Top ten Apple rumours of all time
Tags: return, microsoft windows, surface, processors

What do you get when you cross a notoriously tight-lipped computer company with rabidly fanatical users? A whole lot of gossip, speculation and hearsay, that's what. Thirty years of Apple Computer has seen the company rise, fall and rise again like a kind of technological Jesus Christ -- there's been plenty to talk about.
Putting aside the surreal story of the return of Steve Jobs in 1997 to the company he founded back in 1976, Apple's products themselves have been the ripest material for rumour-mongers. From the '90s doomsayers who predicted the complete collapse of "beleaguered" Apple to today's rampant iPhone speculation, Apple has stimulated more imagination in Internet forums than any other company. You might even say that Apple is the only computer manufacturer to have inspired its own fan fiction.
Take our hand as we frolic back through the last 30 years of Apple rumours. Some turned out to be true, but most were wild fabrications built on nothing but wishful thinking and too much peyote.
A long-running rumour that surfaces roughly every eight months. The motive behind this story is often nothing more sophisticated than the fact that both Apple and Nintendo have exceptionally faithful fan bases. The temptation to stir both camps into action, bickering over the same rumour, is apparently too much to resist.
The reasons suggested by gossip-mongers include the similar styles of the companies -- both are perceived as charming outsiders in their industries -- and the dearth of games on the Mac. What better way to revive the Mac as a games machine than to buy Nintendo's back catalogue and future expertise?
Finally, there is the Pippin angle. Apple did launch a console in 1995, the Bandai Pippin. Although the console was a raging failure, pundits often hint that Apple has been biding its time before delivering payback on Sony for crushing the Pippin with the PlayStation. This is, of course, utter rubbish. The Pippin was never a viable competitor in this field and was discontinued after only a limited release in Japan and the US.
Verdict: So utterly outlandish and fiendishly provocative is this rumour that it deserves top spot.
This is another longstanding rumour. The story goes that Apple realises the only thing between it and global domination is that the Mac operating system doesn't run on a generic PC. Journalists, analysts and forum posters bring this rumour up roughly once every month, insisting that Apple should sell its OS to PC buyers.
Aside from the technical nightmare involved in supporting the unknown hardware in millions of PCs out there, the rumour-mongers ignore the evidence that Apple is a hardware company and its OS, like iTunes, is not in itself a big profit-driver. Apple has a vested interest in allowing OSX to run only on Apple hardware.
Running Mac OS exclusively on Apple hardware also means the company has the advantage of knowing, for the most part, what hardware its users are running. This allows it to concentrate on performance and stability with known configurations -- something Microsoft's Windows has always struggled with. There is also the small matter of Steve Jobs' personal pride -- would the man who called Dell's computers "uninnovative beige boxes" release OSX to the PC market?
Verdict: The idea would be so counter-productive and financially damaging for Apple that we doubt the company has ever seriously considered it.
The Apple Newton was launched in 1993, years before the Palm Pilot. The project was as ambitious as they come. The Newton team not only created a new kind of portable computer, but also combined several early technologies, such as PC Card slots, advanced handwriting recognition, a touch-screen display and a stylus. Steve Jobs axed the Newton on his return to Apple, but that hasn't stopped endless predictions of its return in some form.
The fuel behind this rumour is the belief of many Newton owners that the Newton was wildly ahead of its time. Indeed, it fared extremely well when we pitted it against a brand-new UMPC, and just this month there has been talk of Apple embedding OSX in portable devices that sound potentially Newton-like.
Verdict: The Newton itself is unlikely to return, but some of the technology used in the Newton has appeared in OSX's handwriting-recognition features.
BeOS is a little-known, largely discontinued operating system that was the buzz of the mid '90s. When Apple decided to abandon development on its new OS, the failed Copland project, it urgently needed to buy in a replacement. BeOS was a fledgeling OS with limited support that nonetheless was designed from the ground up for multithreaded application and multiple processors.
Compared to MacOS at the time, BeOS was extremely attractive and Apple offered Be $120 million for the system. Be's owner reportedly held out for much more money and Apple refused to pay, turning instead to NeXT and Steve Jobs.
