fbpx
Wikipedia

Stevenote

Stevenote is a colloquial term for keynote speeches given by Steve Jobs, former CEO of Apple, at events such as the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference, Macworld Expo, and Apple Expo.[1][2] Because most Apple product releases were first shown to the public at these keynotes, "Stevenotes" caused substantial swings in Apple's stock price.[3]

Steve Jobs introduces MacBook Air during keynote presentation at Macworld 2008. The event was his last Macworld appearance.

The final Stevenote was delivered on June 6, 2011, when iCloud (Apple's cloud computing service) was announced. OS X Lion and iOS 5 were also announced on the same day. It was one of Jobs' last public appearances before his resignation as CEO on August 24 and death on October 5 of that year.

History edit

In late 1996, Apple purchased NeXT, and Jobs returned to Apple after an 11-year hiatus following his forced resignation from the company in 1985.[4] In mid-1997, he delivered a keynote address, with a detailed report on the company's status, featuring a satellite appearance by Microsoft CEO Bill Gates. Jobs announced a partnership with Microsoft with several key agreements which, according to him, would benefit Apple and allow it to recover from the prolonged decline of the early and mid-1990s. Two major announcements were made during the keynote: the next release of Microsoft Office (Office 98) would be developed for the Macintosh, and Microsoft's Internet Explorer would be the default web browser on Macintosh computers.[5] Despite heckling from the audience, Jobs explained why the partnership was favorable to Apple:

The era of setting this up as a competition between Apple and Microsoft is over, as far as I'm concerned. This is about getting Apple healthy, and this is about Apple being able to make incredibly great contributions to the industry to get healthy and prosper again.

— Steve Jobs, MacWorld Boston 1997 – Steve Jobs returns – Bill Gates appears on-screen, Mac History (6 August 1997), Christoph Dernbach

Jobs later gave keynote addresses at trade expositions and conferences at least once a year, in which he announced updates to Apple products or demonstrated new products and services.[6] Nearly every product upgrade or announcement in the next 13 years was made during a Stevenote. Among products so-announced were the original iMac all-in-one desktop computer in 1998, the clamshell iBook in 1999, the Mac OS X operating system in 2000, the iPod music player in 2001, the iPhone smartphone in 2007, and the iPad tablet in 2010.

Format edit

Stevenote addresses have usually been given at major trade expos. In the past, these have included the Macworld Conference & Expo in San Francisco and Boston, and the Apple Expo in Paris. However, Apple has stopped exhibiting at both expos.[7] After 2010, the Worldwide Developer's Conference, organized and held by Apple itself at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, was the only major conference at which Apple exhibited and at which Jobs delivered a keynote address. In recent years, Jobs gave his Stevenotes in an auditorium at Apple's corporate campus. These Stevenotes, in contrast to those presented at the large trade fairs attended by Apple in the past, were by invitation only and were attended only by a relatively small number of journalists, employees, and guests, and were called "special events" rather than keynotes. Similar Stevenotes have also been held at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts like those for the introduction of the iPad in 2010 and Apple's "Rock and Roll" iPod event in 2009.

Jobs was known for donning the same uniform in nearly every keynote since 1998.[8] His outfit usually consisted of a black long-sleeved mock turtleneck by Issey Miyake,[9] Levi's 501 blue jeans, and New Balance 991 sneakers.[10]

Notable Stevenotes edit

1998 edit

At the 1998 Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) keynote, Jobs announced that the company was back on track. He reviewed Apple's inventory turnover rate, describing changes in its distribution system and apple.com, its online store. Jobs said that Apple had sold 500,000 Power Macintosh G3 in its first six months, described the PowerBook G3 and showed the "Steamroller" commercial. He claimed that there were 10 million Apple computers in consumer use and six million educational users, and discussed the iMac and QuickTime; Jobs said that the International Organization for Standardization adopted the QuickTime file format as the basis for MPEG 4. Jobs said that Apple would add Internet "live" streaming (Real-time Transport Protocol) to QuickTime 3.0 for its release in fall 1998 and introduced Peter Hoddie, chief architect of QuickTime. Jobs described three improvements Apple wanted to make to Java: unify the Java virtual machine, make it compatible and make it fast. He announced Apple's strategy for Mac OS X, saying that the 6,000-plus good application programming interfaces (APIs) would be called Carbon (API), introducing Avadis Tevanian to demonstrate Carbon. Tevanian introduced Ben Waldman (general manager of the Macintosh unit at Microsoft), Norm Meyrowitz (president of Macromedia Products) and Greg Gilley (vice-president for graphics applications development at Adobe Systems), who demonstrated Photoshop. Jobs announced that the Mac OS 8 Codename Sonata would be released in the third quarter of 1999; Rhapsody 1.0 would be released in the third quarter of 1998.

