Jonathan Paul Popular Books

Jonathan Paul Biography & Facts

Sir Jonathan "Jony" Paul Ive ; born 27 February 1967) is a British and American designer. Ive is best known for his work at Apple Inc., where he served as senior vice president of industrial design and chief design officer. He has been serving as chancellor of the Royal College of Art in London since 2017. Ive joined Apple in September 1992, and was promoted to senior vice president of industrial design in the late 1990s after the return of co-founder Steve Jobs to the company, and Chief Design Officer in 2015. He held that role until his departure from the company in July 2019. Working closely with Jobs during their tenure together at Apple, Ive played a vital role in the designs of the iMac, Power Mac G4 Cube, iPod, iPhone, iPad, MacBook, and the user interface of Apple's mobile operating system iOS, among other products. He was responsible for the design of major architectural projects including Apple Park and Apple Stores. Born in London, Ive lived there until his family moved to Stafford when he was 12. He studied design at Newcastle Polytechnic, and later joined the London-based design firm Tangerine, where he worked on client projects for LG and Ideal Standard as well as Apple. After leaving Tangerine to join Apple full time, he began designing the decade's PowerBooks and Macs, finally taking up US citizenship in 2012 to become a dual British-American national. He was invited to join the Royal College of Art in May 2017 as its head-of-college, serving a fixed five-year term until May 2022. Ive has received accolades and honours for his designs and patents. In the United Kingdom, he has been appointed a Royal Designer for Industry (RDI), an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering (HonFREng), and a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE). In 2018, he was awarded the Hawking Fellowship of the Cambridge Union Society. In a 2004 BBC poll of cultural writers, Ive was ranked the most influential person in British culture. His designs have been described as integral to the successes of Apple, which has gone on to become the world's largest information technology company by revenue and the largest company in the world by market capitalization. On 27 June 2019, in an interview with the Financial Times, Ive announced he would leave Apple after 27 years to start his own design firm, LoveFrom, together with industrial designer Marc Newson. In 2021, he was recruited by the Agnelli family to work on Ferrari vehicles. Early life and education Jonathan Paul Ive was born on 27 February 1967 in Chingford, London, United Kingdom. His father, Michael Ive, was a silversmith who lectured at Middlesex Polytechnic, and his grandfather was an engineer. Raised in London, Ive attended the Chingford Church of England School and Walton High School in Stafford where he studied sculpture and chemistry. While attending secondary school, he was diagnosed with dyslexia. According to a March 2014 interview with Time, "It was his teenage love of cars that made Ive decide to become a designer. When he left school, he checked out a few car-design courses in London, including one at the Royal College. He swiftly changed his mind. 'The classes were full of students making vroom! vroom! noises as they drew,' he recalls, still horrified." Ive decided to study industrial design at Newcastle Polytechnic instead. There he was exposed to a form of Germanic design which originated at the Bauhaus. The Bauhaus expressed the idea of only including what is needed into designs. This philosophy can be seen in his work with Apple. While at Newcastle, some of his designs – including a telephone and a hearing aid – were exhibited at the Design Museum in London. He graduated with a first class Bachelor of Arts in industrial design in 1989. Career Ive's designs at polytechnic garnered him the RSA Student Design Award in 1988 and 1989, which afforded him a small stipend and a travel expense account to use on a trip to the United States. He travelled to San Francisco, California, where he met various designers including Robert Brunner – a designer who ran a small consultancy firm that would later join Apple Computer. After returning to England six weeks later, Ive interned at product design agency Roberts Weaver Group (his college sponsor) where he impressed executives with a pronounced attention to detail and work ethic. Tangerine After a year with Roberts Weaver, Ive joined a London-based design agency called Tangerine, located in Hoxton Square. He designed a diverse array of products, such as microwave ovens, toilets, drills and toothbrushes for clients including LG and Ideal Standard. However, he became frustrated after he designed a toilet, bidet, and sink for Ideal Standard, and the company rejected the work, stating that the products were too costly and looked too modern. He became unhappy with his clients who had different ideas. From 1990 to 1992, Brunner tried to recruit Ive to Apple. During this time, Apple became a client of Tangerine. Ive worked on "Project Juggernaut" for Apple, investigating the future of portable computers and setting the stage for what would become the PowerBook. Apple He was formally recruited to Apple as a full-time employee in September 1992. Ive was initially apprehensive about joining Apple given the move from the UK to California. His first major assignment in Apple's Industrial Design Group regarded the second generation of the Newton and the MessagePad 110. A lack of emphasis on design during the early 1990s prompted Ive to consider quitting. Steve Jobs, who left in 1985 after being pushed away by John Sculley, was staging a return to the company and recruited Ive to join him in taking the firm in a different direction. Jon Rubinstein, Ive's boss at the time, managed to retain Ive as an employee by explaining that Apple was "going to make history" under Jobs in 1996. Ive became the senior vice president of industrial design in 1997 heading up the industrial design team responsible for most of the company's significant hardware products. Ive's first assignment in this capacity was the iMac, introduced in 1998 (he is credited with designing its translucent plastic case). The iMac helped pave the way for many other designs such as the iPod and eventually the iPhone and the iPad. Ive described his rapport with Jobs in 2014: "When we were looking at objects, what our eyes physically saw and what we came to perceive were exactly the same. And we would ask the same questions, have the same curiosity about things." Ive became the first human to make a public phone call with Jobs after he introduced the iPhone on January 9, 2007. It was reported that Ive's desire for keeping the products as thin as possible may have led to the mechanically fragile butterfly keyboard and removing the Magsafe power connector, HDMI port, and SD Card reader from the MacBook. Ive was given his own design office .... Discover the Jonathan Paul popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Jonathan Paul books.

