How Does The Inside Of The Earth Resemble An Apple?

The Earth’s interior is composed of four layers: three solid, one liquid, and one molten metal. The deepest layer is a solid iron ball, about 1,500 miles in diameter. This inner core is white hot but cannot melt due to its high pressure. An apple is a good scale model of the Earth, with its core and skin about the right relative size for the Earth’s core and crust.

The Earth’s interior is influenced by plate tectonics, with the upper part of the mantle being cooler and more rigid than the deep mantle. The outer core, made mostly of iron and nickel, spins a bit faster than the rest of the planet. By tracking seismic waves, scientists have learned what makes up the planet’s interior. P-waves slow down at the mantle core boundary, so we know the outer core is less rigid.

The solid earth provides the essential basis for all aspects of the Earth system, as the energy from the interior is a major force driving the functioning and evolution of the planet. If Earth were an apple, the crust would be the apple’s skin, the mantle would be the apple’s pulp, and the central core would be similar to an apple’s core, though Earth’s core does not contain any seeds.

The Earth’s crust is thin compared to the other three layers, making it about 3-5 miles (8 kilometers) thick. The mantle would be the apple’s pulp, making up most of the inside. Earth also has a central core, similar to an apple’s core, though it does not contain any seeds.

The Earth’s core is composed of two layers: the outer core, which is the layer surrounding the inner core, and the inner core, which is the engine room of the Earth.


📹 The Genius Design of Apple Park

Follow neo on social media: Twitter: twitter.com/NeoExplains Facebook: facebook.com/NeoExplains A closer look at the history …


What is the shape like an apple?

The apple body shape is typified by a large bust, narrow hips, and a full midsection. Individuals with an apple body shape often have slender legs and a flat abdomen. The body shape theory is no longer considered a reliable concept and is best employed for the purpose of concealing or balancing body parts. For a more comprehensive understanding of styling theory, it is recommended to consult the literature on style essences.

What is the represent of apple?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What is the represent of apple?

The Hebrew Bible tells the story of the forbidden apple in Eden, but in Jewish tradition, apples hold positive symbolism due to their perfect shape, sweet taste, and fragrant aroma. They symbolize beauty, sweetness, and hope for prosperity, while their hardiness and durability represent strength and growth. Apples, originating from Central Asia, are a popular and healthy fruit with numerous health benefits, including building resistance to diseases like Parkinson’s, Cataracts, Alzheimer’s, gallstones, and certain cancers. They also help avoid diarrhea and constipation. Apples also have been linked to a youthful appearance.

Apples are a favorite in Belarus, grown in gardens and dachas, and Jewish people who once lived there often remember the trees laden with apples or stories of apple picking. Apple trees are found everywhere across the country, and a welcoming table is often laid with a plate of apples. The Russian word for apple is яблоко, and the fruit is often dipped into honey to symbolize hope for a sweet year ahead.

What is the shape of the Earth like an apple?

The Earth’s shape has been a subject of debate since ancient times. Initially thought to be flat, it is now known to be an oblate spheroid, with nearly flat poles and round sides. This shape, also known as a geoid, is influenced by the Earth’s rotation around its axis. The Earth’s revolution causes it to bugle in the center, resulting in a more bulged center with flat poles. Thus, the Earth’s shape is a geoid or round sphere.

What is the apple of the Earth?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What is the apple of the Earth?

Potatoes, cultivated by the Incas in present-day Peru as early as 2500 BC, were brought to Europe by the Spanish in the 1500s after St. Patrick drove snakes out of Ireland in the 400s. Potatoes were a staple food for the growing population on limited lands, yielding two to four times more calories per acre than grain. Boiled or baked potatoes were cheaper, just as nutritious, and did not require a gristmill for grinding. The French named this delicious new food Apples of the Earth.

Potatoes were particularly well-suited for Ireland’s climate and soils, becoming a staple food for peasants in the 1800s. A single acre of potatoes and cow milk could supply a whole Irish family with a nutritionally adequate diet for a year. However, between 1845 and 1849, a blight struck the potato crop, resulting in a catastrophic failure in the food supply. Around one million Irish peasants perished during the famine years, while another million emigrated to the new world.

Potatoes are rich in vitamins and minerals, including vitamin C and potassium, fiber, protein, low in fat and sodium, and cholesterol-free. They are one of the best food values in the grocery store, often served for pennies per serving.

What is the apple of the earth?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What is the apple of the earth?

Potatoes, cultivated by the Incas in present-day Peru as early as 2500 BC, were brought to Europe by the Spanish in the 1500s after St. Patrick drove snakes out of Ireland in the 400s. Potatoes were a staple food for the growing population on limited lands, yielding two to four times more calories per acre than grain. Boiled or baked potatoes were cheaper, just as nutritious, and did not require a gristmill for grinding. The French named this delicious new food Apples of the Earth.

Potatoes were particularly well-suited for Ireland’s climate and soils, becoming a staple food for peasants in the 1800s. A single acre of potatoes and cow milk could supply a whole Irish family with a nutritionally adequate diet for a year. However, between 1845 and 1849, a blight struck the potato crop, resulting in a catastrophic failure in the food supply. Around one million Irish peasants perished during the famine years, while another million emigrated to the new world.

Potatoes are rich in vitamins and minerals, including vitamin C and potassium, fiber, protein, low in fat and sodium, and cholesterol-free. They are one of the best food values in the grocery store, often served for pennies per serving.

How does an apple represent the Earth?

The apple may be divided into four equal slices, with three representing the oceans, which cover approximately three-quarters of the earth’s surface. This vast expanse of water makes the remaining one-quarter unsuitable for farming. The remaining quarter of the apple represents the land, indicating that the remaining portion is suitable for agricultural activities.

Why is earth’s interior like an apple?

