This tech corporation has repeatedly been named one of the world's most admired companies.
Welcome to WatchMojo.com,
and today we'll be learning more about the origins and history of Apple.
Apple Computers was founded by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
in Cupertino, California on April 1, 1976.
Wozniak was the engineer behind the computers,
while Jobs had the mind for business.
The pair struggled to keep the company afloat in early days;
however, they succeeded in funding the venture without ever giving up shares in the company.
Apple's first product was 1976's Apple I.
Compared to its competition, this machine used few components.
This was mainly due to the company's limited budget.
Steve Wozniak: When you work on low resources and you're trying to do it yourself with very few parts,
you're trying to be clever, you're trying to think out the whole solution
in the shortest number of steps, or pieces, or parts.
This made the Apple I a feat of engineering,
and it remained on the market until late 1977.
The upgraded Apple II was first sold in June of that year.
Ready to go right out of the box,
it was a huge success commercially and is recognized for establishing the market
for home computers by being accessible and affordable.
The Apple II remained the company's main source of revenue for many years,
and by the end of 1980 over one hundred thousand had been sold.
1980's Apple III was prone to overheating, and was a failure for the company.

However, 1980 was also the year Apple went public.
The company generated more millionaires than any other before it,
and the popularity of its founders was increasing.
Steve Wozniak: We started Apple: by 1980,
I was going to computer shows and – you know – we're kinda going public,
we've made a lot of money, we kinda... we've been in the press long before that, Steve and I.
And people are always asking me for an autograph – huh?
What do you mean?
I was just an engineer, I just did an engineer's job,
I designed a good computer.
Meanwhile, Apple was busy at work designing the Apple LISA.
Released in June 1983,
it proved to be a powerful concept and not a market success.
However, it pioneered such terminology as the mouse, icon, and desktop.
It was also Apple's first graphical user interface model,
which meant consumers interacted with images rather than text commands.
Apple's next triumph came during the Super Bowl in January 1984. 

Steve Wozniak: The 1984 commercial kind of showed a free-running person overturning somebody
who's dictating this is the way it’s going to be.
You have no free thought of your own.
That was the theme of that commercial.
This ad introduced the Apple Macintosh to the American public,
and is now considered one of the prime examples of U.S. advertising.
It was just one part of Apple's aggressive and expensive advertising campaign
for the launch of the Macintosh computer,
which was released just a few days later.
The Mac was loved by some and hated by others.
Because of its radical differences from the rest of the market,
it initially suffered from a lack of software.
It was even incompatible with the popular Apple II.
Steve Wozniak: We kind of lost the business market, we lost software in some of those areas,
the left brain areas: accounting, law and engineering.
A lot of the software is really directed towards PCs, that's where it exists now.
Eventually an affiliation with Adobe helped the Mac brand
become the standard for computer users in specific industries.
Steve Wozniak: So all the artists and the video people and the producers
and the movie people all got into Macintoshes
and one you're into it you love it so much it’s very difficult to pry you away.
Despite Apple's success,
problems within the company forced Steve Jobs to leave in 1985.
Steve Wozniak left in 1987, though he is still a paid employee.
Meanwhile, Apple continued to market its two brands to different pieces of the population:
the Apple II series was best for home users,
while more experienced professionals tended towards the Macintosh.
However, by the 1990s, Apple was struggling.
IBM was handily winning the marketplace on the success of Windows.
Steve Wozniak: When IBM came out, they had sales forces in all the big businesses.
The market for home computers really wasn't going to fit the Apple too well.
The market for small business computers was much huger.
At the end of 1996, Apple purchased Steve Jobs' new company, NeXT,
and brought the founder back to the company.
Jobs went on to become CEO of Apple,
and in December 1997 he introduced the online Apple Store.
That same year the company announced a partnership with rival Microsoft
that saw Apple adopt Microsoft Office
and Internet Explorer as part of its default programs.
Apple's revival began with the release of the iMac in 1998.
The company emphasized aesthetic design as one of its major strengths.
2001 was the year Apple opened its first retail stores,
introduced iTunes and released the first iPod to the public.
It kicked off a decade that boasted a steady upswing for the company,
with the release of a number of new products and operating systems.
Steve Wozniak: We were the first ones to build USB ports into our computers,
we invented firewire,
we were really the first to ever have a popular mass-produced and sold wi-fi.

2007 was the year the company changed the cell phone landscape by introducing the iPhone.
The iPad went on sale in 2010, and was instantly successful in the tablet market.
And in early 2011,
Apple continued its trendsetting ways by introducing a new port to replace USB
and similar connections.
With hundreds of millions of products sold worldwide,
Apple is quickly losing its status as a counterculture icon
and becoming a mainstay of the mainstream.
Subtitles by the Amara.org community
