
Happy 50th Birthday, Apple
I went to grade school at a parochial school in San Francisco’s North Beach. It was full of mostly middle class, neighborhood kids—an assortment of Italians, Chinese, and Filipinos from a ten-block radius. Half our teachers were nuns who lived in the convent on the same block. The other half were laypeople. To my surprise and delight, we had a computer lab back in the early- to mid-1980s, filled with maybe ten Apple IIe computers. It was seventh grade when I was allowed to take the class. Most computer classes at the time taught rudimentary programming in BASIC. This was a few years after I had watched the movie TRON on the big screen. And right after I had gotten my first Mac.
A few months into the class, in January, on a typical cool day in The City, I was in the computer class when the principal announced over the PA that a tragedy had struck the crew of the space shuttle Challenger. The group of us ran to the classroom where there was a television mounted at the corner. We watched the news report and the replay of the explosion—a trail of white smoke that split into a Y.
That image must have stuck with me because—well, what would a 12-year-old boy do but want to animate the launch and explosion. As my final project for my computer class, I made an animation of the launch. I mapped it out on grid paper first, and then painstakingly transferred those sprites pixel by pixel and frame by frame to the Apple IIe in my program. Over the course of days—weeks?—I typed in numbers for coordinates and letters for colors, and saved my work to a floppy disk.
Come finals time, I played the animation for my class and got some oohs and ahs. Looking back at it now, it was a dumb and tone-deaf idea. I should have animated a lamp jumping on a ball or something instead.
Anyway, that was an Apple memory I haven’t shared before on this blog. Happy birthday, Apple. Thanks for 50 years of empowering crazy people like me to make crazy things.
Some favorite Apple-related posts I’ve written:
- The Apple Design Process. My memory of working at Apple’s Graphic Design group during the time of the iPod and the PowerMac G5.
- For the Rest of Us. Apple has always done well in its marketing and advertising. This is my reflection on one of my favorite Apple spots.
- 30 Years of Mac. Don’t judge, but this is the first thing I ever drew on a Mac.
- Thank You, Steve. Here I share the story of one of the times I presented to Steve. This was an animation for MacBuddy, the Mac OS X setup assistant.




