1999 edit

WWDC 1999 was opened by HAL9000. Jobs delivered an update, saying that 3,106 Mac apps were announced since May 6, 1998 (the debut date of iMac); Dragon Systems was bringing its voice-recognition software to the Mac, and he introduced Janet Baker (co-founder and CEO of Dragon Systems). Jobs updated Apple's profits, units, inventory and cash, announcing that Sears would be added to its national distribution chain. Apple Inc. launched its store on Memorial Day 1999, and Jobs announced the PowerBook line. During the one-week conference, Apple gave away 50 PowerBooks to attending developers. Jobs delivered an update on OpenGL, Java and QuickTime, inviting Avie Tevanian and Phil Schiller onstage. Schiller demonstrated OpenGL, QuickTime 4, Sherlock 2, the Quartz graphics model, Finder and the MailViewer app. Jobs announced Java MRJ 2.1.2, the fastest Mac Java to date, and he and Tevanian demonstrated Java. He reviewed Mac OS 8.5 (released in October 1998), announced Mac OS 8.6, previewed Sonata (scheduled for release in fall 1999) and delivered an update on Mac OS X Server 1.0. Jobs said that in the Darwin open-source software program there were over 20,000 registered developers and over 175,000 component downloads, describing the three application environments on the Darwin-Quartz foundation. The first was Classic Environment (formerly named Blue Box); the second was Carbon (API) (announced at WWDC 1998), and the third was Cocoa (API) (formerly named Yellow Box). Apple was developing a new Finder and a new Mail.

At the August 31, 1999, Seybold Seminars Expo, Jobs delivered an update on Apple, announcing its June quarterly profits, the appointment of Mickey Drexler (of Gap Inc.) to the board of directors, and giving an overview of QuickTime. Apple partnered with Akamai Technologies as a broadcast network, with content provided by BBC News, Bloomberg Television, Fox News, Fox Sports, HBO, NPR, The Weather Channel, WGBH-TV, ABC News, ESPN, Rolling Stone, VH1, and Disney; new content was provided by Rhino Records and Warner Bros. Records. Phil Schiller demonstrated QuickTime TV, Sherlock 2, VoicePrint, AppleScript and the Power Mac G4, and Jobs previewed Mac OS 9. He demonstrated nine features: Sherlock 2, a shopping app; Multiple Users, with privacy and preferences for a number of users; VoicePrint Password, voice-recognition software; Keychain, with one password; Auto Updating, for the latest updates; Encryption, for private files; File Sharing Over Internet; AppleScript over TCP/IP, to manage workflow across computers, and Network Browser. Jobs reviewed the iMac, introducing Ozzie Osborne (general manager of speech systems at IBM) to demonstrate ViaVoice. Jobs reviewed iBook (showing two TV advertisements) AirPort (showing the AirPort Base Station TV ad), the PowerBook and the Power Mac G4, calling computer scientist Richard Crandall onstage to demonstrate the G4. Jobs introduced John Warnock, chairman and chief commercial officer (CCO) of Adobe Systems. Jobs showed a Power Mac G4 TV ad, and introduced the Apple Cinema Display.

On October 5, 1999, Jobs said that Akio Morita of Sony had died two days earlier, announced the Mac OS 9 and described the nine internet power tools. Phil Schiller demonstrated Sherlock 2, Multiple Users, VoicePrint Password, Keychain, Encryption, Network Browser and Auto Updating. Jobs reviewed the Power Mac G4, showed a TV ad, and reviewed the Apple Cinema Display, PowerBook, and iBook. He announced the new iMac, and Schiller demonstrated the graphics card. Jobs introduced and demonstrated the iMac DV and iMovie, and showed three TV commercials.

