GarageBand for creating and mixing music and other audio. The digital lifestyle strategy entered other markets, with the iTunes Store, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and the 2007 renaming from Apple Computer Inc. to Apple Inc. By January 2007, the iPod was half of Apple's revenues.[59]

 

New Macs include the white "Sunflower" iMac G4. Ive designed a display to swivel with one finger, so that it "appear[ed] to defy gravity".[60] In 2003, Apple released the aluminum 12-inch and 17-inch PowerBook G4, proclaiming the "Year of the Notebook". With the Microsoft deal expiring, Apple also replaced Internet Explorer with its new browser, Safari.[61] The first Mac Mini was intended to be assembled in the U.S., but domestic manufacturers were slow and had insufficient quality processes, leading Apple to Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn.[62] The affordably priced Mac Mini desktop was introduced at Macworld 2005, alongside the introduction of the iWork office suite.[63]

 

Serlet and Tevanian were both initiating the secret project asked by Steve Jobs to propose to Sony executives, in 2001, to sell Mac OS X on Vaio laptops.[64] They showed them a demonstration at a golf party in Hawaii, with the most expensive Vaio laptop they could have acquired.[65] But due to bad timing, Sony refused, arguing their Vaio sales just started to grow after years of difficulties.[66]

 

Intel transition and "back to the Mac"

With PowerPC chips falling behind in performance, price, and efficiency, Steve Jobs announced in 2005 the Mac transition to Intel processors, because the operating system had been developed for both architectures since the beginning.[67][68] PowerPC apps run using transparent Rosetta emulation,[69] and Windows boots natively using Boot Camp.[70] This transition helped contribute to a few years of growth in Mac sales.[71]

  

Steve Jobs unveiled the first MacBook Air at Macworld 2008.

After the iPhone's 2007 release, Apple began a multi-year effort to bring many iPhone innovations "back to the Mac", including multi-touch gesture support, instant wake from sleep, and fast flash storage.[72][73] At Macworld 2008, Jobs introduced the first MacBook Air by taking it out of a manila envelope, touting it as the "world's thinnest notebook".[74] The MacBook Air favors wireless technologies over physical ports, and lacks FireWire, an optical drive, or a replaceable battery. The Remote Disc feature accesses discs in other networked computers.[75] A decade after its launch, journalist Tom Warren wrote that the MacBook Air had "immediately changed the future of laptops", starting the ultrabook trend.[76] OS X Lion added new software features first introduced with the iPad, such as FaceTime, full-screen apps, document autosaving and versioning, and a bundled Mac App Store to replace software install discs with online downloads. It gained support for Retina displays, which had been introduced earlier with the iPhone 4.[77] iPhone-like multi-touch technology was progressively added to all MacBook trackpads, and to desktop Macs through the Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad.[78][79] The 2010 MacBook Air added an iPad-inspired standby mode, "instant-on" wake from sleep, and flash memory storage.[80][81]

 

After criticism by Greenpeace, Apple improved the ecological performance of its products.[82] The 2008 MacBook Air is free of toxic chemicals like mercury, bromide, and PVC, and with smaller packaging.[74] The enclosures of the iMac and unibody MacBook Pro were redesigned with the more recyclable aluminum and glass.[83][84]

 

On February 24, 2011, the MacBook Pro became the first computer to support Intel's new Thunderbolt connector, with two-way transfer speeds of 10 Gbit/s, and backward compatibility with Mini DisplayPort.[85]

 

2012–present: Tim Cook era

 

The 2013 Mac Pro was controversial among professional users. One of the reasons was the lack of internal expandibility due to the absence of expansion slots or the like, which was a side-effect of the exotic and compact design (height c. 25 cm).

Due to deteriorating health, Steve Jobs resigned as CEO on August 24, 2011, after which he died that year on October 5. Tim Cook was named as his successor.[86] Cook's first keynote address launched iCloud, moving the digital hub from the Mac to the cloud.[87][88] In 2012, the MacBook Pro was refreshed with a Retina display, and the iMac was slimmed and lost its SuperDrive.[89][90]

 

During Cook's first few years as CEO, Apple fought media criticisms that it could no longer innovate without Jobs.[91] In 2013, Apple introduced a new cylindrical Mac Pro, with marketing chief Phil Schiller exclaiming "Can't innovate anymore, my ass!"[citation needed]. The new model had a miniaturized design with a glossy dark gray cylindrical body and internal components organized around a central cooling system. Tech reviewers praised the 2013 Mac Pro for its power and futuristic design;[92][93] however, it was poorly received by professional users, who criticized its lack of upgradability and the removal of expansion slots.[94][95]

 

The iMac was refreshed with a 5K Retina display in 2014, making it the highest-resolution all-in-one desktop computer.[96] The MacBook was reintroduced in 2015, with a completely redesigned aluminum unibody chassis, a 12-inch Retina display, a fanless low-power Intel Core M processor, a much smaller logic board, a new Butterfly keyboard, a single USB-C port, and a solid-state Force Touch trackpad with pressure sensitivity. It was praised for its portability, but criticized for its lack of performance, the need to use adapters to use most USB peripherals, and a high starting price of $1,299 (equivalent to $1,700 in 2024).[97] In 2015, Apple started a service program to address a widespread GPU defect in the 15-inch 2011 MacBook Pro, which could cause graphical artifacts or prevent the machine from functioning entirely.[98]

 

Neglect of professional users

 

The 13 inches (330 mm) and 15 inches (380 mm) MacBook Pros (2016–19) were criticized for its keyboard's unreliability, and the USB-C-only port configuration.

The Touch Bar MacBook Pro was released in October 2016. It was the thinnest MacBook Pro ever made, replaced all ports with four Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C) ports, gained a thinner "Butterfly" keyboard, and replaced function keys with the Touch Bar. The Touch Bar was criticized for making it harder to use the function keys by feel, as it offered no tactile feedback. Many users were also frustrated by the need to buy dongles, particularly professional users who relied on traditional USB-A devices, SD cards, and HDMI for video output.[99][100] A few months after its release, users reported a problem with stuck keys and letters being skipped or repeated. iFixit attributed this to the ingress of dust or food crumbs under the keys, jamming them. Since the Butterfly keyboard was riveted into the laptop's case, it could only be serviced at an Apple Store or authorized service center.[101][102][103] Apple settled a $50M class-action lawsuit over these keyboards in 2022.[104][105] These same models were afflicted by "flexgate": when users closed and opened the machine, they would risk progressively damaging the cable responsible for the display backlight, which was too short. The $6 cable was soldered to the screen, requiring a $700 repair.[106][107]

 

Senior Vice President of Industrial Design Jony Ive continued to guide product designs towards simplicity and minimalism.[108] Critics argued that he had begun to prioritize form over function, and was excessively focused on product thinness. His role in the decisions to switch to fragile Butterfly keyboards, to make the Mac Pro non-expandable, and to remove USB-A, HDMI and the SD card slot from the MacBook Pro were criticized.[109][110][111]

 

The long-standing keyboard issue on MacBook Pros, Apple's abandonment of the Aperture professional photography app, and the lack of Mac Pro upgrades led to declining sales and a widespread belief that Apple was no longer committed to professional users.[112][113][114][115] After several years without any significant updates to the Mac Pro, Apple executives admitted in 2017 that the 2013 Mac Pro had not met expectations, and said that the company had designed themselves into a "thermal corner", preventing them from releasing a planned dual-GPU successor.[116] Apple also unveiled their future product roadmap for professional products, including plans for an iMac Pro as a stopgap and an expandable Mac Pro to be released later.[117][118] The iMac Pro was revealed at WWDC 2017, featuring updated Intel Xeon W processors and Radeon Pro Vega graphics.[119]

