First 100 personalized Mac's

A little bit later, after we returned to Bandley 3, we were surprised by a large Apple truck that pulled up in the parking lot near the back of the building. It contained 100 brand new Macintoshes, one for each member of the team, personalized with a little plaque on the back. Steve presented one at a time to each team member with a handshake and a smile as the rest of us stood around cheering. SOURCE

Lets make a list with pictures of first 100 Mac employee who got their personalized Mac. Here are some I have found so far. I am not the author of the pics. They can be found on the internet. All other info found on Folklore.org and from The mac Bathroom reader book by Owen W. Lynzmayer.

1. Andy Hertzfeld (Software wizard; wrote most of the Macintosh Toolbox. Left Apple in 1985)

12593262075_9b161272a4_b.jpg

2. Chris Espinoza (Supervised the writing of the manuals and technical documentation. Still works at Apple)

12586085894_f6f79cc43a_c.jpg

3. Daniel Kottke (Built prototypes and troubleshot boar-level problems. Left Apple in 1985)

12593258095_4a4d16b8a1_z.jpg

4. Jerry Manock (Managed the industrial design engineers. Left Apple in 1985)

12784928044_114d7010f0_w.jpg

5. Steve Capps (Completed the Finder with Bruce Horn. Made Alice, first Macintosh game.)

12596094294_3e7bbbb9cc_b.jpg

6. Del Yocam (At Apple, during the 1980s, Yocam ran the Apple II group and later became Apple's first chief operating officer (COO)).

Del Yocam F347012M0001.jpg

7. Ivan Mach (Optimized main logic and power sweep boards for factory automation. Left Apple in 1984).

572795205_32105896469055817_2042447478286325510_n.jpg
 
Lets make a list with pictures of first 100 Mac employee who got their personalized Mac. Here are some I have found so far. I am not the author of the pics. They can be found on the internet. All other info found on Folklore.org and from The mac Bathroom reader book by Owen W. Lynzmayer.

1. Andy Hertzfeld (Software wizard; wrote most of the Macintosh Toolbox. Left Apple in 1985)

View attachment 95735

2. Chris Espinoza (Supervised the writing of the manuals and technical documentation. Still works at Apple)

View attachment 95734

3. Daniel Kottke (Built prototypes and troubleshot boar-level problems. Left Apple in 1985)

View attachment 95736

4. Jerry Manock (Managed the industrial design engineers. Left Apple in 1985)

View attachment 95737

5. Steve Capps (Completed the Finder with Bruce Horn. Made Alice, first Macintosh game.)

View attachment 95738

6. Del Yocam (At Apple, during the 1980s, Yocam ran the Apple II group and later became Apple's first chief operating officer (COO)).

View attachment 95739

7. Ivan Mach (Optimized main logic and power sweep boards for factory automation. Left Apple in 1984).

View attachment 95740
9. Paul Tavenier (purchasing agent -responsible for "everything not soldered to the MLB". Eventually managed the Mac Supplier Quality Engineering Group. Left Apple at the end of 1984)
IMG_0706.jpeg
 
Thanks Paul. Now we need to find other 91 plauqes :)
I have in my possession a calendar that we all received at the Jan 1983 group off-site conference in Carmel, CA. Each member's birthday is printed on it and there are 90 names -3 of those (at least) left the group well before launch. Not sure how much detective work you want to do but I can scan it for you (or even post here if that is acceptable). It was at this meeting that the name Macintosh was agreed on (by vote) as the official product name, as well as when the whole "pirate" thing got started. (It's more fun being a pirate than joining the Navy. -S Jobs).
The corporate types had discussed calling it the Apple 400 (Apple 4 being a non-starter since the Apple 3 had been such a flop). One of the marketing guys mentioned that the name was very close to Mcintosh -the stereo hi-fi people. Before the day was out Apple legal had negotiated a deal with Mcintosh allowing us to use the name, IIRC Apple paid $40k for the rights.
 
9. Paul Tavenier (purchasing agent -responsible for "everything not soldered to the MLB". Eventually managed the Mac Supplier Quality Engineering Group. Left Apple at the end of 1984)
View attachment 95754
Per the serial in your other post:
Code:
Approximate Build Date:  1983-11-20 - 1983-11-26
Build Sequence:          1165
No question that's one of the earliest :).

Wonder what the other serials are!
 
Good idea @eharmon listing a serial numbers, so here is what I have found:

Paul Tavenier - F347109M0001

Manufactured in: F => Fremont, California, USA
Year of production: 1983
Week of production: 47
Production number: 109 => 1165
Model ID: M0001 => original Macintosh 1984 (128k)


Ivan Mach - F347077M0001

Manufactured in: F => Fremont, California, USA
Year of production: 1983
Week of production: 47
Production number: 077 => 245
Model ID: M0001 => original Macintosh 1984 (128k)


Del Yocam - F347012M0001

Manufactured in: F => Fremont, California, USA
Year of production: 1983
Week of production: 47
Production number: 012 => 36
Model ID: M0001 => original Macintosh 1984 (128k)
 
Last edited:
Thanks for sharing the Calendar. Interesting to see the font on front page and for months was made by Susan Kare.

IMG_0721.jpeg

The MacSketch/MacPaint graphic found on Twiggy Macintosh disc of Susan kare :)

macintosh.jpg
 
Dennis Grimm - F347049M001

Manufactured in: F => Fremont, California, USA
Year of production: 1983
Week of production: 47
Production number: 049 => 145
Model ID: M001 => original Macintosh 1984 (128k)
 
Back
Top