{"id":170,"date":"2007-10-16T13:00:11","date_gmt":"2007-10-16T20:00:11","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2007\/10\/16\/1997-2007-the-10-year-apple-comeback\/"},"modified":"2007-10-16T13:00:11","modified_gmt":"2007-10-16T20:00:11","slug":"1997-2007-the-10-year-apple-comeback","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2007\/10\/16\/1997-2007-the-10-year-apple-comeback\/","title":{"rendered":"1997-2007: The 10 Year Apple Comeback"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by Scrivs<\/a><\/p>\n In 1997 Steve Jobs was named the interim CEO of Apple after haven been “ousted” in 1985 by the same company. It was a year of uncertainty and doom for Apple. You couldn’t go a month without reading an article by a major publication proclaiming the death of Apple. Back then you had to wonder why Steve Jobs would take on such a task, but now the answer is clear: because he knew he could make it work.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n In June 1997, Wired published 101 Ways to Save Apple<\/a>. Looking over the list there are some solid suggestions and no one could blame Apple for listening to most, if not all of them. You do have to chuckle at the very first item though:<\/p>\n 1. Admit it<\/strong>. You’re out of the hardware game. Outsource your hardware production, or scrap it entirely, to compete more directly with Microsoft without the liability of manufacturing boxes.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Some other gems on the list<\/p>\n 2. License the Apple name\/technology to appliance manufacturers and build GUIs for every possible device – from washing machines to telephones to WebTV. Have them all use the same communications protocol. Result: you monopolize the market for smart devices\/homes.<\/p>\n 21. Sell yourself to IBM or Motorola, the PowerPC makers. You can become the computer division that Motorola wants or the alternative within IBM. This would give the company volume for its PowerPC devices and leverage for other PowerPC offerings.<\/p>\n 27. Relocate the company to Bangalore and make it cheap, cheap, cheap.<\/p>\n 42. Organize a telethon. Hire Jerry Lewis to get dewy-eyed over the new line of Mac products.<\/p>\n 81. Merge with Sega and become a game company.<\/p>\n 101. Don’t worry. You’ll survive. It’s Netscape we should really worry about. (Too true)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n In July Dave Winer wrote The Sure Road to Bankruptcy<\/a> and if you read it back then there is good reason to believe all of his points. My favorite though has to be his thoughts on Steve Jobs.<\/p>\n Jobs was the wrong person to choose to turn around Apple because that isn’t what he wants. He wants to turn around Next. And he’s willing to lose Apple to do it. Jobs calls the shots at Apple, Amelio has no power. Eventually I expect a bankruptcy and a shoulder shrug from Jobs as he leaves. “I tried,” he’ll say.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Finally we have BusinessWeek asking Is Apple Mincemeat?<\/a><\/p>\n Macworld Boston 1997<\/p>\n\n
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