Newton's August 1993 launch set the stage for what would become the iPad and iPhone

Posted:
in General Discussion edited August 2023

Apple's Newton handheld computer was both the company's biggest failure and its greatest peek into the future. Thirty years after launch, AppleInsider reminisces about what it was, what it meant, and where it went wrong.




Back in 1993, Apple's press officers did the rounds of every technology magazine there was. When they reached one in London, they had the speech down pat. In particular, they knew how to fend off criticisms by asking questions first.

"What do you think it should have next?" they asked, subtly telling us more versions were coming and buttering up our egos. "Backlighting or color?" Without exception, the ten or so journalists in that office all said "backlighting" in unison.

It wasn't a bad choice. Newton never would get color but it did get backlighting with the MessagePad 130 in 1996.

On reflection, though, the answer to "what does it need next" was a lot more complicated than a simple choice between two features. By the time we were being asked that, the device was already heading to failure because it was competing against everyone's inflated expectations for it. Newton was announced so far ahead of being shipped and it was hyped so much that by the time it came, it was inevitably a disappointment.

That long delay also meant that competitors could at least start making rivals. Yet really the biggest rival to Newton had begun before the announcement. It's just that it had been begun by Apple. At exactly the same time Apple was making Newton, its spin-off company General Magic was attempting to make a similar device.

It's rare for a company to foresee where the future is going but Apple did it in the 1990s -- and unfortunately did it twice at the same time. These were two separate Apple-backed devices that eerily predicted the world we live in today. And they both failed.

To understand where Newton went wrong, you need to see what it was trying to achieve before all of the hype and you need to go back further to the mid-1980s.

Who thought of Newton?



In 1985, Jean-Louis Gasse wrote that "in five years or less, computers will probably be capable of recognizing handwriting."

Today, Gassee is a businessman turned writer with an insightful and witty technology blog but in 1985 he was Apple's senior vice president of research and development.

In his 2023 biography, "Grateful Geek," Gassee says it was when disaffected Apple engineer Steve Sakoman wanted to quit in 1987, that Newton began. Sakoman wanted to escape Apple's politics, return to product creation, and work on his idea for a device with handwriting recognition.

"I should have given him a pep talk and pointed out that Apple was in great shape with many interesting projects ahead," wrote Gassee. "Without thinking, I asked if he needed a CEO."

They compromised. Sakoman agreed to stay with Apple and make this device only if his work would be kept free of interference.

Gassee set him up in a building on Bubb Road, about ten minutes away from 1 Infinite Loop, and did not report to the Board what they were doing.

Apple's relevant buildings in Cupertino, California. Via Apple Maps. In red left to right: Bubb Road, 1 Infinite Loop and today's Apple Park.
Apple's relevant buildings in Cupertino, California. Via Apple Maps. In red left to right: Bubb Road, 1 Infinite Loop and today's Apple Park.



Sakoman wasn't working alone, though. By this point he'd persuaded Steve Capps, co-writer of the Mac's Finder, to return to Apple specifically for this project. What they and their team were doing was specifically to look at making a pen-based mobile computing device. By late 1987 Sakoman had named it Newton, after the original complex pen-and-ink Apple logo.




Also by this point, their plans or at least hopes were well developed. Newton was to be a handheld computer and communicator that sold for $2,495. That's what the original Mac cost so it didn't seem unreasonable. In today's money, though, it's $5,534 which does.

That's $2,000 more than the Apple Vision Pro. Or it was. The planned Newton didn't stay that price for very long.

It didn't stay handheld, either: by 1989 Newton was instead on its way to being a tablet measuring 8.5 by 11 inches, codenamed Figaro, and probably due to cost between $6,000 and $8,000. Today that's $12,193 to $16,257.

It's not clear how long Gassee really did keep this project secret from the rest of Apple, but by 1990, the company's Board definitely knew about it. By then, though, there didn't seem such a need to keep it secret in order to prevent any interference.

That's because Newton's big supporter Gassee had first taken over worldwide product marketing and shortly after was also named President of Apple Products.

