Six Colors
Six Colors

by Jason Snell & Dan Moren

About Six Colors


Jason Snell
Jason Snell (photo by Shawn Blanc)

Six Colors provides daily coverage of Apple, other technology companies, and the intersection of technology and culture. Its founder and editor in chief is Jason Snell. That’s me!

Jason Snell

I was the lead editor for Macworld for more than a decade. During my time at Macworld, I covered every major Apple product release, including every version of OS X, the iPod, iPhone, and iPad, and much more. I’ve written breaking news, interviewed executives (including Steve Jobs), reviewed major products, written how-to articles, penned award-winning editorials, shot and edited videos, produced podcasts… you name it. I left IDG in 2014 and now write here, as well as writing regular columns for Macworld and Tom’s Guide.

You can email me at jsnell@sixcolors.com.

I’m on Twitter @jsnell and the site’s on Twitter at @bleedsixcolors.

Dan Moren

Dan Moren is the other regular writer on Six Colors. He and Jason worked together for many years at Macworld. Dan finished his Macworld career as a Senior Editor and is now a freelancer writer, podcaster, and author. Dan and Jason co-created the Clockwise podcast, of which Dan is still a regular host and Jason appears sometimes. He regularly appears on The Incomparable and co-hosts The Rebound podcast. You can email him at dan@sixcolors.com.

Contributors

Greg Knauss is the Six Colors system administrator. He does things with servers you wouldn’t believe. Learn more about his many powers at Extra Moon.

Christa Mrgan designed the site.

Jay Fanelli of Cotton Bureau came up with the “6C” logo during a back-and-forth while we were talking about making a Six Colors t-shirt we still haven’t made. Someday soon…

What does the name of the site mean?

Back in the olden days, Apple’s logo featured a rainbow of six colors. Longtime Apple fans and employees used to say that if you cut them, they would “bleed six colors.”

Steve Jobs described his return to Apple in this way:

I had expected that all of the good people would have left. And I found these miraculous people… I tried to ask this as tactfully as I could, “Why are you still here?” And a lot of them had this little phrase, “Because I bleed in six colors.” Which was the old six-color Apple logo. And that was code for, “because I love what this place stands for.”

I’ve been using Apple’s products since I was in elementary school. And it has defined my professional life, too, since I’ve been writing about it for two decades. Apple will always be a part of me. I am one of those people who bleeds in six colors.

My career—not just in tech journalism, but also in my side projects focused on entertainment and pop culture—has shown that I believe you can love something while still considering it critically. I may not be Hypercritical, but I believe that we better appreciate the world by analyzing it.

I am here to be honest about Apple and all other technology, the good and the bad. After 20 years under the auspices of publishing companies, I am doing this on my own. I don’t know where this journey will take me, but I hope you’ll join me for it.

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Disclosure

Jason Snell doesn’t own any technology-industry stock, including Apple, nor has he ever. He may hold investments in technology companies as a part of his 401(k) retirement fund, but if he does, he actually has no idea what they are or what the mutual funds are doing with them. Jason has never been employed by any technology company in any form.

This site, and Jason’s various podcasts, do accept sponsorship. In most cases these sponsors are sold by a third party, and in all cases the sponsorships are mentioned and visible in this site’s archives and in the show notes for the podcasts in question. We never accept money or gifts in exchange for coverage. All sponsored content will be prominently disclosed. Our links to Amazon and iTunes products include affiliate tags; we only link to products we wish to mention editorially and are not compensated to mention products in other contexts.