
Apart from phenomenal products like the iPod, iMac and Macbooks, Apple in
its 30 year old history has churned out super flop products too. Here is a
list of 10 products in reversing order from Apple which fizzled in the
market.
No 10 - Apple Cyberdog
Apple's to answer to Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator was
the Cyberdog an Internet suite developed to work on the Mac OS. Introduced
in Feb 1996 in beta stage, Cyberdog was an OpenDoc-based suite of Internet
applications, including email and news readers, a web browser and address
book management components, as well as drag and drop FTP. The components
could be reused and embedded in other documents by the user. However
Cyberdog was a memory hog and sucked up more memory than both the web
browser and mail applications in other suites. Also saved documents were
not viewable from applications which did not support OpenDoc's Brento
format and as web standards evolved Cyberdog became obsolete. It was
replaced a year later in May 1997 with Internet Explorer for Mac as the
default browser till Safari made debut in October 2003.

No 9 - Taligent
Apple joined forces with IBM (really surprising) in 1988 to develop the
next generation operating system to replace Mac OS. In 1992, Taligent Inc.
was formed as Apple-IBM joint venture to complete the software codenamed
Pink, an ambitious object-oriented operating system. The only product it
shipped was CommonPoint which comprised more than 100 object-oriented
frameworks, providing developers with a powerful platform-independent
model that supported interactive collaboration. By 1995 Apple did not have
an OS capable of running CommonPoint and by the end of 1995 it became a
wholly owned subsidy of IBM which was later dissolved in 1998.

No 8 - Apple EWorld
In 1994 Apple partnered with AOL to develop EWorld which was intuitive and
easy to use and included services like email (eMail Center), news, and a
bulletin board system (Community Center). Users of the service were
referred as 'EPeople'. The service was heavily GUI dependent was based
around a "town hall" theme where each of the serviceís branches
were individual "buildings". The town hall metaphor made eWorld
simple to access and provided users with a strong sense of community.
However Apple kept the prices very high and did not advertise the product.
It came preinstalled on new Macintosh's but was buried away several
folders deep on a default installation which majority of the customers
could not find. After 2 years on March 31 1996 the service was officially
shut down,

No 7 - Apple Pippin
Apple Pipin was the technology for a multimedia player marketed by Apple,
it was powered by a 66-MHz PowerPC 603e processor,had a 14.4kbps modem and
ran a cut-down version of the Mac OS. Apple's aim was to create an
inexpensive computer to play CD-based multimedia titles and mainly games,
however the timing couldn't be worst as it was released in a market
already dominated by Sony Playstation, Sega Saturn and Nintendo 64. Only
42,000 of these ill fated devices were sold before a silent death.
No 6 - 20th Anniversary Macintosh
To mark the
company's 20th anniversary Apple released the TAM (Twentieth Anniversary
Macintosh) in May 1997. At a time when CPU speed was still measured in
Megahertz the TAM was pretty futuristic, it had a 12 inch TFT-LCD monitor
(800 x 600), 250 Mhz processor, ATI 3D Rage II video chipset and ATI 3D
Rage II video chipset. It had a vertically mounted 4X CD-ROM drive and
Bose speakers with a sub woofer which doubled as a power supply. The TAM
ran on Mac OS 9.1 and had a 2 GB hard drive, it was discontinued in March
1998, less than a year from launch due to the huge $7,499 price tag.
No 5 - Motorola ROKR
Technically
speaking the iPhone is not Apple's first cell phone, in 2005 it partnered
with Motorola for the ROKR phone. As with any Apple product it was widely
expected, it featured an MP3 player with an interface similar to the iPod
interface and allowed users to playback music purchased from iTunes store.
The phone had decent specs in its times - 512 MB memory, Bluetooth, bright
display and Micro SD card for memory expansion. It still flopped mainly
due to awefully slow transfer rates compared to dedicated music players
and a firmware which limited only one hundred songs to be loaded at any
time.
No 4 - Macintosh TV
The limited edition
Macintosh TV introduced in 1993 was one of only a few Macs to come in
black, it came with a cable-ready TV tuner card, and included a CD-ROM
drive. The Macintosh TV was essentially a Performa 520 which could switch
its built-in 14" Sony Trinitron CRT from being a computer display to
a cable-ready television. It had a 32 Mhz processor, 4 MB RAM and 160 MB
hard drive. Reasons for its failure were its inability display television
feeds in desktop window and mediocre graphical performance.

No 3 - Macintosh Portable
The Macintosh Portable was Apple's first portable computer, launched in
1989 it was powered by a Motorola 68000 processor at 16 Mhz and had 1 MB
of RAM (expandable to 8 Mb). It featured a black and white active-matrix
LCD screen and a full keyboard. However the Lead acid batteries added to
the bulk, it weighed in at 15.8 pounds (7.2 kilograms) and was a bit
bigger than a briefcase. Other than the mammoth size also in question was
the $6,500 price tag which lead to the doom of the Macintosh Portable.

No 2 - Apple Lisa
Way back in 1983 Apple released the Lisa one of the first commercial
personal computers to have a GUI and a mouse. It was powered by a Motorola
68000 CPU at 5 MHz and 1 MB of RAM. The Lisa operating system featured
cooperative (non-preemptive) multitasking and virtual memory, then
extremely advanced features for a personal computer. The use of virtual
memory coupled with a fairly slow disk system made the system performance
seem sluggish at times. One of the main reasons of Lisa's failure was its
astonishing price of $ 9,995 dollars ($ 21,500 in Feb 2007 dollars).

No 1 - Apple Newton
Released much ahead of its time in 1993, the Newton (official name was
MessagePad) was touted as the future of computing. It would be the first
in a new line of Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs). The Messagepad was
the first pen based system running on the Newton Intelligence OS. It was
powered by a ARM 610 processor at 20 MHz and 640k RAM / 4 MB ROM. It
sported a reflective black and white touchscreen with a resolution of 336
x 240, PCMCIA card slot for expansion and Infrared port for communication
between MP's. The main capabilities of the device was its communications
and organizational features. It could fax messages, send e-mail, had
applications to organize names, dates, phone numbers, etc, printing,
wireless paging and perhaps the most important of all it could supposedly
read and recognize handwritten words on the screen. The Newton's
astronomical $ 1000 price tag, poor handwriting recognition, large size
(did not fit any pocket) and the "Doonesbury" comic strips by
Gary Trudeau pushed it towards failure, however the Apple Newton was
produced for six years.
Honorable Mention - Apple Puck Mouse
Introduced
with the original iMac in 1998, it has only one button but figuring out
where that button was and orienting the mouse without looking down created
an ergonomic nightmare. Apple did a small indentation in a later version
so you could figure out where to put your finger, but you still had to
find the indentation. The Puck Mouse was discontinued a few years later.