However, early in that same year, Gassee disagreed with John Sculley who wanted to licence the Mac operating system to other computer manufacturers.

Their difference of opinion and Sculley's position meant that Gassee had a powerful title, but he was sidelined. It was a clear and significant enough change in Gassee's position that he announced he would resign.

It was more internal Apple politics and this time, specifically because of how Gassee was being treated, Sakoman finally did quit Apple on on March 2, 1990.

That could've been the end of Newton except for Bill Atkinson. This is the man who was principally responsible for the Apple Lisa's graphical interface which then became the Mac's.






Atkinson invited Steve Capps plus Apple legends Andy Hertzfeld, Susan Kare, and Marc Porat to his home for a meeting on March 11, 1990. It was to discuss a way of keeping Newton going and, significantly, he also invited John Sculley.

Three years before in his now out of print book "Odyssey: Pepsi to Apple," Scullley enthused about what he called the Knowledge Navigator. "Individuals could use it drive through libraries, museums, databases or institutional archives through various windows and menus opening galleries, stacks and more," he wrote.

Sculley went a bit crazy for this idea, having Apple produce promotional videos for it.

Yet at that first meeting in Atkinson's home, reportedly he just didn't get it.

He did, though, ask for something that he could show the Board at their next meeting. If only by that request, Sculley got Newton going again.

With the exception of Steve Sakoman's departure, the Newton team then began to return to normal. The Board approved the idea, Sculley gave Newton his official and full backing, and then he appointed Larry Tesler to run it in May 1990. There were just two things he mandated: Newton must go on sale on April 2, 1992 and it must cost $1,500 ($3,048 today).

This is where it gets odd



Marc Porat, who was at Atkinson's March meeting, had been involved since a year before with a separate project to do with making partnerships with Apple and companies i the communications and consumer industries.

In May 1990, he and others persuaded John Sculley to spin off that project into the separate General Magic. Working for General Magic from the start were Porat, Bill Atkinson and Andy Hertzfield. At some point shortly after they were joined by Susan Kare.

So with the exception of John Sculley and Steve Capps, every person who'd been at Atkinson's March 1990 meeting about the Newton was now with General Magic.

It's a matter of record that General Magic had the kind of tight security and secrecy that we now associate with Apple. This year's documentary about the company even shows some of the ways it implemented as total a blackout of news as it could.




Yet even if Apple did the same thing with Newton, so many of the General Magic people were ex-Newton that it is not physically possible that they didn't know about their rival. These two companies aimed for the same goal of a handheld communicator that would revolutionize the world in pretty much the same ways and Newton announced first.

"John Sculley gave a keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show where he announced what we were doing," Andy Hertzfield says in the General Magic documentary. "Except he announced it as something Apple was doing. We thought Apple wasn't doing it and we heard about it from that speech. We felt completely betrayed."

"I thought they would co-exist. So I wasn't really concerned that Newton would hurt General Magic. I was getting intense pressure from the Apple board and the Apple management team as to why I was spending so much time on General Magic [when] Apple was developing in parallel a business that it owned 100 percent of called Newton," said Sculley. "And that looked like they could ship a product."

It may have looked like it, but it wasn't true.





When Sculley launched the Newton on May 29, 1993, it didn't work. Literally. The first prototype demonstrated on stage wouldn't switch on. Fortunately the second did. Even so, Sculley should not have caved in to pressure to announce it yet.

Ultimately, the Newton wouldn't actually ship for another 14 months. It came out on August 2, 1993.

Its initial sales were good, for the time, with a reported 50,000 Newton MessagePads sold by the end of November 1993. However, whether through promotions or discounts, those were sold at $900 or $1,569 in today's money, far below Sculley's mandated figure.

The model shown to us in London was nowhere near as fast as using an iPhone today to make notes. However, it was faster than getting out your PowerBook was and the idea of having your calendar and emails with you all the time was compelling.

It just wasn't the magical device we'd all been led to expect. When the handwriting recognition wasn't perfect -- and it often wasn't -- it got mocked.

