50 years of Apple

Apple Watch, iPhone, Macintosh 128k and Airpods Pro on a white background, arranged around a logo with text reading '50 years of Apple' on a bitmap image of a computer, in front of vertical rainbow stripes

(Image credit: Future)

We’re celebrating Apple’s 50th birthday with a week of content about the tech giant. It covers everything from personal recollections from our writers to the greatest — and worst — Apple gadgets as voted by you, and you can read it all on our 50 years of Apple page.

Apple might be responsible for some of the most famous and successful products in human history, but not everything the company touches turns to gold.

While billions of iPhones and millions of iPods and iPads have been sold, there’s a rogues’ gallery of Apple creations that had far less impact and ended up being consigned to the footnotes of tech history.

Sony Discman, but significantly less successful.

Essentially just a rebadged Philips CDF-100, the back of the box promised three separate uses. Plug it into a Mac and it would function as an external CD-ROM drive; connect it to your TV and you could use it to view your holiday snaps from a disc on the big screen; or plug in a pair of headphones or speakers and it could play music CDs.

The PowerCD could also run off six AA batteries, which technically meant you could take it out and about, but with its bulky frame and pointed corners you’d have to be wearing clown trousers for it to qualify as pocketable.

What to read next

Its lack of a singular focus seemed to make it a hard sell, though, and it suffered from being a jack of all trades but master of none. A couple of years later it was discontinued.

still making a comeback of sorts.

Did you also know Apple’s forgotten digicam secretly lives in your iPhone today? A feature called QuickTake is built into the phone’s shutter button, and let’s you quickly shoot both videos and a burst of photos.

Watch On

Another one of Apple’s mid-nineties punts before Steve Jobs came back to steady the ship, the Pippin was designed by Apple but actually released by Japanese toy giant Bandai (of Tamagotchi fame).

Based on a Macintosh Classic II, Apple tweaked the fundamental hardware and Bandai packaged it in a very nineties-looking chassis. In some ways the Pippin was ahead of its time, with internet connectivity and a wireless controller called the Applejack.

But with competition from the Nintendo N64 and original Sony Playstation, plus a significantly higher asking price than both, and fewer games to play on it, the Pippin was always facing an uphill battle.

It’s said that only 42,000 Pippins were sold worldwide, mainly in Japan, so it’s no surprise that Bandai was the first and last company to license its tech from Apple, and even less surprising that most people don’t even know it ever existed.

Watch On

Rumors of a touchscreen MacBook have been circulating for ages, and may finally come to fruition this year, but did you know Apple has already made a touchscreen laptop of sorts?

Over a decade before the first keyboard accessory was released for the iPad, Apple launched the eMate 300 — a cross between a PDA (that’s a Personal Digital Assistant, not a Public Display of Affection) and a notebook that was designed by Jony Ive. It had a 6.8-inch greyscale screen, ran the same operating system as the Newton, and could last a whopping 28 hours on a single charge. Those were the days, eh?

The eMate 300 lasted less than a year, another victim of the great Jobs purge, but you might recognize its translucent shell from the iMac G3, which was released just a year later and had a huge influence on tech aesthetics, helping to turn Apple’s fortunes around in the process.

Keegan)

You’d have to have been living under a Microsoft Zune for the past 25 years to not know what an iPod was, but did you know that it was briefly possible to buy one with an Hewlett-Packard logo on it?

HP was known for making PCs, printers, scanners and other boring office stuff, but at CES in 2004 CEO Carly Fiorina announced that the company would be launching a range of branded iPods with an exclusive blue finish.

In return, HP would pre-install iTunes on all of its desktops and laptops. The blue version never made it to market, although you could download and print your own ‘tattoos’ for it from the HP website instead. No, we didn’t do that either.

The partnership was short-lived, with HP announcing it was over just 18 months later, but if the reaction to U2’s 2014 album Songs of Innocence being added to all iTunes libraries is anything to go by, a lot of people would probably rather own an HP-branded iPod than one with the names of Bono and co inscribed on the back.

our three-star review pointed out, there was “no way that any sensible person would mistake this for even a budget hi-fi or mini system.”

It was discontinued about 18 months later and Apple didn’t make another speaker until the HomePod in 2018.

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course, you can also follow TechRadar on YouTube and TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.