Product introductions edit

 
Jobs showing Mac OS X running on an Intel processor for the first time

Notable keynotes after Jobs' death:

"One more thing..." edit

A typical Stevenote began with Jobs presenting sales figures for Apple products and a review of products released during the past few months. He then presented one or more new products. Reminiscent of Peter Falk's Columbo, he typically feigned some concluding remarks, turned as if to leave the stage and turned back, saying "But there's one more thing".[11]

Some "One more thing..." segments featured:

Year Location Announcement
1998 MacWorld SF Apple's return to profitability
1999 MacWorld NY Apple AirPort
1999 Seybold 22-inch Apple Cinema Display
1999 Apple Special Event iMac DV (including SE) and iMovie
2000 MacWorld SF Aqua and CEO Jobs
2000 MacWorld NY Power Mac G4 Cube
2001 MacWorld SF PowerBook G4
2002 MacWorld NY iPod for Windows
iMac G4 (17-inch model)
2003 WWDC Power Mac G5
2003 MacWorld PowerBook G4 (12-inch aluminum model)
2004 MacWorld iPod Mini
2004 WWDC 30-inch Apple Cinema Display
2005 MacWorld iPod Shuffle
2005 Press conference iPod with video
2006 MacWorld MacBook Pro
2006 Apple Music Event iTunes movies, Apple TV and John Mayer performance
2007 WWDC Safari for Windows beta
2007 Apple Music Event iTunes WiFi Music Store
2008 Apple Special Event MacBook (aluminum unibody model)
2009 Apple Music Event iPod Nano with video and speaker
2010 WWDC FaceTime on iPhone 4
2010 Apple Music Event Apple TV with iOS
2010 Apple Special Event MacBook Air revision
2011 WWDC iTunes Match
2014 Apple Special Event Apple Watch
2015 WWDC Apple Music
2017 Apple Special Event iPhone X
2020 Apple Special Event Apple M1 Chip, and the first Apple silicon Mac models of the MacBook Air, Mac Mini, and 13" MacBook Pro.[note 2]
2023 WWDC Apple Vision Pro

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all Apple Events were held virtually in different times throughout the year without any physical audience. The first event took place in September 15, 2020 for the new iPad Air and Apple Watches. The second event focused on the HomePod mini and iPhone 12 took place on October 13, followed by another Apple Event related to the new Apple Silicon Macs on November 10.
  2. ^ Unlike all other segments, this segment premiered as a standalone event alongside the other previous events that took place in September and October for other events. This segment premiered on November 10, 2020.

References edit

  1. ^ "The Very First 'Stevenote'". CHM. 2014-01-27. Retrieved 2022-08-29.
  2. ^ "Top of the Jobs: The Stevenote's greatest hits". the Guardian. 2008-12-17. Retrieved 2022-08-29.
  3. ^ Marshal, Katie (2007-05-23). "Apple seen unloading new MacBook Pros and (possibly) iMacs at WWDC". Apple Insider.
  4. ^ Hartmans, Matt Weinberger, Avery. "Steve Jobs would have been 65 on Monday. Here's how the late Apple CEO saved the company from disaster and set it on the path to a $1 trillion valuation". Business Insider. Retrieved 2022-10-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Guglielmo, Connie. "A Steve Jobs Moment That Mattered: Macworld, August 1997". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  6. ^ Snell, Jason (June 29, 2016). "A look back at Steve Jobs' most colorful keynote moments". Macworld. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  7. ^ Dalrymple, Jim (December 16, 2008). "Apple announces its last year at Macworld Expo, no Jobs keynote". Macworld. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  8. ^ . Bloomberg. 7 October 2011. Archived from the original on 2011-10-07.
  9. ^ "Steve Jobs' black turtleneck reportedly explained in biography". The Los Angeles Times. 12 October 2011.
  10. ^ Estes, Adam Clark (2011-11-10). "The Booming Business of Selling Steve Jobs's Wardrobe". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  11. ^ Haynes, Natalie (23 January 2012). "Natalie Haynes's guide to TV detectives: #1—Columbo". The Guardian. Retrieved November 27, 2013.

