{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"content": {
"$type": "blog.pckt.content",
"items": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Below is a chronological timeline of the year's defining moments, featuring key quotes from Steve Jobs, followed by my own personal thoughts and reflections on experiencing this historic era firsthand."
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 48,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "January 11, 2005 — Macworld San Francisco 2005"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.bulletList",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Steve Jobs cracks wide open the entry-level PC market by rolling out the original Mac mini for an incredibly low $499. Pitching a BYODKM (Bring Your Own Display, Keyboard, and Mouse) framework, Apple explicitly targets budget-conscious Windows PC users looking to switch to the Mac ecosystem using hardware they already own."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 32,
"byteStart": 31
}
},
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#italic"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 311,
"byteStart": 294
}
}
],
"plaintext": "Apple launches the iPod shuffle for $99. Shrunk down to the size of a pack of chewing gum, it is Apple's very first flash-memory-based music player. Ditching a traditional screen entirely, it leans aggressively into the cultural pop-popularity of music randomization with the marketing slogan: \"Life is random.\""
}
]
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.blockquote",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 363,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "We want to offer a Mac that is incredibly affordable, and to do that, we are introducing the Mac mini. It is the cheapest, most compact Mac we have ever created... Now, how are we selling a full-featured Mac for four hundred and ninety-nine dollars? The Mac mini is BYODKM: Bring Your Own Display, Keyboard, and Mouse. We supply the computer, you supply the rest."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 54,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "May 22, 2005 — D: All Things Digital Conference (D3)"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.bulletList",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 68,
"byteStart": 52
}
},
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#italic"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 198,
"byteStart": 171
}
}
],
"plaintext": "On stage, Jobs focused heavily on the philosophy of product curation, explaining the architectural logic behind the iPod, and answering the question on everyone’s mind: \"What about an iPod Phone?\""
}
]
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.blockquote",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 341,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "People think focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I’m actually as proud of many of the things we haven’t done as the things we have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 42,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "June 6, 2005 — WWDC 2005 (San Francisco)"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.bulletList",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Steve Jobs drops a bombshell announcement: Apple is fully migrating its entire Macintosh architecture to Intel processors. Jobs stuns the developer audience by revealing that Apple had secretly been compiling every single version of Mac OS X for Intel chips behind closed doors for the past five years. To ensure system continuity during the multi-year chip migration, Apple demonstrates Rosetta, a seamless, background binary translation utility engine that lets Intel-based Macs run older PowerPC application code without missing a beat."
}
]
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.blockquote",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 244,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "Mac OS X has been leading a secret double life for the past five years. Every version of Mac OS X—from Cheetah, Puma, Jaguar, Panther, to the brand-new Tiger—has been compiled for both PowerPC and Intel processors every time we did a build."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 52,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "June 12, 2005 — 2005 Stanford Commencement Address"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.bulletList",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "By speaking to some fundamental human truths—love, death, fear, authenticity, hope—he delivered a speech as timeless as it is profound."
}
]
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.blockquote",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 327,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "Again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backward. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 58,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "September 7, 2005 — Apple Special Music Event (San Jose)"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.bulletList",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Steve Jobs walks to the center of the stage, slides his hand into the tiny watch coin pocket of his Levi jeans, and pulls out the impossibly thin iPod nano. It features a color screen, capacitive Click Wheel, and flash-memory storage wrapped in a crisp black or white scratch-resistant casing."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Apple partners with Motorola to launch the ROKR E1, the very first cellular phone to natively integrate iTunes playback support, though it is widely panned by consumers for its sluggish interface and strict 100-song storage limit."
}
]
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.blockquote",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 236,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "It’s an iPod shuffle on your phone. We worked with Motorola, and what we’ve done is we’ve put iTunes mobile into this phone. It’s got a great color screen, great stereo speakers built right in, and it works exactly like an iPod."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 51,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "October 12, 2005 — Apple Special Event (San Jose)"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.bulletList",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Apple introduces the 5th-Generation iPod (iPod with Video). It boasts a massive, crisp 2.5-inch color display capable of rendering digital video playback, full-length music videos, and downloadable $1.99 television episodes from popular networks."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.listItem",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "The consumer desktop line gets a severe internal multiplication layer with the launch of the iMac G5 with iSight, which seamlessly bakes a tiny video-conferencing camera directly into the top glass display frame of the computer."
