10:47 PM
Apple Inc.
- Apple
Inc. Apple-logo.svg
- Type Public
- Traded
as NASDAQ: AAPL
- NASDAQ-100
Component
- S&P
500 Component
- Industry
Computer hardware
- Computer
software
- Consumer
electronics
- Digital
distribution
- Founded
April 1, 1976
(incorporated January 3, 1977
as Apple Computer, Inc.)
- Founder(s)
Steve Jobs
- Steve
Wozniak
- Ronald
Wayne
- Headquarters
Apple Campus, 1
Infinite Loop,
- Cupertino,
California, U.S.
- Number
of locations 357
retail stores (as of October 2011)
- Area
served Worldwide
- Key
people Tim Cook (CEO)
- Arthur
Levinson (Chairman)
- Sir
Jonathan Ive (SVP, Industrial Design)
- Steve
Jobs (Chairman, 1976-1985/2011; CEO, 1997-2011)
- Products
- Products
list[show]
- Services
- Services
list[show]
- Revenue
increase US$ 108.249
billion (FY 2011)
- Operating
income increase US$ 33.790
billion (FY 2011)
- Profit
increase US$ 25.922 billion (FY
2011)
- Total
assets increase US$ 116.371 billion
(FY 2011)
- Total
equity increase US$ 76.615 billion
(FY 2011)
- Employees
60,400 (2011)
- Subsidiaries
Braeburn Capital
- FileMaker
Inc.
- Anobit
- Website
Apple.com
- Apple
Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) formerly Apple Computer, Inc. is an American
multinational corporation that designs and sells consumer electronics,
computer software, and personal computers. The company's best-known
hardware products are the Macintosh line of computers, the iPod, the
iPhone and the iPad. Its software includes the Mac OS X operating system;
the iTunes media browser; the iLife suite of multimedia and creativity
software; the iWork suite of productivity software; Aperture, a
professional photography package; Final Cut Studio, a suite of
professional audio and film-industry software products; Logic Studio, a
suite of music production tools; the Safari web browser; and iOS, a mobile
operating system.
- As of
July 2011, Apple has 357 retail stores in ten countries, and an online
store. It is the largest publicly traded company in the world by market
capitalization, overtopping ExxonMobil by some $60 billion, as well as the
largest technology company in the world by revenue and profit, worth more
than Google and Microsoft combined.[9][10] As of September 24, 2011, the
company had 60,400 permanent full-time employees and 2,900 temporary full-time
employees worldwide; its worldwide annual sales totalled $65 billion, growing
to $108 billion in 2011.
- Fortune
magazine named Apple the most admired company in the United
States in 2008, and in the world from
2008 to 2011. However, the company has received widespread criticism for
its contractors' labor, and for its environmental and business practices.
- Established
on April 1, 1976 in Cupertino,
California, and incorporated January 3, 1977,[17] the company
was named Apple Computer, Inc. for its first 30 years. The word
"Computer" was removed from its name on January 9, 2007,[18] as its traditional
focus on personal computers shifted towards consumer electronics.
·
History
- Apple
was established on April 1, 1976
by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne, to sell the Apple I
personal computer kit. They were hand-built by Wozniak and first shown to
the public at the Homebrew Computer Club. The Apple I was sold as a
motherboard (with CPU, RAM, and basic textual-video chips)—less than what
is today considered a complete personal computer.[23] The Apple I went on
sale in July 1976 and was market-priced at $666.66 ($2,723 in 2012
dollars, adjusted for inflation.)
- The
Apple I, Apple's first product, was sold as an assembled circuit board and
lacked basic features such as a keyboard, monitor, and case. The owner of
this unit added a keyboard and a wooden case.
- Apple
was incorporated January 3, 1977
without Wayne, who sold his share of the company back to Jobs and Wozniak
for $800. Multi-millionaire Mike Markkula provided essential business
expertise and funding of $250,000 during the incorporation of Apple.
- The
Apple II was introduced on April
16, 1977 at the first West Coast Computer Faire. It differed
from its major rivals, the TRS-80 and Commodore PET, because it came with
character cell based color graphics and an open architecture. While early
models used ordinary cassette tapes as storage devices, they were
superseded by the introduction of a 5 1/4 inch floppy disk drive and interface,
the Disk II.
- The
Apple II was chosen to be the desktop platform for the first "killer
app" of the business world—the VisiCalc spreadsheet program.VisiCalc
created a business market for the Apple II, and gave home users an
additional reason to buy an Apple II—compatibility with the office.According
to Brian Bagnall, Apple exaggerated its sales figures and was a distant
third place to Commodore and Tandy until VisiCalc came along.
- By the
end of the 1970s, Apple had a staff of computer designers and a production
line. The company introduced the ill-fated Apple III in May 1980 in an
attempt to compete with IBM and Microsoft in the business and corporate
computing market.
- Jobs
and several Apple employees including Jef Raskin visited Xerox PARC in
December 1979 to see the Xerox Alto. Xerox granted Apple engineers three
days of access to the PARC facilities in return for the option to buy
100,000 shares (800,000 split-adjusted shares) of Apple at the pre-IPO
price of $10 a share.Jobs was immediately convinced that all future
computers would use a graphical user interface (GUI), and development of a
GUI began for the Apple Lisa.
- When
Apple went public, it generated more capital than any IPO since Ford Motor
Company in 1956 and instantly created more millionaires (about 300) than
any company in history.
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