External links edit

  • Latest Keynote Videos Available at Apple.com
  • Official Apple Keynotes Video podcast
  • Every Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) Stevenote videos from 1997 to 2011
  • Every Apple Macworld Stevenote videos from 1997 to 2008
  • Every Apple Special Event Stevenote videos 2013-09-02 at the Wayback Machine from 1983 to 2011
  • Every Seybold Stevenote videos 2013-04-17 at the Wayback Machine from 1998 to 2001
  • Every NeXT Stevenote videos 2013-10-07 at the Wayback Machine from 1990 to 1996
  • Ars Technica's WWDC 2006 keynote bingo blog post - follow-ups 1, 2 and results,
  • The Very First Stevenote

stevenote, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september, 2017,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Stevenote news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Stevenote is a colloquial term for keynote speeches given by Steve Jobs former CEO of Apple at events such as the Apple Worldwide Developers Conference Macworld Expo and Apple Expo 1 2 Because most Apple product releases were first shown to the public at these keynotes Stevenotes caused substantial swings in Apple s stock price 3 Steve Jobs introduces MacBook Air during keynote presentation at Macworld 2008 The event was his last Macworld appearance The final Stevenote was delivered on June 6 2011 when iCloud Apple s cloud computing service was announced OS X Lion and iOS 5 were also announced on the same day It was one of Jobs last public appearances before his resignation as CEO on August 24 and death on October 5 of that year Contents 1 History 2 Format 3 Notable Stevenotes 3 1 1998 3 2 1999 4 Product introductions 5 One more thing 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory editIn late 1996 Apple purchased NeXT and Jobs returned to Apple after an 11 year hiatus following his forced resignation from the company in 1985 4 In mid 1997 he delivered a keynote address with a detailed report on the company s status featuring a satellite appearance by Microsoft CEO Bill Gates Jobs announced a partnership with Microsoft with several key agreements which according to him would benefit Apple and allow it to recover from the prolonged decline of the early and mid 1990s Two major announcements were made during the keynote the next release of Microsoft Office Office 98 would be developed for the Macintosh and Microsoft s Internet Explorer would be the default web browser on Macintosh computers 5 Despite heckling from the audience Jobs explained why the partnership was favorable to Apple The era of setting this up as a competition between Apple and Microsoft is over as far as I m concerned This is about getting Apple healthy and this is about Apple being able to make incredibly great contributions to the industry to get healthy and prosper again Steve Jobs MacWorld Boston 1997 Steve Jobs returns Bill Gates appears on screen Mac History 6 August 1997 Christoph Dernbach Jobs later gave keynote addresses at trade expositions and conferences at least once a year in which he announced updates to Apple products or demonstrated new products and services 6 Nearly every product upgrade or announcement in the next 13 years was made during a Stevenote Among products so announced were the original iMac all in one desktop computer in 1998 the clamshell iBook in 1999 the Mac OS X operating system in 2000 the iPod music player in 2001 the iPhone smartphone in 2007 and the iPad tablet in 2010 Format editStevenote addresses have usually been given at major trade expos In the past these have included the Macworld Conference amp Expo in San Francisco and Boston and the Apple Expo in Paris However Apple has stopped exhibiting at both expos 7 After 2010 the Worldwide Developer s Conference organized and held by Apple itself at the Moscone Center in San Francisco was the only major conference at which Apple exhibited and at which Jobs delivered a keynote address In recent years Jobs gave his Stevenotes in an auditorium at Apple s corporate campus These Stevenotes in contrast to those presented at the large trade fairs attended by Apple in the past were by invitation only and were