How Steve Jobs hired Norman Foster: “Hi Norman. I need some help”

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

News: architect Norman Foster has revealed how late Apple CEO Steve Jobs called him “out of the blue” in 2009 to invite him to design the Apple Campus 2 with the words “Hi Norman, I need some help.”

“For me this project started in the summer of 2009,” says Foster in a movie published this week by Cupertino City Council. “Out of the blue a telephone call. It’s Steve: ‘Hi Norman, I need some help.’ I was out there three weeks later.”

The movie documents a planning meeting held in the city on 1 October, at which representatives of Apple, Foster + Partners and others presented details of the $5 billion project to create a new home for Apple in Cupertino. The building was granted planning permission last week.

Foster says in the movie: “One of the most memorable things and perhaps vital to the project was Steve saying, ‘Don’t think of me as your client. Think of me as one of your team’.”

The architect adds: “The first point of reference I think for Steve was the campus at Stanford, his home territory. And also the landscape he grew up with; the fruitbowl of America.”

Elsewhere in the movie, members of the project team give details of the ring-shaped, 280 million square-foot building, which will have one of the largest photovoltaic solar arrays in the world and feature a parking garage for electric cars with over 100 charging stations.

“We have a building that is pushing social behaviour in the way people work,” adds Stefan Behling, an architect at Foster + Partners, while Dan Whisenhunt, Apple’s senior director of real estate & facilities, says the building will be “one of the most environmentally sustainable projects on this scale in the world, creating a new home for 13,000 employees.”

Whisenhunt adds that Apple would “like to keep engineering and creative groups together on our new site,” referring to the company’s recent moves to integrate the previously separate design and technology departments.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

“When Apple Campus 2 is finished 80% of the site will be green space” says Lisa Jackson, Apple’s vice president of environmental initiatives. “We’re maximising the natural assets of the area; this area has a great climate so 75% of the year we won’t need air conditioning or heating, we’ll have natural ventilation.”

She adds: “AC2 will run on 100% renewable energy, there will be solar power, it will be one of the largest solar arrays in the world for a corporate campus. Our goal is to build a campus that has no net increase in greenhouse gas emissions.”

“This building allows us to put 13,000 engineering and creative types in one location under one roof thus creating the idea factory that will create future generations of Apple products food years to come,” adds Whisenhunt. “The parking station will be fitted with over 100 vehicle charging parking stations, there are provisions to increase that as our employees purchase more electric cars.

Construction will start soon and will take 32 months. Apple staff will be able to move into the building in 2016.

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“Hi Norman. I need some help”
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Apple has reached “saturation” says former designer

Hartmut Esslinger

News: technology giant Apple has lost its vision and has reached creative saturation according to Hartmut Esslinger, the industrial designer hired by Steve Jobs to help transform the brand in the 1980s.

Speaking to Quartz magazine this week, the founder of product design studio Frog said that Apple is operating like Sony was in 1980s when he worked there, where the “visionary founder has been replaced by leaders who aren’t thinking beyond refinement and increasing profit.”

“As soon as you can copy something [like the iPhone,] it’s not smart enough anymore,” he told the magazine. “I think Apple has reached in a certain way a saturation.”

Apple sketch
Sketch made during a meeting with Steve Jobs. Image: Frog.

Esslinger designed over 100 products for Sony prior to joining Apple in 1982, where he worked with Apple’s late co-founder Steve Jobs – who passed away in 2011 – on the early design language for Macintosh computers.

He recounted how Jobs was open to experimenting with news ideas and took risks that lead to innovation, a quality Esslinger feels is lacking at Apple today. “Steve Jobs was a man who didn’t care for any rational argument why something should not be tried,” said Esslinger. “He said a lot of ‘no,’ but he also said a lot of ‘yes’ to things and he stubbornly insisted on trying new things.”

He claimed Jobs conceived a “book-like computer” as early as 1982.”That vision eventually led to the Apple Newton, a tablet that failed, and the iPhone and iPad, which made history. That kind of vision is now lacking at Apple.”

Steve Jobs by Norman Seeff
Photograph of Steve Jobs by Norman Seeff

The designer suggested that Apple is being left behind by radical thinking from young designers in places like China, where Esslinger currently leads the Detao Master Class for Strategic Design at Shanghai Institute of Visual Art (SIVA).

He said that the next generation of innovators are moving beyond flat-screen technology, developing ideas for three-dimensional interfaces. “I think flat screens have reached a level of saturation,” said Esslinger. “Screens don’t have to be all right angles – the cheapest way is not always the best way. What’s happening in China right now is a paradigm shift where they realise they have to innovate and can’t just make cheap products.”

Apple sketch
Hartmut Esslinger sketches made during meetings with Steve Jobs. Image: Frog.

