Gil Amelio's 500 Days at Apple 42
Sabah Arif writes "Apple Computer was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy on January 31, 1996, when Gil Amelio succeeded Michael Spindler as CEO. The first thing he did was turn down an acquisition offer from Sun Microsystems, then he moved to secure Apple's short term financial future by having a huge bond sale. As he restructured the company (and cut 3,000 jobs), Amelio realized that the Copland project would never finish, and decided to buy NeXT Software, paving the way for Steve Jobs' triumphant return in 1997. Read the whole story of Amelio's 500 days with Apple."
nice article (Score:5, Interesting)
At the time of Amelios reign I had a IIcx and a performa 5200 and was pretty un-happy with the direction the mac os was going in. I remember the copland project getting pushed further and further back and in fact I remember modding system 7 to make it look like copland using a resedit hack I downloaded.
Also, the funniest thing is I went to Apple expo in london during Amelios reign and actually got a free mac t shirt from Power Computing which was advertising their 225 mhz mac clone. The slogan was "Anything worth doing is worth doing in excess of 225Mhz!!!" and on the back "My mac is faster than your mac". Classic!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:nice article (Score:1)
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interesting to see (Score:5, Insightful)
However, the information on the discussions with Gates shows that Amelio wasn't as charismatic as Jobs was, and that may have been the killing blow.
It also shows the disastrous effects a ruined presentation can have. Equipment failures and bad planning forced the CEO to ad lib his presentation and it turned into a badly cue'd 3 hour "drone-athon" instead of the 1.5 hour show it was supposed to be. Heed this warning all ye gentlemen.
All in all an interesting read that also shows the Jobs already forcing things to his hand in the few months he got back. Apparently he also had Jobs afficionado's in place since the early days in various positions at Apple.
Cool.
B.
Re:interesting to see (Score:1)
Buying WordPerfect outright is not 'developing an Office suite.' Jobs is smarter to make that sort of ridiculous claim. And, uh, Jobs is not a techie. He's the kind of guy who hangs around the techies and knows how to trick them into producing something he can shil
Re:interesting to see (Score:2)
Re:interesting to see (Score:4, Insightful)
Did Jobs achieve this by threatening Gates? I don't think so.
Rather, MS was feeling anti-trust pressure from other quarters. Pointing to this deal, they could say, "See? We're not engaging in anti-copetitive behavior. We're developing Office for a competing OS."
Re:interesting to see (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, yes. The deal was part of a broader settlement for a patent infringement lawsuit, started by Amelio I believe. Anyway, Apple was quite explicit about using the lawsuit as leverage to get MS to support their next generation OS.
Re:interesting to see (Score:2)
Google for QuickTime source code lawsuit (Score:5, Informative)
Ask yourself this: if the "investment" wasn't under threat, why do you think the full terms were kept so secret?
Re:Google for QuickTime source code lawsuit (Score:2)
However, what I was responding to was the assertion that Jobs threatened Gates that Apple would develop its own Office suite, and that Gates folded because "Gates knew Jobs could outdo them."
Let's not forget IE! (Score:2)
And, ""See? We're not engaging in anti-copetitive behavior. We're developing Internet Explorer for a competing OS."
Although this fought against their assertation that IE was a part of the OS, it did allow them to say, "only support IE, it's on everything anyone can pay to run!"
Jobs was smart enough to start his own browser development so that the MacOS could stand on its own. A browser is one of the most impor
Re:interesting to see (Score:1)
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I used Copland (Score:4, Interesting)
Or maybe i just had a really old build (D11E4 IIRC)...
Re:I used Copland (Score:2, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I used Copland (Score:2)
One thing to keep in mind is that Apple would have been targeting 8MB machines in the mid-90s and probably could not have afforded the overhead of a Classic VM. Which necessitated some sort of Win95ish approach.
Re:I used Copland (Score:4, Informative)
Apple was running a classic virtual machine under System V UNIX in the *early* nineties. But classic Mac OS was born doomed, the API guaranteed that nobody would ever be able to do multitasking under Mac OS without using fixed partitions... which was a performance killer for low-memory systems even with demand paging. They should have replaced the API by 1990 with one that used opaque handles like UNIX, or required explicit locking of handles during use. That would have allowed a single classic application alongside multiple New API applications, which would have been good enough for a transition if it had been started early enough.
Given that the classic environment in A/UX was System 6, they were actually on the way there. But System 7 incorporated The Grand Maltitasking Charade by default and they couldn't really go back after that.
Re:I used Copland (Score:2)
Re:I used Copland (Score:3, Insightful)
Alternate suggestion. (Score:5, Interesting)
My conclusions? Sculley was star-struck and too button-down to run a 'geek' company and Gil Amelio was overrated and near to the most arrogant person on Earth. Of course, BIG personalities like theirs fit right into Apple's history along with guys like Mark Markkula, Mike Scott and Mr. Reality Distortion himself.
The hacks writing As the World Turns could never come with anything half as interesting or dramatic as the history of Apple. If there was ever a subject for a movie, this is it.
Re:Alternate suggestion. (Score:2)
Which is why we have As the Apple Turns [appleturns.com]. Of course, they could do with a few more frequent updates. Very funny, but not as fresh as it used to be. Having kids kinda put a crimp in the website's pace.
Comment about the jet (Score:4, Insightful)
"Amelio had long been an avid amateur pilot, and he owned his own private jet that Apple used. Instead of allowing the struggling Apple to use the jet free of charge, Amelio created an independent company, Aero, to manage it and charge Apple for any fuel and maintenance the plane might need during company flights."
It makes it sound like he should have let the company use his jet for free, meaning that he would pick up the tab for fuel and maintenance, which, for a jet, has to be horrifically expensive. How is it unreasonable to have the company pay for the fuel and maintenance on something like a jet? It's not like he was charging a rent or anything...
Re:Comment about the jet (Score:1)
Other than that, a very good read and a nice perspective on Amelio's crucial role in keeping Apple independent and solvent.
500 days? (Score:2)
Please tell me Steve Jobs' middle name isn't "Louis".
20th Anniversary Macintosh (Score:2)
If you expect people to pay pr
Re:20th Anniversary Macintosh (Score:2)
Re:20th Anniversary Macintosh (Score:1)
Excuses, excuses (Score:2)