That recognition did improve and the machine did get faster and it did ultimately get a backlight.

The end of the show



Newton subsequently went through eight versions of the hardware, and many revisions of its software mostly distributed on 3.5-inch floppy disk before Steve Jobs returned to Apple in 1997 and killed the project.

It didn't actually get discontinued until 1998 and there were attempts by other companies to buy the technology but none worked out. To this day there are people using Newton MessagePads and a documentary was released about them and it this year.

John Sculley was ultimately the reason Newton came to market, and perhaps it's because of acrimonious disagreements that Jobs killed it off. Yet it was also Sculley who created Newton's most serious rival and it was he who announced it all more than a year before it could be made ready to ship.

"The Newton in 1998 looks remarkably unchanged from the Newton in 1993," wrote Sculley. "With the exception that the handwriting now works and the screen is readable."

If he'd let the designers get that right before announcing it, Newton might well have revolutionized the world. In an alternative reality, Newton could have been such a hit.

Which is what the writers of Apple TV+ hit "For All Mankind" think, too. That drama, which posits an alternative reality to our own, has characters using what's actually a Newton MessagePad 120 with an iPhone 12 hidden inside it.

Even in our own reality, even just looking back at the history of the Newton, still we can see much of what made the iPhone popular so many years later.

Read on AppleInsider

FileMakerFeller

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 20
    2770 Lorca2770 Lorca Posts: 14unconfirmed, member
    For those 65 years and older. Newton, like General Magic and other developments and exiting projects were starved off and killed by all almighty Microsoft. Apple had always the upper hand of craziness and ingenuity, however, Microsoft always came with the concept of “stops the presses” we are coming with something better; projects which no any of them ever materialized. It was the tactic of a company already under the scrutiny of DOJ.
    lkruppwatto_cobrajony0pscooter63
  • Reply 2 of 20
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    So, the iPod, iPhone and iPad all derived from Newton...

    That says more about Steve Jobs than anything else:
    Steve was not a great creator or new technology.   Instead, he took existing technology and mixed it, matched it, improved it and refined it until he had an "insanely great" product that he could stand on a stage with and very proudly show off to the world.

    The Newton was clearly great technology for its day.  But it wasn't a great product.  It was big and clunky and not very usable by the average person.   In short, it was (from Steve's point of view) crap.  But the underlying ideas, objectives and technology were not. 

    So, product by product, Steve took that idea and that fundamental technology and mixed it, matched it, refined it and made it an "insanely great" product.   Thanks to all that worked to make this possible going all the way back to Xerox PARC!
    watto_cobraFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 3 of 20
    The Knowledge Navigator movie predated the Newton launch with almost 6 years (produced in 1987), and was the inspiration for the Newton and later the iPad, that was first implemented as the iPhone.

    If you watch the entire movie, there are functionality there that even the modern day combination of iPad and Siri can't perform. 

    I worked in Apple product management at the time of the Newton launch, and had it in hand before it was presented to the public. We had very high hopes for the success of the little machine, but in practical use it had a number of shortcomings that Apple only was able to master with iOS. 
    GeorgeBMacCuJoYYCwatto_cobraFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 4 of 20
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    So, the iPod, iPhone and iPad all derived from Newton...

    That says more about Steve Jobs than anything else:
    Steve was not a great creator or new technology.   Instead, he took existing technology and mixed it, matched it, improved it and refined it until he had an "insanely great" product that he could stand on a stage with and very proudly show off to the world.

    The Newton was clearly great technology for its day.  But it wasn't a great product.  It was big and clunky and not very usable by the average person.   In short, it was (from Steve's point of view) crap.  But the underlying ideas, objectives and technology were not. 