Esslinger’s forthcoming memoir Keep it Simple: The Early Design Years of Apple that recounts his time working with Jobs will be released at the Frankfurt book fair on 9 October 2013.

This time last year San Francisco designer Yves Behar told Dezeen that  Apple was “a little behind” in interface design and criticised the firm’s skeuomorphic approach to the look of its software, which mimicked real-word materials like leather and wood.

Since then Apple has put British industrial designer Jonathan Ive in charge of both its software and hardware design. In June the company unveiled iOS 7, the first major interface design overhaul overseen by Ive, which will be available to users later this month.

German industrial designer Richard Sapper told Dezeen how Steve Jobs once tried to lure him to work for Apple in an interview looking back on his career in June, but that he turned down the offer because he “didn’t want to move to California”.

See more stories about Apple »

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Online Memorial For Steve Jobs

Rememberum è un free-tool che ti aiuta a creare memoriali online di persone scomparse. Questo è il loro personale tributo a Steve Jobs in versione Old-School Mac OS Theme.

Online Memorial For Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs yacht free to sail again

Steve Jobs yacht free to sail again

News: the yacht commissioned by Steve Jobs before his death has been cleared to sail again as his family has come to a temporary agreement with French designer Philippe Starck in their dispute over an unpaid design bill.

The lawyer representing Jobs’ heirs, Gérard Moussault, said a temporary agreement between the two parties had been reached on Monday.

The ship was impounded in the Netherlands earlier this month after Starck‘s lawyers claimed he was still owed €3m for his work on the vessel.

Jobs and Starck had reportedly agreed on a payment of €9m for the design work – or 6% of the estimated €150m building costs. However, the Apple co-founder’s estate say the designer should receive 6% of the actual total cost, which came in at €105m.

Named Venus, the boat was completed in October, just over a year after Jobs’ death.

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free to sail again
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Steve Jobs yacht seized over unpaid Philippe Starck design bill

Steve Jobs yacht impounded

News: a yacht built for Apple’s late co-founder Steve Jobs has been impounded in Amsterdam following a dispute over an unpaid bill to French designer Philippe Starck.

A lawyer for Starck’s company, Ubik, said the designer was still owed €3m for his work on the vessel, which was completed after Jobs’ death last year.

Jobs and Starck had reportedly agreed on a payment of €9m for the design work – or 6% of the estimated €150m building costs. However, Jobs’ estate say the designer should receive 6% of the actual total cost, which came in at €105m.

The yacht will remain in the Port of Amsterdam until Jobs’ estate hands over the money, the lawyer told Reuters.

Earlier this year we reported on the unveiling of the 80-metre-long yacht, named Venus, which was built over six years at the Koninklijke De Vries shipyards in Aalsmeer, the Netherlands. See all our stories about Steve Jobs and all our stories about Apple.

We’ve previously reported on boats designed by Zaha HadidThomas HeatherwickMarc Newson and Studio Job – see all our stories about boats.

This year we’ve featured Starck’s stacking chair for Emeco made of discarded material and his design for an aerosol spray that lets users enjoy alcohol without the hangover.

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Philippe Starck design bill
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Steve Jobs’ yacht completed

Steve Jobs' yacht completed

News: the yacht that Apple‘s co-founder Steve Jobs designed for himself before he died this time last year with interiors by French designer Philippe Starck is now complete and has been unveiled at the Dutch shipyard where it was built.

Steve Jobs' yacht completed

Named Venus, the 80-meter-long ship has an aluminium exterior reminiscent of the company’s notebooks plus large panels of glazing common to Apple stores and seven 27-inch Macs in the wheelhouse. It was built over six years at the Koninklijke De Vries shipyards of the Feadship custom yacht-building company in Aalsmeer, the Netherlands.

Steve Jobs' yacht completed

Jobs’ widow and three of their children were present for the ceremony but it’s not yet clear what will happen to the boat.

“I know that it’s possible I will die and leave Laurene with a half-built boat,” Jobs is reported to have said in his biography by Walter Isaacson. “But I have to keep going on it. If I don’t, it’s an admission that I’m about to die.”

Jobs passed away on 5 October 2011 aged 56 after suffering with pancreatic cancer. See all our stories about Steve Jobs and all our stories about Apple.

In the past we’ve reported on boats designed by Zaha Hadid, Thomas Heatherwick, Marc Newson and Studio Job. Check out all our stories about boats.

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Lui era il capo

Computer Iconography

Susan Kare est une artiste dont les créations sont connues de tous. Elle a pu en effet créer depuis 1983 des iconographies pour les ordinateurs, répandu aujourd’hui à travers le monde. Cette dernière rappelle ses créations à travers une série de posters. Plus dans la suite.



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Jonathan Mak

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