April 1st marks a historic date for the Cupertino company: 50 years of technological evolution, started in a small garage and reaching into the lives of billions of people.
To celebrate this significant moment, which took place back in 1976, the company has launched a commemorative campaign titled “50 Years of Thinking Different“.
On this occasion, the CEO Tim Cook has shared an open letter addressed to the global community. It is a text that looks to the past but above all reflects on a founding thesis that, although radical at the time, was surprisingly simple: technology had to be closely personal and within everyone’s reach.
Apple is about to turn 50 years old, Tim Cook writes to fans

In his address, the CEO emphasizes how progress always begins with those who decide to challenge conventions, whether they are an inventor, a scientist, or a student who imagines an alternative path.
“Thinking differently has always been at the heart of Apple“, Cook explained in the official statement, highlighting how this drive has enabled the creation of products capable of giving people the tools to express themselves and connect.
However, the letter clarifies an essential concept: the devices released to the market represent only the beginning of the narrative. The most meaningful chapters are written daily by users.
From business activities born using a Mac, to irreplaceable moments captured with the iPhone’s camera, the true driving force behind the California-based company lies in what people are able to achieve thanks to technology.
The intersection of technology and the humanities
The historical path outlined for this anniversary embraces five decades of hardware and services that have left a profound mark on modern society.
From the early steps with the Apple II and the Macintosh, through cultural and commercial phenomena such as iPod, iPad and Apple Watch, up to the spatial and virtual explorations of Apple Vision Pro.
Beyond the physical objects, an invisible ecosystem made up of App Store, Apple Music, iCloud and Apple Pay has become an essential part of daily life.
Since its early days, the brand’s philosophy has held that engineering prowess alone is not enough to create real value. It is the intersection between silicon milestones and the liberal arts, continually guided by human sensitivity, that makes the products truly memorable.
A vision that continues to guide today’s choices, spanning from the development of Apple Intelligence to the creation of an entire computing system designed around the protection of privacy, universal accessibility and environmental respect.
A toast to the “crazy ones”
Although the company states it prefers building tomorrow over celebrating yesterday, ignoring this milestone would have been impossible.
Cook directly addresses operational work teams around the world, the vast community of developers and every single customer who has placed their trust in Cupertino’s ecosystem. The closing of the open letter is a meaningfully symbolic tribute, a direct call to one of the most famous advertising campaigns in the history of communication.
Remembering that people who are bold enough to think they can change the world are the same who end up doing so, the CEO raises the metaphorical glasses in a toast. A tribute to those who are unconventional, rebels, and troublemakers. To those who see things differently and who, for the past fifty years, have pushed society toward new frontiers.