    So, product by product, Steve took that idea and that fundamental technology and mixed it, matched it, refined it and made it an "insanely great" product.   Thanks to all that worked to make this possible going all the way back to Xerox PARC!
    I basically agree. Tech types like inventors rarely have any business or marketing sense. Look no further than Woz. It takes someone like Jobs, Gates, Musk, Bezos to build a company. The story goes that when Jobs saw what Xerox PARC was doing he instantly knew it was the future of computing. Bill Gates typically bought his technology, like DOS. Gates famously said about the GUI, “I broke into the house intending to steal the TV but when I did I found that you (Jobs) had already stolen it.” 
    watto_cobraFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 5 of 20
    BebeBebe Posts: 145member
    The bulkiness of the MessagePad was what made it a failure, in my opinion.  I still have one and still works.
    GeorgeBMacwatto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 20
    A factual error in the article, in my interview with John Sculley for the film, Love Notes to Newton, he is adamant that it was Apple’s board, never him, who wanted to license the MacOS to other manufacturers, and that is one reason why Sculley was forced out in 1993. The clip is not in the film, but maybe I should make it available.
    GeorgeBMacwatto_cobrajony0FileMakerFeller
  • Reply 7 of 20
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    lkrupp said:
    So, the iPod, iPhone and iPad all derived from Newton...

    That says more about Steve Jobs than anything else:
    Steve was not a great creator or new technology.   Instead, he took existing technology and mixed it, matched it, improved it and refined it until he had an "insanely great" product that he could stand on a stage with and very proudly show off to the world.

    The Newton was clearly great technology for its day.  But it wasn't a great product.  It was big and clunky and not very usable by the average person.   In short, it was (from Steve's point of view) crap.  But the underlying ideas, objectives and technology were not. 

    So, product by product, Steve took that idea and that fundamental technology and mixed it, matched it, refined it and made it an "insanely great" product.   Thanks to all that worked to make this possible going all the way back to Xerox PARC!
    I basically agree. Tech types like inventors rarely have any business or marketing sense. Look no further than Woz. It takes someone like Jobs, Gates, Musk, Bezos to build a company. The story goes that when Jobs saw what Xerox PARC was doing he instantly knew it was the future of computing. Bill Gates typically bought his technology, like DOS. Gates famously said about the GUI, “I broke into the house intending to steal the TV but when I did I found that you (Jobs) had already stolen it.” 
    Well, yeh...  But I don't think it is marketing.   Sculley was a marketing genius but he didn't have the capacity to create a great product.   Steve and the others you mentioned were/are able to transform technology into something that works for people.   Real people.  Then, and only then, does the marketing kick in.

    Which is not to disparage either:  you need both:
    -- History is filled with great products ("better mouse traps") that failed due to poor marketing
    -- But, conversely, great marketing can't make a crappy product succeed -- at least not for long.
    watto_cobraFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 8 of 20
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,922administrator
    moosefuel said:
    A factual error in the article, in my interview with John Sculley for the film, Love Notes to Newton, he is adamant that it was Apple’s board, never him, who wanted to license the MacOS to other manufacturers, and that is one reason why Sculley was forced out in 1993. The clip is not in the film, but maybe I should make it available.
    Would be good. There are loads of other comments and accounts saying it was Sculley.
    watto_cobraFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 9 of 20
    mac_128mac_128 Posts: 3,454member
    I hate the idea that this article attributes the concept of the Newton to Gasse. Steve Jobs was working with Hartmut Esslinger in 1984 on prototypes based on concepts Jobs wanted to bring to market which Sculley refused to consider as he myopically focused on the Mac. Gasse hyper-focused on the Mac in complete disagreement with Jobs as well.

    Jobs was already introducing the idea of LCD tablet devices with hand recognition long before Gasse got his sleezy hands on the concept.

    https://www.designboom.com/technology/hartmut-esslingers-early-apple-computer-and-tablet-designs/


    edited August 2018 watto_cobramarklarkFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 10 of 20
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    mac_128 said:
    I hate the idea that this article attributes the concept of the Newton to Gasse. Steve Jobs was working with Hartmut Esslinger in 1984 on prototypes based on concepts Jobs wanted to bring to market which Sculley refused to consider as he myopically focused on the Mac. Gasse hyper-focused on the Mac in complete disagreement with Jobs as well.

