I wish I could remember the first time my dad brought an Apple II from his school home for the Christmas break. But for years, the Apple II was what a computer was. Then my local frenemy got a Macintosh, and that was interesting, to say the least. And then there was a whole lot of nothing until my senior year, when someone I knew at college had a Mac and said that the Power Macintosh was coming, and by that time I was looking at PowerBook flyers from every serious college bokstore I could get into. And then, when I got my fellowship, I went to the Vanderbilt computing store and bought a Power Macintosh 6100/60 AV, and that was the beginning of one of the longest relatioships of my life.
That’s the amazing thing about the Mac – it was possible for me to start almost completely cold in the summer of 1994 and three years later, I had taught myself to manage the thing to the point that I wheedled myself into a job. And ever since September of 1997, every dollar I’ve ever earned has been connected to the products of Apple, inc of Cupertino, California. Including a stretch of three years when those dollars came directly from Apple itself, in which I had the assorted privileges of being gifted the first edition iPhone, getting a group email to remind us of the Apple alcohol policy, and talking shit about hockey to Phil Schiller before I realized I was chopping it up with my great-great-great-great-grandboss.
The thing about Apple’s products is – they’ve always been good at getting out of the way of what I want to do. None of the learned helplessness of Windows, the expectation that it will only kind of sort of work and might fail for no reason, and none of the DIY satisficing that goes along with Linux. Not that I’ve put much money into the Mac myself in those years. In all that time, I’ve only ever bought four desktop Macs and three laptops (one for my wife, on which I’m writing this). Most of the time it’s been work’s Macs. Now as for other things…three Apple Watches, half a dozen iPhones of my own, couple pair of AirPods Pro, couple of iPads. Because Apple launched another personal computing revolution from 2007 to 2010, for better or worse, and gave us truly personal computing. What’s on your iPhone is you. It’s your familiar, it’s your cyberspace interface viewer, it’s an extension of your hand and an extension of your brain.
A dent in the universe. Over and over. It’s been something to see.