Verdict: This one turned out to be true
After the launch of OSX, the rumour mill worked itself up over the possibility that Apple was secretly maintaining an Intel version of OSX in a basement room in Cupertino. Because OSX was based on the NeXT OS, and the NeXT OS ran on Intel hardware, it didn't seem impossible that Apple would have evolved the Intel version alongside the public PowerPC version.
Although no one had any hard evidence, forum posters often made references to this mythical beast, the Intel version of OSX. These speculators seemed to think that Apple would release a PC version of OSX (see the entry at 2) and take over the PC market by stealth.
Most Mac users thought this was totally improbable, but in 2005, Steve Jobs announced that Apple had indeed been secretly programming both PowerPC and Intel versions of Mac OSX for five years. What followed was not a version of OSX for PCs, but a migration from Power PC to Intel processors in Apple Computers.
Verdict: Shockingly true. Apple kept the Intel version of OSX secret for a staggering five years. Its eventual release vindicated millions of rumour-mongers across the world.
UPDATE: Looks like we were wrong on this one -- Apple did eventually announce the iPhone. We're as surprised as we are delighted! Here's what we foolishly thought just weeks before the announcement:
It's such a worn-down-to-the-rim rumour that some have speculated the iPhone is just an elaborate hoax dreamed up by Steve Jobs to keep journalists busy. Barely a day passes without some analyst predicting or decrying the arrival of an Apple mobile phone -- or some obscure Far Eastern factory claiming to be making it.
This wonderfully elaborate rumour plays on the fact that some analysts think it's common sense that mobile phones should also be MP3 players. This belief relies on the myth of convergence that has been peddled to the consumer electronics buyer for decades: why have a mobile phone, a computer and an MP3 player, when you can have all three squeezed into one impossibly complicated and power-hungry device?
Verdict: Totally misguided. We'll believe it when we see it -- and no, we don't mean your Photoshop mock-up.
Even if you ignore the legal problems this might dredge up on account of Apple Computer's uneasy truce with Apple Records, the computer company has very limited experience of marketing bands, let alone picking out talent. Arguably, iTunes could do most of the work for Apple. It would simply have to sign artists for a minimal fee in exchange for a healthy cut of any sales the band made through iTunes.
It's certainly an interesting possibility, but, whether it was successful or not, it could provoke traditional record companies to abandon iTunes in rebellion. The record industry has a good track record for freaking out over this kind of thing. There's also the problem of dedicating time and energy to this when Apple has so many other projects on the go.
Verdict: Certainly interesting, but extremely unlikely
Officially the most mocked-up device after the iPhone, the widescreen video iPod does seem like a viable product. Apple has reportedly filed patents on a touch-screen user interface that covers the entire surface of an iPod, leading many to suspect that a future model will feature an LCD across its front surface.
Verdict: It's very likely we'll see the widescreen video iPod sometime soon.
Ten years after the quirky 20th Anniversary Mac, bloggers were convinced that Apple would release something really special for its 30th anniversary. Some imagined a Mac made entirely of gold, others a sentient robot made of iPods. As it turned out, Apple announced no commemorative products on that day, nor afterwards.
Verdict: The most disappointing day in Apple's history. Still, there's always the 40th Anniversary Mac to look forward to.
Given Steve Jobs' prominent position at Disney, and his history with Pixar, it makes sense to many rumour-mongers that Apple will at some point, probably very soon, buy Disney. There is about as much credibility to this rumour as the Nintendo Apple merger, but still it persists.
The main reason this idea is so appealing is that it would cement Apple's return to glory in the minds of many Mac fans. Disney is an iconic company, representative of the American dream and of capitalism's global success. What better trophy could Apple hope to own than this? The concept is clearly an appealing one, but that doesn't make it true.
Verdict: The poisoned apple won't be edited out of Snow White and replaced with a Windows logo anytime soon.
What are your favourite Apple rumours of all time? Did we leave some out? Let us know, post a comment below.