The Earth, in a manner analogous to an apple, is constituted of layers, including the crust, mantle, outer core, and inner core. The crust may be considered the exterior, while the mantle is the interior, comprising the majority of the planet’s volume. This resemblance to an apple in structure and composition is striking.

How does the earth look like an orange or an apple?

Oblate spheroids, a type of ellipsoid, are frequently described as resembling the shape of the Earth. They are often depicted as an orange sphere with a wider diameter around the equator, as part of a basic education curriculum.

What are the similarities between Earth and apple?

The apple’s core symbolizes the Earth’s outer and inner cores, which are comprised of two distinct layers. The core is a spherical mass situated at the center of the Earth, comprising two distinct layers: the inner core, which is composed of hot liquid metals such as nickel and iron, and the outer core.

How is the Earth compared to an apple?

The Earth’s core is of a similar thickness to the mantle, whereas the core of an apple is of a smaller diameter than its white pulp. The Earth’s crust is divided into discrete tectonic plates, whereas the apple’s peel represents a single, continuous layer. Both entities possess layers; apples have an outer layer of skin, while Earth has a crust.

How is the shape of apple?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

How is the shape of apple?

Apples are typically observed to have a roundish, oblate, or oblong shape when viewed from the side. Additionally, apples may exhibit a tapering towards the base, ribs, or lobes, or a combination of these characteristics, as observed in the “roundish conical” or “oblong ribbed” forms. Additionally, apples may exhibit segmented forms or lobes protruding from the sides.


📹 Inside Apple’s $5 Billion Headquarters

In 2017 construction on Apple’s new headquarters, called Apple Park, was finally completed. It took four years to build, and cost …


How Does The Inside Of The Earth Resemble An Apple?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Rafaela Priori Gutler

Hi, I’m Rafaela Priori Gutler, a passionate interior designer and DIY enthusiast. I love transforming spaces into beautiful, functional havens through creative decor and practical advice. Whether it’s a small DIY project or a full home makeover, I’m here to share my tips, tricks, and inspiration to help you design the space of your dreams. Let’s make your home as unique as you are!

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  • I sympathize with the programmers. Open concept is fantastic. It’s bright, airy, energizing and for a lot of people reduces anxiety and encourages a feeling of community and socializing. But I remember in college how much we needed the lab dungeon. No windows, minimal glass, just white walls. Sometimes you wouldn’t even have phone service. Just a way to go down and cut off all distractions and connections besides you, your thoughts, and whatever you were working on. Everything in life is made of compromises and if there’s one thing Steve Jobs wasn’t known for, it was compromising.

  • I can tell you as a developer myself, that open floor plans are only good for management, not for the devs themselves. Most development does not require collaboration, except on integration points, so I have little need for the constant open air to the people around me. As mentioned, it’s more of a distraction than anything. Also, developers are generally less outgoing, so crave that personal space that an office or cubicle gives.

  • The trees Dave selected for Apple Park and how they were grown changed the nursery industry in California. The trees are natural hybrids of different drought tolerant oaks native to climates which resemble what the Bay Area will be in 50-100 years, and were grown in nurseries for the first time for this project. The pots the trees grew in are completely different than the hard-sided ones usually seen. They allow trees to grow faster, cheaper, and with better root systems that don’t wrap around. All the trees grown for this project came out so well, that California’s largest tree grower switched all of their nurseries to this new pot.

  • It looks gorgeous, but I’m glad I worked at Infinite Loop from ’97-’10. Most folks had private offices and it was easy to “bump into” Steve and have informal discussion (which was motivating). Nevertheless, the gardens and health/exercise facilities @ Apple Park look amazing…the Infinite Loop gym was pretty minimalist.

  • I spent a few weeks in a similar building which was almost a full circle. It didn´t feel as well as expected. It took ages to get from one side to the other and you got kinda dizzy running in circles. Took me a few days to get used to the never ending curve when you walk to different areas of the building. The view to the outside was nice though. It felt like visitors plattform

  • It hurts to see Steve like that. I lost my father in law last year to cancer also. Though flawed as any human, both men were inspirations to me. (Ironically, my father in law was an architect). Thank you for this article and the journey it took us on for a place that is part of the legacy of someone special to so many of us.

  • The open pod areas are a good idea, but should be an addition to rather than replacement of, individual work spaces. At the very least there should be available spaces for a single person or smaller group, which could even be set up as soundproofed rooms within the pod areas. Clear acrylic double pane with those blinds between the panes because sometimes you need to shut out the sights as well as the sounds to concentrate. A dry erase marker could be used to write your name on the door or window in case someone needs to find you. People like to have the ability to put personal touches in their work space, too. Photos, a favorite plant, a snack drawer, a splash of color or poster that calms them or inspires them. Having a space that you feel is yours can be important for morale. Skylights would be nice, too. Not sure white on white is the best idea for parking signage, either. That’s asking for trouble. But at least you don’t have to worry about getting caught in the rain in the parking lot. They pretty need their own grounds maintenance company. Additional thought on those pod areas: how many exits are there and which way do the doors open? If there’s a fire or other situation are they setting themselves up for people getting trampled/smothered trying to get out?

  • The shades outside the windows also cut down on the “ant under a magnifying glass” effect that you’ll come across if you cover the Wynn in Vegas. The inner curve will reflect sunlight onto one area and absolutely bake whatever is there. Blocking the direct sunlight will minimize this effect. It’s also a form of passive cooling by reducing the greenhouse effect of letting the direct sunlight in. Bounce lighting gives you plenty of light, direct light gives you heat.

  • I watched multiple articles about the campus, but this one summarizes it and adds a lot of answers to questions “why” they did it the way the did. It is also amazing how smoothly you explained that the beautiful design does not always goes with practicality. The fact is that beauty of the office pretty much never goes with practicality. From my expierence I know that office deisgn is usually visualization of ego of GM or CEO of the company.