attended only by a relatively small number of journalists employees and guests and were called special events rather than keynotes Similar Stevenotes have also been held at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts like those for the introduction of the iPad in 2010 and Apple s Rock and Roll iPod event in 2009 Jobs was known for donning the same uniform in nearly every keynote since 1998 8 His outfit usually consisted of a black long sleeved mock turtleneck by Issey Miyake 9 Levi s 501 blue jeans and New Balance 991 sneakers 10 Notable Stevenotes edit1998 edit At the 1998 Apple Worldwide Developers Conference WWDC keynote Jobs announced that the company was back on track He reviewed Apple s inventory turnover rate describing changes in its distribution system and apple com its online store Jobs said that Apple had sold 500 000 Power Macintosh G3 in its first six months described the PowerBook G3 and showed the Steamroller commercial He claimed that there were 10 million Apple computers in consumer use and six million educational users and discussed the iMac and QuickTime Jobs said that the International Organization for Standardization adopted the QuickTime file format as the basis for MPEG 4 Jobs said that Apple would add Internet live streaming Real time Transport Protocol to QuickTime 3 0 for its release in fall 1998 and introduced Peter Hoddie chief architect of QuickTime Jobs described three improvements Apple wanted to make to Java unify the Java virtual machine make it compatible and make it fast He announced Apple s strategy for Mac OS X saying that the 6 000 plus good application programming interfaces APIs would be called Carbon API introducing Avadis Tevanian to demonstrate Carbon Tevanian introduced Ben Waldman general manager of the Macintosh unit at Microsoft Norm Meyrowitz president of Macromedia Products and Greg Gilley vice president for graphics applications development at Adobe Systems who demonstrated Photoshop Jobs announced that the Mac OS 8 Codename Sonata would be released in the third quarter of 1999 Rhapsody 1 0 would be released in the third quarter of 1998 1999 edit WWDC 1999 was opened by HAL9000 Jobs delivered an update saying that 3 106 Mac apps were announced since May 6 1998 the debut date of iMac Dragon Systems was bringing its voice recognition software to the Mac and he introduced Janet Baker co founder and CEO of Dragon Systems Jobs updated Apple s profits units inventory and cash announcing that Sears would be added to its national distribution chain Apple Inc launched its store on Memorial Day 1999 and Jobs announced the PowerBook line During the one week conference Apple gave away 50 PowerBooks to attending developers Jobs delivered an update on OpenGL Java and QuickTime inviting Avie Tevanian and Phil Schiller onstage Schiller demonstrated OpenGL QuickTime 4 Sherlock 2 the Quartz graphics model Finder and the MailViewer app Jobs announced Java MRJ 2 1 2 the fastest Mac Java to date and he and Tevanian demonstrated Java He reviewed Mac OS 8 5 released in October 1998 announced Mac OS 8 6 previewed Sonata scheduled for release in fall 1999 and delivered an update on Mac OS X Server 1 0 Jobs said that in the Darwin open source software program there were over 20 000 registered developers and over 175 000 component downloads describing the three application environments on the Darwin Quartz foundation The first was Classic Environment formerly named Blue Box the second was Carbon API announced at WWDC 1998 and the third was Cocoa API formerly named Yellow Box Apple was developing a new Finder and a new Mail At the August 31 1999 Seybold Seminars Expo Jobs delivered an update on Apple announcing its June quarterly profits the appointment of Mickey Drexler of Gap Inc to the board of directors and giving an overview of QuickTime Apple partnered with Akamai Technologies as a broadcast network with content provided by BBC News Bloomberg Television Fox News Fox Sports HBO NPR The Weather Channel WGBH TV ABC News ESPN Rolling Stone VH1 and Disney new content was provided by Rhino Records and Warner Bros Records Phil Schiller demonstrated QuickTime TV Sherlock 