This biographical article is written like a résumé. (September 2024) |
Steve Sakoman is an American computing executive. He retired from Apple Computer in 2005 and is now an independent consultant.
He originally worked at Hewlett-Packard as a manufacturing engineer and project manager for the industry's first battery-powered portable MS-DOS PC, the HP 110.
Sakoman moved to Apple Computer in 1984 where he would oversee the hardware groups responsible for the Apple II and Mac product lines.[1] In 1987 he formed the team behind the Apple Newton to realize his vision of the world's first PDA.[1]
Sakoman left Apple in 1990 before the Newton shipped to set up Be Inc. with former Apple executive Jean-Louis Gassée. At Be, he led development of the original BeBox, personally developed BeOS's support for Brooktree video-capture devices, and eventually worked as the company's Chief Operating Officer. During this time, he ran a webcam inside Be's offices using the CodyCam application.
In 1994 he moved to Silicon Graphics as director of Consumer Products & Technologies Group.[2] This included work on the Nintendo 64 graphics system. He then returned to Be in 1996.[2]
PalmSource acquired Be in 2001 and Sakoman took on a role there as Chief Products Officer, where he was a key member of the team behind Palm OS 5 and Palm OS 6.[3][1]
Sakoman rejoined Apple in 2003 as Vice-President of Software Technology, reporting to Avie Tevanian.[3]
Sakoman also set up GutenTalk in 2004, a site to discuss ebooks specially formatted for PDAs and other hand-held readers.