Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Susan Alinsangan, a Chiat/Day art director, came up with the design of the iPod silhouette commercials [2] in 2003, along with the help of Chiat/Day's director Lee Clow, and James Vincent, a former DJ and musician. [3] She worked on the print campaign with artist Casey Leveque of Santa Monica's Rocket Studio [4]
The 1990s Think Different campaign linked Apple to famous social figures such as John Lennon and Mahatma Gandhi, while also introducing "Think Different" as a new slogan for the company. Other popular advertising campaigns include the 2000s "iPod People", the 2002 Switch campaign, and most recently the Get a Mac campaign which ran from 2006 to ...
Apple's first logo, designed by co-founder Ron Wayne, depicts Sir Isaac Newton sitting under an apple tree. It was almost immediately replaced by Rob Janoff's "rainbow Apple", the now-familiar rainbow-colored silhouette of an apple with a bite taken out of it. Janoff presented Jobs with several different monochromatic themes for the "bitten ...
3 Non-Silhouette Ads. 3 comments. 4 original style used again. 1 comment. 5 Merger. 10 comments. 6 Move: iPod advertising. 4 comments. 7 Another iPod ad. 1 comment. 8 ...
Apple's white earbuds are prominently featured in the majority of their distinctive "silhouette style" iPod advertisements. [45] [46] Most often as a dancing black figure in [silhouette] with a starkly contrasted white earbuds and cord while holding a white iPod. [45]
Fadell joined Apple Inc. in 2001 and oversaw all iPod hardware, software, and accessories development. He is known as the "father of the iPod". As the co-creator of the iPhone , he also worked on the first three generations of the iPhone and oversaw all iPhone hardware, firmware, and accessories development from March 2006 to November 2008.
Pro-Trump groups have followed his campaign’s lead. Preserve America – a leading super PAC that has received millions from megadonor Miriam Adelson – went up with a pair of spots earlier ...
The iPod came from Apple's "digital hub" category, [17] when the company began creating software for the growing market of personal digital devices. Digital cameras, camcorders and organizers had well-established mainstream markets, but the company found existing digital music players "big and clunky or small and useless" with user interfaces ...