 

In 2018, Apple released a redesigned MacBook Air with a Retina display, Butterfly keyboard, Force Touch trackpad, and Thunderbolt 3 USB-C ports.[120][121] The Butterfly keyboard went through three revisions, incorporating silicone gaskets in the key mechanism to prevent keys from being jammed by dust or other particles. However, many users continued to experience reliability issues with these keyboards,[122] leading Apple to launch a program to repair affected keyboards free of charge.[123] Higher-end models of the 15-inch 2018 MacBook Pro faced another issue where the Core i9 processor reached unusually high temperatures, resulting in reduced CPU performance from thermal throttling. Apple issued a patch to address this issue via a macOS supplemental update, blaming a "missing digital key" in the thermal management firmware.[124]

 

The 2019 16-inch MacBook Pro and 2020 MacBook Air replaced the unreliable Butterfly keyboard with a redesigned scissor-switch Magic Keyboard. On the MacBook Pros, the Touch Bar and Touch ID were made standard, and the Esc key was detached from the Touch Bar and returned to being a physical key.[125] At WWDC 2019, Apple unveiled a new Mac Pro with a larger case design that allows for hardware expandability, and introduced a new expansion module system (MPX) for modules such as the Afterburner card for faster video encoding.[126][127] Almost every part of the new Mac Pro is user-replaceable, with iFixit praising its high user-repairability.[128] It received positive reviews, with reviewers praising its power, modularity, quiet cooling, and Apple's increased focus on professional workflows.[129][130]

 

Apple silicon transition

 

The 2021 iMac was praised for its colorful and slim design.

 

The 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros (2021-present) received widespread acclaim for its significantly improved port selection (pictured) and thermals.

In April 2018, Bloomberg reported Apple's plan to replace Intel chips with ARM processors similar to those in its phones, causing Intel's shares to drop by 9.2%.[131] The Verge commented on the rumors, that such a decision made sense, as Intel was failing to make significant improvements to its processors, and could not compete with ARM chips on battery life.[132][133]

 

At WWDC 2020, Tim Cook announced that the Mac would be transitioning to Apple silicon chips, built upon an ARM architecture, over a two-year timeline.[134] The Rosetta 2 translation layer was also introduced, enabling Apple silicon Macs to run Intel apps.[135] On November 10, 2020, Apple announced their first system-on-a-chip designed for the Mac, the Apple M1, and a series of Macs that would ship with the M1: the MacBook Air, Mac Mini, and the 13-inch MacBook Pro.[136] These new Macs received highly positive reviews, with reviewers highlighting significant improvements in battery life, performance, and heat management compared to previous generations.[137][138][139]

 

The iMac Pro was discontinued on March 6, 2021.[140] On April 20, 2021, a new 24-inch iMac was revealed, featuring the M1 chip, seven new colors, thinner white bezels, a higher-resolution 1080p webcam, and an enclosure made entirely from recycled aluminum.[141][142]

 

On October 18, 2021, Apple announced new 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros, featuring the more powerful M1 Pro and M1 Max chips, a bezel-less mini-LED 120 Hz ProMotion display, and the return of MagSafe and HDMI ports, and the SD card slot.[143][144][145]

 

On March 8, 2022, the Mac Studio was unveiled, also featuring the M1 Max chip and the new M1 Ultra chip in a similar form factor to the Mac Mini. It drew highly positive reviews for its flexibility and wide range of available ports.[146] Its performance was deemed "impressive", beating the highest-end Mac Pro with a 28-core Intel Xeon chip, while being significantly more power efficient and compact.[147] It was introduced alongside the Studio Display, meant to replace the 27-inch iMac, which was discontinued on the same day.[148]

 

Post-Apple silicon transition

At WWDC 2022, Apple announced an updated MacBook Air based on a new M2 chip. It incorporates several changes from the 14-inch MacBook Pro, such as a flat, slab-shaped design, full-sized function keys, MagSafe charging, and a Liquid Retina display, with rounded corners and a display cutout incorporating a 1080p webcam.[149]

 

The Mac Studio with M2 Max and M2 Ultra chips and the Mac Pro with M2 Ultra chip was unveiled at WWDC 2023, and the Intel-based Mac Pro was discontinued on the same day, completing the Mac transition to Apple silicon chips.[150] The Mac Studio was received positively as a modest upgrade over the previous generation, albeit similarly priced PCs could be equipped with faster GPUs.[151] However, the Apple silicon-based Mac Pro was criticized for several regressions, including memory capacity and a complete lack of CPU or GPU expansion options.[150][152] A 15-inch MacBook Air was also introduced, and is the largest display included on a consumer-level Apple laptop.[153]

 

The MacBook Pro was updated on October 30, 2023, with updated M3 Pro and M3 Max chips using a 3 nm process node, as well as the standard M3 chip in a refreshed iMac and a new base model MacBook Pro.[154] Reviewers lamented the base memory configuration of 8 GB on the standard M3 MacBook Pro.[155] In March 2024, the MacBook Air was also updated to include the M3 chip.[156] In October 2024, several Macs were announced with the M4 series of chips, including the iMac, a redesigned Mac Mini, and the MacBook Pro; all of which included 16 GB of memory as standard. The MacBook Air was also upgraded with 16 GB for the same price.[157]

 

Current Mac models

See also: List of Mac models

Overview of current Mac lineup

MacBook Air, entry-level lightweight laptop

MacBook Air, entry-level lightweight laptop

MacBook Pro, high-performance workstation laptop

MacBook Pro, high-performance workstation laptop

iMac, all-in-one desktop

iMac, all-in-one desktop

Mac Mini, entry-level desktop

Mac Mini, entry-level desktop

Mac Studio, compact workstation desktop

Mac Studio, compact workstation desktop

Mac Pro, expandable workstation tower

Mac Pro, expandable workstation tower

More information Release date, Model ...

Marketing

 

The "1984" advertisement debuted during Super Bowl XVIII.

The original Macintosh was marketed at Super Bowl XVIII with the highly acclaimed "1984" ad, directed by Ridley Scott. The ad alluded to George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, and symbolized Apple's desire to "rescue" humanity from the conformity of computer industry giant IBM.[160][161][162] The ad is now considered a "watershed event" and a "masterpiece."[163][164] Before the Macintosh, high-tech marketing catered to industry insiders rather than consumers, so journalists covered technology like the "steel or automobiles" industries, with articles written for a highly technical audience.[165][166] The Macintosh launch event pioneered event marketing techniques that have since become "widely emulated" in Silicon Valley, by creating a mystique about the product and giving an inside look into its creation.[167] Apple took a new "multiple exclusives" approach regarding the press, giving "over one hundred interviews to journalists that lasted over six hours apiece", and introduced a new "Test Drive a Macintosh" campaign.[168][169]

 

Apple's brand, which established a "heartfelt connection with consumers", is cited as one of the keys to the Mac's success.[170] After Steve Jobs's return to the company, he launched the Think different ad campaign, positioning the Mac as the best computer for "creative people who believe that one person can change the world".[171] The campaign featured black-and-white photographs of luminaries like Albert Einstein, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King Jr., with Jobs saying: "if they ever used a computer, it would have been a Mac".[172][173] The ad campaign was critically acclaimed and won several awards, including a Primetime Emmy.[174] In the 2000s, Apple continued to use successful marketing campaigns to promote the Mac line, including the Switch and Get a Mac campaigns.[175][176]

 

Apple's focus on design and build quality has helped establish the Mac as a high-end, premium brand. The company's emphasis on creating iconic and visually appealing designs for its computers has given them a "human face" and made them stand out in a crowded market.[177] Apple has long made product placements in high-profile movies and television shows to showcase Mac computers, like Mission: Impossible, Legally Blonde, and Sex and the City.[178] Apple is known for not allowing producers to show villains using Apple products.[179] Its own shows produced for the Apple TV+ streaming service feature prominent use of MacBooks.[180]

 

The Mac is known for its highly loyal customer base. In 2022, the American Customer Satisfaction Index gave the Mac the highest customer satisfaction score of any personal computer, at 82 out of 100.[181] In that year, Apple was the fourth largest vendor of personal computers, with a market share of 8.9%.[182]

 

Hardware

 

A Mac Pro from 2019 being used for color grading.