}
]
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.blockquote",
"content": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#bold"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 607,
"byteStart": 0
}
}
],
"plaintext": "We've completely re-engineered the iMac G5 to be even thinner than its predecessor, which was already an engineering marvel. But we didn’t stop there. We have built an iSight camera right into the top of the bezel—it's practically invisible, but it lets you do video chats right out of the box with zero setup. And to go with it, we are introducing Front Row. Front Row is a beautiful, full-screen media interface that lets you enjoy your music, photos, and videos from across the room using this elegant, six-button Apple Remote. It brings the ease of the iPod user experience straight to your desktop."
}
]
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.horizontalRule"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.image",
"attrs": {
"align": "center",
"alt": "",
"blob": {
"$type": "blob",
"ref": {
"$link": "bafkreiczbb6pdqw2ovqt7nzqxlabncuniltn7i5whb53gkulprvfe2fnzq"
},
"mimeType": "image/jpeg",
"size": 73644
},
"naturalHeight": 720,
"naturalWidth": 1280,
"placeholder": "data:image/jpeg;base64,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",
"src": "blob:bafkreiczbb6pdqw2ovqt7nzqxlabncuniltn7i5whb53gkulprvfe2fnzq"
}
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2005/01/11Apple-Introduces-Mac-mini/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 392,
"byteStart": 384
}
},
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2004/06/28Apple-Unveils-30-Cinema-HD-Flat-Display/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 455,
"byteStart": 418
}
}
],
"plaintext": "Thanks to a steady stream of cash tips, my spending picked up significantly as I started making more and more money. With that extra cash burning a hole in my pocket, I made some hardware choices that, looking back, still leave me scratching my head. In another classic moment of questionable tech logic, I decided to give up my beautiful 20-inch iMac G5. In its place, I opted for a Mac mini paired with a standalone 20-inch aluminum Apple Cinema Display (release in 2004). I guess I was just completely captivated by the novelty of the mini's incredibly small size, but the reality is that the iMac G5 would have offered a much cleaner, cable-free setup on my desk."
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2005/06/28Apple-Takes-Podcasting-Mainstream/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 33,
"byteStart": 23
}
}
],
"plaintext": "This was also the year podcasting absolutely exploded. I had been casually dipping my toes into podcasts here and there, but once Apple integrated native podcast support directly into iTunes and allowed them to sync seamlessly to the iPod, everything changed. I started listening to more and more of them, taking my favorite shows with me everywhere I went. Little did I know, this was just the absolute beginning of what would become a massive, lifelong podcasting journey for me."
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.gallery",
"ref": "at://did:plc:r4i2fnts3i7habyjuuhmdup3/blog.pckt.gallery/3mnwoahztdtqs"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2005/09/07Apple-Introduces-iPod-nano/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 193,
"byteStart": 184
}
},
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2005/09/07Apple-Motorola-Cingular-Launch-Worlds-First-Mobile-Phone-with-iTunes/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 227,
"byteStart": 211
}
},
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2002/07/17Apple-Introduces-iSync/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 376,
"byteStart": 371
}
}
],
"plaintext": "Between software milestones and rapid-fire hardware releases, 2005 officially became the \"Year of iTunes\" in my life. I went all-in on the ecosystem, picking up both the revolutionary iPod nano and the infamous Motorola ROKR E1. The ROKR officially replaced my trusty Sony Ericsson T610—a phone I had since 2002 because it was the very first handset to support Apple's iSync. While the tech world ultimately panned the ROKR, I actually loved it; having a hard-coded limit of exactly 100 of my absolute favorite songs tucked into my phone wherever I went was fantastic."