    Jobs was already introducing the idea of LCD tablet devices with hand recognition long before Gasse got his sleezy hands on the concept.

    https://www.designboom.com/technology/hartmut-esslingers-early-apple-computer-and-tablet-designs/


    It never dawned on me until I saw that note:
    SJ:  Steve Jobs
    JS:  John Sculley

    Were they mirror image, polar opposites of each other -- dopplegangers from alternate realities -- bound to both love and hate each other?
    watto_cobrajony0FileMakerFeller
  • Reply 11 of 20
    The other big thing that came out of this was a small company who wrote a program for an alternative way to write in your Newton. The software was called Graffiti. The company?
    Palm. 

    Yes the same palm who went on to make the Palm Pilot. Which turned out to be a better PDA, until they crashed and burned with the Pebble. 

    Its funny how all tech is connected. Someone should make a documentary and speak to all these retired people from Sunnyvale while they can still remember details. 

    Some are pretty interesting like the gentleman I met who worked for Motorola. He was a SVP of some devision and told me a story that Steve Jobs was the one who convinced the CEO of Motorola to make the Razor.  It just happened to be with an engineer who was testing it and he took it out of his pocket at a meeting with Steve. Steve saw it and asked what it was. The CEO said it was a skunkworks design that wasn't going to be made. Jobs said that if they went thru and made it, Apple would do business with Motorola and make a phone with them. Although the Rokker sucked, the Razor was one of their best selling phones of all time. 
    Plus hardly anyone knows about this story. 

    Do I have proof? No, but this guy knew a lot about the meeting with Steve and what he wanted in a phone. Plus he did admit that the device would have been more successful if Motorola let Apple have more input in the design. 

    I wonder how many more stories like that are out there. 
    edited August 2018 GeorgeBMacwatto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 20
    georgie01georgie01 Posts: 437member
    lkrupp said:

    Gates famously said about the GUI, “I broke into the house intending to steal the TV but when I did I found that you (Jobs) had already stolen it.” 

    I’ve always had difficulty with that perspective. It is different when technology that is ‘copied’ is willingly shown and demonstrated to the ‘copier’ vs. when it is ‘copied’ by devious and backhanded means. 
    FileMakerFeller
  • Reply 13 of 20
    mac_128 said:
    I hate the idea that this article attributes the concept of the Newton to Gasse. Steve Jobs was working with Hartmut Esslinger in 1984 on prototypes based on concepts Jobs wanted to bring to market which Sculley refused to consider as he myopically focused on the Mac. Gasse hyper-focused on the Mac in complete disagreement with Jobs as well.

    Jobs was already introducing the idea of LCD tablet devices with hand recognition long before Gasse got his sleezy hands on the concept.
    Sculley's myopic focus on Mac was right in 1984. Just as Jobs's hyperfocus on it 15 years later when he came back was right. Products are, for lack of a better phrase, products of their time. Technology evolves and so does society. Newton needed handwriting recognition in 1993 because typing was still foreign to the majority of the world (plus mechanical keys would have ballooned the size even further). It wasn't until 2007 with the introduction of the original iPhone that an onscreen keyboard was technologically feasible and the potential audience had evolved to knowing a keyboard better than a pen.

    That being said as someone who got my hands on a Newton the day it was publically available and upgraded consistently and eventually tried to switch to a Palm Pilot I never found anything nearly as amazing as the Newton until the iPhone arrived.

    As for the claim that Gassée was sleazy, I never saw much of that but Jobs's ability convince himself that what he said previously never happened or that he had thought of something that was someone else's idea, in a lesser man would have come off as very sleazy. 
    watto_cobraFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 14 of 20
    sirdirsirdir Posts: 191member
    Oh the memories. Programming this thing was sort of my first job. My university apparently liked what I did in programming courses and asked me whether I want a holiday job. I programmed sort of a searchable scratchpad for geologists. Great fun. Can't remember what the language was called, but it was quite buggy back then, but in the end I got it to do what I wanted. 
    dewmeFileMakerFeller
  • Reply 15 of 20
    timmilleatimmillea Posts: 252member
    I bought a used MessagePad 120 around a year after it was discontinued. I was severely underwhelmed by it and sold it on pretty quickly. To suggest it was the forerunner of the iPhone or even iPod is mistaken. It was not a phone nor a media device. The iPod and iPhone never had handwriting recognition as their primary input interface. They are different product categories. 

