How Steve Jobs' Love of Simplicity Fueled A Design Revolution
Passionate to the point of obsessive about design, Steve Jobs insisted that his computers look perfect inside and out
- By Walter Isaacson
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
In creating the case for the original Macintosh, which came out in 1984, Jobs worked with two young designers at Apple, Jerry Manock and Terry Oyama, who drafted a preliminary design and had a plaster model made. The Mac team gathered around for the unveiling and expressed their thoughts. Andy Hertzfeld, one of the software engineers, called it “cute.” Others also seemed satisfied. Then Jobs let loose a blistering burst of criticism. “It’s way too boxy, it’s got to be more curvaceous. The radius of the first chamfer needs to be bigger, and I don’t like the size of the bevel.” With his new fluency in industrial design lingo, Jobs was referring to the angular or curved edge connecting the sides of the computer. But then Jobs gave a resounding compliment. “It’s a start,” he said.
Every month or so, Manock and Oyama would come back to present a new iteration, based on Jobs’ previous criticisms. The latest plaster model would be dramatically unveiled, and all the previous attempts would be lined up next to it. That not only helped them gauge the evolution, but it prevented Jobs from insisting that one of his suggestions or criticisms had been ignored. “By the fourth model, I could barely distinguish it from the third one,” said Hertzfeld, “but Steve was always critical and decisive, saying he loved or hated a detail that I could barely perceive.”
One weekend, Jobs went to the Macy’s in Palo Alto and again spent time studying appliances, especially the Cuisinart. He came bounding into the Mac office that Monday, asked the design team to go buy one and made a raft of new suggestions based on its lines, curves and bevels.
Jobs kept insisting that the machine should look friendly. As a result, it evolved to resemble a human face. With the disk drive built in below the screen, the unit was taller and narrower than most computers, suggesting a head. The recess near the base evoked a gentle chin, and Jobs narrowed the strip of plastic at the top so that it avoided looking like a Cro-Magnon forehead. The patent for the design of the Apple case was issued in the name of Steve Jobs as well as Manock and Oyama. “Even though Steve did not draw any of the lines, his ideas and inspiration made the design what it is,” Oyama later said. “To be honest, we didn’t know what it meant for a computer to be ‘friendly’ until Steve told us.”
Jobs obsessed with equal intensity about the look of what would appear on the screen. In particular, he cared about the fonts—the different styles of lettering. When he had dropped out of Reed College as a freshman, he had stuck around campus auditing classes that struck his fancy, and his favorite was one in calligraphy. “I learned about serif and sans-serif typefaces, about varying the amount of space between different letter combinations, about what makes great typography great,” he recalled. “It was beautiful, historical, artistically subtle in a way that science can’t capture, and I found it fascinating.” It was yet another example of Jobs consciously positioning himself at the intersections of the arts and technology.
Because the Macintosh had a bitmapped display—meaning that each pixel on the screen could be turned on or off by the microprocessor—it was possible to create a wide array of fonts, ranging from the elegant to the wacky, and render them pixel by pixel on the screen. To design these fonts, he hired a graphic artist from Philadelphia, Susan Kare. She named the fonts after the stops on Philadelphia’s Main Line commuter train: Overbrook, Merion, Ardmore and Rosemont. Jobs found the process fascinating. Late one afternoon he stopped by and started brooding about the font names. They were “little cities that nobody’s ever heard of,” he complained. “They ought to be world-class cities!” The fonts were renamed Chicago, New York, Geneva, London, San Francisco, Toronto and Venice. “If I had never dropped in on that single course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts,” Jobs later said. “And since Windows just copied the Mac, it’s likely that no personal computer would have them.”
Chris Espinosa, another of the young engineers, found one way to satisfy Jobs’ demands when he was designing a calculator for the Macintosh. “Well, it’s a start,” Jobs said when he saw Espinosa’s first attempt, “but basically, it stinks. The background color is too dark, some lines are the wrong thickness, and the buttons are too big.” Espinosa kept refining it in response to Jobs’ critiques, but with each iteration came new criticisms. So finally one afternoon, when Jobs came by, Espinosa unveiled his inspired solution: “The Steve Jobs Roll Your Own Calculator Construction Set.” It allowed the user to tweak and personalize the look of the calculator by changing the thickness of the lines, the size of the buttons, the shading, the background and other attributes. Instead of just laughing, Jobs plunged in and started to play around with the look to suit his tastes. After about ten minutes, he got it the way he liked. His design, not surprisingly, was the one that shipped on the Mac and remained the standard for 15 years.
Although his focus was on the Macintosh, Jobs wanted to create a consistent design language for all Apple products. So he set up a contest to choose a world-class designer who would be for Apple what Dieter Rams was for Braun. The winner was Hartmut Esslinger, a German designer who was responsible for the look of Sony’s Trinitron televisions. Even though he was German, Esslinger proposed that there should be a “born-in-America gene for Apple’s DNA” that would produce a “California global” look, inspired by “Hollywood and music, a bit of rebellion and natural sex appeal.” His guiding principle was that “form follows emotion,” a play off the familiar maxim that it follows function. The look he developed for Apple products in the 1980s featured white cases; tight, rounded curves; and lines of thin grooves for both ventilation and decoration.
