MWE SF 2000: With the renaissance in full swing, Steve announced Apple’s next-generation operating system in earnest at the first Macworld of the new millennium. With “state-of-the-art plumbing,” “killer graphics” and a 12-month, “gentle migration,” Steve introduced the masses to the blue-tinged world of Aqua of the Dock and kept his promise: A public beta was in our hands by September.
MWE New York 2000: Indigo, Ruby, Sage
and Snow iMacs, dual-processor Power Macs, optical mice, translucent
keyboards, iMovie 2, and 15-, 17- and 22-inch displays. None stood a
chance against the star-crossed star of the show, the jaw-dropping
Power Mac G4 Cube. Everyone wanted to take one home, but strangely, few
people actually did.
MWE Tokyo 2000: After an quiet debut in 1999, Steve
pulled out all the stops in 2000, unveiling brand-new portables and
Power Macs, including the iBook Special Edition and Pismo PowerBook.
Steve also made good on his ’98 vow to include the highest-quality
Japanese fonts in OS X.
MWE SF 2001: One of Jobs’ shining moments (even by his standards), the 2001 Stevenote featured a shipping date for Mac OS X, two more pieces of the digital hub (iDVD and iTunes), SuperDrive-equipped graphite Power Mac G4s, and the piece de resistance, the “mega-wide,” one-inch thick Titanium Power Mac G4. Suddenly, all was right-side up with the world (including the Apple logo on the case).
MWE New York2001: A preview of Mac OS X Puma (and
a few lengthy third-party demos) brought scarcely any new features, but
faster iMacs and Quicksilver Power Macs promised an all-around zippier
experience.
MWE Tokyo 2001: The final aesthetic flourish for the
iMac brought the trippy Flower Power and Blue Dalmatian patterns and
added CD-RW drives to accompany iTunes 1.1 Joining the art-deco
all-in-ones were new Power Mac G4 Cubes, which also added the elusive
CD-RW drives.
MWE SF 2002: A 14-inch iBook joined the wildly popular 12-inch “ice-book” family and iPhoto rounded out Apple’s digital hub vision, but the show-stopper was the flat-panel iMac G4, an overdue update that was well worth the wait. Part-computer, part-sculpture, the “Sunflower” iMac firmly cemented the Stevenote as the greatest show on earth.
MWE New York 2002: A notably lackluster presentation
eliminated Apple’s free e-mail in favor of a paid service and delivered
a rehash of the Jaguar demo Steve gave two months earlier at WWDC. No
killer new products to speak of, but iSync, iCal and iTunes 3 made
their debut, along with solid-state iPods (with Windows support) and
17-inch iMacs, but attendees couldn’t help but notice the spring was
missing from Steve’s step.
MWE Tokyo 2002: Steve crammed another 5 gigabytes into
the diminutive iPod music player as the Macworld Tokyo expo was moved
to the more spacious Big Sight convention center for Apple’s last
overseas splash. Turned out the switch was prophetic, as Steve took the
wraps off the stunning 23-inch Cinema HD display, Apple’s largest to
date.
MWE SF 2003: Final Cut Express, Airport Extreme, iLife, Keynote and Safari would have been enough for most company’s trade shows, but not Apple. After nearly two hours of nonstop announcements, Steve saved the best for last: The largest (17-inch) and smallest (12-inch) PowerBooks ever, dressed to the nines in classy aluminum.
MWE New York 2003: After Steve bailed on his annual
keynote to protest IDG’s plan to move to the expo back to Boston the
following year, the show, now known as Macworld CreativePro Conference
& Expo, found itself in a tailspin. Apple fulfilled its commitment
to exhibit--and even announced the availability of Soundtrack as a
standalone product--but the thrill was most definitely gone.
MWE Tokyo 2003: On the heels of the east-coast shake-up,
Apple abruptly pulled out of the Japan show, too, and IDG cancelled the
event altogether.
MWE SF 2004: A somewhat disappointing keynote delivered Garageband and way too much John Mayer, but still finished on a high note as Steve unveiled the product no one knew they needed: a smaller iPod in a rainbow of flavors.
MWE Boston 2004-2005: A pair of intimate Boston expos
closed the book on Macworld East for good, as IDG vowed to focus its
efforts on the sole remaining show in San Francisco.
MWE SF 2005: Also known as the keynote that brought down ThinkSecret, Steve took to the Moscone stage in 1995 looking to capitalize on all the attention Apple was getting. Along with a new iLife and a surprise successor to the defunct AppleWorks, two low-priced products sought to dispel the notion of Apple as a high-priced niche company: the $99 iPod shuffle and $499 Mac mini.
MWE SF 2006: Apple kicked off the Intel transition by fitting its two most popular Macs with Core Duo processors. Little was changed from the new iMac aside from its new brain, but the PowerBook underwent a series of tweaks and refinements, including the retirement of its famous name “because we’re kind of done with Power and we want Mac in the name of our products.”
MWE SF 2007: The last great Macworld keynote ever. Nuff said.
MWE SF 2008: With the near-impossible task of following the launch of the iPhone, Steve took the stage for his last Macworld San Francisco keynote with a bag full of assorted treats--cheaper Apple TVs, iTunes movie rentals, iPod touch and iPhone software updates, Time Capsule--and one big trick. Steve’s lasting image as the master of Macworld ceremonies: sliding the Macbook Air out its plain manila envelope.
MWE SF 2009: Apple’s final Macworld appearance was preceded by letter from Steve explaining his “nutritional problem” and “decision to have Phil deliver the Macworld keynote,” so attendees were prepared for a lackluster event. Apple surprised some with the new 8-hour, 17-inch Mac Book Pro, iLife ’09 and iWork ’09, but it just wasn’t the same without the man who made it all happen.
Macworld Expo elsewhere
Building off the success of U.S.
shows, a number of expos around the globe tried to capitalize on the
Macworld name, to limited success:
1989: Macworld Canada
1991: Macworld Mexico, Hong Kong, Stockholm and New Zealand
1992: Macworld Barcelona, Paris (cancelled due to popularity of Apple Expo)
1994: Macworld Expo Summit (Washington, D.C.)
1996: Macworld Taiwan
2004: Macworld UK
2005: Macworld on Tour (only schedule date, in Kissimmee, Fla., cancelled)
At the behest of IDG subsidiary Computerworld Australia, I organised the world's third Macworld Expo in November 1985 which became the first of a series which lasted at least a decade.I can't attempt to start on the stories from even that first Sydney Expo here and no materials survive in digital form, but I could dig out and scan some printed material given a bit of free time.
I finished up attending almost every Macworld Expo anywhere between 1986 and 1989 before my life moved on, though I've remained exclusively a Mac user ever since. There was at least one other early US venue, but I'd have to dig deep to be sure of the details. Tony SmithMelbourne, Australia
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