Reason Why There's A Bite In The Apple Logo
So back in1977 Steve Jobs Turned to an Ad Agency to
design a simple logo that could be printed in their computers. Since the
original hand-drawn logo of Issac Newton under an Apple tree was a little to
complicated. Rob Janoff was assigned to the project, and Jobs gave him just one
request. Saying “don’t make it cute.” With that in mind, Janoff began working
on the logo.
He decided to focus on the imagery of an Apple instead
of the typography, which as a different approach than other computer companies
like IBM and Hewlett Packard whose logos were primarily text based. Janoff
started with a simple silhouette of an Apple with a leaf on top. But this
imagery was pretty ambiguous, since there are several fruits that have a round
shape with leaves stemming off.
Janoff pointed out that several people mistook the
Apple logo for a cherry, since there was no clear context for how large or
small the fruit might be. So, to solve these problems, Janoff added a bite
which allowed people to immediately identify the logo as an Apple, while still
retaining a simplistic design.
Finally, six colorful stripes were added to symbolize
the Apple computer’s ability to display color images, something no other
machine could do at the time. When Janoff presented the logo, Jobs simply said,
“Okay, that’s nice.” And made it the official logo of the company. But there’s
a myth that persists to this day that the bite taken out of Apple’s logo was a
play on words.
Since the term byte, spelt byte, is used in the tech
industry as a unit of memory size. Although Janoff himself admitted the rumor
wasn’t true. Saying, “I’m afraid it didn’t have a thing to do with it. It’s
just a small happy coincidence.”
