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October 25, 2017

Steve Jobs: “We’ll just name it Apple…”

Winner of the Fall 2017 StMU History Media Award for

Best Article in the Category of “People”

It was a sunny summer day. A sea of graduates, proud parents, family members, and faculty had their sights fixed on a bony and haggard individual. It seemed age had already taken possession of his body, making him look somewhat fragile and weak. Yet, he radiated forcefulness. The man was none other than Steve Jobs, ready to deliver Stanford’s Class of 2005 Commencement Speech. By that year, Jobs had gone through many hardships—he had been fired from the company he started, and he had undergone intricate medical procedures due to pancreatic cancer, just to name a few. Amidst the tragedies in his life, he transmitted nothing but the serenity of a man that had accomplished what he desired in life. One of his initial remarks was “Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it.”1 However, how exactly did Jobs find his dream job? Specifically, what was the genesis of Apple Inc?

A Young Steve Jobs in 1977 | Courtesy of Flickr
Steve Jobs’ early life is somewhat ironic. His biological mother, too caught up in graduate school to take care of a baby, decided to put her nameless baby up for adoption. Her only prerequisite was that little Steve would get a guaranteed college education. Little did she know, however, that six months after enrolling at Reed College, Jobs would drop out. While Jobs was always an intelligent and innovative thinker, he didn’t fancy formal schooling. When discussing his youth, he stated that his educators were making him lose all hint of curiosity.2 Early on in his life, Steve was well aware that his passion was outside of the classroom and textbooks. Steve’s fourth-grade teacher once said she had to “bribe Steve for him to pay attention in class.”3 At that age, however, he had become captivated with helping his father take apart and reconstruct electronics, a hobby that instilled confidence, tenacity, and mechanical ability in young Jobs.

“I did go to college… [and] after six months, I couldn’t see the value in it. I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was going to help me figure it out.”4 In his academic hiatus, Steve encountered many things. He experienced psychedelic drugs, and sought to find spiritual enlightenment in India. He rekindled a friendship that would later serve as catalyst for the creation of the most powerful electronic company of all time, Apple Inc. His friend was Steve Wozniak, a talented, self-taught electronics engineer, whom Jobs had met in his high school years through common friends.5 Like himself, Steve Wozniak was an electronics enthusiast. After having part-time jobs with Atari and Hewlett-Packard, Jobs had found his passion—anything electronics.6 “I was lucky—I found what I loved to do early in life.”7 The two Steves, in love with computers, began their first commercial venture in 1975, when Jobs was only twenty years old.8

Their first creations were called “blue boxes”—electronic boxes that allowed anyone to make cost-free long-distance phone calls.9 Jobs invested $40 in parts and sold the boxes door-to-door in college dorm rooms for $150 apiece, splitting the profits with Wozniak.10 Although their first creation had to be shut down because of its illicit intentions, it proved that the two Steves were perfect business partners. Many attribute Apple’s early success to the natural connection the two Steve’s shared. Wozniak has commented,”we had so much in common. Normally, it was hard for me to explain to people the kind of designs I worked with, but Steve got it right away.”11 Similarly, Jobs explained, “He was the only person I met who knew more about electronics than me.”12 Despite their different personalities, they complemented each other in a wonderful manner. Steve Wozniak contributed with his technological savvy, and Steve Jobs with his entrepreneurial charisma. Aware of this powerful interrelation, they decided to take their collaborative efforts to the next level.

Apple Computer Co. Original Logo | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Jobs and Wozniak regularly attended Homebrew Computer Club (HCC), where they swapped ideas with other hobbyists who dreamed of building their own computers.13 It was there that they recognized the market for smaller, cheaper, intuitive, and accessible computer machines for everyday consumers. In his very first HCC meeting, Wozniak recalls, “the complete vision of a personal computer suddenly appeared in my head. That night I began to make sketches on paper of what later became known as the Apple I.14 Just as he had with the blue boxes, Jobs quickly recognize the potential to profit from a computer that Wozniak had designed to show off at the HCC.15

Their new venture—the Apple I. Jobs convinced Wozniak that they should sell the computers as a product. “Steve [Jobs] didn’t do one circuit of design for the first computer…but it was his idea to sell them,” Wozniak recalls.16 In order to finance their bold creation, Jobs parted with his red and white Volkswagen bus for $1,500 and Wozniak with his beloved HP-65 programmable calculator for $250.

Every day after that, Wozniak would work on the first prototype in his Hewlett-Packard cubicle, spreading the pieces out and deciding where they should be placed and welded.17  By 1975, “Woz” had successfully created the first personal computer with a typewriter-like keyboard able to connect to a regular TV as a screen. Just like that, the archetype of the modern personal computer and the start-up of the biggest company in the world was up and running. The two Steves were ready to take their simple computer to the market, but first, they needed a name for their company. As the two drove along Highway 85 between Palo Alto and Los Altos, Jobs blurted out “I’ve got a name: Apple Computer.”18 It was Jobs who came up with “Apple.” He thought the name sounded “fun, spirited and not intimidating.” Although they tried to think of more technical sounding names, nothing was able to beat “Apple Computer.”