    When Jobs returned to Apple he cancelled a whole load of projects, including some he should not have, because they were not his. The Newton platform was ahead of its time but not ready for commercial release. We also lost OpenDoc - a philosophical extension of ClarisWorks to the OS - and the World is much the poorer for it. Jobs wanted to use his Next OS based on Unix and that was that, we still do. A radical branch of progress was simply severed because it did not suit the vanity of one man. 
    williamlondon
  • Reply 16 of 20
    danoxdanox Posts: 3,356member
    The other big thing that came out of this was a small company who wrote a program for an alternative way to write in your Newton. The software was called Graffiti. The company?
    Palm. 

    Yes the same palm who went on to make the Palm Pilot. Which turned out to be a better PDA, until they crashed and burned with the Pebble. 

    Its funny how all tech is connected. Someone should make a documentary and speak to all these retired people from Sunnyvale while they can still remember details. 

    Some are pretty interesting like the gentleman I met who worked for Motorola. He was a SVP of some devision and told me a story that Steve Jobs was the one who convinced the CEO of Motorola to make the Razor.  It just happened to be with an engineer who was testing it and he took it out of his pocket at a meeting with Steve. Steve saw it and asked what it was. The CEO said it was a skunkworks design that wasn't going to be made. Jobs said that if they went thru and made it, Apple would do business with Motorola and make a phone with them. Although the Rokker sucked, the Razor was one of their best selling phones of all time. 
    Plus hardly anyone knows about this story. 

    Do I have proof? No, but this guy knew a lot about the meeting with Steve and what he wanted in a phone. Plus he did admit that the device would have been more successful if Motorola let Apple have more input in the design. 

    I wonder how many more stories like that are out there. 
    IBM, Motorola and Intel had multiple chances to still be in the mobile game today in a big way all the way up to 2005, imagine that, with just a little vision and creativity.
    FileMakerFeller
  • Reply 17 of 20
    danoxdanox Posts: 3,356member
    mac_128 said:
    I hate the idea that this article attributes the concept of the Newton to Gasse. Steve Jobs was working with Hartmut Esslinger in 1984 on prototypes based on concepts Jobs wanted to bring to market which Sculley refused to consider as he myopically focused on the Mac. Gasse hyper-focused on the Mac in complete disagreement with Jobs as well.

    Jobs was already introducing the idea of LCD tablet devices with hand recognition long before Gasse got his sleezy hands on the concept.
    Sculley's myopic focus on Mac was right in 1984. Just as Jobs's hyperfocus on it 15 years later when he came back was right. Products are, for lack of a better phrase, products of their time. Technology evolves and so does society. Newton needed handwriting recognition in 1993 because typing was still foreign to the majority of the world (plus mechanical keys would have ballooned the size even further). It wasn't until 2007 with the introduction of the original iPhone that an onscreen keyboard was technologically feasible and the potential audience had evolved to knowing a keyboard better than a pen.

    That being said as someone who got my hands on a Newton the day it was publically available and upgraded consistently and eventually tried to switch to a Palm Pilot I never found anything nearly as amazing as the Newton until the iPhone arrived.

    As for the claim that Gassée was sleazy, I never saw much of that but Jobs's ability convince himself that what he said previously never happened or that he had thought of something that was someone else's idea, in a lesser man would have come off as very sleazy. 