Jobs’ infatuation with design had a downside. The excess costs and delays he incurred by indulging his artistic sensibilities contributed to his ouster from Apple in 1985 and the gorgeous market failures he produced at his subsequent company, NeXT. When he was recalled to Apple in 1997, he had tempered some of his instincts and learned to make sensible trade-offs, but he was no less passionate about the importance of design. It was destined to make Apple again stand out in a market that was glutted by boxy, beige generic computers and consumer devices such as music players and phones that looked as if they had been designed in Uzbekistan.
When Jobs gathered his top management for a pep talk soon after his return, sitting in the audience was a sensitive and passionate 30-year-old Brit who was head of the company’s design team. Jonathan Ive—known to all as Jony—was planning to quit. He was sick of the company’s focus on profit maximization rather than product design. Jobs’ talk led him to reconsider. “I remember very clearly Steve announcing that our goal is not just to make money but to make great products,” Ive recalled. “The decisions you make based on that philosophy are fundamentally different from the ones we had been making at Apple.” Ive and Jobs would soon forge a bond that would lead to the greatest industrial design collaboration of their era.
Like most designers, Ive enjoyed analyzing the philosophy and the step-by-step thinking that went into a particular design. For Jobs, the process was more intuitive. He would point to models and sketches he liked, and dump on the ones he didn’t. Ive would then take the cues and develop the concepts Jobs blessed. In Ive, Jobs met his soul mate in the quest for true rather than surface simplicity. Ive, sitting in his design studio, once described his philosophy:
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (6)
The article replicates a serious area of Jobs' ignorance, when it comes to the advent of proportional-spaced fonts in computers and PCs. For all his love of font design and calligraphy, Jobs certainly must have been blissfully unaware of what was happening with fonts and computers when he first started work in that garage - and from Isaacson's quote, he remained ignorant on this issue. Jobs, per Isaacson, speculates that his work on Macintosh proportional fonts led to the proliferation of such fonts across the entire PC world. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Well before the arrival of the first Atari, proportional fonts (and WYSIWYG) we a design goal for computer screens and printers. If Jobs had never lived, and Apple had never happened, proportional fonts would still have arrived on screen roughly when they did -- many many people besides Jobs were working actively on the problem, especially with bit-mapped screens. The Mac was not the first screen to have proportional fonts ... far from it. Isaacson should remove this little anecdote from his Jobs repertoire ... or he should re-frame it as an example of how ignorance, combined with arrogance, can be embarrassing.
Posted by Nat on September 23,2012 | 12:15 PM
I refer you to the scene in Douglas Adams' "Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy" in which a committee of marketing and other business folks are re-inventing the wheel. Not much progress has been made. When one of the main characters points this out, a committee member replies: "All right, Mr. Wiseguy. . .you're so clever, you tell us what color it should be." And yes, I'm aware of the fact that Douglas used Mac's. But I don't think he cared a hoot about the chamfers. Del Ramey
Posted by Del Ramey on September 15,2012 | 10:29 AM
Hi Walt, I respectfully suggest that the time has come for you to stop pretending that you're Steve Jobs's ghost. Sincerely, Bob
Posted by Bob on August 24,2012 | 11:00 AM
Very talented people exist all over the world, and yet, a company with this consistent level of innovation, has not emerged. Jony Ive was talented in 1992, when he was hired at Apple. His talents were realized five years later, after collaborating with the "like-minded" leadership of Steve Jobs. Interestingly, the great majority of products which were initially designed by the company, had been rejected by Jobs, who had an extraordinary aesthetic sensibility of form and function, an attribute which even the most "talented" lacked. It was through his guidance, vision, and persistent refinement that he, and his team, were able to transform the Computer Industry , Music Industry , Motion Picture Industry, (Pixar) Phone Industry, Retail Industry, Tablet Industry, App Industry , Television Industry , (pending) Publications Industry, Advertising Industry, Subscription Industry, Cloud Networking Industry , and Operating System design , to name some few. Anyone who had achieved only 1/10th of his accomplishments would be deemed a genius. He was a true visionary, artist, innovator, inventor, businessman, and, above all, one who really gave a s**t about producing great products, with a first-rate "user experience." As far as being the "soul mind" behind the products, simply take a look at Apple from 1976-1985, and then from 1997 to present. The 12 years in-between was severely lacking in "soul," among other things.
Posted by MagnumShares on August 23,2012 | 02:35 AM
@michael So you can back up this opinion up with extensive interviews with Jobs, along with interviews of his family, friends, co-workers, rivals, business partners, and more? You spent years researching the man, right? And of course, you're generally regarded as one of the world's best biographers. Your opinion matters quite a bit then, I'm glad you made your comment..
Posted by John on August 23,2012 | 03:58 PM
I disagree with the presentation of Steve Jobs as a genius whose design talents revolutionised technology and changed the world. He had an eye for a good thing and pulled together teams of very talented people who then designed and built what he wanted. He was not the soul mind behind any if the designs, and whilst I appreciate that this article names many of them, it still makes the mistake of giving Jobs most of the credit as if none of it could have happened without him. It did, and there are many examples of this. He had extraordinary success after a long hard slog and not a little luck. He was a business man, not a deity or a design guru.
Posted by Michael on August 23,2012 | 07:51 AM