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Tim Cook Says iPhone Launch Was His Favorite Apple Moment in 50th Anniversary Interview

For its 50th anniversary celebration, Apple invited The Wall Street Journal's Ben Cohen to Apple Park to meet up with Apple CEO Tim Cook.


Cohen and Cook took a look at rare archival materials from the early days of Apple, some of which Cook wasn't even familiar with. Cook said that he had seen a lot of the devices for the first time while preparing for Apple's 50th anniversary.

Items on display included the first patent Apple filed, which was for the Apple II, the original 2001 iPod, early iPhone components and prototypes, the Apple Watch Cook wore on stage when announcing the device, and more.

According to Cook, the launch of the iPhone was his favorite moment at Apple. When asked why, he said it was because a phone was something everyone at Apple was using every day.

We were using that generation's smart phone, and it was such an awful experience. And I love the fact that all of a sudden you had this touch interface, and it worked like your mind worked.

Cook declined to speak on future products, but he suggested Apple's next hit would be something that "finds the intersection of hardware, software, and services." Cook also declined to comment on talk about him retiring. "My answer to that is when the day comes, I'll know it," he said.

Apple celebrated its 50th anniversary with a Paul McCartney concert for employees last night, and today, in addition to speaking with the ‌Wall Street Journal‌, Cook sent out a heartfelt letter to employees.

Today officially marks Apple's 50th anniversary. And as we've celebrated that milestone this month, I've been reflecting on some powerful words from Steve.

"When you grow up, you tend to get told that the world is the way it is," he said. "But life can be much broader once you discover one simple fact: everything around you that you call life was made up by people that were no smarter than you. You can change it, you can influence it, you can build your own things that other people can use. Once you learn that, you'll never be the same again."

This is the ethos that brought Apple into the world in 1976--and for fifty years, it's what has drawn the smartest, most passionate, most creative and most committed people to this company.

We come here to do the best work of our lives, and to reach beyond what any of us could do alone. To be part of a culture that asks us to stay curious, to collaborate deeply, to demand excellence of ourselves and the people around us, and to believe--genuinely believe--that we can do the impossible.

Across our teams and across generations, we've been united by a simple belief: the future isn't something you wait for. It's something you build. And it is staggering to think of everything we've built together.

Fifty years ago, there was a single computer prototype in a garage. Today, there are 2.5 billion active Apple devices in the hands of people in every corner of the earth - helping them create, communicate, learn and connect in ways that would have seemed unimaginable then.

It's impossible to fully quantify the profound impact this company and its people have had on the world. And it's a truly special thing to do what we do every day, knowing that our work is squarely focused on empowering people and enriching their lives.

Whether you joined this year or have been here for dozens of years, I hope you take a minute to reflect on how much your work means. Thank you.

Thank you for pushing yourselves further than you thought you could go. Thank you for believing in our mission and holding fast to our values. Thank you for dedicating yourself to something so much bigger than any one of us.

As extraordinary as it is to reflect on the past fifty years, what excites me most is what comes next. The opportunities ahead of us are among the greatest we have ever seen - and there's no team in the world better positioned to meet them.

Thank you for everything and here's to the next fifty years.

Prior to today, Apple also celebrated its 50th anniversary with a series of concerts and events around the world.

Top Rated Comments

sza Avatar
13 hours ago at 03:44 pm
I’m scared to speak up about Tim; every time I try, I’m banned by admins here.
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Jonas Danielsson Avatar
12 hours ago at 04:05 pm
Tim Cook came from Compaq and now it shows. Apple has drifted from its original vision into a bland, consumer-first company, churning out questionable design choices and cluttered experiences. Even the intrusive pop-ups feel more like Windows than the Apple we once knew. The answer is this wanky company compaq
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Chet-NYC Avatar
11 hours ago at 04:50 pm
I could watch hours of an interview like that.

Also, Apple really needs to open a museum to show off all of that amazing stuff!
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
kiensoy Avatar
13 hours ago at 03:44 pm
Not Vision Pro?
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
boswald Avatar
13 hours ago at 03:39 pm
We all miss Steve dearly, but you have to admit, Tim Cook got to see some cool stuff in his time. I'd be floored to just hold the first iPhone, let alone stand next to Steve and Tim.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)
10 hours ago at 06:02 pm

Well, yeah. Cook is just your average boardroom exec. He doesn't really understand technology or user-centered design. He can announce iterative products each year and track revenues on a spreadsheet. That's enough to make him and Apple obscenely rich.
I think there is probably more to the man, or Jobs wouldn't have put him into this position. He never said he was Steve. He never said he was an amazing artist, but he seems to get how to keep the company running as it was.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)