Skip to main content

The buttonless Apple mouse was an accident

apple updating magic mouse and wireless keyboard could be coming soon

Sometimes the biggest innovations come not from a group of creative minds pitting their energies to create a single product but by pure chance. At times, even pure accident.

From hit songs to scientific breakthroughs and countless inventions, many things today exist despite initially being half-baked or seen by their creators as blunders.

If an interview conducted with a former Apple engineer is any indication, you can put the buttonless Apple mouse in the “came about by accident” column.

Speaking with Cult of Mac, Abraham Farag, the former Apple Senior Mechanical Engineer of Product Design, shone a light on how the button-free Apple mouse came to be when a few Cupertino staff members laid out a bunch of proposed designs for a new desktop mouse back in 1999.

“It all started with a model we did not have time to finish,” Farag told Cult of Mac. “We had made six of these great form models to show Steve. They were fully done, with all the parting lines cut in for buttons and different plastic parts, and all the colors just right.”

But at the 11th hour, the engineers who worked on these proposed designed opted to add to the mix. There was just one problem: it wasn’t completely hashed out, and the team didn’t have time to outline where the buttons on that prototype would be.

Farag and the crew weren’t exactly proud of their creation. “It looked like a grey blob,” he said. “We were going to put that model into a box so people wouldn’t see it.”

Then Steve Jobs showed up to the meeting and everything changed.

“Steve looked at the lineup of potential forms and made straight for the unfinished one,” Farag says.

“That’s genius,” Jobs said. “We don’t want to have any buttons.”

Someone in the room chimed in with: “That’s right, Steve. No buttons at all.”

The rest is history.

You can check out the full interview with Abraham Farag here.

Konrad Krawczyk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Konrad covers desktops, laptops, tablets, sports tech and subjects in between for Digital Trends. Prior to joining DT, he…
There’s a reason this Apple II manual auctioned for nearly $800K
Manual for the Apple II computer.

On the face of it, the spiral-bound Apple II manual from decades ago doesn’t look anything special. It even has “a few small stains on the front cover,” according to Boston-based RR Auction, which recently put the 196-page booklet under the hammer.

But turn to its table of contents and on the opposite page, you’ll find a note scrawled in blue ink. Penned and signed by Steve Jobs. Yes, that Steve Jobs.

Read more
The Deployable Key Mouse may be Apple’s craziest MacBook idea yet
3 imac features apples m2 macbook air keyboard leak jon prosser

What if your laptop didn't have a trackpad, but instead a removable key that could work as a mouse? That's exactly what Apple is trying to do according to a recently spotted patent application.

The feature is called "Deployable Key Mouse" in the patent application and was first spotted by Patently Apple. The diagrams on the application show a regular MacBook keyboard with a hidden removable key. This key would have a "position sensor" that allows it to function as a pointing device. While docked on the keyboard, the key would still provide typing input like any of the other keys.

Read more
Steve Jobs’ 1973 job application auctions for record amount
Steve Jobs unveils the iPhone in 2007.

A job application filled out by the late Apple boss Steve Jobs in 1973 has auctioned for $343,000.

It’s the highest amount that the artifact has fetched at any of the four auctions it’s been involved in, comfortably beating the previous record of $222,400 bid by a group of friends going by the name Winthorpe Ventures at a sale in March.

Read more