Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)


Have you heard of all of those devices? I haven't.

Apple 3 (1980)
When you’re looking for a home computer that will probably overheat and catch fire, look no further than the Apple 3. The successor to the hugely popular Apple 2 (see what they did there), this was a huge flop. Also, a genuine fire hazard.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Apple Lisa (1983)
The Lisa was actually pretty groundbreaking for its time – it was one of the first personal computers to utilise a graphical user interface (ie: on screen icons), came with a mouse, and could multi-task across programs. All very impressive for 1983. The $10 thousand price tag was considerably less impressive. In today’s terms it equates to approximately $22 thousand. Ouch.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Macintosh Portable (1989)
A portable Mac! Sweet... Wait, why do I have these crippling back pains? Maybe it’s because this laptop weights over seven kilos and is larger than a briefcase. Crapsticks.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Apple Newton (1993)
The original iPad. Released in 1993, the Newton was an all-in-one portable office that could send faxes (remember those?), splutter out emails, store your clients’ details, take notes and other relevant stuff. Anyway, its man claim to fame was its ability to read handwriting (via stylus input). Unfortunately, this feature was less reliable then your weed dealer. Also, it cost $1000 bucks.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Macintosh TV (1993)
If you’re going to release a computer that can display TV signals on the monitor than you wanna make sure it can actually do so. The Macintosh TV was a bit of a shambles and watching TV on it was slightly less satisfying poking yourself in the eyes with a stick.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

QuickTake (1994)
The QuickTakes were some of the very first digital cameras available on the market, which again points to Apple’s uncanny knack for meeting needs that consumers don’t yet know they have. A QuickTake camera was easy to use, had a .3 Megapixel resolution (which isn’t bad for 1994), and ranged in price from $600 to $750.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Apple Pippin (1996)
A mutant PC/games consoles hybrid, this was a bit of a mess from the get-go. Apple partnered with Japanese entertainment giant Bandai and somewhere along the way things got lost in translation. Released around the same time as the original Playstation, this quickly sank without a trace, selling fewer than 45 thousand units internationally.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

20th Anniversary Macintosh (1997)
Creating a deluxe version of your computer to mark 20 years in the business is all good and well. Charging nearly $8000 for some pointless ‘special features’ and a new casing? Not so much.

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Apple USB Mouse (1998)
One button? What the hell am I supposed to do with one button? What about right cluck? Nuts to this…

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

Apple's Greatest Fails (10 pics)

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3 Comments

Sep 11, 2010
dah said...
hilarious that they havent changed the design of their crap mouse since 1983.
Sep 12, 2010
Peever said...
Dude! you're missing the best part about the Apple III It used to get so hot that the CPU would pop out (this is the first computer Steve Jobs required there be no Fan etc, which is why it failed, but they did fix it in later models). But as for the best part.......customers who were experiencing certain problems were instructed to lift the machine 3 inches and drop it in order to re-seat the chips on the logic board!! BEST TECH SUPPORT ADVICE EVER!!!
Sep 12, 2010
Peever said...
Also, the Apple III created a huge win for Apple, while the design was defective, apple replaced ALL of the Apple III 's that were bought free of charge and shipped them a brand new Apple III Revised Plus, just because it couldn't perform it's primary function without intermittently turning off. HUGE WIN! Maybe Apple should remember this and do that with the Iphone 4 too? just a thought :).

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