Best Seller Jonathan Paul Books of 2024

  • The Goalie synopsis, comments

    The Goalie

    Andy Goram & Iain King

    This is the story of a genius with flaws. Lots of them. On the field, Andy Goram was a defiant figure between the sticks who, in many ways, defined the historymaking nineinarow tea...

  • How To Pass Psychometric Tests synopsis, comments

    How To Pass Psychometric Tests

    Andrea Shavick

    In this book, author Andrea Shavick explains all there is to know about psychometric tests: what they are, what they measure, who uses them, why they're used, how they're changing,...

  • Faith Alone---The Doctrine of Justification synopsis, comments

    Faith Alone---The Doctrine of Justification

    Thomas R. Schreiner

    Renowned biblical scholar Thomas Schreiner looks at the historical and biblical roots of the doctrine of justification and offers an updated defense of this pillar of Reformed theo...

  • Things My Dog Has Taught Me synopsis, comments

    Things My Dog Has Taught Me

    Jonathan Wittenberg

    'A wonderful read' Lorraine KellyIn this book for dog lovers everywhere, Jonathan Wittenberg says his dogs have taught him, more than anything else, how to appreciate the wonderfu...

  • The Myth Of Decline synopsis, comments

    The Myth Of Decline

    George L Bernstein

    This history of Britain since 1945 confronts two themes that have dominated British consciousness during the postwar era: the myth of decline and the pervasiveness of American infl...

  • Release the Beast synopsis, comments

    Release the Beast

    BIMINI BON BOULASH

    THE BIMINI BON BESTSELLER (Sunday Times official!)A hilarious and inspiring guide to transforming your life through lessons from drag, by the UK's favourite drag queen and star of ...

  • The Dark Side of the Sky synopsis, comments

    The Dark Side of the Sky

    Francesco Dimitri

    A pageturning literary fantasy filled with terror and wonder, set in a sunbaked Southern Italy, for fans of The Girls by Emma Cline, The Magus by John Fowles and The Great Believer...

  • The Professor synopsis, comments

    The Professor

    Myles Palmer

    Idealistic, passionate and scientific, Arsène Wenger led the modernisation of English football.A starmaker who identifies and nurtures talent, he also opened the door for foreign c...

  • Sports Betting for Winners synopsis, comments

    Sports Betting for Winners

    Rob Miech

    “Rob Miech has outdone himself with this poignant, behindthecurtains revelation of a world of parlays and moneyline wagers, of mobruled games, and characters named Lem and Lefty. T...

  • The Man Who Made Mark Twain Famous synopsis, comments

    The Man Who Made Mark Twain Famous

    Cappy McGarr & Ken Burns

    In The Man Who Made Mark Twain Famous, Cappy McGarr shares how he  became an Emmynominated cocreator/executive producer of the Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Hum...

  • Change Of Heart synopsis, comments

    Change Of Heart

    Barbara Anderson

    Oliver Gurth Perkins is seventyfive, and the darkest cloud on his horizon is that the local bookshop no longer stocks paperbacks of the Times cryptic crosswords. He has an easy com...

