MacDailyNews - Where Mac news comes first

 MacDailyNews Poll

Deal of the Day

5 Day Most Commented

Opinion Archive

Current Headlines

Latest Joy of Tech

  • Latest Joy of Tech!

MacNN

AppleInsider

Macworld UK

TUAW

MacRumors

Yahoo! Finance AAPL

iTunes Top 10 Albums

Mac OS X Downloads

Sat, Nov 07, 2009 - 09:08 PM EST  —  AAPL: 194.34 (+0.3099, +0.16%)  |  NASDAQ: 2112.44 (+7.12, +0.34%)

Fast Company: Apple Computer’s Jonathan Ive ‘Master of Design’
Friday, June 04, 2004 - 11:21 AM EST

"'It's all about removing the unnecessary,' Jonathan Ive has said of the ethos that informs his landmark product designs for Apple Computer. Ive has stripped the complexity out of technology and moved Apple's products--and with them, much of the high-tech industry--toward what he calls the "utterly serene." His translucent Power Mac G4 Cube, which resembled postmodern sculpture more than office equipment, proved that computer design could even aspire to high art. But nothing better fulfills Ive's ambition to create elegant, intuitive machinery than his revolutionary design for the iPod MP3 player. Coveted as much as a fashion statement as for its utility, this ode to minimalism has redefined the way consumers experience technology, to say nothing of music. Dell and Samsung have vainly followed with their own iPod knockoffs, proving conclusively that Ive's influence runs deep," Fast Company writes.

Full article here.

Bookmark and Share

Always -- Free ground shipping with orders over $50 at the Apple Store.

Reader Feedback: = registered.
Unregistered users: Feedback from multiple usernames are subject to deletion. Off-topic and posts from suspected astroturfers will be removed.

Jun 04, 04 - 11:39 am Comment from: Glick7

The history of Apple's product line is worthy of a museum exhibition.

Could we say the same for Dell?

Jun 04, 04 - 11:49 am Comment from: Dave H

No

Jun 04, 04 - 11:50 am Comment from: SecretAgentMan

Our buddy Jonathan makes a cool $1 Million a year and has been awarded the Queens highest honors for design.

Now a nice 30+ Apple Cinema Display matching my G5 would be nice.

Of course I would want the resolution to be higher as well.

Jun 04, 04 - 11:54 am Comment from: twelveightyone

My university lecturer Marked Johnathan Ive's GCSE projects. He design an OHP that was tiny and folded away into a small cube rather than a huge beast with a giant arm sticking out. It was so cool (well, as cool as an OHP can be).

Wonder if Apple will release it? grin

Jun 04, 04 - 12:01 pm Comment from: Ed

What's an OHP?

Jun 04, 04 - 12:15 pm Comment from: Less is More

Must be an overhead projector. Yep... bring on the 30+ Cinema with higher resolution. And lower price. And a video-in; not to mention the abitily to fold into a cube for petting.

Jun 04, 04 - 12:19 pm Comment from: twelveightyone

Ed,

Yes, an OHP is an OverHead Projector.

No need for them now, just have an iBook and projector.

Jun 04, 04 - 12:20 pm Comment from: More is Less

>"It's all about removing the unnecessary."
IT staff, antivirus programs, bloated software from M$, crashes, user license fees, FUD....

Jun 04, 04 - 12:32 pm Comment from: artist

I love how Apple keeps the Touch Pad on it notebooks centered, while every other maker puts then left of center to accommodate the right handed mass.
As a lefty, I really appreciate it, even though I use my right hand with the mouse. I don't own a laptop so can someone chime in on this. Do you miss the extra room that would result from shifting it over?

Jun 04, 04 - 12:43 pm Comment from: Jack A

Artist. I like the touch pad where it is but really preferred the trackball I had on my powerbook 170. AND I wish all the Apple track pads had two buttons.

Jun 04, 04 - 01:35 pm Comment from: Buffy

I thought that someone else designed the iPod, and then Apple purchased it. Let me see if I can find the article.

Jun 04, 04 - 02:22 pm Comment from: kev

Buffy,

The internal reference framework and processing chip was designed by PortalPlayer. This gave Apple a significant head start, but Apple worked with PortalPlayer to add audio digitizing, Firewire, display, and HD controller chips. Apple designed the outside, including the layout of the UI wheel and buttons. I think the article was in Engineering Design or something like that.

Jun 04, 04 - 03:43 pm Comment from: stevo

I thought the reason the wintel folks had the track pads offset - right was because their larger screen notebooks had ten key in addition to the qwerty.

I would love to have a ten key on my Powerbook.

But It's my opinion that SJ would never allow the trackpad to be offset becasue it's not aesthetically clean [as a centered pad].

Jun 04, 04 - 03:53 pm Comment from: mike

uhh.. michael dell will be the first in line to say that its designs are boring

Jun 04, 04 - 08:26 pm Comment from: sjk

Now a nice 30+ Apple Cinema Display matching my G5 would be nice.

And what's the highest resolution you think it would have? Larger displays typically have unimpressive resolutions.

Jun 04, 04 - 08:28 pm Comment from: sjk

bring on the 30+ Cinema with higher resolution

My guess is if there's anything like it on the market now it probably costs over $10K.

Jun 04, 04 - 09:25 pm Comment from: SecretAgentMan

"And what's the highest resolution you think it would have? Larger displays typically have unimpressive resolutions.

Well if the 20" ACD has 1600 x 1200 and the 23" has 1920 x 1200 pixels

I guess the 30" would have to have something like 2800 x 1600 pixels.

Large displays like plasmas, LCD TV's are bigger, but have lower pixel dimensions, this is why you get a lousy display for up close.

They were not designed for viewing 3-4 feet away, but rather 10-15 feet away, where the eye cannot see the details.

Jun 04, 04 - 09:28 pm Comment from: notatotalsucker

Larger displays will be great, except for the "frequent mouse miles" one will clock up.

Jun 05, 04 - 08:05 am Comment from: meat of moose

Thankfully a (mini)article of praise for someone other than Woz and Jobs. It is nice to be reminded that Apple is a company of more than 2 people.

Jun 05, 04 - 11:17 pm Comment from: perfusionista

"Large displays like plasmas, LCD TV's are bigger, but have lower pixel dimensions, this is why you get a lousy display for up close."

The conventional wisdom for TVs is that the ideal viewing distance is 5x screen size. So if you have a 30" TV it's designed to be viewed from 12 feet away.

Reader feedback page 1 of 1 pages:

Always -- Free ground shipping with orders over $50 at the Apple Store.

Add Your Feedback:

Register or Login

Name:

Email: (optional)

Emoticons | Allowed HTML Tags

Remember my info   Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the "MDN Magic Word" you see in the image below: