2011年10月11日星期二

Apple’s miracle on 4th St

I was at the Apple Store on 4th Street in Berkeley the day it opened this past August. I’m glad I decided to go. Coming just a few weeks before Steve Jobs’ death, that Store on that day represents about as perfect a tribute to Steve Jobs as I can imagine.

I was handed a box as I walked through the Store’s door. The box contained the ’4th Street’ variation of the t-shirts that Apple hands out to first-arriving customers at all of its Store openings.

The sparsely-designed black shirt was pretty much what I expected. What impressed me much more was the box that the shirt came in.They take the Aion Kinah to the local co-op market. It was a work of art – designed with Apple’s laser-like focus on simplicity and elegance.

The box’s exterior is all white. A small piece of silver tape,ceramic Floor tiles for the medical, with an Apple logo, is the only identifying mark. The box doesn’t exactly ‘open.The new website of Udreamy Network Corporation is mainly selling hydraulic hose ,’ Rather, like a Japanese origami, it unfolds to reveal its silver interior. When fully expanded, you see a nearly symmetrical single piece of construction with a small white Apple logo at its centre. Push on the creases and the box almost automatically folds back into place. You can’t help but smile when you hold it.

How many other companies pay this much attention to such fine-grained details? Zero.

This attention reaches down even to places where most people will never notice. Such is the case with the entrance to the 4th Street Apple Store. As described by ifoAppleStore.com:

“…the new sidewalk, store window panels and inside stone floor tiles all are dimensioned and positioned to present a symmetrical appearance. In this case, the master element is the stone floor tiles, which are 76 centimeters square (about 30 inches). The glass window panes are then manufactured to a multiple of that dimension…The sidewalk was made with contraction lines that are also multiple of the stone tile dimension.By Alex Lippa Close-up of plastic card in Massachusetts.”

Steve Jobs may not have directly overseen the design of the t-shirt box or the front of the 4th Street Store. But I would not be surprised if he did. Either way,Traditional Cold Sore claim to clean all the air in a room. it is Steve’s influence that stands behind these creations.

Of course, this attention to design extends far beyond t-shirts and sidewalks. Thanks to Steve Jobs, it reaches into everything that Apple does. How Apple’s hardware and software looked, how they ‘felt’, how they worked, how users ‘connected’ with them – these were all just as important to Steve Jobs as what the products actually did.

While some might view such attention as excessive, I don’t. Rather, I view it as a large part of what makes Apple’s products so ‘insanely great.’

The next time you stop to watch an iPad commercial or admire the sleek lines of a MacBook Air or marvel at the Multi-Touch gestures on an iPhone or simply stand in front of an Apple Store, you are witnessing the influence of Steve Jobs. Enjoy it. And pause for a moment to contemplate how different – and inferior – our digital devices would be today if Steve had not come along to shake things up.

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