Apple 2.0

Mac news from outside the reality distortion field

Nostalgia time: Apple ads from the '80s and '90s


Here's a flash from the past.

apple-ad.jpg

Dave Caolo at The Unofficial Apple Weblog stumbled across a collection of old Apple (AAPL) print ads and was kind enough to share the link. It's from a site maintained by Marcin Wichary, a Swiss-based graphical user interface designer at Google best known on the Web for his obsessive "10 Years of Being Boring: 150 pages dedicated to one of the most beautiful songs ever."

Wichary's archives cover two decades and include many of the early Apple II and III ads as well the 39-page Macintosh extravaganza that filled all the ad space in the 1994 presidential election issue of Newsweek. It does not include, however, the Think Different series.

The ad that brings back the most memories for me is the "100 Things You Can Do With An Apple" spread that ran in 1983 and ended up in the lead paragraph of TIME's Machine of the Year cover story:

moy.jpgWILL SOMEONE PLEASE TELL ME, the bright red advertisement asks in mock irritation, WHAT A PERSONAL COMPUTER CAN DO? The ad provides not merely an answer, but 100 of them. A personal computer, it says, can send letters at the speed of light, diagnose a sick poodle, custom-tailor an insurance program in minutes, test recipes for beer. Testimonials abound. Michael Lamb of Tucson figured out how a personal computer could monitor anesthesia during surgery; the rock group Earth, Wind and Fire uses one to explode smoke bombs onstage during concerts; the Rev. Ron Jaenisch of Sunnyvale, Calif, programmed his machine so it can recite an entire wedding ceremony. (link)

I was on my writer's trial at the magazine that year and played a minor role in the issue. Much of the heavy lifting was done by Michael Moritz, then TIME's Silicon Valley correspondent and now a managing partner at Sequoia Capital (and former member of the board at both Google and Yahoo).

You can see Wichary's full collection of ads in the attached section of arsluna, his elegant home in cyberspace.

Some really great 'ads' that, much of the time transcend advertising. And that's tough to do. They create a spirit, a feeling of what the company is. They work on the three classical levels, ethos, pathos and logos. Very little advertising can do that, and almost no other technology advertising does it.

Reading through the old materials I was surprised to find so much humor in the footnotes (our lawyers said…ETC) That is missing no days as Apple takes itself a little more seriously.

I love to watch the 'think different' ad every once in a while, as linked above. Perfect editing, score, timing.

-M

http://cartoonshmartoon.blogspot.com/

Posted By mfearing: February 11, 2008 12:48 AM

Awesome collection, something that should be put in a museum!! The history of a company that makes great products, even through some tough years, but in the end will prove to have changed the world. Just like my favorite Apple commercial: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4oAB83Z1ydE

Posted By Mike from Cleveland: February 10, 2008 7:12 AM

All of this stuff should be destroyed! nobody wants to remember this crap! Microsoft was the winner not Apple!

Posted By ballmer, Redmond, WA: February 10, 2008 2:30 AM

behind the hatred there lies a murderous desire for love

Posted By Anonymous: February 10, 2008 1:07 AM
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Philip Elmer-DeWitt

Philip Elmer-DeWitt
Steve Jobs, goes the old joke at Apple, is surrounded by a reality distortion field; get too close and you believe what he's saying. Apple has made believers out of millions of customers — and made a lot of investors rich — but Philip Elmer-DeWitt believes that an ounce of skepticism never hurts when writing about the company. He should know. He's been covering Apple – and watching Steve Jobs operate — since 1982.
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