Apple outsources the production of its hardware to Asian manufacturers like Foxconn and Pegatron.[183][184] As a highly vertically integrated company developing its own operating system and chips, it has tight control over all aspects of its products and deep integration between hardware and software.[185]

 

All Macs in production use ARM-based Apple silicon processors and have been praised for their performance and power efficiency.[186] They can run Intel apps through the Rosetta 2 translation layer, and iOS and iPadOS apps distributed via the App Store.[187] These Mac models come equipped with high-speed Thunderbolt 4 or USB 4 connectivity, with speeds up to 40 Gbit/s.[188][189] Apple silicon Macs have custom integrated graphics rather than graphics cards.[190] MacBooks are recharged with either USB-C or MagSafe connectors, depending on the model.[191]

 

Apple sells accessories for the Mac, including the Studio Display and Pro Display XDR external monitors,[192] the AirPods line of wireless headphones,[193] and keyboards and mice such as the Magic Keyboard, Magic Trackpad, and Magic Mouse.[194]

 

Software

 

The latest release of macOS, Sequoia, was released in 2024.

Main article: macOS

See also: Architecture of macOS and Mac operating systems

Macs run the macOS operating system, which is the second most widely used desktop OS according to StatCounter.[195] Macs can also run Windows, Linux, or other operating systems through virtualization, emulation, or multi-booting.[196][197][198]

 

macOS is the successor of the classic Mac OS, which had nine releases between 1984 and 1999. The last version of classic Mac OS, Mac OS 9, was introduced in 1999. Mac OS 9 was succeeded by Mac OS X in 2001.[199] Over the years, Mac OS X was rebranded first to OS X and later to macOS.[200]

 

macOS is a derivative of NextSTEP and FreeBSD. It uses the XNU kernel, and the core of macOS has been open-sourced as the Darwin operating system.[201] macOS features the Aqua user interface, the Cocoa set of frameworks, and the Objective-C and Swift programming languages.[202] Macs are deeply integrated with other Apple devices, including the iPhone and iPad, through Continuity features like Handoff, Sidecar, Universal Control, and Universal Clipboard.[203]

 

The first version of Mac OS X, version 10.0, was released in March 2001.[204] Subsequent releases introduced major changes and features to the operating system. 10.4 Tiger added Spotlight search;[205] 10.6 Snow Leopard brought refinements, stability, and full 64-bit support;[206] 10.7 Lion introduced many iPad-inspired features;[69] 10.10 Yosemite introduced a complete user interface revamp, replacing skeuomorphic designs with iOS 7-esque flat designs;[207] 10.12 Sierra added the Siri voice assistant and Apple File System (APFS) support;[208] 10.14 Mojave added a dark user interface mode;[209] 10.15 Catalina dropped support for 32-bit apps;[210] 11 Big Sur introduced an iOS-inspired redesign of the user interface,[211] 12 Monterey added the Shortcuts app, Low Power Mode, and AirPlay to Mac;[212] and 13 Ventura added Stage Manager, Continuity Camera, and passkeys.[213]

 

The Mac has a variety of apps available, including cross-platform apps like Google Chrome, Microsoft Office, Adobe Creative Cloud, Mathematica, Visual Studio Code, Ableton Live, and Cinema 4D.[214] Apple has also developed several apps for the Mac, including Final Cut Pro, Logic Pro, iWork, GarageBand, and iMovie.[215] A large amount of open-source software applications run natively on macOS, such as LibreOffice, VLC, and GIMP,[216] and command-line programs, which can be installed through Macports and Homebrew.[217] Many applications for Linux or BSD also run on macOS, often using X11.[218] Apple's official integrated development environment (IDE) is Xcode, allowing developers to create apps for the Mac and other Apple platforms.[219]

 

The latest release of macOS is macOS 15 Sequoia, released on September 16, 2024.[220]

 

Timeline

Timeline of Mac model families

vte

 

See also: Timeline of the Apple II series, List of Mac models, and Timeline of Apple Inc. products

Source: Glen Sanford, Apple History, apple-history.com

 

References

Further reading

External links

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Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) was introduced in Singapore in 1998 as a pioneering system to manage traffic congestion in the city-state's densely packed urban areas. The ERP replaced the earlier manual toll collection system and used electronic gantries equipped with radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology to charge vehicles based on the time of day and the level of traffic congestion in specific zones. The system aimed to incentivize drivers to avoid peak hours and high-traffic areas, reducing congestion and promoting the use of public transportation.

 

The ERP system has evolved over the years, incorporating dynamic pricing where rates vary depending on real-time traffic conditions. Over time, the system has expanded to cover more roads, including the expressways, and has become a key part of Singapore's smart transport infrastructure. The success of ERP has not only helped manage congestion but also set a model for other cities worldwide in utilizing technology to regulate urban traffic efficiently.

totaltele.com/u-s-huawei-ban-a-pyrrhic-victory-spurring-d...

U.S. Huawei ban: A Pyrrhic victory spurring digital decolonisation

 

Pyrrhus of Epirus, a Hellenistic king best known for his self-destructive military campaigns, has been immortalised by the term ‘Pyrrhic victory’—a win so costly that it is actually a catastrophic defeat. His famous lament after such a battle victory, “Another such victory and we are undone,” captures the essence of a Pyrrhic victory and serves as a potent warning in today’s complex world of tech geopolitics. As we analyze the short-, medium- and long-term impact of American economic coercion against Huawei and China, more broadly, it’s worthwhile to consider whether this could turn into a Pyrrhic scenario – a short-term triumph that is actually a devastating long-term loss.

 

The U.S. ban on Huawei, announced in May 2019, marked a crucial pivot in the arena of tech geopolitics. This decision was made with a view to curbing the Chinese telecom giant’s escalating influence within the global Information and Communications Technology (ICT) industry. Undeniably, the move has had immediate and far-reaching impacts. However, in an environment as dynamic and resilient as the ICT sector, the ban didn’t merely constrain Huawei as originally intended. Instead, it has triggered a sequence of unexpected outcomes rippling across diverse fronts. These consequences, many of which are still unfolding, stretch beyond the company itself and bring into focus the broader global tech landscape.

 

In the aftermath of the U.S. ban, Huawei confronted immense challenges. The ban severed critical supply chain links and even raised questions about the company’s ability to survive. However, their 2022 financials demonstrate a remarkable turnaround, evidencing their resilience amidst these adversities. For example, revenues increased to 642 billion in 2021.