  • As a developer, I couldn’t imagine a more miserable work space. I love how they often give managers their own private offices, but everyone has zero privacy, and none of it is your own space, lots of shared spaces, and it’s just feels so impersonal. It’s an absolutely awful experience to work in a collaborative space like that all day everyday.

  • I’m really glad you highlighted Apple isolating itself from the local community towards the end with these projects. Apple Park is a gorgeous piece of architecture and engineering but a shockingly bad piece of urban design. If you zoom out and look at it from all sides it’s met by massive suburban developments of houses in standard California fashion, all of which are several million dollars that skyrocketed due to lack of availability when the campus opened. There’s a few small apartment complexes, but there’s really nowhere for employees (particularly younger ones) to live without having to commute in. This is true of a lot of tech HQs (exemption being Amazon), but there’s a genuine attempt in funding local transit, housing, and designing around city connections with the intent of improving the local economy beyond tax benefits from the others these days. Apple’s disinterest in spending their money outside of their own property feels like you’re looking over the gates into the palace grounds while the Apple employees drive out at the end of the work day to head back to a city that isn’t Cupertino.

  • its amazing to me how often “genius” architecture is met with criticism from the people that, ya know, actually have to live and work in it. I grew up in an elementary school that had open concept at its root. And it was a vast open space that very quickly the school realized needed to have flimsy and shoddy partitioning walls put up. This did nothing for the fact that teachers need to, you know, project their voices. So every single student could hear every single teacher throughout the cavernous area. When my schools (yes, plural) were renovated all the way thru my school career, they not surprisingly went back to a traditional design. Similarly, artitechs love to look at awe at brutalist buildings but then can cheerfully walk away as people that live there have to deal with the crumbling and oppressiveness of it.

  • I began my investment journey at the age of 27, primarily through hard work and dedication. I am to share that my passive income exceeded $100k in a single month for the first time. This success reinforces the importance of the advice mentioned earlier. It is not about achieving quick wealth, but rather ensuring long-term financial prosperity.

  • Frederick Law Olmsted being the founder of American landscape architecture is no joke. Thanks to him and Calvert Vaux, Central Park was born. Olmsted also worked on landscape for Niagara Falls State Park (country’s oldest state park), the Biltmore Estate, and even the US Capitol. Apple Park was also designed with earthquake safety in mind! Modeled after similar ones in Japan, it’s one of the ONLY buildings in the US to use base isolation against earthquakes. Meaning that it should survive all but the biggest California tremors. It consists of 692 large, stainless-steel saucers located two stories underground that can shift as far as four feet in any direction. Quite impressive! That being said, I don’t blame Apple employees for not liking an open-pod concept. An open-pod concept doesn’t encourage working together, it encourages dillydallying. In a personal office, you’re focused on you and your goals. As you should be. For those who work more efficiently independently, this is a nightmare.

  • a ideal functional open office design for me would have mixed used spaces; open areas for collaboration, closed areas for individual work, varying seating, and areas with different volume levels. Perhaps notations for whether or not an employee is busy on their own work in an open collaborative area, like a light system. But it is also important for people to have a home base, like a main desk. So, in the end, like a traditional office with more collaborative spaces and comfy chairs, or like a college library vibe with personal desks at the perimeter. But I am neither an architect or a social scientist.

  • I could really sense the Steve Jobs Reality Distortion Field at the opening remarks to city council. By the time he got to talking about Hewlett Packard you could practically sense that city council was already like “hurry up and tell us your plan so that we can approve it!” Similar to “shut up and take my money!” An absolute legend.

  • Anyone have any idea which stocks may be experiencing major growth this new year season? A lot of people have been talking about a March bounce. I recently sold my Boca Grande, Florida, house, and I want to invest a lump sum before equities recover in the stock market. Is now a good time to buy or not?

  • I really hate the open floor concept. Sure, i like how it looks better than the cubicle farm but cubicles give you privacy to talk on the phone or with another collogue or not be looked at all the time. Cubicles also reduce distractions. This is even more important if you are in sales or involved with anything that might need to be kept secret such as working on some projects that can’t be shared with the rest of the team yet.

  • It’s a nice starchitect bauble for those privileged enough to work there but that’s about it. It would have been nice to see Apple apply those values and design aesthetics to a mixed-use walkable TOD that could have incorporated so much more than just offices and parking. Think affordable housing for workers, hotel spaces for those who want to travel to HQ, etc. Ah well! Next build!

  • 3:28 For those wondering why the HSBC Building in particular has a unique design for a skyscraper: In Hong Kong (and ancient China), there’s a practice called feng shui about arranging the pieces in living spaces to create balance with the natural world. For good feng shui, in Hong Kong, skyscrapers are designed with holes called “dragon gates” to allow dragons to fly from the mountains to the sea every day, thus allowing positive energy flow through the building. But when the neighboring Bank of China Tower by IM Pei was constructed, there was nothing but negative energy flow as feng shui principles were ignored. HK Governor Youde died in 1986 in Beijing from a heart attack, and Hong Kongers blamed the building for this since it overlooked Government House. So to fend off the negative feng shui from the Bank of China Tower and protect the HSBC Building, two cannon-like cranes (shown on the left at 3:34) were constructed to point towards it.

  • I have mixed feelings. On the one hand, the campus is beautiful, the building is magnificent, and the energy efficiency is commendable. On the other hand it’s sad how isolated the campus feels in comparison to the surrounding city and how it only further promotes car centric living (though I understand that Cupertino is already famous for that and its good that Apple provides shuttle services). It’s also sad how the employees opinions weren’t really incorporated into the design. While I certainly understand the appeal of an open office design, I think there has to be a mix that allows people to have their own space when needed.

