Did Steve Jobs’ want to see Mac OS X on Sony Vaio computers? — Apple World Today

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I find this a bit hard to swallow. In 1997, after returning to Apple, Jobs killed the Mac clone program implemented by former CEO Gil Amelio. The program was intended to expand the market penetration of the Mac. From 1995 through mid-1997 companies such as Power Computing, Motorola, Radius, DayStar, and UMAX made desktops running Mac OS X (no Mac laptop clone ever saw the light of day).

However, there was no evidence that the clone program expanded the Mac market. Mac clones only seemed to cannibalize Mac sales. In 1997, Jobs ceased negotiations of upcoming licensing deals with OS licensees. Since the clone makers’ licenses were valid only for Mac OS 7, Apple’s release of Mac OS 8 left the clone manufacturers without the ability to ship a current Mac OS version and effectively killed the cloning program.

At the time Jobs didn’t want to license Apple’s “crown jewels.” It’s hard to believe that, admiration for Sony or not, he’d want to make an exception in their case regarding Mac clones. 

(By the way, Sony sold its PC business to the investment firm Japan Industrial Partners in February 2014 as part of a restructuring effort.)



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