15 Products That Defined Apple's First 40 Years

WIRED celebrates Apple's 40th birthday with a look back at the 15 products that define its legacy in our culture.
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iPhone
If you want to understand the [iPhone's](http://slim-weight.info/tag/iphone) importance to Apple, just look at its earnings. But it's not just that: Without it, our phones might still look like BlackBerries. We might never have learned to pinch to zoom. We might all carry point-and-shoots. It's almost impossible to overstate the revolution the iPhone started [in 2007](http://slim-weight.info/2007/01/iphone_announce/), which has touched and connected billions of people around the world.
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iMac and the Return of Steve
When Steve Jobs came back to Apple after being ousted from the company he started, he did it with a vengeance. His first major product was 1998's iMac. It ditched the floppy drive for a USB port, which worked out pretty well for everyone. It was beautiful and high-end, deeply designed in a way Apple products hadn't been for too long. Its designer? Jony Ive, in his first assignment at Apple.
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Apple II
The Apple II wasn't the first Apple computer, but it was the first one made for the masses. When it hit stores in 1977, it had a whopping four kilobytes of RAM, and let you run programs and save data...using cassette tapes. Seriously. It was a smash success, though. It became a computer-nerd tool of choice, and inspired the first of many generations of home computer enthusiasts, programmers, and Apple fanboys.
Deafult
"1984...won't be like '1984.'" The first-ever Macintosh was a big moment for Apple, an adorable little rectangle that looked like a face with a half-smile welcoming you to the world of human-friendly computers. But the commercial—a 60-second spot full of dystopia and propaganda smashed into smithereens by Anya Major's flying hammer—framed everything about what Apple stood for, and would come to mean, in the coming decades.