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SippanThu 28 December, 2006 9:30am
Newton is in the process of returning, I tell you! I have codenamed the cunning project "iNap", for "iPod is Not A PDA". Steve Jobs' plan is to add more and more PDA functions to the iPod one by one, until it has become a PDA without anyone noticing, thus creating an Apple PDA without losing his face over his old statement that Apple would never create a PDA again. They laughed at me when I presented my idea... But who's laughing now, the iPod's got a color screen fer chrissakes, what kind of an mp3 player has a color screen!? iNap is Not A PDA!!!! Remember where you heard it first!
AnonymousThu 28 December, 2006 5:05pm
What happened to Apple/Sun Merger rumors? I've seen that one come up much more often than Apple/Nintendo, and I definitely think it deserves a place on the list.
PeteThu 28 December, 2006 7:39pm
""My personal favorite was the eventual release of the 'Red Box' windows compatibility environment. The goal of that project was to allow the MacOS to natively run Windows applications through a compatibility layer. I recall hearing the rumor sometime in 1997, and it popped up again in various forms for at least the next 5 years..."
This wasn't a rumor. It was called Yellow Box, and existed on the Intel version of Rhapsody. The Mac version had Blue Box, which ran OS 8/9 in a virtual windowing system. This followed through to Mac OS X Server 1.0, which was near identical to Rhapsody."
I'll add to this: It now exists in a different version on Intel Macs. It's called Parallels Desktop for Mac. The current beta has a feature called "Coherence". Using this you can run individual windows apps on your Mac, including putting a shortcut to the application on your Mac desktop. With the new Intel processors that have the VT virtual machine instructions, you're running at native speeds. I've been using this for quite some time, and I can tell you that Windows compatibility exists quite nicely.
AnonymousThu 28 December, 2006 5:30pm
Why Apple haven't bought Adobe yet is beyond me, do what they did with Logic, buy it and can the windows version's of everything bar Acrobat, and they'd own all DTP and most of video
AnonymousThu 28 December, 2006 5:48pm
Apple most certainly did consider releasing a version of Mac OS for PCs. The project was called Star Trek, and was a straight port of Mac OS...7 I think, back in the very early nineties. IIRC Novell were also involved. They had a prototype up and running but the project was eventually axed.
GalleyThu 28 December, 2006 6:56pm
Be Inc. not accepting Apple's $120 million offer was a huge blunder. They ended up selling themselves to Palm for a measly $5 million or so.
blahThu 28 December, 2006 7:34pm
Wow this articles blows.
edcoThu 28 December, 2006 7:47pm
My favorite is MacOSX for PCs ...call me a conspiracy theorist, but I still think it's about to happen and maybe even at this years MacWorld Expo. What would steal Vista's fire more than an announcement the same month that every PC owner now has the option of OSX or Vista (or both! - dual boot and/or VM) ...canibalize hardware sales? not really; Apple customers will always "drink the coolaid" and buy Apple hardware. What they'd gain is marketshare - marketshare - marketshare. and all they'd have to do is "flip a switch" ...it's (OSX) already compiled for Intel. And as far as the argument about 3rd party drivers; if they'll write linux drivers (and 3 or 4 versions of win drivers) and include them with their hardware, what's so difficult about including one more!? This would correct the biggest mistake in Apple's history, letting Microsoft have the PC market all to itself. Guess we'll find out Jan 9th.
AnonymousThu 28 December, 2006 9:21pm
Apple buying Adobe? That would be expensive. Personally I still wonder why Apple didn't buy Alias/Wavefront (Maya), which sold for a mere 50 million a year or two ago.
Another thing is that Apple did a lot in the digital media section. Final Cut Pro, Logic, Aperture etc. If you compare that with Adobe's offerings, there's only Illustrator and Photoshop missing on Apple's side. But that also creates tension. Adobe discontinued Premiere already - What's next?
AnonymousThu 28 December, 2006 10:23pm
Apple buying Disney is absolutely crazy to even dream of. A simple look at the comparative size of the companies should sum it up pretty quickly. Disney has ABC, ESPN, SOAPnet, Buena Vista Television, Touchstone Television, 72 ABC radio stations, Hyperion Books, and equity interest in Lifetime Entertainment Services, A&E, and E!.
I just don't see Apple as having the buying power to acquire a company like Disney.
I wish people would think a little bit before starting rumors like that one and wasting my time / brain cycles. Then again, I wish I had the will not to read them...
