Revolution in the Valley: The Insanely Great Story of How the Mac Was Made (51 page)

Read Revolution in the Valley: The Insanely Great Story of How the Mac Was Made Online

Authors: Andy Hertzfeld

Tags: #Business & Economics, #General, #Industries, #Computers & Information Technology, #Workplace Culture, #Research & Development, #Computers, #Operating Systems, #Macintosh, #Hardware

Jef did not want to incorporate what became the two most definitive aspects of Macintosh technology - the Motorola 68000 microprocessor and the mouse pointing device. Jef preferred the 6809, a cheaper but weaker processor which only had 16 bits of address space and would have been obsolete in just a year or two, since it couldn't address more than 64Kbytes. He was dead set against the mouse as well, preferring dedicated meta-keys to do the pointing. He became increasingly alienated from the team, eventually leaving entirely in the summer of 1981, when we were still just getting started, and the final product utilitized very few of the ideas in the Book of Macintosh. In fact, if the name of the project had changed after Steve took over in January 1981, and it almost did (see
bicycle
), there wouldn't be much reason to correlate it with his ideas at all.

So, if not Jef, does anyone else qualify as a parent of the Macintosh? Bill Atkinson is a strong candidate, since he was almost singlehandedly responsible for the breakthrough user interface, graphics software and killer application that distinguished the Mac. A case could also be made for Burrell Smith, whose wildly creative digital board was the seed crystal of brilliance that everything else coalesced around. But ultimately, if any single individual deserves the honor, I would have to cast my vote for the obvious choice, Steve Jobs, because the Macintosh never would have happened without him, in anything like the form it did. Other individuals are responsible for the actual creative work, but Steve's vision, passion for excellence and sheer strength of will, not to mention his awesome powers of persuasion, drove the team to meet or exceed the impossible standards that we set for ourselves. Steve already gets a lot of credit for being the driving force behind the Macintosh, but in my opinion, it's very well deserved.

Table of Contents

I'll Be Your Best Friend

We'll See About That

Scrooge McDuck

It's The Moustache That Matters

Good Earth

Texaco Towers

Reality Distortion Field

Nybbles

Black Wednesday

More Like A Porsche

He's Only in Field Service

Early Demos

Bicycle

A Message For Adam

Square Dots

Round Rects Are Everywhere!

Pineapple Pizza

I Invented Burrell

Macintosh Prototypes

Apple II Mouse Card

Diagnostic Port

Shut Up!

PC Board Esthetics

First day with the Macintosh team

Donkey

Joining the Mac Group

Desk Ornaments

I Don't Have a Computer!

The Grand Unified Model (1) - Resources

Hungarian

Signing Party

-2000 Lines Of Code

Mister Macintosh

Calculator Construction Set

And Another Thing...

Rosing's Rascals

Software Wizard

Gobble, Gobble, Gobble

And Then He Discovered Loops!

I Still Remember Regions

Bouncing Balls

You Can't Fire Bruce!

Do It

Inside Macintosh

Invasion of Texaco Towers

Alice

Creative Think

You Guys Are In Big Trouble

Resource Manager Countdown

Boot Beep

Sound By Monday

US Festival

The Little Kingdom

Little Rubber Feet

The Grand Unified Model (2) - The Finder

Credit Where Due

Steve Icon

Too Big For My Britches

Bouncing Pepsis

RMaker

A Big Scare!

MacPaint Evolution

World Class Cities

Swedish Campground

Quick, Hide In This Closet!

Saving Lives

Stolen From Apple

Pirate Flag

Close Encounters of the Steve Kind

The Puzzle

Cut, Paste and Crash

1984

How to Hire Insanely Great Employees

Steve Wozniak University

We're Not Hackers!

Make a Mess, Clean it Up!

Price Fight

Monkey Lives

90 Hours A Week And Loving It!

The Mythical Man Year

MacPaint Gallery

A Rich Neighbor Named Xerox

Steve Capps Day

3rd Party Developers and Macintosh Development

A Mac For Mick

It Sure Is Great To Get Out Of That Bag!

A Floppy named lsadkfjalhkjh

Disk Swapper's Elbow

Real Artists Ship

The Times They Are A-Changin'

Leave Of Absence

First Day in the Mac Group

Thunderscan

Things Are Better Than Ever

Switcher

Are You Gonna Do It?

Font Manager Redux

The End Of An Era

Handicapped

MacBasic

An Early 'Switch' Campaign

Vault of Horror

A Rose by Any Other Name

Evolution Of A Classic

A Lesson In Diplomacy

Origins of Spline-Based and Anti-Aliased Fonts

Five Different Macintoshes

Busy Being Born

Busy Being Born, Part 2

Revolution in the Valley

Mea Culpa

On Xerox, Apple and Progress

The Macintosh Spirit

The Apple Spirit

The Father Of The Macintosh

Other books

Stripped Defenseless by Lia Slater
Ruled by the Rod by Sara Rawlings
The Silver Anklet by Mahtab Narsimhan
The Forms of Water by Andrea Barrett
Code to Zero by Follett, Ken
Velvet by Mary Hooper
Beautifully Awake by Riley Mackenzie
El Reino del Caos by Nick Drake