  • It defeats the purpose of Apple Park if employees are still spread out in so many other buildings and can’t mingle and share ideas. I would find it fascinating if, in some alternate timeline or universe, Apple actually managed to put all employees into just one of three massive buildings to replace all of the various smaller ones, each tailored to a different type of employee: the first looking like Apple Park in a giant open circle with an open-concept floor plan for executives and managers, one shaped like a giant square (no interior courtyard) with traditional interior design for programmers and researchers, and one in a giant triangle with an interior courtyard for salepeople and customer support.

  • I’ve been there. Of course you can’t go in the spaceship because it’s a working corporate headquarters. But the visitor center across the street is pretty impressive in its own right. You get a better view of the spaceship from the roof and you can’t see the whole thing. But what you can see – it’s enormous.

  • Excellent article. Thank you very much. I’m especially impressed by the footage close to and inside the buildings. One small comment: the fruit trees were planted because that area used to be covered with fruit orchards, mainly peach and apricot. It was an attempt to remind people (?) or bring some of those back (?). Thank you for all of your hard work!

  • I appreciate that you mention some of the downsides of this design, and even offer alternative solutions. From a European perspective, the exclusivity of Apple Park seems very American. If there was such a thing as walkable and cyclable neighbourhoods that already exist in the city, it would surely be much more convenient for the employees if the offices were distributed there, among existing local businesses and living spaces.

  • I know people who worked here. The entire stupid complex is made out of glass, and people frequently ended up running into windows because they didn’t bother with simple things like “walls”, instead it was all glass. So, no privacy, no sound proofing, it’s all form and no function. It’s a nightmare.

  • It’s all been done before. IBM’s main research building in Yorktown Heights, NY was designed by Eero Saarinen in 1960 – it’s three story, glass fronted ring section building with walkways inside the glass – one difference: it’s a third of a ring rather than going all the way around. One issue with buildings like this, and especially with Apple’s building: it’s a long walk to anywhere.

  • What a wonderful article on the Apple Campus Neo. It is especially nice to see your comments on the landscape design by Laurie Olin. Landscape architecture rarely receives the credit it should yet many of the great places we cherish are landscape architect designed, e.g. Stanford Uni./Olmsted, Foothills College in Cupertino/Sasaki. Both in ‘almost’ walking distance of Apple HQ.

  • The Apple Campus is the nicest and flashiest form of an office park there is but it is still a vastly car centric office park which isolates itself from its urban surrounding and creates a huge block without paths through for outsiders, shielding itself with its least attractive part, the garages towards the outside. Take the smaller Samsung HQ not far from the Apple Campus to see how even in the context of Silicon Valley a much more progressive urban concept is possible, which includes proper PT connections, a building that adds quality to its surroundings, is publicly accessible and not behind walls of green or grey …

  • as an Android user that doesnt like apple products (lol) this was very interesting and cool to watch, and i think Jobs seemed a very cool dude… idk how he was under the surface. i wonder how the company would be doing today if he was still alive and well. i believe ive heard that once Jobs died, the care for quality and functionality went down, and became more of a way to make lots of money from people thatll just buy their new phone every year even if other options are better and the new phone is almost exactly the same as the previous release.

  • 12:25 As a structural engineer, I love this theater. It looks unstable at first glance, but honestly, it’s 2″ thick of glass, so as long as you secure each glass panel top, bottom, and both sides, they will basically all act as a rigid body, and nothing will be able to move in any direction. If you were to rotate all of the panels 90° and had them all pointing outwards, them all toppling simultaneously would be a possible failure mechanism. These panels perfectly negate that possibility. As an example, see the Apple Kunming Pavilion and how they add panels orientated like these every 3rd panel to keep it stable. Another option would be to add moment-resisting connections top and bottom, but then you’re asking the glass to sustain loads in bending and it can fail catastrophically if heavily stressed. Something that might not be immediately apparent, is how critical the roof is to holding it all together. As any single panel that tries to fall inwards (“Out Of Plane” of the glass), due to wind or its own inertia during an earthquake, is braced by the ground below and the roof above, which can then send the force perpendicular out to the left and right panels of glass that can easily take that force in their strong orientation (“In Plane” of the glass). At this point, a single wooden house stands up due to it’s own self weight, but here there are probably strong anchors to prevent any motion at all (to keep the seals strong, so these anchors would need to take the full seismic loads).

  • No compromises? An open floor plan, which all employees hate, but which is especially detested by developers and engineers. Glass everywhere, so people walk into walls. No child care. You can walk a half a mile just to get from one side to the other for a meeting. Great idea in principle, horrible idea in practice.

  • Very nice building with lots of brilliant ideas, but at the end it’s still an office. An office main function is too enable employees to perform at their best, speaking from personal experience some people work great in open offices, some people can’t stand all the distractions. I belong to the second group, working from home during covid thought me I can do twice the work in a single day whilst feeling less than half as exhausted than going to my open space office. Currently I’m pressured into coming to the office again, which just makes my productivity go down, resulting in higher stress levels. I’m not a shy, introvert person, just a normal guy with lots of good relationships at my firm. I just wish companies would finally admit the cheap open working space are the dumbest idea ever.

  • I wanted to work here. I realize now that Silicon Valley, and probably surrounding areas and companies, are a cess pool. Rather work at nChain. Still have open minded people. I would redo operating systems completely from scratch, without using compilers at all. I had the vision Steve Jobs had, in some sense, but I think humans are so set in their ways that it would just be easier if the company grew old and died like its founders. I should just start my own.

  • Great job, Neo! Your visualization skills are truly impressive. Your articles are engaging and visually stunning. I would love to learn how to create similar articles. Can you please share some tips or resources that you use to produce such high-quality content? Thank you for sharing your talent with the world.

