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Anthony Michael Fadell (born March 22, 1969) is an American engineer, designer, entrepreneur, and investor. He was senior vice president of the iPod division at Apple Inc. and founder and former CEO of Nest Labs. Fadell joined Apple Inc. in 2001 and oversaw all iPod hardware, software, and accessories development. He is known as the "father of ...
Tony Fadell is one of the most important figures in Apple’s history. As the creator of the iPod, he helped turn the struggling company’s fortunes around. And as the co-creator of the iPhone ...
Investors in the company include Tony Fadell of iPod, YouTube personality Casey Neistat, and GV (formerly Google Ventures). [2] Nothing's first product, "Ear (1)", was launched on 27 July 2021. In 2024, Nothing doubled its annual revenue to more than $500 million and crossed $1 billion in lifetime sales. [3]
In this episode of Influencers, Andy is joined by DICE Founder & CEO Phil Hutcheon along with Tony Fadell, Future Shape Principal, Nest Founder, and iPod inventor, as they discuss the rapid growth ...
Nest Labs was founded in 2010 by former Apple engineers Tony Fadell and Matt Rogers. [10] The idea came when Fadell was building a vacation home and found all of the available thermostats on the market to be inadequate, motivated to bring something better on the market. [6] Early investors in Nest Labs included Shasta Ventures and Kleiner Perkins.
Tony Fadell helped create the iPod and co-create the iPhone, but he wasn't sure he wanted to join Apple in the first place.
In a new interview, former Apple engineer Tony Fadell — who's credited with inventing the iPod and helping design the iPhone — says Jobs taught him how to anticipate and serve a customer's wishes.
General Magic was an American software and electronics company co-founded by Bill Atkinson, Andy Hertzfeld, [1] and Marc Porat.Based in Mountain View, California, [3] the company developed precursors to "USB, software modems, small touchscreens, touchscreen controller ICs, ASICs, multimedia email, networked games, streaming TV, and early e-commerce notions."