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.gallery",
"ref": "at://did:plc:r4i2fnts3i7habyjuuhmdup3/blog.pckt.gallery/3mnwob5dtet3j"
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"facets": [
{
"features": [
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.richtext.facet#link",
"uri": "https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2005/10/12Apple-Unveils-the-New-iPod/"
}
],
"index": {
"byteEnd": 265,
"byteStart": 235
}
}
],
"plaintext": "When the iPod nano arrived, I was incredibly impressed by how impossibly thin and gorgeous it was. However, its time with me was short-lived. I ended up giving the nano to my brother because the blockbuster October announcement of the 5th-Generation iPod with Video completely stole my attention."
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": "Since I already had the ROKR handling my music on the go while I was out and about at work, the new video-capable iPod became the ultimate secondary media companion for my downtime. It capped off a wild, fast-paced year of trading up, handing down, and completely reshaping how I consumed media."
},
{
"$type": "blog.pckt.block.text",
"plaintext": ""
}
]
},
"coverImage": {
"$type": "blob",
"ref": {
"$link": "bafkreiderufo3zlfheoaeed4dqf62j25ne4nwnb2zqvbzao5wgvwrsbdzu"
},
"mimeType": "image/jpeg",
"size": 502648
},
"description": "Below is a chronological timeline of the year's defining moments, featuring key quotes from Steve Jobs, followed by my own personal thoughts and reflections on experiencing this historic era firsthand. January 11, 2005 — Macworld San Francisco 2005 May 22, 2005 — D: All Things Digital Conference (D3)",
"path": "/2005-connect-the-dots-zc71dj6",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-31T10:56:16+00:00",
"site": "at://did:plc:r4i2fnts3i7habyjuuhmdup3/site.standard.publication/3mmzvmsylekso",
"tags": [
"apple"
],
"textContent": "Below is a chronological timeline of the year's defining moments, featuring key quotes from Steve Jobs, followed by my own personal thoughts and reflections on experiencing this historic era firsthand.\nJanuary 11, 2005 — Macworld San Francisco 2005\nSteve Jobs cracks wide open the entry-level PC market by rolling out the original Mac mini for an incredibly low $499. Pitching a BYODKM (Bring Your Own Display, Keyboard, and Mouse) framework, Apple explicitly targets budget-conscious Windows PC users looking to switch to the Mac ecosystem using hardware they already own.\nApple launches the iPod shuffle for $99. Shrunk down to the size of a pack of chewing gum, it is Apple's very first flash-memory-based music player. Ditching a traditional screen entirely, it leans aggressively into the cultural pop-popularity of music randomization with the marketing slogan: \"Life is random.\"\nWe want to offer a Mac that is incredibly affordable, and to do that, we are introducing the Mac mini. It is the cheapest, most compact Mac we have ever created... Now, how are we selling a full-featured Mac for four hundred and ninety-nine dollars? The Mac mini is BYODKM: Bring Your Own Display, Keyboard, and Mouse. We supply the computer, you supply the rest.\nMay 22, 2005 — D: All Things Digital Conference (D3)\nOn stage, Jobs focused heavily on the philosophy of product curation, explaining the architectural logic behind the iPod, and answering the question on everyone’s mind: \"What about an iPod Phone?\"\nPeople think focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I’m actually as proud of many of the things we haven’t done as the things we have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things.\nJune 6, 2005 — WWDC 2005 (San Francisco)\nSteve Jobs drops a bombshell announcement: Apple is fully migrating its entire Macintosh architecture to Intel processors. Jobs stuns the developer audience by revealing that Apple had secretly been compiling every single version of Mac OS X for Intel chips behind closed doors for the past five years. To ensure system continuity during the multi-year chip migration, Apple demonstrates Rosetta, a seamless, background binary translation utility engine that lets Intel-based Macs run older PowerPC application code without missing a beat.\nMac OS X has been leading a secret double life for the past five years. Every version of Mac OS X—from Cheetah, Puma, Jaguar, Panther, to the brand-new Tiger—has been compiled for both PowerPC and Intel processors every time we did a build.\nJune 12, 2005 — 2005 Stanford Commencement Address\nBy speaking to some fundamental human truths—love, death, fear, authenticity, hope—he delivered a speech as timeless as it is profound.