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Steve Jobs' Mac design legacy (photos)

Retrospective of the iconic laptop and desktop designs Steve Jobs introduced throughout his Apple career.

Rich Brown
Rich was the editorial lead for CNET's Home and Wellness sections, based in Louisville, Kentucky. Before moving to Louisville in 2013, Rich ran CNET's desktop computer review section for 10 years in New York City. He has worked as a tech journalist since 1994, covering everything from 3D printing to Z-Wave smart locks.
Rich Brown
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1 of 16 One More Gadget

Apple II

Introduced on January 15, 1977, the Apple II introduced thousands of consumers to home computing.
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2 of 16 Scott Ard/CBS Interactive

Apple Lisa and Apple Macintosh

The Apple Macintosh (center), and its less successful, business-focused precursor, the Lisa (right), were among the first PCs to offer a graphical user interface.
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3 of 16 Wikipedia

Apple iMac G3

The iMac G3, introduced in August 15, 1998, hailed the widespread acceptance of the all-in-one desktop category, and was one of Jobs' first design wins after his return to the company in 1996.
Apple_iBook_G3_1.jpg
4 of 16 Wikipedia

Apple iBook G3

Introduced on July 21, 1999, the iBook G3 shared the design language of the iMac G3, and was the first Apple laptop intended for consumers, in particular students.
Apple_PowerMac_G4_1.jpg
5 of 16 Wikipedia

Apple PowerMac G4

The Power Mac G4, introduced on August 31, 1999, was the first traditional desktop design for Apple during Jobs' second run with the company. It was also one of the first Apple products credited to its now Senior Vice President of industrial design, Jony Ive. The PowerMac G4's sculpted plastic handles and friendly-future styling were a welcome departure from the sea of beige towers on the Windows side of the aisle.
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6 of 16 CNET

Apple Power Mac G4 Cube

Apple introduced its most innovative design, the Power Mac G4 Cube, on July 19, 2000. While this system was not a mass market success like the iMac G3, it remains an iconic example of millennial-era consumer product design. You'll find this system on exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
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Apple PowerBook G4

The PowerBook G4 was the laptop design that arguably put the largest aesthetic gap between Apple and its Windows-based competition. Where the rest of the market was mired in a seeming random selection of dark-colored plastic, Apple's aluminum and titanium iterations of the PowerBook G4 turned the laptop into a fetish object when it was introduced on January 9, 2001.
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Apple iMac G4

Debuting on January 7, 2002, the iMac G4, affectionately known as "the lamp" charmed customers with its playful design.
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Apple Power Mac G5

With the Power Mac G5 (a June 23, 2003 debut), Apple's standalone desktop line shed its roots as a consumer desktop and essentially became a professional workstation. The all-metal exterior echoed the serious industrial design of the PowerBook G4.
10 of 16 CNET

Apple iBook G4

The iBook G4 (October 22, 2003) merged the approachable plastic finish of the iBook G3 with the clean-lined aesthetic of the PowerBook G4. This laptop brought a refined look-and-feel to Apple's consumer-oriented products, and also hewed closely to the design of Apple's now 2-year old iPod.
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Apple iMac G5

Introduced in August 31, 2004, the iMac G5 signaled Apple's clear separation from mainstream Windows-based desktop designs. Not everyone was convinced of Apple's insistence on a closed hardware for general purpose computing, but it was hard to argue with the sheer visual appeal of the updated iMac.
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Apple Mac Mini

For Mac OS loyalists who still wanted flexibility in their choice of monitor, Apple introduced the diminutive Mac Mini on January 22, 2005.
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Apple aluminum iMac

Apple introduced its aluminum and glass iMac on August 7, 2007. This system, as well as the unibody update it introduced in 2009, extended Apple's industrial design leadership from the PowerBook G4 and the PowerMac G5 to its all-in-one desktop line for the first time.
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Apple MacBook Air

The Windows market is only now making an industry-wide attempt to challenge the slim-and-trim MacBook Air that Apple introduced on January 15, 2008. At the time of its debut, the MacBook Air was expensive in part due to its dependence on relatively new, and expensive, solid-state hard drives. Although it seemed like a vanity product at the time, the MacBook Air and its absent optical drive were one of the first signals of Apple's intentions to free computer users from physical media in the same way the iPod and iTunes liberated music fans.
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Apple Unibody MacBook/MacBook Pro

Apple's unibody MacBook and MacBook Pro (October 14, 2008) designs were the first true conceptual laptop update since the PowerBook G4 from 2001. The seamless aluminum body and edge-to-edge glass display carried over and refined the metal and black plastic design Apple introduced with its aluminum iMac in 2007, extending it to both the high-end MacBook Pro, and its more mainstream MacBook laptops.
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Apple Unibody Mac Mini

The Mac Mini received its last true design overhaul on June 15, 2010, with a unibody aluminum chassis in the same vein as the most recent iMac, MacBook, and MacBook Pro. In recent updates to the Mac Mini, Apple has added HDMI output, allowing you to more easily use it as a living room PC, and also shed the optical drive as with the MacBook Air. Both steps suggest Apple's ongoing effort to ween customers from physical media, and encourage them to acquire their media and software from Apple's various digital distribution services.

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