  • 1. I’d love to know how the programer problem is or was solved. 2. I hope the pizza boxes are recycled paper only. Otherwise, this whole article is really quite exhilarating. Quiet and informative, almost soothing, and yet exciting. A great vision for what is possible, and at the end the possibilities of how it could be improved. I love the labour of love to make something inspirational and yet reflect, nostalgically, the development of the company. One of the very best articles I’ve seen. in the last 5 years (I was probably very impressible earlier than that), Thank you so much.

  • I love AP. Even after having to come 3-5 days a week to work here, the beauty doesn’t cease to amaze me. It truly does feel like working inside a spaceship every time you walk around the ring. Even though walking from office to office can take forever and caffe Macs is always insanely packed during lunchtime, I love it. 🙂

  • It is hilarious how this article paints Steve Jobs as the creator and assembler of the first Apple computer. Jobs was NOT an engineer he was a salesman. Wozniak created and built the first Apple computer and SHOWED it to Jobs who then built a business around it. Fun fact: I lived in Cupertino in the late 1970s and early 1980s near Apple. When my parents got me my first computer, an Apple II+ in 1979, I took it to Apple Campus to have one of the engineers there help me add a 16k expansion card to it. Back in those days, Apple was small and totally open to helping a kid like that. Back then, Wozniak was the technical star and Jobs was the face of the tiny company. How the narrative has changed.

  • The story telling you do in this episode is great. Your voice is great. And I’m just curious. Forgive me for asking something that could be offensive. Which is not my intent. You pronounce words containing “TH” with the sound of the letter F. My mind races with curiosity about the muscles in the mouth and the shapes used to create different sounds. And I wonder what it would take to allow you to pronounce the “TH” sound.

  • The design may be innovative, true, but so what? The hugely overpriced and overpaid Apple computer has come at a great cost. Just ask some of California’s homeless who can’t make rent. Big tech is just as evil if not worse than those big industrialists from a century ago. Does anyone truly admire Steve Jobs as a human being?

  • Thank you for this article. I had the pleasure of working there for one of the conferences and it was unforgettable. It is a stunning structure and magical environment. Walking amongst so many languages, cultures and creative minds still inspires me. The lake was my favorite spot and standing in the center of the park was amazing.❤ I love being able to see it again.

  • Of course a fleet of commuter buses helps, but how many cars enter and leave this fancy place daily, serving how many employees, burning how many gallons of fossil fuel for how years. Don’t look to Apple to come clean on this. They could have built a company town on the property, starting on a very small scale, using it as an educational experiment with the option of expanding with time. They could have partnered with local or state gov’t as well to avoid any stigma of a company town. The point is low density, single use land use is right for agricultural use and wrong for housing or office use. Jobs made important contributions, but he was also a wealthy, powerful man who (perhaps?) had an edifice complex.

  • Only a delusional person sees this as cool when in reality, it’s built to keep employees at work for longer periods of time. Seems like a pain to leave the building and enter it. It has a fitness area and makes it seem like there is no where else to go but to just stay at the building, making you work more. Disgusting. I would leave after clocking out. Anyone who crunches in the tech industry needs to find a job that treats employees and doesn’t work them like slavery.

  • We humans are so involved with materialistic life all we praise is the one who is rich, how they became rich, how expensive are their products, how it’s important to be unique so you can sell it at an unreasonable price, how they own so much wealth. Apple is one of the big names in innovation. But I don’t consider it to be for people as it’s not affordable to everyone. It’s not practical for public contributions. Apple is just for themselves and that is what people should know, and not for public contributions.

  • The extend of how much americans rely on private cars for transportation is beyond my understanding. So Apple and other big companies have these massive office complexes for tens of thousands of people who need to get to the same area but almost exclusively rely on highways for commuting. I do hope this will change someday.

  • I remember perusal that exchange with the Cupertino city council. Jobs gave a wonderful presentation as he always could, but I recall one councilmember quizzing him on the impact on residents, traffic patterns and the long-term effects to small business. Jobs got miffed at the questioning and suggested he could take this project to another part of the Bay Area if they didn’t like it. I thought it a bit petty to get defensive when the councilmember was simply asking broader questions beyond the scope of the Apple universe. When a company wants to spend billions of dollars to substantially remake portions of the town, questions should be expected. Obviously, Cupertino was thrilled to have one of the most innovative companies in the world make such an investment, but the exchange offered a unique insight into the motivations behind public and private cooperation.

  • I just bought more of these apple stock a few minutes ago. Tying up money due to an apocalyptic stock market crash is also not a smart move my advice will be to invest in other AI stocks. Life is a risk and it’s better to take risks than to do nothing, you can’t always expect to make huge profits all the time, people have so many opinions about a recession/depression. In just 5 months my portfolio grew by $300,000 in gross profit, the main thing is to expand your portfolio and you will see amazing results by investing smartly.

  • Export the Q*, Chat GPT, Revit, Plant 3D, Civil 3D, Inventor, ENGI file of the Building or Refinery to Excel, prepare Budget 1 and export it to COBRA. Prepare Budget 2 and export it to Microsoft Project. Solve the problems of Overallocated Resources, Planning Problems, prepare the Budget 3 with which the construction of the Building or the Refinery is going to be quoted.

  • This article is a work of art that mirrors that of such a flawlessly beautiful and unique piece of architecture. Also, the use of 360° solar panels on the rooftop is a fabulous use of prime real estate. I really wish more companies would be like Apple and not just the same old boring, tedious, predictable methodologies that make them excel at being dull and boring.