 

To overcome these challenges, Huawei embarked on strategic shifts that could redefine the global tech landscape. Not only did Huawei launch successful new business lines, such as autonomous vehicles and cloud computing, that are less susceptible to economic coercion, the company also developed an in-house replacement for Oracle’s ERP system. This showcases not only their formidable technical aptitude but also demonstrates their adaptability and readiness to tackle immense challenges in the rapidly evolving technological landscape.

 

Moreover, drawing from successful examples such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Slack, and Google AdSense, Huawei’s in-house ERP system may emerge as a formidable competitor to Oracle. Much like AWS, which originated as Amazon’s internal infrastructure to manage and scale their online retail operations, Huawei’s ERP system could harness its experience in managing a complex, multinational technology business and bring that to market. This would cater to companies, governments and other entities looking for efficient, large-scale solutions borne from real-world usage.

 

However, the U.S. ban on Huawei triggered more than just an immediate crisis for the company and questions about the future of its key American technology partners; it ignited a chain reaction that has reverberated globally. Consider European telecom carriers, many of which heavily relied on Huawei’s competitively priced and technologically advanced equipment for their infrastructure, especially for 5G rollouts. According to Reuters, Vodafone has spent EUR200 million replacing Huawei equipment in its core network while BT has spent GBP500 million removing Huawei equipment from the UK and Deutsche Telekom spent EUR3 billion removing Huawei’s 5G antennas. French carriers have even sued the government over this. Bouygues Telecom said rip and replace would cost them roughly EUR82 million, and Altice France said it would cost them even more.The ban resulted in increased costs and delayed 5G implementation, creating a substantial upheaval in their strategic plans.

 

This ripple effect has not stopped at Europe’s doorstep. It’s also made waves in developing nations that relied on Huawei’s cost-effective solutions for their digital expansion. Now, they are left to scramble for alternatives, which may not only be more expensive but could also slow their digital transformation journeys.

 

Not surprisingly, the U.S. ban on Huawei unintentionally amplified the call for digital decolonization. By revealing the fragility of an over-reliance on the American technology stack, the ban has nudged countries to rethink their tech dependencies, thereby challenging the stranglehold of American tech powerhouses. For instance, India’s ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’ (self-reliant India) initiative and Europe’s GAIA-X are fostering growth of domestic tech industries.

 

China, through its titan Huawei, is demonstrating robustness and adaptability, epitomized by their strides towards homegrown operating systems and semiconductor technologies. This progress suggests a reshaping of the global tech landscape, with new and traditional players striving for digital leadership.

 

In essence, the ban, while designed to constrain Huawei, has stirred a global shift towards digital decolonization. It’s not just a survival tale for Huawei; it’s a turning point signaling a potential rebalancing of global digital power.

 

While the U.S. ban aimed to constrain Huawei’s growth and influence, it seems to have inadvertently triggered a resilience that may culminate in a strategic upper hand for Huawei and, by extension, China’s tech industry. Much like King Pyrrhus, the U.S. might soon find that its ‘victory’ in curbing Huawei could come at a greater cost than anticipated. In the US, the government has allocated US$1.9 billion to replace Huawei telecommunications equipment in rural operators’ networks. Already though, applications for compensation of actual costs totalling up to US$5.6 billion have already been filed. The cost of removing Chinese equipment according to the Federal Communications Commission’s own assessment was estimated at US$5.3 billion, almost three times the budget Congress had set aside.

  

Rather than capitulating under pressure, Huawei is reforging itself in the heat of this crisis. Its drive to develop an in-house ERP system, a feat that few global companies have accomplished, is one such compelling signal of this resilience. This initiative, while meeting Huawei’s immediate need for a replacement to Oracle’s system, also harbors the potential to challenge Oracle’s market dominance if Huawei decides to commercialize its ERP solution, similar to the successes of AWS, Slack, and Google AdSense. Moreover, the backlash from the ban is no longer confined within the U.S.-China tech rivalry. It’s incited a global chain reaction, instigating hesitations about reliance on U.S. tech firms and inciting ambitions for digital self-reliance.

 

The U.S. stance on China does not necessarily reflect the views of American business. For example, Micron, a memory chip maker faces a significant loss of revenue and market share in China. Other U.S. firms, such as NVIDIA, are worried about losing access to the lucrative Chinese market, where they face increasing competition from local rivals. NVIDIA’s CEO Jensen Huang warned that the U.S. should be careful not to alienate China, which is a key market for the technology industry. He said: “If [China] can’t buy from the United States, they’ll just build it themselves.” Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, also demonstrated the significance of China for his company’s global strategy by visiting the country and meeting with top officials. These cases illustrate the complex and uncertain implications of the U.S.-China trade war for the tech sector.

 

In sum, while the U.S. may have initially appeared victorious with the Huawei ban, the long-term implications suggest a different narrative. This ‘victory’ might indeed be a Pyrrhic one, as the resultant strategic adaptations, global chain reactions, and the acceleration of digital decolonization may reshape the global tech landscape to the detriment of U.S. tech hegemony.

 

www.trustedreviews.com/opinion/fast-charge-huawei-ban-con...

 

Huawei’s US ban continues to be a terrible thing for consumers

OPINION: Four years after the US set Huawei in its sights with a flurry of sanctions, Huawei is still trying to maintain a smartphone offering devoid of Google services. The worst part is that the phones are pretty terrific, making the fact they’re difficult to recommend to the vast majority even more frustrating.

 

For those that have been living under a phoneless rock for the past few years, Huawei is in a bit of a geopolitical jam. The company was accused by then-President Trump of shady business practices with the Chinese government that led to it being added to something called the Entity List, essentially blocking Huawei from working with any business operating in the US.

 

That includes not only Qualcomm, the chipset maker of choice for a huge number of smartphones, but the likes of Intel and, most importantly, Google. This means that no Huawei phone from 2019 onwards can ship with Google services pre-installed, meaning no access to Google Play, Google-developed apps or any apps that rely on Google services in the backend.

 

This has forced Huawei to completely revamp its approach to smartphones with its open-source EMUI/HarmonyOS operating system based on the open-source version of Android, and it sports its own version of Google Play dubbed AppGallery.

 

It’s a great achievement, but four years on, it still lacks plenty of key apps used by Westerners, making it difficult to recommend to anyone but the most dedicated Huawei fans. That’s a pretty big shame as, even with the ban in place, Huawei continues to deliver some of the best smartphone technology around.

 

That really rang true earlier this week when I got my first chance to play with Huawei’s latest top-end foldable, the Mate X3. I’ve used a fair few foldables in my time – in fact, I’d like to think I’ve seen the vast majority of those in the Western market – but none quite surprised me like the Mate X3.

 

The book-style foldable is lightyears ahead of the competition with a form factor much thinner (5.3mm when unfolded) and lighter (239g) than the competition, a gapless close and one of the best hinge mechanisms so far. In a word, it’s exquisite.

 

The new “multi-dimensional hinge” is the result of years of R&D from Huawei, coming a long way from the crunchy hinge of its initial foldable, the Huawei Mate X. The Mate X3’s hinge is smooth with just the right level of resistance that makes it easy to unfold one-handed but not easy enough for it to come open on its own.

 

That hinge mechanism also allows for one of the most muted display creases I’ve seen yet, with very little hint that this is a foldable display when fully opened.

 

It also just feels nice in the hand, complete with a satin-like finish that perfectly rounds off the premium experience on offer.

 

Throw in capable cameras including a 50MP main, 13MP ultrawide and 12MP periscope, fast charging at 66W and a fairly large 4800mAh battery and you’ve potentially got the best foldable hardware around right now.

