Design Moment: iMac, 1998

Jony Ive’s Bondi-blue iMac was something no one imagined computers could be: fun

Bondi-blue iMac: a revolutionary design
Bondi-blue iMac: a revolutionary design

Twenty-one years ago genius industrial designer Jonathan Ive changed the way we see personal computing forever, helped turnaround the fortunes of Apple and launched transparent-coloured plastic as the go-to material for all manner of objects.

Before his iMac, launched in 1998, desktop computers were beige or grey but his curvy Bondi-blue version was something no one imagined computers could be: fun.

Tech was terrifying for most people but these iMacs were simple to use – the “i” in the name stood for internet, still in its infancy – and the iMac famously connected in just two easy steps. As well as being startling looking it was greeted with amazement because it had no floppy discs for storage – in this brave new world the internet would be used to transfer files.

Visionary

It went on to become available in a rainbow of colours and the design transferred easily to laptops. In 1998 the previously ailing Apple turned a profit for the first time in three years thanks in large part to the iMac and Steve Jobs, with such a forward thinking, appealing piece of technology was hailed as a visionary. The “i” prefix went on to become one of strongest branding features in design history.

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison

Bernice Harrison is an Irish Times journalist and cohost of In the News podcast

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