  • “While Apple’s attempt to create an isolated environment for its employees is rife with benefits, it might be even more forward thinking if the company had instead created a campus in an environment where (…) the success of their campus could rub off on the environment and integrate into modern city planning solutions.” What a perfect summary of the Apple ecosystem and Apple’s way of thinking

  • Hey man awesome article! I have two AV600 adapters. One gets internet, one doesn’t. I’ve tried everything in the article, still nothing with the dodgy one. I’ve tried different cables to the plugs, router, reset everything, followed the steps above as best as I can understand, only difference is that the reset is a tiny pinhole above the pair button. I can’t send it back because I’ve lost the damned box, any more help very much appreciated so I can enjoy ‘wired’ gaming while the wife enjoys her tv with no dramas!! picture available of the two plugs together if it’s any help. thank you!

  • The goal was to do what Steve Jobs wanted. The goal at apple was ALWAYS was to do what Steve Jobs wanted, as long as he was alive. He was an egomaniac completely immune to criticism and compromise. Face it, Jobsists PS: If you don’t know what a Jobsist is, you need to watch Iron Sky: The Coming Race.

  • I am 49years and when small 14 to 16years i learned Aptech computer course Foxbase dbase example marksheet Roll name sub 123 total result percentage first class second class rank If m1m2m3…>35then “fail” If for amount means bread is 20₹fiscount is 1% then what islast bill No item discription discount amount

  • Every design feature is totally arbitrary and egocentric. The underground parking was not enough, then 2 more oversized buildings appear on the corner of the plot. The open work areas, are filled with columns…???? All the desks shown in the design are facing the center of the circle/building… that is metaphor of what exactly? The façade canopy goes all round the building to provide shade … even to the East, West and North???? That is not architectural at all. The whole building is a “story”, a “well narrated story”, but eventually just a closed-endless loop… exactly like every Apple product: locked to the outer world.

  • Práce v otevřeném prostoru s mnoha lidmi odporuje vývoji člověka. Od pravěku tu byli skupiny lidí do počtu maximálně 10 lidí co spolupracovali na něčem. V tak otevřeném prostoru se nelze téměř na nic soustředit a nosit celí den sluchátka na odstranění pozadí je pitomé. Kanceláře od jednoho do 10 lidí jsou ideální. Ostatně i pozemek je zastavěn neúčelně. Stačilo to udělat tak že na tu plochu dají pár výškových budov kde budou rovnou i byty a školky a školy pro rodiny nákupní centrum elektrická doprava prodejny. Prostě koncept SAMSUNG města. Tohle je fabrika to nejsou kanceláře. Zaostalí model otevřených kanceláří.

  • Great article The building is just like apple products itself, enclosed to the outside world, but very open to eachother within, and to do, some normal “traditional” stuffs, you need different buildings(ecosystems) outside the apple park It’s a great architectural masterpiece, but I don’t like the building

  • I don’t think people realize just how useful this type of design is. 1: obviously the idea of modernization + Solar panels + Forestry and more nature overall. 2: this is beneficial for workers, instead of a mindless windowless office building, they get to look at nature, and meet their coworkers more often. 3: Open-space concept but more efficiently produced, more interaction, less of a workplace more of a comfortable community space you happen to work at. 4: it just looks fucking nice 🔥🔥 5: you could eventually I’d assume manage to make buildings like this bigger, taller, and more ecologically friendly (even more than it is now!!) by adding free gardening spaces over the roofs. (Normal Ivy like plants, or more vegetable/fruit plants for fresh picking, while still retaining their eco improving appearance) Basically you could make this one of the most ecologically friendly buildings, and change cities. (this would also solve job problems,, like gardening jobs!!)

  • With all the add-ons that had to be built, I’d say the takeaway is that the level of social engineering Steve Jobs wished to implement (and he was a notoriously controlling man) could not be implemented. Free people do not take well to overt social control, or even subversive control. Working for Apple solidified many careers, but often cost you your ethics or, as some felt, your soul.

  • Apple Park is a new campus that houses Apple’s offices, surrounded by vast parkland, in a single ring-shaped building. The complex is designed to promote collaboration between different departments and employees, with the circular building divided into nine sections, each connected by a light-filled atrium. The walkways around the building are separated from the outside only by a continuous wall made of glass that stretches from the floor to the ceiling, allowing for a panoramic view of the surroundings. The office space is also kept very open with glass walls laying out an open pot design, which allows employees access to a large open floor plan where they can self-locate to available desks. The central cafeteria is a single lunchroom for the entire building, rising from the floor to the roof offering a massive open room that is intended as another meeting space. The parks at the new campus celebrate the local environment and were designed by reclaimed landscape architect Laurie Olin to represent the California landscape. They include a wide meadow that can be used for events and resembles campus parkland at Stanford University, two freestanding cafes, several rows of an orchard containing over 800 fruit trees referencing the Bay area’s countless food plantations, and a manmade pond referencing the waters of the surrounding area, which enable all the greenery to exist. For the planting of the trees, Apple hired the arborist, Dave Muffly, who had previously planted the Stanford dish that Steve Jobs wanted to replicate.

  • While the design has many interesting positives, and I’m sure for many people this would be a great place to work, for me and those like me, I don’t think we could work in those ‘open office space areas for collaboration’. When I’m trying to code stuff, and find bugs, and make my project work, the last thing I need is an endless stream of distractions and having 50 conversations going on across the room. I need people out. I need no distractions. I need to focus on my work. I need peace and quiet and people to leave me alone. I would never get anything done there.

  • Frederick Law Olmsted being the founder of American landscape architecture is no joke. Thanks to him and Calvert Vaux, Central Park was born. Olmsted also worked on landscape for Niagara Falls State Park (country’s oldest state park), the Biltmore Estate, and even the US Capitol. Apple Park was also designed with earthquake safety in mind! Modeled after similar ones in Japan, it’s one of the ONLY buildings in the US to use base isolation against earthquakes. Meaning that it should survive all but the biggest California tremors. It consists of 692 large, stainless-steel saucers located two stories

  • Let’s call it what it is: Jobshenge. And it’s topologically identical to the Pentagon — not exactly known for productivity or innovation. It’s Dilbert’s “coffee ring of quality” made flesh. I’m glad you got around to pointing out some of the obvious flaws, even if it took you ‘til about 14:00 to do it.

