On January 9, 2007, Steve Jobs went onstage at the Macworld Expo to tease a "revolutionary product" that would change "everything" Jason Hahn is a former Human Interest and Sports Reporter for PEOPLE.
The world looked very different in 2007. George W. Bush was president; the final Harry Potter book hadn’t been released yet; and while smartphones existed, they weren’t mainstream. But that last part ...
Apple CEO Steve Jobs gave the world its first look at the iPhone — as well as a glimpse into a radically different future of personal computing and communications — on this day in history, Jan. 9, ...
Think visually. Apple presentations are strikingly simple and visual. For example, there is very little text on a Steve Jobs slide. While the average PowerPoint slide has 40 words, there were far ...
It was January 9, 2007, when Steve Jobs strolled confidently onto a San Francisco stage to unveil the very first iPhone. Wearing his trademark black turtleneck, blue jeans, and white sneakers, the ...
One of the universal truths in business—and in many other aspects of life—is that Steve Jobs, by virtue of his groundbreaking success with the launch of Apple Computers and the iPhone, achieved the ...
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs first revealed the iPhone back in 2007 at MacWorld San Francisco, and only a few months after the reveal it released for $499/$599. Jobs showcased the iPhone on January 9 ...
On my first day of journalism school, instructors taught me to find the “wow” in a story: the surprise that makes people pay attention. In 2001, Jobs could have simply introduced the first iPod by ...