Confident Apple for 2004
by Derrick Story 01/07/2004What do you do when the whole world is watching and you don't have a killer hardware announcement? You do what Steve did on the opening day of Macworld 2004.
Steve Jobs’ first keynote of the year was relaxed, confident, and entertaining. And to me, it was a keynote for Apple in 2004 as much as it was for the Macworld conference.
You might be thinking that the iPod mini isn't exactly chopped liver and qualifies as a major hardware announcement. You're right, it isn't chopped liver. It's cool. It's five fruity flavors in your pocket. But it's an evolution of a revolutionary product. In of itself, the iPod mini isn't a major announcement. Apple is tending the garden, and they are doing so quite well.
Then you could argue that the Xserve G5 isn't really anything to pooh-pooh. And I would say, "Amen brother." The Xserve is Apple's commitment to the small and large enterprise market -- and what a beautiful, smart, powerful commitment it is. And don't forget about the Xserve RAID Steve demoed. Very nice.
Again, evolutionary, not revolutionary. Nothing wrong with that. In fact, nothing worse than having a great idea (iPod, Xserve, etc.) and not fully developing it. Apple is not only coming up with new ideas, but they are also seeing them through. Heck, look at Mac OS X if you want to talk commitment. This is good business.
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While I'm standing here in the garden that Apple is tending, I should mention the iLife suite. iPhoto, iDVD, iTunes, and iMovie are all maturing with grace and stability. It's so cool to fire up a new version of a favorite application and not be disgusted by feature bloat, poor performance, and buggy behavior.
I haven't heard the official word either way on this, but it appears that you will have to buy iLife to get the updated versions of iPhoto, etc. No more free downloads apparently. But the entire suite is $49 and that includes a new application that is killer. Personally, I find it hard to complain about that.
But I want to get back to the keynote itself and Apple's momentum for 2004. One of the first things I noticed during the presentation was that it was mostly Steve and a few Apple product managers. The parade of technology CEOs proclaiming their commitment to the Mac platform was diverted to another place and time. Yes, Microsoft did make an appearance to announce Office 2004 for the Mac. And that was certainly the right thing to do. But that's all that was needed. Apple doesn't require validation from fickle companies that would just as easily turn away at the drop of a mouse.
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Steve ran most of the demos. And watching him refer to his notes, leg bouncing with excitement as he tried to tame his computer in front of the whole world was exciting. Steve is a rock star, no doubt. But there's something very endearing about him when he sits down at the computer and suddenly becomes you or me trying to make something happen. It takes guts to do that in front of the whole world. And when it works, we can identify with the man on the stage in a very familiar way. If Steve can do it in front of thousands, millions, of people, then I sure as hell can in the privacy of my own office.
It got even better. Steve introduced John Mayer. John has some endearing qualities himself. First of all, he's a guitar player, and the first thing they did was set him down at the keyboard. "John, play a few rifts for us," Steve asked. John's thinking, "Dang, what am I doing playing the keyboard in front of the whole world." But it worked. Again, it was you or me trying to pound out a tune.
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The new application, GarageBand was the reason for all this fun. And what a heck of a program it is. Over and over again I heard in the audience, "I want that." You look at it, watch Steve trying to shape a composition with it, and you connect. Not only is the application revolutionary (because average people can actually use it), so was the presentation of it.
Then they got serious. John Mayer picked up the guitar and the room lit up. I cannot describe the enjoyment I felt watching John play, Steve play, and seeing the Mac capture it all. When Steve was getting ready to close the application, "Save it!" was shouted throughout the hall.
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I don't know what's going to happen in 2004. I hope it's a good year for the U.S. and all of the world. But I do know that Apple has laid the foundation for a strong 12 months ahead. You can see it on paper, and I could feel it in the Moscone Ballroom yesterday.
Now we need to do our part. We need to take this platform and push it to the very limit. As developers and power users, we can apply the same creativity and confidence to our endeavors that Apple has to its framework.
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When Steve introduced the video showing Virginia Tech's supercluster of 1,100 G5s, I thought that this is a perfect example of recognizing the strengths of a platform and leveraging it in a creative way. I would love to see those types of achievements, big and small, come out of our audience. We certainly can add fuel to this fire, and if we do, God knows what we might see this time next year.
Derrick Story is the author of The Photoshop CS4 Companion for Photographers, The Digital Photography Companion, and Digital Photography Hacks, and coauthor of iPhoto: The Missing Manual, with David Pogue. You can follow him on Twitter or visit www.thedigitalstory.com.
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Showing messages 1 through 13 of 13.
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The real keynote during the super bowl?
2004-01-12 06:28:30 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
I know this is a stretch. But I would watch the super bowl this year. Perhaps that is where the big announcement for hardware is going to be announced. It was twenty years ago during the big game the hardware was announced. Perhaps steve showing the add at Mac World was a hint.