  • Che ficata l ascensore di cristallo io lo avevo pensato per i tavoli privè riservati in starship pizza,dentro l astronave nei parchi Disney con osservatorio vagante a visione di plancia,un mio sogno Fanta culinario italiano internazionale importante starship pizza in ogni parco Disney una rotta intergalattica diversa..personale androgino obbligatorio…come i visitors …belli ed androgeni ..sarebbe fantastico esclusiva unicamente nelle città che ospitano parchi Disney…Phantom of manor Disney Paris ….una delle cose di genere più fiche Mai viste

  • I hope Apple took into account of servicability, repairability and ease of maintenance of this new HQ. You can readily throw away $1000-3000 Iphones / Ipads / Macbooks just because it’s impossible to service / repair / upgrade. It’s neither pragmatic nor wise to do the same for a building costing billions to construct 😂🤣😝.

  • To the apple employees complaining about not being able to concentrate please respectfully GROW UP there’s people like myself busting their but in less extravagant places trying to make. It to even get remotely close to working for a company as vast as apple concentration isn’t based on environment honestly its based on your own will to achieve no matter how noise it is or how open space it is PLUS YOU WORK FOR APPLE and they have integrated systems ( AIR PODS AND AIR POD MAX) that have inferior noise cancelation to help block out noise and theirs many other methods to help for concentration in a work environment so in my opinion not being able to concentrate is nothing but an excuse they need to get over. The Apple Park would be a great building and very unique and fits apples criteria for advancement and the want to evolve the world one code at a time.

  • Io ho pensato tavoli in diverse zone considerando che sarebbe un osservatorio multimediale con diverse logistiche di posizione tavoli trap cui la plancia in prima (parte anteriore nave) con ascensori privati e plancie tonde con alcuni prive sospesi un po’ come tasti giganti di una tromba asimmetrici anche divergenti in altezza il top sarebbe se potessero sollevarsi da terra

  • Io dico no vecchie borse italiche ed associate identità di stantio,nn di conservazione di immutabilia quindi nella gestione della cinetica integrata con una partecipazione di uno o più di questi soci e delegati andremmo incontro ad un rischio di stasi funzionale strumentale economica ed energetica quindi semplicemente no nulla di personale scelte preventive di tutela

  • Like all big architecture it was meant to be representative and showing the impact Apple has and had to the world. That’s also why articles for product launches and the WWDC are filmed there. I guess they tried the best to also create an effective workspace. But within the limitation that the representative character comes first. And yes, I can not imagine programming in an open “co-workspace”. That will not work for me. I am likely not able to focus under this conditions.

  • Initially Steve wanted the new Apple HQ to have a pointy oval shape. His family looked the model and told him from top down view, it look like a woman genital. Oops. Steve searched around for idea. He found the Hakka Round House (AKA Hakka Tulou) and he loved it. The Hakka Round House is a self-contained safe house, round shape with an open-living-space in the middle. The living space often has trees, garden, water well and all other essentials. The Round House (Tulou) is 100% self sufficient. It is about 70m to 80m in diameter with typically 3 to 5 storeys. The Tulou are build between 12th to 20th century. Steve built Apple HQ like a Tulou with 4 storeys with a much wider 460m diameters, with modern building materials. I love both the Hakka Round House and the Apple HQ. .

  • Every few years interior designers push the idea that open workspaces are best for collaboration and for the company. The psychology of that is just plain wrong. Professionals NEED privacy and function best when trusted as adults and not watched or treated as cattle. If people need to communicate with others, they will seek each other out. CEOs need to wake up and learn that private offices and cubicles are the only way to go and stop listening to interior designers who just want to make work for themselves and keep changing back and forth from open space to private offices and back again. If you cannot trust your people to work diligently, then you have a problem with HR and the hiring managers who hire the wrong people.

  • A beautiful building, paid for by Apple’s low cost manufacturing plants in “developing” countries. Their underpaid workers, living in depressing factory “dorms”, generate the high margin, insane profits that allow megalomaniac billionaires to realize these dreamscapes for their elite employees at the top. Please… Search: Apple – Foxconn factory workers in India (or China)

  • Within the world of Apple there has bee a lot of forward, even daring design- but something went horribly wrong. Maybe it was greed, or arrogance, probably both- where to push to market the next “Uber-slick” design sacrificed the needs of the users. The attacks on those outside Apple who dared to repair, and demanded access parts and freedom to repair, only to be stonewalled by Apple. It seems to me that Apple hates the very people who buy their ever depreciating quality. Soldering in the SSD’s…. Really? If anyone wants an objective view needs to go no further than Louis Rossman who has a private repair shop and seems to understand the sun of Apple better than anyone. Apple could have won the unending support and favor of the masses if it only though of actually SERVING their customers instead of looking down on them by so called geniuses who dismiss the customer only to tell them lies about what is actually wrong- over charging to fix- often coercing customers to buy new. That logo needs to change- from a bite out of- to a rotten spot.

  • Listen all credit to the guys that did the stabilization stuff and new windows. The Amazing technology. But giving these three guys credit for a great idea? The Idea, Steve Jobs (The Pentagon), The architect ( Um Ah lets do another shape), IPhone designer (Yeah pretty cubicles and conference rooms). This is 2022 Pentagon !

  • Hey Man! Such a great article, loved every part of it. Also a suggestion, you could have just made that Nebula platform free for now. Bring in more creators, and bring the sponsorship. and maybe Google will buy you out eventually. The thing is majority of the people rather spend money on entertainment and not on informative articles and that is a fact. So rather than using your articles as a product to earn, use articles to attract people and use their time as the product and earn via sponsorship.