    Jean-Louis Gassée of the BeOS fame? The only thing sleazy about him was not following through on dedicated hardware for BeOS, but everyone (the tech industry) was completely overwhelmed by Wintel in those days, no one could imagine just making a better computer system that was profitable could exist, unless it went head to head against Microsoft and Intel, it seemed like when jobs came back to Apple for the second go round with the success of the iMac and then later OSX operating system, he/Apple started to believe that as long as you were profitable, it didn’t matter whether or not you sold as many computers as the Wintel market as long as you were profitable with what you sold. (in short marketshare by itself, doesn’t matter)

    I bought a Mac at that time specifically because of OSX, and would have bought a BeOS machine if it had dedicated hardware designed to run BeOS, and if I had the money in those days in the late 80s, I definitely would have bought a Next computer, but I had to settle for a Amiga 1000 and later a Amiga 2000 computer instead, really good computers in their time graphically, hardware, and OS wise ahead of their time in many areas, designed with multiple cool co-processors taking up the computing slack, which is interesting because Apple Silicon does many powerful things with multiple helper co-processors combined into one, which, of course, was not practical in those days with a consumer level computer, each co-processor in an Amiga was a separate chip.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiga
  • Reply 18 of 20
    anomeanome Posts: 1,545member
    I've been saying it for years, but the Newton has to be the most successful "failure" in history. Everyone says it was a failure, but it lasted for years in various guises, led to ARM becoming [i]the[/i] architecture for mobile devices (and eventually back to the desktop), and even spawned the whole PDA market that kept going until smartphones took over the functionality 15 years later.

    I'm put in mind of a line about Charles Babbage and his attempts to build the Difference and Analytic Engines. (I don't remember the precise wording, however.) His attempts to build these machines led to advances and innovation in tool making and machining that moved a number of other technologies forward, even though ultimately he failed in his objective. That's the kind of failure I can accept.
    FileMakerFeller
  • Reply 19 of 20
    danoxdanox Posts: 3,356member
    anome said:
    I've been saying it for years, but the Newton has to be the most successful "failure" in history. Everyone says it was a failure, but it lasted for years in various guises, led to ARM becoming [i]the[/i] architecture for mobile devices (and eventually back to the desktop), and even spawned the whole PDA market that kept going until smartphones took over the functionality 15 years later.

    I'm put in mind of a line about Charles Babbage and his attempts to build the Difference and Analytic Engines. (I don't remember the precise wording, however.) His attempts to build these machines led to advances and innovation in tool making and machining that moved a number of other technologies forward, even though ultimately he failed in his objective. That's the kind of failure I can accept.
    Between 1980 and 1996 the sheer variety of computing platforms, and options available in comparison to today, well, there is no comparison, but most, as I said, were overwhelmed by Wintel, many felt that if they didn’t have the same or near marketshare as Microsoft and Intel, they were failing. Also there seem to be a stronger cross section of enthusiastic computer programmers, who are willing to try their hand at programming on multiple computer platforms particularly if something new and interesting came out.
  • Reply 20 of 20
    AngmohAngmoh Posts: 26member
    I had an "Apple Newton Original", first generation, given to us by Apple Australia complete with the full software development kit. For me the achilles heel was the software development kit. This software development environment was not only complex but also very expensive. It was so different than anything else and the learning curve was steep. Data was stored in "soups" and there was other weird stuff. It was just too big a step. At the same time, there was little training material, no reference code and very little other support (keep in mind, the internet was only available at select universities and from home through a 9600 baud dial-up-modem with document and code downloads still a concept - support went through eWorld and that was only more than a year after the Newton came out). We tried so develop some applications, but it took much more time than we had available and had to drop it because we just did not have the time to figure out how to do something useful with it. It was also way before wifi came along, because that together with TCP/UDF packets would have made the device easy to connect/transfer data with a desktop and would have been the difference between a useable device and a brick. Today, with Xcode everyone can put apps together while with the Newton you needed both a degree in computer science and a degree in philosophy at the same time.

    At that time a lot of weird stuff was happening with Apple Development Tools and concept Operating Systems and the most disastrous was their collaboration with IBM on Pink and Taligent. That was such an incredible mess. If Jobs had not come back and killed all this chaos, the Apple would not have made it till 2000.
    FileMakerFeller
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