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A Few More All-Star Apple Alumni to Celebrate

Intro

BusinessWeek recently put together an interesting run-down of prominent Apple Design alumni and what they’re up to these days. It’s a good list, but far from comprehensive, as is required in any such piece. I did want to highlight a couple of people who didn’t make the cut.

It’s literally two. I promise.

1650-Riley

This is Ray Riley. For a good seven years, he had a guiding hand in Apple’s design group, working on the designs for what became the first generation Power Macs, the incredible Apple Adjustable Keyboard, the Quadra 800, and, if you can believe it, the Pippin, Apple’s only ever game console. Ray left Apple in 1997, I believe, to join what was then known as Nike’s [Tech Lab and is now called the Explore Group. There, he has helped Nike shift its focus from shoes to sports, and moving their business into watches, sunglasses, mp3 players and all points in between. He is also the single person most responsible for teaming Apple and Nike together for the Nike+iPod Sport Kit, which is itself a build on the Mp3 player he and his team co-created with Philips a bit earlier. Ray’s an insanely talented design strategist, and I’ve had the privilege to meet him. Probably the best Apple alumnus I can think of for getting the questions right rather than just designing answers off the bat. We’ve worked with him at Jump for years, and we’re all a little bit awed by him, to be honest.

(Image via IDSA)
Hargadon

Second is Andy Hargadon, now the director of UC Davis’s Center for Entrepreneurship. Andy was a key designer and strategist at Apple during the early ’90s, having migrated over from David Kelley Design (one of IDEO’s three forebears) to the mother ship. Bill Scott, who is himself the collective memory of Silicon Valley design, still calls Andy the boy wonder, it’s not hard to see why. He had a profound impact on the creation of the PowerBook, particularly the amazing 500 series, and he understands better than almost anyone just how the flow of information in an organization promotes or impedes innovation. He also wrote How Breakthroughs Happen, a masterful book about innovation that I can’t recommend highly enough. He’s a very sharp guy and a great speaker. He’s almost worth going to UC Davis for all by himself.

So there you have it. Just two more Apple All-Star Alumni for the list.

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About the author

Petemortensen

Pete Mortensen is a design strategist for consulting firm Jump Associates and the co-author of Wired to Care: How Companies Prosper When They Create Widespread Empathy, a book and blog that are significantly more interesting than you might initially think. Pete's particular Apple avocations are both around design--interface and industrial. Follow him on Twitter!

Email the author | Read more posts by Pete Mortensen.

2 comments

    Good adds…

    One more -> Don Lindsay – designer of 0SX. Left Apple to join Bill Buxton at Microsoft’s next-gen lab…

    Two “comments”. One, there is no way to contact the creator of this blog for there is no contact link, at least not easily found. This is should be corrected. I could then tell you things like “the iPhone chill enducing video” can’t be seen by anyone as the video is private, or about typos like… no, I’ll wait for a comment link. THEN we’ll let you let US tell you about the problems with these pages at times…

    Although, if someone read these blog posts once in a while you would notice these things.

    http://cultofmac.com/?p=989#comments

    Good luck…

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