Explore the history of Apple, from its 1976 garage beginnings to a global icon. Learn how Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak revolutionized personal computing.

Apple's success has never been about having the most features—it’s about having the most integrated, human-centric design and the courage to decide that what not to do is as important as deciding what to do.







Apple was founded on April 1, 1976, by three friends: Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne. Operating out of a garage in Los Altos, California, the trio aimed to make computing accessible to individuals rather than just large corporations. While Wozniak provided the engineering genius and Jobs provided the marketing vision, they worked together to move beyond hobbyist projects and establish a radical new business strategy for personal empowerment.
The company's first product was a bare circuit board known as the Apple I. At a time when computers were massive machines owned by governments or giants like IBM, the Apple I represented a shift toward personal computing. To fund the first batch of these circuit boards, Steve Jobs famously sold his VW bus, demonstrating his belief in the commercial potential of Wozniak’s technical designs and their shared vision for the future.
The Homebrew Computer Club was a pivotal setting where Steve Wozniak initially wanted to share his computer designs for free. However, Steve Jobs recognized the commercial potential of these designs and convinced Wozniak to turn their hobby into a business. This partnership combined technical innovation with a unique marketing strategy, moving away from the counterculture idea of free sharing toward building a brand that emphasized the 'specialness' of the individual user.
Apple’s early business strategy was rooted in the idea that computing should be a tool for ordinary people with ordinary budgets. Instead of just selling silicon and solder, Jobs and Wozniak sold the concept of personal empowerment and 'specialness.' By positioning the user as the hero against the industry behemoths, Apple used design and branding to influence the market, transforming a garage-based project into a foundational force in the personal computing industry.
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From Columbia University alumni built in San Francisco