2 VoicePrint AppleScript and the Power Mac G4 and Jobs previewed Mac OS 9 He demonstrated nine features Sherlock 2 a shopping app Multiple Users with privacy and preferences for a number of users VoicePrint Password voice recognition software Keychain with one password Auto Updating for the latest updates Encryption for private files File Sharing Over Internet AppleScript over TCP IP to manage workflow across computers and Network Browser Jobs reviewed the iMac introducing Ozzie Osborne general manager of speech systems at IBM to demonstrate ViaVoice Jobs reviewed iBook showing two TV advertisements AirPort showing the AirPort Base Station TV ad the PowerBook and the Power Mac G4 calling computer scientist Richard Crandall onstage to demonstrate the G4 Jobs introduced John Warnock chairman and chief commercial officer CCO of Adobe Systems Jobs showed a Power Mac G4 TV ad and introduced the Apple Cinema Display On October 5 1999 Jobs said that Akio Morita of Sony had died two days earlier announced the Mac OS 9 and described the nine internet power tools Phil Schiller demonstrated Sherlock 2 Multiple Users VoicePrint Password Keychain Encryption Network Browser and Auto Updating Jobs reviewed the Power Mac G4 showed a TV ad and reviewed the Apple Cinema Display PowerBook and iBook He announced the new iMac and Schiller demonstrated the graphics card Jobs introduced and demonstrated the iMac DV and iMovie and showed three TV commercials Product introductions edit nbsp Jobs showing Mac OS X running on an Intel processor for the first time 1984 Macintosh 1996 Announced return to Apple 1997 Power Macintosh G3 and PowerBook G3 1998 iMac 1999 New Power Mac G3 and G4 iBook QuickTime TV and AirPort Wi Fi connectivity 2000 Mac OS X now known as macOS Power Mac G4 Cube and PowerBook G4 2001 Launch of Mac OS X iTunes iPod and new iBook G3 2002 Mac OS X Jaguar and the discontinuation of Mac OS 9 the last Classic Mac OS 2003 Xcode and iTunes Music Store 2004 iPod Mini and Mac OS X Tiger 2005 Mac Mini iPod Shuffle iPod Nano and the Mac transition from PowerPC to Intel processors was announced 2006 The first Intel based Apple computer the iMac Core Duo and the MacBook Pro 2007 Apple TV iPhone iPod Touch iPhone OS and launch of Mac OS X Leopard 2008 MacBook Air iPhone 3G and second generation aluminum 13 inch MacBook and 15 inch MacBook Pro 2009 iPhone 3GS and Mac OS X Snow Leopard 2010 iPad iPhone 4 and next generation MacBook Air 2011 iPad 2 Mac OS X Lion iOS 5 and iCloud iPhone 4S with Siri were presented in the first keynote by Tim Cook as CEO the day before Jobs death Notable keynotes after Jobs death 2012 MacBook Pro with Retina Display iPhone 5 next generation Mac Mini next generation iMac iPad Mini iPad 3rd generation and 4th generation and new iPod nano and iPod Touch 2013 Redesigned iOS 7 OS X Mavericks the first free major software update for Mac next generation Mac Pro iPad Air new Retina iPad Mini iPhone 5s with Touch ID and iPhone 5c 2014 Swift for OS X and iOS redesigned OS X Yosemite iPhone 6 Apple Watch iPad Air 2 and iMac with Retina Display 2015 Apple Music new MacBook iPad Pro and iPhone 6s 2016 Renamed OS X to macOS new MacBook Pros iPhone SE 1st generation AirPods and iPhone 7 2017 New iPad Pros all new iPhone X with Face ID iPhone 8 and Apple Watch Series 3 with Cellular 2018 iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max iPhone XR and Apple Watch Series 4 2019 iPhone 11 iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max and Apple Watch Series 5 2020 Apple Watch Series 6 Apple Watch SE 4th generation iPad Air HomePod mini iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 mini iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max the Apple M1 Chip and the first Apple silicon Mac models of the MacBook Air Mac Mini and 13 MacBook Pro note 1 One more thing editFor similar terms see One More Thing A typical Stevenote began with Jobs presenting sales figures for Apple products and a review of products released during the past few months He then presented one or more new products Reminiscent of Peter Falk s Columbo he typically feigned some concluding remarks turned as if