 

However, the fact that it doesn’t run Google Play services, doesn’t offer 5G connectivity nor the latest Snapdragon chipset – all as a direct result of the Entity List – it’s almost impossible to recommend to any but the most dedicated (and anti-Google) tech fans out there, especially with a £1,999 price tag.

 

It’s a similar story with the recently-announced flagship, the Huawei P60 Pro. As my colleague Max discovered when he went hands-on with the P60 Pro, the camera tech is truly next-level, sporting a 48MP main with a variable aperture that can shift between f/1.4 and f/4.0, a 48MP telephoto with 90mm zoom and a 13MP ultrawide capable of delivering impressive images like those taken on a sunset safari below.

 

With tech as impressive as this readily available, it’s so disappointing that most people won’t even consider using a phone that doesn’t offer access to Google Play and many popular Google-based apps that Westerners rely on for day-to-day use.

 

Ultimately, it’s the consumer that misses out, and we should be furious.

The Hereios are visiting a group called ”It’s a job”. My job is kind of fun – I spend a lot of my time solving puzzles. I’m an analyst on an “Enterprise Resource Planning” (ERP) system called SAP. I work with the people who use the system and with the programmers to sort problems, and to design and test new solutions.

 

I used my phone to take this photo while waiting to meet with an accountant who processes the company’s bank statements. Sometimes the program isn’t finishing the final processing log. Now why did that start happening?

 

Need ideas for your 365? Join the Hereios at We’re Here!

 

RealERP provides a complete solutions to real estate business organizations through it's robust tools as 'Real Estate ERP Solution' that manage all business processes.More information visit this site:- www.realerp.in

SocrateOpen is a modern, highly adaptable, enterprise-class ERP/CRM solution - that can be deployed on-premise or on the Cloud - for a fraction of the cost of traditional ERP systems.

 

Originally designed for companies working in professional services, SocrateOpen is now successfully used in various industries such as distribution, construction, telecommunications, discrete manufacturing and manufacturing and distribution of consumer goods.

 

More details at www.bitsoftware.ro

Productivity Engineering GmbH (PE), is a private held and independent high-tech company, highly focused on the electronic industries. The business of PE is the development, manufacturing and volume delivery of integrated circuits (fables design house), as well as the development and implementation of ECAD integration solutions to PDM/PLM and ERP systems. Due to its leading edge complementary know-how in both fields, PE is able to offer creative and scaleable ECAD integration solutions at the best of class cost-value ratio.

Productivity Engineering GmbH (PE), is a private held and independent high-tech company, highly focused on the electronic industries. The business of PE is the development, manufacturing and volume delivery of integrated circuits (fables design house), as well as the development and implementation of ECAD integration solutions to PDM/PLM and ERP systems. Due to its leading edge complementary know-how in both fields, PE is able to offer creative and scaleable ECAD integration solutions at the best of class cost-value ratio.

Productivity Engineering GmbH (PE), is a private held and independent high-tech company, highly focused on the electronic industries. The business of PE is the development, manufacturing and volume delivery of integrated circuits (fables design house), as well as the development and implementation of ECAD integration solutions to PDM/PLM and ERP systems. Due to its leading edge complementary know-how in both fields, PE is able to offer creative and scaleable ECAD integration solutions at the best of class cost-value ratio.

Productivity Engineering GmbH (PE), is a private held and independent high-tech company, highly focused on the electronic industries. The business of PE is the development, manufacturing and volume delivery of integrated circuits (fables design house), as well as the development and implementation of ECAD integration solutions to PDM/PLM and ERP systems. Due to its leading edge complementary know-how in both fields, PE is able to offer creative and scaleable ECAD integration solutions at the best of class cost-value ratio.

Global Combat Support System-Army (GCSS-Army) is one program with two

components. GCSS-Army Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Solution is an

automation information system that serves as the primary tactical logistics

enabler to support Army and Joint transformation for sustainment using an

ERP system. The program re-engineers current business processes to achieve

end-to-end logistics and integration with applicable command and control

(C2)/Joint systems. The second component, Army Enterprise Systems

Integration Program, integrates Army business functions by providing a

single source for enterprise hub services, master data, and business

intelligence. GCSS-Army uses commercial-off-the-shelf ERP software products

to support rapid force projection in the battlefield functional areas of

arming, fixing, fueling, sustaining, and tactical logistics financial

processes. The GCSS-Army is a product by Program Executive Office for

Command, Control and Communications-Tactical (PEO C3T).

 

Read more on page 118 of the 2013 U.S. Army Weapon Systems Handbook: armyalt.va.newsmemory.com/wsh.php.

.

"Singapore Land Transport Authority has been using RFID since 1998 in what was the world's first Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) system, an automated toll-collection system used to control and manage traffic volume in the city." www.rfidjournal.com/article/view/1024

Global Combat Support System-Army (GCSS-Army) is one program with two

components. GCSS-Army Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Solution is an

automation information system that serves as the primary tactical logistics

enabler to support Army and Joint transformation for sustainment using an

ERP system. The program re-engineers current business processes to achieve

end-to-end logistics and integration with applicable command and control

(C2)/Joint systems. The second component, Army Enterprise Systems

Integration Program, integrates Army business functions by providing a

single source for enterprise hub services, master data, and business

intelligence. GCSS-Army uses commercial-off-the-shelf ERP software products

to support rapid force projection in the battlefield functional areas of

arming, fixing, fueling, sustaining, and tactical logistics financial

processes. The GCSS-Army is a product by Program Executive Office for

Command, Control and Communications-Tactical (PEO C3T).

 

Read more on page 118 of the 2013 U.S. Army Weapon Systems Handbook: armyalt.va.newsmemory.com/wsh.php.

Trade Show Display Case Study

 

AIG: A 10-foot Boost in Image and Recognition

 

Upgrading from Velcro®-attached logos on a carpet backdrop to a seamless mural on a 10' curved backwall produced immediate results for AIG Technology.

 

"It's been phenomenal," says Robert Satcher, vice president. "The exhibit boosted our image so much. We had two of our most successful shows ever in the first month."

 

Key words on the graphic help tell the story of AIG Technology, whose software is used to enhance ERP systems.

 

The Mirage® pop-up display matches the company's new marketing materials. It also provides quick and easy set-up.

 

After seeing the exhibit increase traffic and make prospects stop in their tracks, Satcher has raised his expectations

 

"Improving our marketing and getting a first-class exhibit will help us get beyond our home territory," he says. "In 6 to 12 months, going into new territories, I think we'll attribute a lot of name recognition to the display."

 

To learn more:

www.skyline.com/Success-Stories/aig/

SocrateOpen CRM / ERP system, let you automate all your financial, distribution, sales and services processes quickly and easily by employing an innovative Model Driven Architecture (MDA) to enable broader application adaptability, faster and easier deployments and significantly reduce total cost of ownership.

 

More about SocrateOpen open source CRM & ERP at www.bitsoftware.ro/

Minister of Education, Youth and Information, Senator the Hon. Ruel Reid, addresses JIS ‘Think Tank' on April 19.

Minister of Education, Youth and Information, Senator the Hon. Ruel Reid (left), listens as Executive Director of the Caribbean Maritime Institute (CMI), Dr. Fritz Pinnock, addresses JIS ‘Think Tank’ on April 19.