  • The Mozart of Basketball synopsis, comments

    The Mozart of Basketball

    Todd Spehr & Digger Phelps

    Dražen Petrovic was born on October 22, 1964, in Šibenik, Croatia. Learning basketball at an early age from his older brother, Aleksandar, Dražen was a natural. He began his profes...

  • How to Understand Paul Gascoigne synopsis, comments

    How to Understand Paul Gascoigne

    Danny Baker & Danny Kelly

    The Lives Less Ordinary series brings you the most exciting, adventurous and entertaining truelife writing that is out there, for men who are timepoor but want the best. Lives Less...

  • Die Spuren der Stadt synopsis, comments

    Die Spuren der Stadt

    Lars Saabye Christensen

    Was hören wir, wenn wir der Stadt lauschen? Welche Spuren hinterlässt sie in uns? Wer ist am anderen Ende, wenn wir telefonieren? Kennen wir die, die an der Straßenecke stehen, ve...

  • British Society Since 1945 synopsis, comments

    British Society Since 1945

    Arthur Marwick

    High and popular culture; family, race, gender and class relations; sexual attitudes and material conditions; science and technology the diversity of social developments in Britai...

  • Eddie Turnbull synopsis, comments

    Eddie Turnbull

    Eddie Turnbull & Martin Hannan

    As the first British player to score a goal in European club competition in 1955, Hibs hero Eddie Turnbull holds a unique place in footballing history. In Eddie Turnbull: Having a ...

  • Bad Chemistry synopsis, comments

    Bad Chemistry

    Jonathan Paul Isaacs

    A last chance to make things rightMay be the last thing he ever does.Captain Noah Denson seriously messed up when he failed to deliver his passenger in good condition. Not that it ...

  • Forza Italia synopsis, comments

    Forza Italia

    Paddy Agnew

    When journalist Paddy Agnew and his girlfriend Dympna touched down in Rome in 1985 in search of adventure, sunshine and the soul of Italian football (well, Paddy was looking for th...

  • My Town synopsis, comments

    My Town

    David Gentleman

    David Gentleman has lived in London for almost seventy years, most of it on the same street. This book is a record of a lifetime spent observing, drawing and getting to know the ...

  • Daylight Robbery synopsis, comments

    Daylight Robbery

    Dominic Frisby

    Death and taxes are our inevitable fate. We've been told this since the beginning of civilisation. But what if we stopped to question our antiquated system? Is it fair? And is it c...

  • It Occurs to Me That I Am America synopsis, comments

    It Occurs to Me That I Am America

    Jonathan Santlofer

    A provocative, unprecedented anthology featuring original short stories on what it means to be an American from thirty bestselling and awardwinning authors with an introduction by ...

  • Into the Red synopsis, comments

    Into the Red

    John Williams

    After a decade in football wilderness, weighed down by the legacy of unmatched domestic and European successes in the 1970s and ’80s, Liverpool Football Club – under new French coa...

  • Management Level Psychometric and Assessment Tests synopsis, comments

    Management Level Psychometric and Assessment Tests

    Andrea Shavick

    Gone are the days when an impressive CV and a sparkling performance at interview were all you needed to land a great job. Now, for the vast majority of mediumlarge sized organisati...

  • Psychometric Tests For Graduates synopsis, comments

    Psychometric Tests For Graduates

    Andrea Shavick

    Are you a graduate? Looking for a brilliant job? Then you should know that over 95 percent of the FTSE 100 companies use psychometric and management tests to select their graduat...

  • Joe Royle The Autobiography synopsis, comments

    Joe Royle The Autobiography

    Joe Royle

    FOREWORD BY SIR ALEX FERGUSON Joe Royle became the youngest player to play for Everton in February 1966 and went on to win six caps under Alf Ramsey and Don Revie. Injury for...

  • The Echo Chamber synopsis, comments

    The Echo Chamber

    John Boyne

    'His relish is infectious' Times'The funniest book I've read in ages. Savage but compelling' Ian Rankin'Funny, rumbustious, unstinting and wonderfully Hogarthian' The Observer'Shar...

  • Paint it White synopsis, comments

    Paint it White

    Gary Edwards

    In his dedication to Leeds United, Gary Edwards has no rivals. He has seen every Leeds game since 17 January 1968, home and away. League, Cup and Europe. And preseason friendlies. ...

  • American Ghost synopsis, comments

    American Ghost

    Paul Guernsey

    WINNER OF THE 2018 MAINE LITERARY AWARD FOR SPECULATIVE FICTIONAn inventive metafictional novel, in which a drugdealing biker must solve his own murder from beyond the grave.Thumb ...