\nAgain, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backward. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.\nSeptember 7, 2005 — Apple Special Music Event (San Jose)\nSteve Jobs walks to the center of the stage, slides his hand into the tiny watch coin pocket of his Levi jeans, and pulls out the impossibly thin iPod nano. It features a color screen, capacitive Click Wheel, and flash-memory storage wrapped in a crisp black or white scratch-resistant casing.\nApple partners with Motorola to launch the ROKR E1, the very first cellular phone to natively integrate iTunes playback support, though it is widely panned by consumers for its sluggish interface and strict 100-song storage limit.\nIt’s an iPod shuffle on your phone. We worked with Motorola, and what we’ve done is we’ve put iTunes mobile into this phone. It’s got a great color screen, great stereo speakers built right in, and it works exactly like an iPod.\nOctober 12, 2005 — Apple Special Event (San Jose)\nApple introduces the 5th-Generation iPod (iPod with Video). It boasts a massive, crisp 2.5-inch color display capable of rendering digital video playback, full-length music videos, and downloadable $1.99 television episodes from popular networks.\nThe consumer desktop line gets a severe internal multiplication layer with the launch of the iMac G5 with iSight, which seamlessly bakes a tiny video-conferencing camera directly into the top glass display frame of the computer.\nWe've completely re-engineered the iMac G5 to be even thinner than its predecessor, which was already an engineering marvel. But we didn’t stop there. We have built an iSight camera right into the top of the bezel—it's practically invisible, but it lets you do video chats right out of the box with zero setup. And to go with it, we are introducing Front Row. Front Row is a beautiful, full-screen media interface that lets you enjoy your music, photos, and videos from across the room using this elegant, six-button Apple Remote. It brings the ease of the iPod user experience straight to your desktop.\nThanks to a steady stream of cash tips, my spending picked up significantly as I started making more and more money. With that extra cash burning a hole in my pocket, I made some hardware choices that, looking back, still leave me scratching my head. In another classic moment of questionable tech logic, I decided to give up my beautiful 20-inch iMac G5. In its place, I opted for a Mac mini paired with a standalone 20-inch aluminum Apple Cinema Display (release in 2004). I guess I was just completely captivated by the novelty of the mini's incredibly small size, but the reality is that the iMac G5 would have offered a much cleaner, cable-free setup on my desk.\nThis was also the year podcasting absolutely exploded. I had been casually dipping my toes into podcasts here and there, but once Apple integrated native podcast support directly into iTunes and allowed them to sync seamlessly to the iPod, everything changed. I started listening to more and more of them, taking my favorite shows with me everywhere I went. Little did I know, this was just the absolute beginning of what would become a massive, lifelong podcasting journey for me.\nBetween software milestones and rapid-fire hardware releases, 2005 officially became the \"Year of iTunes\" in my life. I went all-in on the ecosystem, picking up both the revolutionary iPod nano and the infamous Motorola ROKR E1. The ROKR officially replaced my trusty Sony Ericsson T610—a phone I had since 2002 because it was the very first handset to support Apple's iSync. While the tech world ultimately panned the ROKR, I actually loved it; having a hard-coded limit of exactly 100 of my absolute favorite songs tucked into my phone wherever I went was fantastic.\nWhen the iPod nano arrived, I was incredibly impressed by how impossibly thin and gorgeous it was. However, its time with me was short-lived. I ended up giving the nano to my brother because the blockbuster October announcement of the 5th-Generation iPod with Video completely stole my attention.\nSince I already had the ROKR handling my music on the go while I was out and about at work, the new video-capable iPod became the ultimate secondary media companion for my downtime. It capped off a wild, fast-paced year of trading up, handing down, and completely reshaping how I consumed media.",
"title": "2005 - connect the dots",
"updatedAt": "2026-06-10T12:31:59+00:00"
}