Are you looking to implement an ERP solution for your discrete manufacturing needs? Here are six pointers on the functionalities an ERP system should provide. www.info-ways.com/6-essentials-an-erp-should-provide/

There is no business owner who hasn't thought about implementing an ERP system. However, some top executives get frustrated with results of ERP system implementation - either because their expectations are set too high or they haven't chosen or customized the ERP components properly. To help you out and demonstrate the full potential of an ERP system, we have prepared this comprehensive guide to its components and how they can benefit you.

Infographic Source: artelogic.net/img/the-anatomy-of-erp.jpg

ERP System provide visibility, analytics and efficiency across every aspect of business.

Just in time for Sapphire we (with help from our partner Roundarch) finished the development of a great Flex application connecting back into an SAP ERP system using Web Services.

The book on ERP by Prof. Jyotindra Zaveri presents in a very lucid way and simple language various aspects of ERP. Especially he has highlighted seamless integration of business processes in ERP by using more than 300 diagrams / pictures / tables and giving practical case-studies and examples from purchase, accounts, exports, material management, HR and all departments, which has increased its usefulness and value. Anybody working in ERP system will get all practical hints and guidelines regarding what, why, where, when and why of ERP

An updated ERP system and adherence to process compliance can give manufacturers a competitive advantage and improve efficiency. To learn more visit: bit.ly/2deq71D

Colleagues working in supply chain management, including Subject Matter Experts from Operations, were treated to demos and process playbacks of the new Cloud ERP system. In 2022, we closed 117 key design decisions. The new system will simplify the way we work and collaborate.

Please support us and check out our TV program for HKMA Award

 

《2014年度HKMA優質管理獎:智‧勝關鍵》-掌握7大管理元素

 

兩間業務相同的店舖,分別開設在街頭巷尾,為何生意額會差天共地?位置、人流、貨品質素及類別,以至店內裝潢統統都可以有關係,但最關鍵因素卻是「管理」二字,由此影響了員工和服務的水平。無論是打工仔抑或老闆,想「省靚招牌」?不妨一看 now 香港台的節目《2014 年度 HKMA 優質管理獎:智.勝關鍵》。

Ch100 now Hong Kong 香港台

17 Aug5:30 PM

19 Aug10:30 AM

21 Aug1:00 PM

 

Results of the annual HKMA Quality Award, one of the most prestigious business awards in Hong Kong, were proudly announced by Mr James Thompson GBS, Chairman of 2014 HKMA Quality Award Organizing Committee; and Deputy Chairman of The Hong Kong Management Association, during the press conference of the Award held today (Friday, 25 July 2014) at the JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong.

 

The search for QUALITY has become the single most important force leading to organizational success and growth in both national and international markets in the new millennium. The organizations which will succeed are those that can maintain a dedication to Quality in each and every organizational function.

 

The Quality Award was first launched in 1991 by The Hong Kong Management Association. With this annual Award, the Association seeks not just to reward, but also bring public recognition to those organizations that have achieved outstanding standards of quality and made a lasting commitment to the process of quality management.

 

MALCOLM BALDRIGE NATIONAL QUALITY AWARD

The Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award, named after the late Secretary of Commerce of the United States, was created by the US Congress in 1987. It is the highest level of national recognition for quality performance and practices that a US organization can receive.

It is intended to spark interest and involvement in quality programmes, drive American products and services to higher levels of quality, and better equip organizations to meet the challenges of global competition.

 

DEMING PRIZE

The Deming Prize was instituted in Japan in 1951 by a formal resolution of the JUSE (Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers) Board of Directors in grateful recognition of Dr W Edward Deming's friendship and his achievements in promoting industrial quality control.

It has become customary in Japan for corporations intending to improve their performance in products or services to vie for the Deming Prize, not only for the prestige that goes with this honour but also to benefit from internal improvements that result from the implementation of total or company-wide quality control (TQC or CWQC) that is needed in order to qualify for the award.

 

EUROPEAN QUALITY AWARD

The European Quality Award was first presented in Europe in 1992 to honour the most successful exponent of Total Quality Management (TQM). To receive the Award, an applicant must demonstrate that its approach to TQM has contributed significantly over the past few years to satisfying the expectations of customers, employees and others with an interest in the company.

 

2014 HKMA Quality Award-SPECIAL AWARD FOR SMES

The Association introduced the annual Quality Award in 1991 to give recognition to those companies in Hong Kong which have made a lasting commitment to quality and also to provide an opportunity for companies to share with one another their experience in Total Quality Management.

 

Tung Fat Ho Building Material Limited (TFH) is one of the leading local ironmongery suppliers in Hong Kong founded in 1950. Top management excels at anticipating future needs and formulates key success strategies to enhance company`s branding. On customer focus side, the company values after-sales services and sets up an engineering team to deliver at least one-year warranty instead of the industry`s three-month warranty norm. As part of the strategy to transform the company to a professional service provider, the company has earmarked 2.5-3% of payroll for staff to attain professional qualifications and skills enhancement. It is also the first in the industry to deploy ERP system and ISO accreditations. TFH has transformed from an initial retail timber business into a current total solution service business.

 

Panel of Judges:

Dr Dennis T L Sun BBS JP, Chairman, Fuji Photo Products Co Ltd (Chairman);

Mr Alfred W K Chan BBS, Managing Director, The Hong Kong and China Gas Co Ltd;

Mr Herbert Hui, Managing Director, Fuji Xerox (Hong Kong) Ltd;

Mr John Slosar, Chairman, Swire Pacific Limited;

Mr James E Thompson GBS, Chairman, Crown Worldwide Group; and

Dr Kelvin T Y Wong, Executive Director & Deputy Managing Director, COSCO Pacific Ltd.

2014 Award Organizing Committee:

Mr James Thompson GBS , Chairman, Crown Worldwide Holdings Ltd (Chairman);

Dr Michael Chan, Chairman, Cafe de Coral Holdings Ltd;

Dr Fan Cheuk Hung, Managing Director, Synergis Holdings Ltd;

Mr Edmond Ho, Managing Director, The Kowloon Motor Bus Co (1933) Ltd;

Ms Alice Ip, Executive Director, Sino Land Co Ltd;

Ms Randy Lai, Managing Director (Hong Kong) & Regional Manager (Taiwan), McDonald`s Restaurants (HK) Ltd;

Ms Bianca Ma, Managing Director, Metro Broadcast Corporation Ltd;

Mr Perry Mak, Managing Director & Executive Director, Publisher, Hong Kong Economic Times;

Mr Peter Yeung, Vice President - Operations, Harrow International Management Services.

Board of Examiners:

Professor Matthew Yuen, Head and Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (Chairman);

Mr Frankie Cheng, Manager - Quality Assurance, Synergis Management Services Ltd;

Mr Eric Chow, Head of Corporate Treasury & Financing, The Hong Kong and China Gas Co Ltd;

Ms Katherine Lau, General Manager, Corporate Quality & Sustainability, Fuji Xerox (Hong Kong) Ltd;

Mr Jonathan Lui, Deputy Director, Research and Development Department, Glorious Sun Enterprises Ltd;

Ms Ivy Leung, General Manager, Human Resources & Administration Department, OCTOPUS Holdings Ltd;

Mr Chester Tang, Principal - Academy of Excellent Service, MTR Corporation Ltd;

Ms Louisa Tam, Director of Business Operations, Pfizer Corporation Hong Kong Ltd;

Mr VY Ek-chin, Chief Engineer / Business Development, Electrical & Mechanical Services Department, Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

#TycoonTalk

#NowTV100

#HKMAQualityAward

Under the Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) system, motorists pay each time they drive into a congestion prone area. The ERP also allows us to vary charges according to traffic conditions. In this way, we can reduce traffic congestion and optimise the use of our roads by spreading traffic across the network.