ShoaibThu 28 December, 2006 10:33pm
I remember reading something somewhere about an Apple , Sony merger. Just imagine that; OSX on a PS3!
schleifnetThu 28 December, 2006 11:08pm
on number 4, wasn't BeOS bought by Palm and not apple, a number of their programmers were coding for palm until recently when many became disillussioned with the new access platforma nd were hired by a number of companies (including google, i think)
NicksterThu 28 December, 2006 11:27pm
Where's the flat-screen iMac???
The buzz was HUGE in early 2001 that Apple would be unveiling a flat-screen iMac at July's Macworld Expo. Then the keynote came and went, and at the end, just as everyone was expecting Steve to say, "Oh, there is one more thing!" Nothing. Wailing and gnashing of teeth ensued.
AnonymousFri 29 December, 2006 12:40am
Regarding the Top Secret Intel Version ... Apple had, on their own FTP servers, an x86 version of darwin. It was being updated by apple and the open source community - quite complex, it was essentially a build of x86 darwin that only ran on specific x86 hardware (intel chipset boards if memory serves). To me, it was no secret that Apple was making an x86 version. If memory serves, the code for x86 darwin had sparc specific conditional statements in the source as well - which suggests that they were eyeing the sparc. I had figured back then that they were going to switch to either intel or sparc, and were simply preparing for it. Their choice for going with BSD over Linux supports this claim (although many uneducated advocates will flame me for saing so): Sparc support is WAY more stable in netBSD than it is in Linux. Funny, at the time their stock was $12 something a share ... it has since split 3 times :P
AnonymousFri 29 December, 2006 2:43am
Ummmm... copy editor/fact-checker still on vacation? FWIW, we still have seven years before we could see a 30th Anniversary Mac. Apparently the author of this article was not yet born, but the original Mac was released in 1984 (remember the famous commercial? -- oops, apparently not). 1994 brought us the TAM (Tenth Anniversary Mac), a high-priced, highly prized, but difficult to sell (some consider) work f industrial art; 2004 brought high expectations of another anniversary version, but I still say we have a better chance of seeing something extra special in 2009, the 25th (and silver) anniversary.
As for 30th anniversaries, April 1 of this year already marked the actual birth of Apple (according to popular Apple lore), but January 3 2007 will mark the actual date of incorporation in California. Will Apple mark the occasion with anything special, in terms of products? I doubt it. Will they note the milestone and celebrate its evolution of recent products? Likely, but no more so than usual, and only in passing.
As for the rest of this article... meh. Plenty of more popular, interesting, controversial and long-lasting rumors could have been discussed, especially those that have proof of death.
Cheers
Frederico
AnonymousFri 29 December, 2006 3:38pm
APPLE TO BUY TIVO is, like the Nintendo rumor, a long-standing idea based solely on the fervent user-base of both companies, plus TiVo's commitment (like Apple's) to ease of use.
AnonymousFri 29 December, 2006 3:42pm
The facts about the Twentieth Anniversary Mac are correct - see http://lowendmac.com/ppc/tam.shtml - It was celebrating *Apple's* 20th anniversary as a company, not the anniversary of the Macintosh itself.
AnonymousMon 1 January, 2007 9:06am
Re: Fact checking: It's always interesting to observe the common phenomenon of "often wrong, but never in doubt." The TAM, which was introduced in early 1997, not in 1994, is short for the Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh, not the Tenth Anniversary Macintosh. Really, you ought to check *your* facts before proudly demonstrating your ignorance. You suffer from a poor assessment of self-knowledge.
AnonymousThu 11 January, 2007 10:08pm
Boy, do you have egg on your face now. iPhone lives with wide-screen iPod functionality.
CleveWed 15 August, 2007 11:54am
Video iPod touch coming in September...
http://9to5mac.com/ipod-nano-video-ipod-touch-both-arriving-in-one-week-34563345

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Ross BelletteWed 27 December, 2006 10:31pm
Eleventh Top Rumour: Apple's on the way out.
Now that Microsoft has released it's ground breaking OS 'Wista', Apple will surely be on the way out this time.
Ross/.