Model of what the Apple I looked like | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Realizing that Apple would be hopelessly deadlocked if they disagreed on any major issues, the two sought someone who could serve as a tiebreaker and help get the company off the ground. That man was Ronald G. Wayne, a video game maker’s chief draftsman. Jobs enticed Wayne to become a partner in Apple by offering ten percent interest in the company, with the remainder split between Jobs and Wozniak. The three formally filed the partnership papers for Apple Computer Company on April Fool’s Day, 1976.19 By 1976, Apple Inc was open for business, and Jobs was only twenty-one years old. Wozniak conceived of a series of user-friendly personal computers, and—with Jobs in charge of marketing—Apple set the list price of the original 4K Apple I at $666.66 each.20 Immediately, Jobs began hustling up customers. Paul Jay Terrel—owner of the first retail computer store chain in the country “Byte Shop”—agreed to buy fifty computers for $500 each, cash on delivery.

The order was placed, the only problem—they had no working station. In a daring move, 11161 Crist Drive in Los Altos (Steve’s home), became the assembly center of the Apple I. The 24-by-24 ft cramped space in Jobs’s garage was transformed into an impromptu workshop. The two Steve’s had thirty full days to complete the Byte Shop’s request. Having no employees, and very little time, the two Steves recruited all available hands, from college students to Jobs’ pregnant sister Patty. Around ten workers were roped in to sit at a kitchen table to solder parts and set up boards. Exceedingly long working hours. Enormous amounts of caffeine. Countless failed models. No sleep. The small garage became so labor intensive that Paul Jobs (Steve’s father), had to stop repairing old cars so that the Apple kids could have all of the garage for themselves. Defying all odds, however, the company’s first batch of Apple I’s was completed within the month. With fifty Apple I’s completed, their first formal contract generated the rookie company a total of $25,000.21

Steve Jobs at the MacWorld Conference & Expo 2008 | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Although there were a few bumps along the road, and a couple of not so successful products, it seemed that every year this company got better and better. They would go on to release trendsetting and ground-breaking products such as the Macintosh with its revolutionary mouse, the MacBook laptop computer, and the ubiquitous iPods, iPhones, and iPads that we cannot live without today. Ultimately, Apple became the most powerful electronic industry of all time. Its dominance is undisputed, generating a colossal $108.25 billion in sales today.

It is truly amazing to see how this company originated in a college drop out’s garage. Jobs’ early career success, dramatic ouster from the company he built, and ultimate transformation of Apple into one of America’s largest multi-billion dollar companies encapsulates the American dream.22 His untimely death left questions unanswered about the products he might have invented or what he might have accomplished later in life. Nevertheless, he made it clear to all that we should strive to reach our dreams, and work hard for them. As he said at the end of his Stanford speech, “Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish.”23

  1. Steve Jobs, “How to Live before you Die,” (Commencement Address, Stanford University, Stanford, June 12, 2005).
  2.  Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011): 52.
  3.  Anna Wong, “A Lesson for Public Schools From Steve Jobs,” The Huffington Post, last modified October 9, 2012 https://www.huffingtonpost.com/anna-wong/steve-jobs-education_b_1762277.html.
  4. Steve Jobs, “How to Live before you Die” (Commencement Address, Stanford University, Stanford, June 12, 2005).
  5. International Directory of Company Histories, 2012, s.v. “Apple,” by Scott Lewis, Jeffrey L. Covell and Mark Lane.
  6. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 2.
  7. Steve Jobs, “How to Live before you Die,” (Commencement Address, Stanford University, Stanford, June 12, 2005).
  8. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 2.
  9. International Directory of Company Histories, 2012, s.v. “Apple,” by Scott Lewis, Jeffrey L. Covell, and Mark Lane.
  10. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 3.
  11. Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011): 85.
  12. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 3.
  13. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 5.
  14.  Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011): 170.
  15. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 5.
  16. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 6.
  17. Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011): 171.
  18. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 6.
  19. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 6.
  20. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 7.
  21. Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company (San Francisco: No Starch Press, 2004): 7.
  22. Amy E. Hurley-Hanson and Cristina M. Giannantonio, “Academic Reflections on the Life and Career of Steve Jobs,” Journal of Business and Management, no. 1 (2013): 5.
  23. Steve Jobs, “How to Live before you Die”(Commencement Address, Stanford University, Stanford, June 12, 2005).

Tags from the story

Apple Computer

Steve Jobs

Steve Wozniak

Maria Callejas

“Aja Chavalo?” Nicaraguan slang for “What’s up, buddy?”. If you haven’t figured it out by now I am Maria Cecilia Callejas (Ceci), from the beautiful Central American country of Nicaragua. I am a freshman here at St. Mary’s, majoring in Communications Studies. Can’t wait to share some of my writings, as well as to read yours!