 

To find out more about the other strategies that make up Singapore's Sustainable Development Blueprint, please visit www.sustainablesingapore.gov.sg

 

What is a Computer Network? Learn Networking. Basics of Networking

 

Today we will learn about What is Computer Networking? Learn Networking. Basics of Networking. How Network works, Different types of network, and Advantages of the network.

 

What is Computer Networking?

The basic definition of Networking is connecting two or more computers is called networking. Without Networking, nothing is possible in the world. From small to big business or from small to big organization Networking is compulsory. Connect Local and Cloud devices. Like smartphones, satellites, Local areas, Wide areas, and Virtual systems or computers

 

Connect Single or multiple devices on the same or different network. A real example of networking is using Google.com or Download applications from Playstore or Icloud, Store our data on a cloud server or any local server without networking is not possible. Computer Networking is based on physical wires, WIFI, Different types of topologies, and radiofrequency methods. Computer Network includes Personal computers, Servers, and Networking Hardware. Networking working on Network Mediator devices like Switches, Routers, WIFI, Firewall, and Bridge.

 

Importance of Networking?

Networking is the main base for any organization. Without networking, nothing will work properly. Like if you are a Software Developer, Website Developer, Application Developer, Server Developer, Database Developer, or Mobile Application Developer, and if you create an application without networking not a single client will be able to use your resources.

 

Why Importance of Networking

Business Communication

Streamline Communication

Sharing the resources

Data Storage Efficiency

Reduce Cost of Hardware

Reduce Cost of Software

Centralized Administration

Centrally Database Management

Data Security

Data Monitoring

Application

Usage Monitoring

File Sharing

Profile Sharing

Hardware Sharing

Media Sharing

Reliable and Flexible

Information Sharing

User Communication

Play Multiplayer Games.

 

How does Computer Network Work?

Computer Networking working on packet switching. Packets are switching from source to destination. If the packet drop user will not receive any data from the source. Network service runs on specific service and port numbers.

 

File Transfer Protocol (FTP)20 & 21TCP

Secure Shell (SSH)22TCP & UDP

Telnet23TCP

Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)25TCP

IP-SEC50 & 51TCP & UDP

Domain Name System (DNS)53TCP & UDP

Dynamic Host Control Protocol (DHCP)67 & 68UDP

Trivial File Transport Protocol (TFTP)69UDP

Hypertext Transport Protocol (HTTP)80TCP

Hypertext Transport Protocol Secure (HTTPS)443TCP

Post Office Protocol (POP3)110TCP

Network News Transport Protocol (NNTP)119TCP

Network Time Protocol (NTP)123UDP

NetBios135 & 139TCP & UDP

Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP4)143TCP & UDP

Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)161 & 162TCP & UDP

Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP)389TCP & UDP

Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)3389TCP & UDP

 

Types of Computer Network?

Computer Network design on network types. Here we brief about some networking types.

 

- Local Area Networks (LAN):- Local Area Network design for Limited area networks like school colleges or small companies.

 

- Personal Area Networks (PAN)‍:- Personal Area Network design for a personal network like Infrared or Bluetooth. PAN access in the limited area network.

 

- Home Area Networks (HAN):- Home Area Network design to connect home appliances like TV, Fridge, Washing machine, WIFI Router, and Smartphone.

 

- Wide Area Networks (WAN):- Wide Area Network design to connect large geographical areas.

 

- Campus Networks (CAN):- Campus Area Network design to connect specific campus areas like schools or colleges.

 

- Metropolitan Area Networks (MAN):- It connects city to city.

 

- ‍EPN Network:- ‍Enterprise Private Network. It connects various sites from different locations.

 

- Internetworks Network:- Internet Network. Multiple Connection Connect to the Internet at a time.

 

- ‍BBN Network:- Backbone Network. Provide specific information path to communicate

 

Advantages of Computer Network?

- File-Sharing:- Share File and Folder easily from any computer. Single and Multiple file sharing. File sharing with and without authentication users can access.

 

- Resource Sharing:- Software, Application, or ERP system users can access through the network.

 

- Sharing Internet Connection:- Single Internet connection can be shared with multiple users through the network.

 

- Central Data Storage:- Server or client Data backup can store on a single server through the network.

 

- Authentication & Security:- Data sharing and internet surfing will authenticate with security monitoring.

 

Learn Free Information Technology with Manglastubh. Knowledge Base of the different operating systems.

 

Manglastubh By Ankit Akolkar

  

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Colleagues working in supply chain management, including Subject Matter Experts from Operations, were treated to demos and process playbacks of the new Cloud ERP system. In 2022, we closed 117 key design decisions. The new system will simplify the way we work and collaborate.

iTours is specially designed tour operator software that takes care of all the business needs and provides a complete online booking and management software for tours and travels. A popular tour and travel software take care of everything in a one roof software solution of CRM, Accounting, Billing, Reports, B2B, B2C, MIS, Online Payments and Back Office activities. iTours presents a complete ERP System to run a successful travel business.

Now save time to managing and simplify complex activities and empower your customer interaction, manage customer information follow-up and customer retention with this ready-to-use advanced tour operator online CRM software! Back offices, admin, vendors, agents all are important for a tour operating the business; iTours provide an individual platform for them which make easy to use and scalable tour company software for everyone! We also provide multi-doors help & support to our customer by email, open chat, on phone and also available our FAQ section which makes you 100% satisfied.

 

Effitrac is a leading ERP software and development company based in Dubai, UAE. We Provide VAT accounting and ERP Systems, ERP has flexible software for Your Business.

A new generation cash card by NETS that will be compatible with the satellite based road usage tracking system to be introduced in Singapore by 2020 to replace the existing gantry based Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) system.

Danielle Kerner: Welcome to xTuple, and if we can start by you guys each telling us who you are or who you are with.

 

David Brauner: Yea, I am David, I am from credativ Germany. So I am the executive assistant from Germany; so we are formed in 1999, so yea and I worked for credativ for ten years.

 

Danielle: Ten years, wow.

 

Carsten Meskes: My name is Carsten Meskes. I was employed by credativ recently, half a year ago. And I am also the executive assistant, but my work is just for the international part of credativ. So I am basically doing project management for the international business.

 

Danielle: So, what does credativ do?

 

David: We are a service and support company in Germany, only for the open source market.

 

Carsten: Yes, we do support. So, because open source tools do not have the typical support that any proprietary software has, we basically do that and do all of the main care support. So if the customer has any problem with his open source tools, his open source systems, his open source anything, we go in and help him say “ok, that’s a problem, we help you fix it.”

 

Danielle: You are embarking on an implementation of xTuple for your company. Tell us a little bit why you chose to partner with xTuple, why xTuple is the ERP that you selected to help run your operations.

 

Carsten: Um, to get into that I think to do that the best way to start is with a little bit of history here. Because our CEO did; he also partnered up with xTuple on several occasions, and he suggested us trying out to contact you guys, because we are in a dire need for an ERP system right now. So we got setup, and we did try to initiate contact. And well - first of all - we tried to write down all of our needs and all of our requirements and then hand them to you to try if you can…

 

Danielle: ...modify it to meet your specific needs?

 

Carsten: ...encompass every and all of our requirements, yes!

