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Apple at 50

Wins, the Misses, and the Relentless Pursuit of Better Technology

As Apple approaches its 50th anniversary, it stands as one of the most influential companies in modern history. From a garage startup to a global technology powerhouse, Apple has repeatedly reshaped how we interact with computers, music, phones, and even our own health. But its journey has not been a straight line of success. Alongside category-defining wins sit bold failures, missteps, and experiments that did not quite land.

What makes Apple unique is not just its ability to succeed, but its willingness to rethink, rebuild, and try again.

The Early Years: Reinventing the Personal Computer

Apple’s story begins with a simple idea: computers should be accessible. The Apple II helped bring computing into homes, but it was the Macintosh in 1984 that truly changed the game. With its graphical user interface and mouse-driven navigation, it made computing intuitive for the first time.

This was Apple’s first major pattern. It rarely invents entirely new categories. Instead, it refines, simplifies, and elevates them into something people actually want to use.

That philosophy would define the next five decades.

The iMac G3: Saving Apple and Making Tech Personal

By the late 1990s, Apple was struggling. Then came the iMac G3.

Bright, colourful, and unapologetically different, the iMac turned the computer into something expressive. It was not just a tool. It was an object you wanted in your home. At a time when most PCs were beige boxes, Apple leaned into design, personality, and approachability.

The iMac did more than sell well. It reintroduced Apple to the world and laid the foundation for its design-led future.

The iPod: Simplicity Wins

The early 2000s brought another shift. Digital music existed, but it was messy and fragmented. Apple changed that with the iPod and iTunes.

A thousand songs in your pocket was not just a slogan. It was a promise of simplicity. Syncing music became effortless. The experience just worked.

The iPod did not invent portable music players. It made them usable for everyone.

The iPhone: Resetting the Entire Industry

In 2007, Apple launched the iPhone. Smartphones already existed, but they were clunky, stylus-driven, and often frustrating.

The iPhone replaced all of that with a touchscreen interface built around software. It felt fluid, responsive, and intuitive. It also introduced the idea that a phone could be a platform, not just a device.

The App Store followed, and suddenly the iPhone became whatever you needed it to be.

Entire industries were reshaped overnight. Cameras, GPS devices, music players, and even laptops began to feel redundant for many users.

The Apple Watch: A Quiet Giant

If the iPhone was a loud revolution, the Apple Watch was a quieter one.

Initially seen as a companion device, it has evolved into the world’s most popular watch by focusing on health, fitness, and daily convenience. Features like heart rate monitoring, activity tracking, and fall detection have made it more than just a piece of tech.

It became something personal.

Apple Silicon: The Modern Power Move

One of Apple’s most important recent decisions has been its move to its own silicon.

By designing its own chips, Apple has taken full control of the Mac experience. The result is machines that are faster, more efficient, and significantly better in terms of performance per watt than much of the competition.

Laptops now run cooler, quieter, and with battery life that feels almost unreal compared to previous generations.

This shift is not just about speed. It is about control. Apple now owns the entire stack, from hardware to software to silicon.

The Ecosystem: Apple’s Most Underrated Strength

While individual products often get the spotlight, Apple’s ecosystem may be its most powerful achievement.

Features like Handoff, AirDrop, and Universal Clipboard create a seamless experience across devices. You can start an email on your phone and finish it on your Mac. Copy text on one device and paste it on another.

It feels simple, but it is incredibly difficult to replicate.

This level of integration keeps users invested. Once you are in the ecosystem, everything just works together in a way that competitors have struggled to match.

The Failures: When Apple Gets It Wrong

Apple’s history is not without its missteps. In fact, some of its most interesting lessons come from its failures.

The Newton: Too Early for Its Time

The Newton was Apple’s attempt at a personal digital assistant in the 1990s. It introduced ideas that feel familiar today, like handwriting recognition and portable computing.

The problem was timing. The technology was not ready. Performance issues and unreliable features meant it never reached its potential.

In many ways, the Newton was a glimpse of the future that arrived too soon.

The Butterfly Keyboard: Design Over Reliability

Fast forward to the MacBook lineup in the mid-2010s, and Apple introduced the butterfly keyboard.

It allowed for thinner devices, but at a cost. Keys became prone to failure, often triggered by something as simple as dust. For many users, it became a frustrating and costly experience.

This was a rare case where Apple’s pursuit of thinness directly impacted usability.

The Magic Mouse Charging Port: A Small but Notable Miss

Sometimes Apple’s missteps are not massive product failures but small design decisions that feel out of character.

The Magic Mouse charging port, placed on the underside, is a perfect example. It means the mouse cannot be used while charging, turning a simple task into an inconvenience.

It is a reminder that even the most design-focused company can occasionally prioritise aesthetics over practicality.

Early MacBook Air Trade-Offs

Even one of Apple’s biggest successes, the MacBook Air, had its compromises in its early days.

It redefined portability, but battery life and performance limitations showed the cost of pushing boundaries too far, too quickly.

Still, those early compromises paved the way for the refined, powerful laptops we see today.

The Pattern: Fail, Learn, Refine

What ties Apple’s successes and failures together is a clear pattern.

