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Interview with John Scully

worm eater writes "CNet news has an interesting interview with John Scully, CEO of Apple back in the day. He talks about problems and potential in the computer industry, and expresses regret over the opportunities Apple missed with some key technologies -- such as HyperCard and the Newton."

9 of 229 comments (clear)

  1. HyperCard technology lives on in these products... by 5n3ak3rp1mp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Runtime Revolution
    Compile on any platform, to any platform- including a ton of *nix variants. A very nice cross-platform rapid application development tool with a very complete set of functionality (interface, database, tcp/ip ports, etc.), all coded in a HyperTalk-descended language.

    X-Builder
    Mostly designed for multimedia, I don't know as much about this one...

  2. Suppy and Demand by IntlHarvester · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Back in the day, Apple computers were loaded with custom chips that gave them unique capabilities. The downside to this design was that it limited Apple's ability to manufacture machines.

    So, they basically had more potential customers than they had computers. There's two ways they could deal with this situation:

    a) Move to an 'open' architecture and bring in 3rd party manufacturing
    b) Keep raising prices until the demand curve falls off.

    Scully chose Plan B, which pretty much permenently doomed them to a nitch player. The upside is that their profits were so high that they built that $4 Billion bank account that people are always talking about. Apple is really more of a mutual fund now days than a computer manufacturer.

    There's a history of Apple by Jim Carlton that covers the decision not to allow 'cloning' in great detail.

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  3. Sculley had some big shoes to fill by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 5, Interesting

    he was hired away from Pepsi to work at Apple. I think Jobs gave him that old "Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life or do you want to change the world?" speech.

    The Newton was fine, except that it cost more than the average person was able to pay, and the handwriting recognition needed work. They fixed it later.

    Sculley brought about the Color Macs, under Jobs it was still greyscale and B&W. I have a Mac IIcx under my desk which I don't use. One day I may hook it back up. Maybe run Linux on it or System 7?

    Microsoft beat down Apple, Windows kept taking marketshare, and Apple did the best it could to compete. The Creative Content market was the bulk of Apple's marketshare. This helped to cotribute to Apple's Dark Ages and loss of revenue. Microsoft was to blame there, even if it did make software for the Mac, it favored Windows first.

    Sculley tried to fill Jobs' shoes, but couldn't. He didn't have the reality distortion field or the creative marketing genius that Jobs had. Meanwhile Next wasn't doing so well and could barely hold it's own. Unix was the future, few people saw that at the time. Jobs knew it because he invested in Unix technology for Next. Meanwhile Linux was getting started and slowly started to gain marketshare. Apple's A/UX needed work, but was put on the back burner to favor MacOS.

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  4. HyperCard was WAY more than a slideshow! by MarcQuadra · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Oh yes, Hypercard was WAY more than a slide show! My dad has been running his business off Hypercard for over fifteen years! He tracks his time and expenses on projects, which autocalculates the billing, which autogenerates the invoice that gets him paid. It also tracks if the client has paid or not, keeps a 'credit rating' for clients in his hypercard 'rolodex', and handles all the family finances.

    My Chemistry teacher and I made a test-at-your-own-leisure testing system for our science department in high school, it was network enabled, and pretty secure. It let us take short tests after we completed our lab work, or during off-hours and study halls. The test was randomized so nobody could make cheat-sheets.

    --
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  5. Live Picture and Flashpix by jayrtfm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    he shoulda stuck with the sugar water.
    After bonehead moves with Apple, he aquired the program/company Live Picture.
    Back when RAM would cost you over $6K/gig, it allowed you to do retouching and composites of really big files on a 256meg machine. They also promoted the Flashpix format, which let you zoom into pictures online.

    After ignoring many suggestions of how the tech could be used to do some really innovative, useful things, and more bonehead moves, the company dies (assets bought by MGI)

    a good page about this can be found at:
    http://www.goingware.com/tips/resignation.htm l
    and
    http://www.goingware.com/tips/misery.html
    quote:
    "The bad VC comes up with ideas about what might appeal to Wall Street or to a possible corporate purchaser and orders you to drop what you're doing and pursue his misguided goal.

    A specific example of this was when John Scully directed Live Picture, the company, to abandon development of Live Picture 3.0, the program, and instead pursue development of internet technologies involving the very complex and proprietary Flashpix file format.

    You could do really cool things with FlashPix, admittedly, but it's not really what users wanted. Very few people use Flashpix these days, even though Kodak, Microsoft and Live Picture went to no end of trouble to develop and promote it. Instead, people who browse the web still get JPEGs, plain and simple.

    But the specific reason John Sculley felt it was important to develop and promote Flashpix - he said as much in a company meeting - was because we were preparing for an IPO, and "Wall Street is not interested in tools companies. It is interested in Internet companies".

  6. What about OpenDoc and CyberDog? by axxackall · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I think one of the biggest keys created by Apple (and killed by Apple too) was OpenDoc as an DOM precessor, and based on it CyberDog - what Mozilla is trying to be today, but at time when Netscape and IE could barely run longer than 10 minutes without being crashed.

    Where was that Scully when the technology was closed? Why wasn't it at least open-sourced?

    So many stupidy-based decisions were, are and will be driving Apple.

    --

    Less is more !
  7. Re:Not tech related but... by bellings · · Score: 3, Interesting

    you can't get into a more price competitive market than soft drinks

    Are you trolling? Pepsi, Coke, and Dr. Pepper cost about 50 cents a can, retail Just about every other soda on earth costs about 25 cents a can.

    There's about 2 cents of can, .5 cents of sugar water, and 47.5 cents of advertising in a can of soda.

    There probably isn't less competitive market than market than soft drinks.

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  8. Re:Hypercard by alangmead · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Scully is echoing comments from Tim Berners-Lee during the development of the web. The original proposal for the world wide web specifically mentions Hypercard when describing what the system does.

  9. Jobs killed OpenDoc. by solios · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Due to industry pressures. Period. The fact that you could make modules for OD and string modules together to make an application meant, essentially, that you could drop a type module and a paint module together... and a spell checking module... and BLAMMO! Be running what Adobe didn't get around to doing with Photoshop until v.7 back in the days of OS 8.

    Adobe and several other major software houses took notice of this, realized what it could do, and essentially told Apple "Drop this shit like a ton of bricks or we drop support for your platform. Now." (this may also answer your question as to why it was never opened- though asking why older software wasn't open sourced is kind of like asking why I can't get m '57 Chevy with factory air and CD player...)

    Same thing with the memory management system that had been planned for MacOS 9.3. Publishers pissing an moaning about "OOOOH WE'LL HAVE TO REWRITE OUR APPS AND YOUR A NICHE MARKET SO IT MIGHT BE BETTER TO JUST DROP IT" has kept Apple hogtied in more ways than one for some time.

    Fortunately, OS X and Final Cut Pro are serious coups in this department- Adobe dropped Premiere (which sucks rocks regardless) in response to having to compete against Apple. The fact it was Apple must have pissed them off something fierce- if Macromedia had continued FCP development instead of selling it to Apple, I'm sure things would be a bit different.... and I'm sure FCP would suck. :P

    Anyway. That's the long form. The short form: Get a clue. Talk to a few developers who've actually been to the Apple campus and have been doing work on the platform since the 80's. Get their views.

    That said, OD was whacked after Jobs came back, and the OSS buzzword was barely a blip on anyone's radar back in the days of MacOS 8.