to leave the stage and turned back saying But there s one more thing 11 Some One more thing segments featured Year Location Announcement 1998 MacWorld SF Apple s return to profitability 1999 MacWorld NY Apple AirPort 1999 Seybold 22 inch Apple Cinema Display 1999 Apple Special Event iMac DV including SE and iMovie 2000 MacWorld SF Aqua and CEO Jobs 2000 MacWorld NY Power Mac G4 Cube 2001 MacWorld SF PowerBook G4 2002 MacWorld NY iPod for WindowsiMac G4 17 inch model 2003 WWDC Power Mac G5 2003 MacWorld PowerBook G4 12 inch aluminum model 2004 MacWorld iPod Mini 2004 WWDC 30 inch Apple Cinema Display 2005 MacWorld iPod Shuffle 2005 Press conference iPod with video 2006 MacWorld MacBook Pro 2006 Apple Music Event iTunes movies Apple TV and John Mayer performance 2007 WWDC Safari for Windows beta 2007 Apple Music Event iTunes WiFi Music Store 2008 Apple Special Event MacBook aluminum unibody model 2009 Apple Music Event iPod Nano with video and speaker 2010 WWDC FaceTime on iPhone 4 2010 Apple Music Event Apple TV with iOS 2010 Apple Special Event MacBook Air revision 2011 WWDC iTunes Match 2014 Apple Special Event Apple Watch 2015 WWDC Apple Music 2017 Apple Special Event iPhone X 2020 Apple Special Event Apple M1 Chip and the first Apple silicon Mac models of the MacBook Air Mac Mini and 13 MacBook Pro note 2 2023 WWDC Apple Vision ProSee also editApple Inc advertising List of Apple Inc media events Apple Worldwide Developers Conference Macworld iWorldNotes edit Due to the COVID 19 pandemic all Apple Events were held virtually in different times throughout the year without any physical audience The first event took place in September 15 2020 for the new iPad Air and Apple Watches The second event focused on the HomePod mini and iPhone 12 took place on October 13 followed by another Apple Event related to the new Apple Silicon Macs on November 10 Unlike all other segments this segment premiered as a standalone event alongside the other previous events that took place in September and October for other events This segment premiered on November 10 2020 References edit The Very First Stevenote CHM 2014 01 27 Retrieved 2022 08 29 Top of the Jobs The Stevenote s greatest hits the Guardian 2008 12 17 Retrieved 2022 08 29 Marshal Katie 2007 05 23 Apple seen unloading new MacBook Pros and possibly iMacs at WWDC Apple Insider Hartmans Matt Weinberger Avery Steve Jobs would have been 65 on Monday Here s how the late Apple CEO saved the company from disaster and set it on the path to a 1 trillion valuation Business Insider Retrieved 2022 10 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Guglielmo Connie A Steve Jobs Moment That Mattered Macworld August 1997 Forbes Retrieved 2022 10 07 Snell Jason June 29 2016 A look back at Steve Jobs most colorful keynote moments Macworld Retrieved 2022 10 07 Dalrymple Jim December 16 2008 Apple announces its last year at Macworld Expo no Jobs keynote Macworld Retrieved 2022 10 07 IGlossary Bloomberg 7 October 2011 Archived from the original on 2011 10 07 Steve Jobs black turtleneck reportedly explained in biography The Los Angeles Times 12 October 2011 Estes Adam Clark 2011 11 10 The Booming Business of Selling Steve Jobs s Wardrobe The Atlantic Retrieved 2022 10 07 Haynes Natalie 23 January 2012 Natalie Haynes s guide to TV detectives 1 Columbo The Guardian Retrieved November 27 2013 External links editLatest Keynote Videos Available at Apple com Official Apple Keynotes Video podcast Every Apple Worldwide Developers Conference WWDC Stevenote videos from 1997 to 2011 Every Apple Macworld Stevenote videos from 1997 to 2008 Every Apple Special Event Stevenote videos Archived 2013 09 02 at the Wayback Machine from 1983 to 2011 Every Seybold Stevenote videos Archived 2013 04 17 at the Wayback Machine from 1998 to 2001 Every NeXT Stevenote videos Archived 2013 10 07 at the Wayback Machine from 1990 to 1996 Apple Expo Paris Keynote 2003 Pictures Ars Technica s WWDC 2006 keynote bingo blog post follow ups 1 2 and results The Very First Stevenote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stevenote amp oldid 1208690040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.