Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video (2024)

In 1984, Apple introduced the public to its groundbreaking new personal computer, the Macintosh, with a now-iconic Super Bowl ad portraying the Mac as liberating consumers from a conformist dystopia.

While that commercial earned a permanent spot in pop culture history, Apple also made another video a year earlier touting the "revolutionary" new Macintosh for the company's employees and partners. That internal promotional video, which was unreleased at the time but now lives on the internet, features young Steve Jobs and Bill Gates singing the Mac's praises.

Gates praises Apple

Gates and Microsoft would later become fierce rivals with Apple in the battle for software supremacy. But in the early 1980s, Microsoft was one of Apple's biggest software developers, with Gates and his team creating Microsoft software specifically for the new Macs, including the first version of Microsoft Word.

In the 16-minute internal promo video from 1983, Gates notes that Microsoft had already been working with Apple on the Macintosh for roughly two years. The future billionaire added that he was "enthused" to work on the Macintosh, because it was rare for Microsoft to get to develop software for new devices before they hit the market.

Embedded below is a clip of Gates discussing Microsoft's work on Macintosh software from the 1983 promo video.

Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video (1)

VIDEO0:2700:27

Bill Gates talks about Apple's Macintosh computer in 1983

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"It's a great machine," Gates says in the video. "It's a step forward in terms of the way it uses graphics; and the speed. This is a machine that a lot of people are going to be able to afford that's a very, very useful machine."

Gates wasn't done gushing about the Macintosh, though. In 1984, he proclaimed in an interview that "the next generation of interesting software will be done on the Macintosh, not the IBM PC."

Look, it's 'portable'

The internal Apple video also shows a series of Apple hardware and software engineers explaining how hard they had worked to make the Macintosh into what they believed would be a more consumer-friendly personal computer. A voice-over touts the benefits of the new computer, which is described as being "as easy to set up as it is to use."

The video also offers tutorials on using the Macintosh's mouse to click and drag files, or even to change fonts and type sizes.

Apple even boasts about the portability of the Macintosh, with the video showing an office worker unplugging the computer and sliding it into a "durable carrying case" the size of small carry-on before taking the entire set-up on a bike ride.

"When you're ready to travel, Macintosh can easily go along," the voice-over says.

Embedded below is a clip from the 1983 promo video showing off the Macintosh's portability.

Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video (2)

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This is what Apple's Macintosh computer looked like in 1983

Jobs pitches his vision for the future of personal computers

The promo video concludes with Apple co-founder Jobs describing the Macintosh as "the neatest product I've ever seen in my life," while explaining that he envisioned the personal computer revolutionizing the way people work at home and in the office, as well as communicate with each other.

Embedded below is a clip from the promo video featuring Jobs discussing the Macintosh.

Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video (3)

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Steve Jobs talks about Apple's Macintosh computer in 1983

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In 1983, Apple's most notable personal computer was still the Apple II, which hit the market in 1977 and became the first commercially successful personal computer on the market — eventually selling more than five million units.

However, Jobs envisioned the Macintosh as the first truly mass-market personal computer, in part because it was easier to use than most other computers on the market, with a built-in screen and mouse. The nearly $2,500 Macintosh was also more affordable for the average consumer (a lot less than the Apple Lisa computer, which the company released a year earlier at a price of nearly $10,000).

"We're going to find people buying Macintoshes for their own use or for use in a dormitory or for use in a corner of a corporation that might never have gotten a computer before," Jobs says in the video.

In the video, Jobs predicts that Apple's computer technology would be able to "not only to increase the productivity in offices and colleges around the world, but is going to be able to make a qualitative difference in the way that we communicate with each other."

The Apple co-founder even predicted the enormous success of the Macintosh.

"I think we're going to be able to bring these products to not just tens of thousands or millions of people, but to tens of millions of people," Jobs says, noting that such widespread adoption was the ultimate goal of the tech industry at the time.

"And, that's really what the personal computer revolution is all about."

Once it hit the market on January 24, 1984, the Apple Macintosh immediately became a popular seller, with roughly 72,000 computers sold in the first 100 days on the market. Apple sold its one-millionth Macintosh in 1987.

And just as Jobs predicted, the Macintosh brand has gone on to reach tens of millions of people. In the 2019 fiscal year, Apple sold more than 18 million Mac personal computers, including desktops and laptops.

You can watch the entire 1983 promo video here.

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Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video (4)

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Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video (2024)

FAQs

Bill Gates calls Apple's first Mac a 'great machine' in this 1983 internal video? ›

“It's a great machine,” Gates says in the video. “It's a step forward in terms of the way it uses graphics; and the speed. This is a machine that a lot of people are going to be able to afford that's a very, very useful machine.” Gates wasn't done gushing about the Macintosh, though.

What did Apple do in 1983? ›

Lisa is a desktop computer developed by Apple, released on January 19, 1983. It is generally considered the first mass-market personal computer operable through a graphical user interface (GUI).