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Recent Comments

Justin Garcia

This was a very interesting article. Steve Jobs truly was a face of the current generation. He paved the way for many technological innovations and social changes. The brand apple that he founded brought many people together over the products he helped create. Many people remember wanting in line for hours for the new Iphone with friends as well as meeting new friends in the line. Overall this was a very well written article.

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25/10/2017

8:02 am

Lauryn Hyde

Interesting article! What an affect Steve Jobs had on the world of technology today. His background is an important reminder that anyone who works hard enough and had a passion for something can accomplish anything. I did not know he was at first a college dropout, however with his passion and drive he create the apple company that is still striving today.

reply

25/10/2017

8:02 am

Ezequiel De La Fuente

Very interesting article and very inspiring. He really brought himself up from nothing and the company, still today, excels despite his death. I had no idea that apple was the first personal computer. Apple is a great company, which was first drove by a creative, innovative thinker. Steve Jobs truly found happiness in his work and so do we. Like you article said, I need my MacBook, iPhone, and iPod with me everywhere I go.

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Cherice Leach

Is it just me, or does every billionaire you know go to college just to drop out? Man, that must be the life. Anyways, it really is interesting to see where the company I dearly appreciate has started from. It’s also quite interesting that Jobs’ and Wozniak’s first names were both Steve. It seems kind of inevitable that they would be the greatest business partners ever. Apple will always be one of the top competitors for the things we can’t live with out and it’s cool to see that even when it started it was that way.

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Matthew Rios

It’s interesting to see the development of Apple today. They sort of run in a Duopoly like nature with the Android app store. I remember some years ago with the development of the Windows phone and their new app marketplace. But the problem this industry is facing now is that no one wants to produce for more than one app store because it would then involve rebuilding applications for more than 2 mobile platforms, which is costly. Thus rendering the Window’s phone and their app store a failure, which it was officially declared of as of a few weeks ago. Steve Jobs may have innovated an entire industry of technology for the world, but in the process he unknowingly created the worst enemy of the free market. The ultimate destruction of competitors with 0 potentiality to grow in the industry.

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Amanda Figueroa

It’s incredibly interesting to read on how the maker of the products I use every day came to be. He defied all odds by dropping out of college and still making a multibillion company. This article was very well written and gave a lot of informative details regarding his process of inventing the Apple computers. I also didn’t know that he had a partner help him along the way and that they made their batch of the computers in a garage. Very interesting!

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Alejandra Chavez

Crazy how relatable Steve Job’s statement is that his educators were making him lose all hint of curiosity. Growing up in a time where going to college is highly stressed, it’s amazing to see that one of the greatest inventors decided to take a different path. I find it extremely inspiring how you included a lot of quotes that showed that he really found it important to tell people to find what they love to do in order to be successful. It’s quite refreshing to read that someone can always move forward even without a formal education. Great article.

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Thomas Fraire

This article was fascinating. I knew Steve Jobs didn’t finish college, but I did not realize it as because he attended and saw no point in it. It is quite ironic because everyone always preaches the importance of college and how you cannot be successful without it. But this man has come up with some of the most life-changing products that dominate the market leaving a legacy on the world.

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Sarah Mares

I really enjoyed reading this article! I have had previous background knowledge about Steve Jobs and the rise of his famous multibillion-dollar company, Apple Inc., yet, after reading this article I came across intricate details that I had not yet known about Jobs, his business partner of the same name, and their journey together in establishing and launching one of the world’s most popular and beloved technology companies. I found Jobs’ journey so inspiring due to the very harsh beginnings he came from, as well as his lack of and disinterest in education. It’s amazing to learn that someone who has seemed to have hit rock-bottom several times, as well as gone through hell and back working hard and sacrificing a lot to make their dream come true, can achieve so much once they fully commit themselves to living their best life and learning to love what they do in order to produce their best work. Great article, the use of quotes was awesome and once again, so inspiring!

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

Josemaria Soriano

A very important article. Steve Jobs was a revolutionary, making that something as technical as a computer become a symbol of style. When Steve Jobs passed away, many people wondered if Apple would continue to succeed without him. Jobs’s ideas about how people should interact with technology and their determined pursuit of that vision led him to create a company with a culture that combined obsessive design attention with a highly inventive technology. Computer use was limited to industrial and business scenarios, until he and his team introduced Apple II in 1977, which transformed computing and our daily lives. Apple spearheaded a revolution in the music industry when the company launched the iPod and iTunes in 2001; the subsequent launch of the iPhone and iPad fueled the creation of an entire industry of application developers. Jobs’s passion for grand design was the foundation of what is now one of the most respected brands in the world. His life and work teaches us that if you want to succeed, you must innovate. An excellent article!

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26/10/2017

8:02 am

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