 

Danielle: So that’s kind of a neat aspect to your implementation - in particular - is you are a service-based company that is implementing xTuple ERP with some very specific requirements ... in terms of how you want to manage those projects inside of the application and how you will communicate with your customers about the status of those projects. So that’s one of the unique opportunities with xTuple -

certainly - is that out-of-the-box, it’s a very complete system, and then you have the ability - should you want - to make those enhancements you can. So, any additional thoughts? You have been here for a few days, what is your perspective of xTuple as a company and as a product?

 

Carsten: Um, I personally do like, well it starts with the building.

 

Danielle: You like the building?

 

Carsten: I do like your office building, being setup in an old bank. It has just a unique flare that I enjoy. I also like how leisure[ly] everyone is here ...it's just really easy, fun. and enjoyable what I’ve learned.

 

Danielle: Well, good. You agree?

 

David: Yea!

 

Danielle: Haha! We’re great, you agree we’re great. So really this is your first endeavor with xTuple. You haven’t used the application a lot. You’ve - as a partner though - you’ve worked on some projects around the world, and I think we are all looking forward to engaging in more of those over time

 

Carsten: Certainly!

 

Learn about xTuple ERP+CRM with Web Portal (eCommerce & more) at xtuple.com.

 

Learn about credativ international GmbH at www.credativ.com.

REVOLUTIONIZING FINANCE

“The implementation of Enterprise Resource Planning will be a tremendous milestone in the transformation of Multan Electric Power Company into a justly operated public utility. It will facilitate timely decisions, transparency and persistent improvement in operational efficiency. The assistance and contribution of the Power Distribution Program in this venture designed for the benefit of the public, is greatly appreciated.”

Multan Electric Power Company Finance Director

Mian Ansar Mehmood

(Pictured Above) Kicking Off Enterprise Resource Planning at Multan Electric Power Company: The USAID Power Distribution Program officially kicked off its Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementation project at MEPCO in September. Currently, existing DISCO back-office operations are incapable of providing timely information required for making effective managerial decisions. The automation of the back-office operations through an ERP system will streamline processes, improve workflow efficiency, and enable reliable and precise financial and managerial information. The event introduced the ERP implementing partner, Abacus Consulting, which further presented a high-level Implementation Plan to MEPCO senior management. The presentation, besides charting the course ahead, also highlighted the intervention’s benefits and motivated MEPCO staff to successfully implement the ERP Project.

 

REVOLUTIONIZING FINANCE

“The implementation of Enterprise Resource Planning will be a tremendous milestone in the transformation of Multan Electric Power Company into a justly operated public utility. It will facilitate timely decisions, transparency and persistent improvement in operational efficiency. The assistance and contribution of the Power Distribution Program in this venture designed for the benefit of the public, is greatly appreciated.”

Multan Electric Power Company Finance Director

Mian Ansar Mehmood

(Pictured Above) Kicking Off Enterprise Resource Planning at Multan Electric Power Company: The USAID Power Distribution Program officially kicked off its Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) implementation project at MEPCO in September. Currently, existing DISCO back-office operations are incapable of providing timely information required for making effective managerial decisions. The automation of the back-office operations through an ERP system will streamline processes, improve workflow efficiency, and enable reliable and precise financial and managerial information. The event introduced the ERP implementing partner, Abacus Consulting, which further presented a high-level Implementation Plan to MEPCO senior management. The presentation, besides charting the course ahead, also highlighted the intervention’s benefits and motivated MEPCO staff to successfully implement the ERP Project.

 

*cough* is this thing on? *cough*

 

Erm, this is me, I work on the web. Well not really, but I do hang out on a lot on the net. In fact it's become an essential part of my everyday life. When I say "not really", I do use web and browser based technology to solve business problems for my customers, but most of what I do doesn't end up on the public web.

 

My background is the *scary echo* enterprise *scary echo*, developing green screen ERP systems -- big fat systems that big fat companies use to run their businesses. But in 2006 I decided to ditch it all and started my own business with the intent of solving the same problems, but with simpler software.

 

I was a pre-web internet junky while at Uni. Spending many a late night chatting to people on the other side of the world using irc, and consuming vast amounts of smut^H^H^H^H information on usenet.

 

I've tinkered with building web pages for a while, hanging on the fringes of the Clan Analogue collective in Sydney and Canberra in the mid-nineties. I put together my first website to promote my music about 10 years ago using Netscape Composer. Five or so years later I started building a web site for a Buddhist study centre using MS Frontpage. It was horrendous, both Frontpage and the resulting site, so I bought Sitepoint's "Designing Without Tables" and taught myself HTML and CSS. With new skills in hand I rebuilt the website by hand.

 

Right now, Ruby on Rails is floating my boat, and I love hanging with the Sydney rails crew. There's something about spending time with a bunch of passionate people that are smarter than me _and_ who are innately likeable that I find immensely rewarding.

 

So, yeah, this is me, I work on the web.

Capacity vs Productivity

We’ve been running a series of posts that engage you to think about your business much earlier than is customary. Why? Some distributors voice an opinion that they seem to have reached the maximum output of their ERP systems (databases are out dated or obsolete) ...

 

www.electricaltrends.com/2014/10/big-bang-buck.html

We are an IT organization, offering Software Solutions, products and services along with Web Development, Mobile Development & Online promotions like Search Engine Optimization as well as Social Media Optimization to our clients. With a focus on delivering Superior and Precise Solutions for Business Owners, PreciseIT has consistently been proactive and innovative in delivering value.

 

7 Steps for Getting Success in ERP System Implementation. www.cembs.com

"Intellect has formed a variety of ERP Systems for the Transportation industry created generally for Carriers, Agents, NVOCC’s, Freight Forwarders, Warehouses, and Intermodal companies applying the latest technologies in the industry. Intellect technologies developed ERP software solutions for supply chain and Logistics markets. For more details contact us:https://www.intellecttech.com/ Email: sales@IntellectTech.com

Phone: +1 609-454-3170"

TRANSPARENCY

“This orientation training for the Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system, organized by the Power Distribution Program and conducted by Abacus Consulting, provided practical understanding of the different ERP modules. It will serve as the basis for the successful completion of the whole project.”

Multan Electric Power Company Dy. Manager CA (Banking)

Aftab Fazal

  

(Pictured Above) Introducing New Levels of Financial Transparency in Multan Electric Power Company: USAID Power Distribution Program in collaboration with Abacus Consulting conducted a specialized training session on its new Enterprise Resource Planning system being implemented at the Multan Electric Power Company. The training targets both advanced and basic level users to enable all middle managers familiarity with the new system. The ERP system is a standard management tool for well-managed modern electric distribution utilities. The system allows for various business functions to share and collaborate under one umbrella and will greatly streamline all processes in the company.

 

O Ring (www.oring-seal.com):

1,Compound from world class suppliers, NBR, EPDM, VITON (FKM), HNBR, etc material and pantone code available, hardness from 30 to 95 Shore A;

2, pressed by mould vulcanization, ID from 0.5mm to 1000mm and C/S from 0.5mm to 20mm by mould Vulcanization, ID from 3mm to 20mm and C/S from 500mm to 6000mm by Section Vulcanization;

3,AS, JIS, BS,R,GB and customize size available;

4, in house tool making and free of tooling charge for standard rubber ring, the mould line can be 45° and 180°

5,RoHs/Reach/NORSOKM710 certificate,

6, strict material traceability under ERP system.

7,Big stock,mini MOQ acceptable

Eresource ERP is an Exclusive ERP System for various Industries. bit.ly/2plPd9I

Automate your Business with eresource ERP System. #1 ERP for Small, Medium & Large Scale Industries.

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