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 4 of 4)
“Back then, people weren’t comfortable with technology. If you’re scared of something, then you won’t touch it. I could see my mum being scared to touch it. So I thought, if there’s this handle on it, it makes a relationship possible. It’s approachable. It’s intuitive. It gives you permission to touch. It gives a sense of its deference to you. Unfortunately, manufacturing a recessed handle costs a lot of money. At the old Apple, I would have lost the argument. What was really great about Steve is that he saw it and said, ‘That’s cool!’ I didn’t explain all the thinking, but he intuitively got it. He just knew that it was part of the iMac’s friendliness and playfulness.”
Jobs and Ive proceeded to make beguiling design a signature of all future Apple computers. There was a consumer laptop that looked like a tangerine clam, and a professional desktop computer that suggested a Zen ice cube. Like bell-bottom pants that turn up in the back of a closet, some of these models looked better at the time than they do in retrospect, and they show a love of design that was, on occasion, a bit too exuberant. But they set Apple apart and provided the publicity bursts it needed to survive in a Windows world.
When flat-screen displays became commercially viable, Jobs decided it was time to replace the iMac. Ive came up with a model that was somewhat conventional, with the guts of the computer attached to the back of the flat screen. Jobs didn’t like it. There was something about the design that lacked purity, he felt. “Why have this flat display if you’re going to glom all this stuff on its back?” he asked Ive. “We should let each element be true to itself.”
Jobs went home early that day to mull the problem, then called Ive to come over. They wandered into the garden, which Jobs’ wife, Laurene, had planted with a profusion of sunflowers. “Every year I do something wild with the garden, and that time it involved masses of sunflowers, with a sunflower house for the kids,” she recalled. “Jony and Steve were riffing on their design problem, then Jony asked, ‘What if the screen was separated from the base like a sunflower?’ He got excited and started sketching.” Ive liked his designs to suggest a narrative, and he realized that a sunflower shape would convey that the flat screen was so fluid and responsive that it could reach for the sun.
In Ive’s new design, the Mac’s screen was attached to a moveable chrome neck, so that it looked not only like a sunflower but also a cheeky Luxo lamp. Apple took out many patents for the design, most crediting Ive, but on one of them—for a “computer system having a moveable assembly attached to a flat panel display”—Jobs listed himself as a primary inventor.
Jobs’ belief in the power of simplicity as a design precept reached its pinnacle with the three consumer device triumphs he produced beginning in 2001: the iPod, iPhone and iPad. He immersed himself daily in the design of the original iPod and its interface. His main demand was “Simplify!” He would go over each screen and apply a rigid test: If he wanted a song or a function, he should be able to get there in three clicks. And the click should be intuitive. If he couldn’t figure out how to navigate to something, or if it took more than three clicks, he would be brutal. “There would be times when we’d wrack our brains on a user interface problem, and think we’d considered every option, and he would go, ‘Did you think of this?’” said Tony Fadell, the team leader. “He’d redefine the problem or approach, and our little problem would go away.”
The iPod, and later the iPhone and iPad, were triumphs of Jobs’ original insight in the early 1980s that design simplicity was best accomplished by tightly wedding hardware and software. Unlike Microsoft, which licensed out its Windows operating system software to different hardware makers, such as IBM and Dell, Apple created products that were tightly integrated from end to end. This was particularly true of the first version of the iPod. Everything was tied together seamlessly: the Macintosh hardware, the Macintosh operating system, the iTunes software, the iTunes Store and the iPod hardware and software.
This allowed Apple to make the iPod device itself much simpler than rival MP3 players, such as the Rio. “What made the Rio and other devices so brain dead was that they were complicated,” Jobs explained. “They had to do things like make playlists, because they weren’t integrated with the jukebox software on your computer. So by owning the iTunes software and the iPod device, that allowed us to make the computer and the device work together, and it allowed us to put the complexity in the right place.” The astronomer Johannes Kepler declared that “nature loves simplicity and unity.” So did Steve Jobs. By integrating hardware and software, he was able to achieve both.
In the year since Steve Jobs died and my biography of him was published, I was struck by two conflicting reactions that the book provoked. Some people were put off by how petulant and abrasive he could be. But others, especially younger entrepreneurs or people who had run businesses, focused on how his petulance was linked to his artistic sensibility and drive for design perfection.
I believe that the latter interpretation is closer to the truth. Jobs was, at times, very demanding, indeed a jerk. But the world is filled with demanding bosses and jerks, most of whom never amount to much. What made Jobs special, sometimes even a genius, was his fiery instinct for beauty, his talent for creating it and his conviction that it mattered. And because of that, he was able to build a company that became the greatest force for innovative design—and the best proof of its importance—in our time.
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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