  • I love how the underground tunnels that lead to the garages looks like an Apple Store or an ad by apple! The traffic lights literally look like the lights that pop up when your camera or microphone is on and the name of the road on the arch looks like a commercial. I never thought an underground tunnel for cars would look futuristic and beautiful! I wish though that the entire thing and all the buildings would be connected underground because then the rainy weather wouldn’t affect walking around the campus.

  • “Open concept” and “glass walls” are more about micromanagement, employee policing than synergy. People normally need peace and quiet, privacy to think. When there are too many distractions and noise, it’ll hamper productivity — kinda like parents sushing their kids while talking on the phone. But then again, this thing is generational.

  • one problem i have with the design is that the extent of “openness” in this building is nearly identical to a panopticon. one difference: every employee can see every other employee at any given time, which is scarier in a way. suppressing privacy is an overt way of enforcing control because it abrogates the possibility of groups forming who disagree with the greater consensus.

  • It’s interesting how corporations moved away from skyscrapers and now they are moving to lower spread out campuses. For example, in Chicago, Sears moved out of Sears Tower after just 17 years (which was the tallest building in the world at the time and now called Willis Tower) then built a huge campus in the suburbs. I heard the reason this happened was because employees did not like being separated by elevators (there are over 100 elevators in that building) and they were missing social interaction because of needing to go through 3 different elevator banks to get to a coworker. Because of this they were mostly doing phone calls and were missing interaction. Now that building is rented out to smaller companies so now 1 company might have 1 floor, or half of a floor, or something like that. It works for small companies but not when your company is taking the whole 110 story building.

  • This was the former HP Cupertino site. I worked there in the late 80s and 90s. It had many of the same features — open courtyards, large theater, central employee restaurant. It was very square and linear. Everyone, including senior executives, worked in cubicles. When it was built, it incorporated many new design and workplace ideas that were novel at the time. As befit the HP corporate culture, it was much more modest in its materials than its Apple successor. I loved working there, especially having meetings outside in the large open courtyards. HP was a special company.

  • I prefer the approach Microsoft was taking to buildings when I worked for them in the late 1980s. Rather than a distracting open office plan, everyone got their own office. Rather than consign the outside views to the short time someone is walking down a hall, each office had a window on a wooded outside, either inside the ring or outside. The windowless areas were where people spend little time—halls, storage areas, refreshment areas, and conference rooms. And there was also another difference. Rather than one huge building, there were a number of them, making work more intimidate.

  • I’m an architecture student and this is my favorite building, I think what people criticize is exactly what make it special, if it wasn’t extravagant or perfect enough, they wouldn’t have make the calculations and the work to achieve that “floating roof” of the theater or the huge sliding doors, sometimes perfection is good

  • 7:22 “Now this five billion dollar headquarters has received its fair share of criticism for being too extravagant and its construction too perfectionist”. How is that building is criticized just for being too good??? How is building something amazing and created with care a criticism??? (Just an opinion)

  • I’ve been there a few times since it opened. Took a while to work out some ergonomic kinks, for instance they added little black evenly spaced stickers to the glass walls so people don’t crash into them as much. It’s a very ambitious and pretty building, but I’m not sure it’s the one I’d prefer to work in every day. Definitely the one I’d want to be in during a bad earthquake though.

  • What an amazing place to work; I can’t imagine being able to go here every day. It seems more and more companies are increasing spending in fields of employee satisfaction and comfortability. This aligns with the idea that the key to employee success is through love and not the past-used fear tactics that my managers used to encompass. When it comes to employee turnover and efforts, having a visually and physically appealing office can greatly improve employee morale and attitudes around the work place.

  • As someone who worked at one of their Data Centers for two years… You do actually get use to the long walks. However Apple Park clearly was built much different from where I worked. Our building was over 1 million square feet and it wasn’t uncommon to be walking all over it (minus locked areas) daily… However security was really high so it was filled with long corridors with no windows, just concrete floors and white walls (personally I loved the simplicity). I love Apple, but my god I do not agree with their choices of things like forcing one single cafeteria or even that whole, “we want people to mingle!” – It doesn’t always work and actually can lead to MORE hostile work relationships. I’ve seen great ideas literally fall apart because just two people on a team couldn’t get along.

  • I help commission this building right after construction. After such, I worked as a constrols engineer operating the campus. We only had a 6 man crew. Daily id run reports relative to outside air conditions making the determination to open the 100’ Megadoors. The campus is environmentally conscious and efficient .

  • If it weren’t for slave labor salaries in China doing all the real work for Apple that campus would look like exactly what it is – the headquarters of a cult of capitalist sleight of hand artists, no different than that huge glass ”Tower of Power” built by that christian minister decades ago that now sits abandoned since his ”ministry” flopped. I like Apple products but I’m not hip to their core business practices nor do I find their Dieter-esque aesthetic, in-line with Jobs’ weirdnesses, impressive or anything other than comical. Again, take super desperate Chinese workers out of their equation and the whole thing falls apart, even the more than $1 Trillion in un-taxed monies they have offshored in Ireland (that had significant weight on why the UK Brexited – to avoid EU audits). The 1 thing I do applaud Apple for is standing up to Israel by telling Facebook and Google as well as the NSO group, that rides atop them both and takes down whoever they find ”a threat” to their literal mob under the guise ”security”, to take a flying leap. The minute Apple stops doing that it’s over and so is democracy world-wide as Facebook and Google will pounce and destroy Apple, leaving it just like Android – nothing but a means of keeping users under constant surveillance and control. The creepies don’t just want industries full of Harvey Weinsteins who control the banks, Hollywood, both mainstream and social media and the weapons manufacturers, they want it ALL and they 100% believe that God gave it all to them.

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