What story archetype is employed in 1984 Apple Macintosh computer advertisem*nt shown in the lecture pod? ›

The title of this commercial is an allusion to the novel written in 1949 by George Orwell. The novel takes place in the year 1984 and depicts a dystopian society in which citizens' freedoms are restricted by a totalitarian government ruled by a dictator referred to as “Big Brother.”

What does the Apple 1984 Super Bowl commercial introducing Macintosh computer mean? ›

The spot depicts a bleak future. A sad, gloomy, Orwellian world stripped of any vestige of individuality. People are cogs in a vast state-controlled machine and can do little more than sleepwalk through their miserable existence. But a hero emerges.

Was the Apple Macintosh the first successful computer to use? ›

The Macintosh was the first successful mouse-driven computer with a graphical user interface and was based on the Motorola 68000 microprocessor.

Was Apple around in 1983? ›

The company was incorporated by Wozniak and Steve Jobs in 1977. Its second computer, the Apple II, became a best seller as one of the first mass-produced microcomputers. Apple introduced the Lisa in 1983 and the Macintosh in 1984, as some of the first computers to use a graphical user interface and a mouse.

How much was an Apple Computer in 1983? ›

On this day, in 1983, Apple Computer introduced the Lisa. One of the first personal computers to implement two new leading-edge ideas – a GUI (Graphical User Interface) and a mouse. But its ill-fated $10,000 price tag doomed it from the start.

What is the message of the Macintosh commercial did the message of the commercial about technology in 1984 turn out to be true today almost 40 years later? ›

The idea was that Macintosh would revolutionize computing and that the future of technology would bring freedom, rather than control. The message was effective – the ad launched Apple as a computing powerhouse, and made the Mac one of the best-selling computers of its time.

Why was the Macintosh important? ›

Today, the Macintosh is widely seen as a landmark product. It introduced the masses to a graphical user interface; introduced, for the first time in mass production, the mouse, and had an impact on the trajectory of the entire personal computing revolution that followed.

What is the story of Apple Macintosh? ›

Conceived in 1979 by Jef Raskin, Macintosh was envisioned as an affordable, easy-to-use computer for the masses. Raskin named the computer after his favorite type of apple, the McIntosh. The initial team consisted of Raskin, hardware engineer Burrell Smith, and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

What was the purpose of the 1984 Apple commercial? ›

Conceived by the Chiat/Day ad agency and directed by Ridley Scott, then fresh off making the seminal science-fiction noir “Blade Runner,” the Apple commercial “1984,” which was intended to introduce the new Macintosh computer, would become one of the most acclaimed commercials ever made.

What was the name of the Apple Computer released in 1983 that was the first from that company to use a graphical user interface GUI )? ›

Apple introduces the Lisa computer

Lisa is the first commercial personal computer with a graphical user interface (GUI). It was thus an important milestone in computing as soon Microsoft Windows and the Apple Macintosh would soon adopt the GUI as their user interface, making it the new paradigm for personal computing.

What was special about the first Mac? ›

The first Macintosh was introduced on January 24 1984 by Steve Jobs and was the first commercially successful personal computer to feature two known, but still unpopular features: the mouse and the graphical user interface.

What is Apple's oldest computer? ›

Apple I
TypeMotherboard-only personal computer kit
Release dateApril 11, 1976
Introductory price$666.66 (equivalent to $3,600 in 2023)
DiscontinuedSeptember 30, 1977
Units soldc. 175 to 200
13 more rows

How much RAM did the first Mac have? ›

The first Macintosh, exemplified by this object, had only 128K RAM, and users quickly found this insufficient. The Macintosh 512 KB, nicknamed "Fat Mac," was introduced in September 1984.

How much revenue did Apple make in 1983? ›

Click to enlarge. Apple's revenues nonetheless rose 69%, to $983 million, for the 1983 fiscal year that ended in September, and its net income of $77 million was 25% better than the year before.

How much did Apple make in 1983? ›

Steve Jobs co-founded Apple in 1976 and the company went public in 1980 raising about $100 million at a split-adjusted IPO price of $2.75 per share. After reaching roughly $8 per share in 1983 (with annual revenue near $1 billion), the stock fell to below $2 per share when Jobs left the company in 1985.

Who was the CEO of Apple in 1983? ›

John Sculley III (born April 6, 1939) is an American businessman, entrepreneur and investor in high-tech startups. Sculley was vice-president (1970–1977) and president of PepsiCo (1977–1983), until he became chief executive officer (CEO) of Apple Inc. on April 8, 1983, a position he held until leaving in 1993.

Who left Apple in 1983? ›

The Apple II revolutionized the computer industry with the introduction of the first-ever color graphics. Sales jumped from $7.8 million in 1978 to $117 million in 1980, the year Apple went public. Wozniak left Apple in 1983 due to a diminishing interest in the day-to-day running of Apple Computer.

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