Apple is not afraid to take risks. When those risks pay off, they redefine industries. When they do not, Apple learns, adapts, and often returns with something better.

The Newton laid conceptual groundwork for mobile computing. The butterfly keyboard led to a renewed focus on reliability. Even smaller missteps inform future design decisions.

Failure is not the end. It is part of the process.

Why Apple Still Matters at 50

Fifty years in, Apple remains at the centre of the technology world not because it gets everything right, but because it consistently pushes forward.

It challenges expectations. It refines experiences. It obsesses over details, even if it occasionally gets them wrong.

Most importantly, it understands that technology is not just about power or features. It is about how people use it, how it fits into their lives, and how it makes everyday tasks feel effortless.

Looking Ahead

As Apple enters its next chapter, the question is not whether it will succeed or fail. It will do both.

The real question is what it will redefine next.

If history tells us anything, it is that Apple’s biggest impact comes when it quietly reshapes the ordinary into something better. Not louder, not flashier, just better.

And that is what has kept it relevant for nearly half a century.

As seen on the BBC

Old Tech Shouldn’t Die

So, I’m jumping the gun and getting my 2026 New Year’s resolutions out early in public, before December 2025 is even over.

Long-time readers of The Apple Geek will know I love Apple products and their operating systems. You’ll also know I can’t resist rolling out a Linux-based solution wherever I can and that Windows and I have never really seen eye to eye.

What you might not know is that I’ve kept another side of me separate: I’m a bit of a petrolhead. I’ve got a soft spot for older, retro cars 80s, 90s, and early 00s Volkswagens, plus a few German icons from BMW and Porsche. I absolutely cannot stand electric vehicles, and while I appreciate some aspects of modern car tech (Apple CarPlay being the obvious example), most of the new stuff just doesn’t do it for me. That said, retrofitting CarPlay into a 90s VW? Not impossible, just a fun weekend project.

So yes I love both new and old tech. MiniDisc players are my guilty pleasure (and my kryptonite). I adore new Apple hardware, but I’m also conscious of the waste all those perfectly good old machines and gadgets sitting unused, gathering dust, or worse, heading for landfill.

The 2026 Resolution

For 2026, I’m making myself a promise: if a piece of tech can be repaired, renewed, or reused without buying a new one, I’m doing it.

I want this to be a year of learning, problem-solving, and tinkering a proper hands-on year of reviving forgotten hardware and keeping it useful. To ease myself into it, I’ve already lined up two projects.

Project 1 The Doomed iMac 27”

The 2011 iMac 27” was a problem child from the start. Its internal design traps heat right around the GPU an AMD 6770M with 1 GB of VRAM flanked by a 1 TB spinning hard drive on one side and an optical drive directly below. Add in some warm air from the cooling fans, and you’ve got the perfect recipe for a GPU meltdown.

Mine’s had five lives so far. Originally owned by a graphics and sign company, it’s been passed through a few owners, doing everything from professional design work to family homework and YouTube duty. I’ve now given it a sixth chance.

I’ve upgraded the RAM from 4 GB to 32 GB, swapped the mechanical HDD for a 500 GB SSD, and replaced the optical drive with a caddy holding another 500 GB SSD for storage. The result? Cooler internals and snappier performance but the GPU finally gave up, as they all do.

Yes, you can “bake” the GPU literally stick it in an oven at Gas Mark 9 for nine minutes to reflow the solder and get it working again. I’ve done this four times already, just long enough to fire the iMac up, grab data, and order a proper replacement from iMacGfx on eBay.

Part 1 of this project is to install that replacement GPU.
Part 2 is to use OpenCore Legacy Patcher to bring the iMac up to a modern macOS maybe Ventura or later.

Alternatively, I might leave macOS High Sierra in place and dual-boot Linux. Either way, it’s staying alive.

Project 2 The iPod Video (5th Generation)

Back to the 90s again. My Mk2 Golf is a proper throwback complete with a 2000-era Kenwood MiniDisc head unit. It even has an adapter that mimics a CD changer and lets me connect an iPod.

Enter my 5th Gen iPod Video. I remember buying it from Argos the month it came out and it’s still in mint condition. The only problem? The hard drive occasionally clicks, and the battery has become moody.

The plan is simple: upgrade the hard drive using an iFlash SD Card adapter with a fast 32 GB card, and replace the battery with a 2000 mAh one. The Golf’s iPod connection powers the device anyway, but while I’m inside, I may as well future-proof it.

I’m keeping this iPod original no wild mods. But if it goes well, I might pick up another 5th Gen and go all out: 3000 mAh battery, massive storage, and maybe a clear or yellow front shell for that early-2000s look.

Old Tech Shouldn’t Sit in a Drawer

Circling back to the title old tech shouldn’t just sit broken in a drawer or end up in landfill. It’s worth fixing, learning from, and breathing new life into.

There’s a simple joy in listening to an album on an iPod with no notifications, no messages, no distractions. The 5th Gen iPod Video has one of the best DACs Apple ever shipped, giving that warmer, richer sound modern devices can’t quite match.

Once these two projects are up and running, I’ll be hunting for more Apple ecosystem gear to revive maybe finding clever ways to integrate older devices into a smart home setup.

Let’s keep old tech alive, one project at a time.

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