PadGadget
Lost Speech Shows Jobs Was Working on iPad in 1983
In 1983, Steve Jobs gave a speech at the International Design Conference in 
Aspen. In June, the first 20 minutes of the speech made its way around the 
Internet. Unfortunately, the additional 40 minutes of Jobs’ appearance was 
still missing from the archives. Writer Marcel Brown can be credited for 
tracking down that first 20 minutes. However, his associate John Celuch was at 
that conference nearly 30 years ago and just so happened to have the full 
speech, plus the missing Q&A that followed. Brown recently posted the entire 
speech, plus the Q&A to his blog, Life, Liberty, and Technology.


The speech is fascinating. Jobs talks about an unimaginable future, filled with 
networking computers, electronic mail boxes, and digital downloads. At the 
beginning of the speech, Jobs asks how many people in the audience owned a 
computer. There was no count, but from his reaction, you could guess that very 
few people raised their hand. He later talked about how he believed that 
personal computers would someday be the main form communication between people 
and that people will someday be spending more time interacting with PCs than 
with cars.

About 25 minutes into the speech, Jobs mentions putting a computer into “a 
book.” What we want to do is put an incredibly great computer into a book that 
you can carry around with you and learn to use in 20 minutes.” He also mentions 
wanting to allow users to hook up with a “radio link” so that you don’t have to 
connect any wires to it. Jobs then states that Apple had already designed the 
computer that will eventually go into the “book” (He was referencing the “Lisa” 
computer), but technology has not advanced enough to let them actually put them 
together. After explaining the steps that the company will take to make 
computers smaller and smaller, he says, “finally, we will make a computer small 
enough to fit into a book and we will sell it for less than $1,000.”

He claimed that Apple would have this technology available in seven to 10 
years. He was off by a couple of decades, but it is clear that the plan was in 
motion to invent the iPad before Apple even invented the Macintosh computer. 
When you think about it, the Lisa was the first iPad.

[via TheNextWeb]

» Related posts:

Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview in Theaters this November
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview Hits The Big Screen
Aaron Sorkin Rumored to Direct Steve Jobs’ Biopic
  



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