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The Band
2004-01-08 18:37:41 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
To know what craftmanship is just look at Gates presentation of the DvD player he showed at CES. He used a sales guy to show it off....just pathic. Then Steve shows off GarageBand..he does the presentation with help with John Mayer! All passion and craftmenship.
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Glad to see the positive view
2004-01-08 13:04:57 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
I'm glad to see a positive review of the keynote. Like you said, it was mostly evolutionary and that's extremerly positive - "evolve or die!". Not all keynotes has to be a bootstompping, heartripping experience to leave one with a nice afterglow.
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Recording minutes of live music before millions of eyes...
2004-01-08 11:18:07 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
That was the most exciting thing about the keynote.
They demoed a brand new app, recording minutes of music!
That was incredibly risky, I'd say. So much could have gone wrong.
There is no person on the world who'd take the risk of demoing a music program like that on a PC.
That was the most striking demonstration of reliability I've ever seen.
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MWSF - Yawn
2004-01-08 10:34:37 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
Not much intersting this year. No faster G5's, no updated iMacs or eMacs, no 20th Anv. Mac.
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the missing point...
2004-01-08 10:12:44 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
In the past Apple announced many products and they would get lost in the ... but one last thing (iMac 2) shuffle.
I found the show, to be well thought out. They wanted to focus on music and ipods. If they had come out with a 3 GHz station everyone would have forgotten iLife.
I remember buying a pc and their were so many to choose from I just left. The next store had just a couple and it was a lot easier.
My two bits, thanks
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Keynote and GB
2004-01-08 08:45:12 reluctantswitcher [Reply | View]
It was an excellent keynote with some strong but largely evolutionary announcements. However, GarageBand is, IMHO, a "killer app". My kids are alreadt planning their music, CDs and pop videos, all using one platform. GB alone is easily worth $49 and that fact that you get iMovie with trim-editing, iPhoto with performance and database size improvements, iTunes with Rendevouz sharing, etc, etc - is great ! Pity iDVD still only links to Superdrives. BTW, I wonder when GarageBand, linked to iTunes, will allow upload, as well as download - just imagine ! :-)
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Charging for iPhoto and iMovie is wrong
2004-01-08 07:20:23 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
I disagree with the practice of charging for iPhoto and iMovie. People who have had their Mac's for some time operated under the impression that the original i products where a part of the OS. Each iteration of the products was a free download. The only exception being iDVD, although I can justify it due to the size of the download.
Now I have all of my content in these applications and have become a regular part of my computing experience. Now that I'm hooked in Apple is going to start charging for them. I think it's wrong. Banks allowed ATM usage to be free, once users became hooked they started charging. Drug dealers operate the same way, first hit free. Once your addicted they start to charge.
That's my 2 cents.
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iLife bundled?
2004-01-08 06:11:18 bazzargh [Reply | View]
According to the transcript I was reading (IRC provided my MacRumours.com) iLife4 is being bundled with all new Macs, from the 16th? Anyone know if that is being reported elsewhere?
Its impossible to tell from Apples online store what software will be bundled - they don't even tell you the version of OSX you'll get. Ah well, I ordered my new powerbook yesterday anyway, I'm sure I'll get iLife eventually...
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Growing confidence in evidence
2004-01-07 20:40:49 msievers [Reply | View]
With the stress of moving the Mac customer base to OSX starting to fade in the rear view mirror, Apple can now turn its attention to tying together the many technologies it has to offer. While we often see the power of an individual innovation we only gradually come to realize how all the pieces of the puzzle fit together to create a whole that is greater than its parts. Xgrid and Rendezvous are examples of the kind of synergy we will all enjoy going forward. I sense the growing confidence in this year's MacWorld keynote and yes, the year ahead is very promising.
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iLife
2004-01-07 17:48:56 mike3k [Reply | View]
iTunes & iPhoto are the only iLife apps I use regularly. Although both my PowerBook & G4 towers have SuperDrives, I never use iDVD or iMovie, since I don't have any video equipment and I'm not interested in making movies.
I would love to be able to get just iPhoto as a free download. I really don't care about getting the rest of the package.
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best commentary yet
2004-01-07 17:30:56 restiffbard [Reply | View]
Thanks, Derrick. That has to be the best commentary yet on this year's MacWorld. Reading the rumor forums lately has been making me insane with all the complaints. I thought it was great. GarageBand is incredible. John Mayer was perfect. Steve was, as usual, great to watch. I enjoyed it thoroughly. Also, I switched less than a year ago, from Linux. I've no complaints. Thanks for not continuing the trash talking I've been seeing.






The photos to this article are all distorted when I view them. Twisted or skewed is the best way to describe them.
Now this article is written by someone who is supposed to be an expert in Digital Photography? Huh? Are you trying to be "creative"? Artistic?
It does not inspire me to go buy your book.