ZirconBlue
Sole Survivor of L-Town
......and in the pacific rim Jobs is the stuff of legend.
Babbage? I thought he invented the Brussels sprout, no?
No, you're thinking of Cabbage.
......and in the pacific rim Jobs is the stuff of legend.
Babbage? I thought he invented the Brussels sprout, no?
I can only speak for myself but I'm not arguing that his contributions were 'so little' just that he seems to be getting all the credit when most people like Apple stuff for the design and it was Johnathan Ive that designed all their flagship products.
What Jobs did was take technology that was already out there, and made it intuitive, easy to use, and popular. Personal computers, GUIs, mp3 players, tablets, music and video distribution, tech stores, computer animation, smart phones... Jobs took quirky technology that only geeks loved and made it into wildly successful, desired products. Look how much other companies have followed Apples lead in each of these areas.
In the legend of Xerox PARC, Jobs stole the personal computer from Xerox. But the striking thing about Jobs’s instructions to Hovey is that he didn’t want to reproduce what he saw at PARC. “You know, there were disputes around the number of buttons—three buttons, two buttons, one-button mouse,” Hovey went on. “The mouse at Xerox had three buttons. But we came around to the fact that learning to mouse is a feat in and of itself, and to make it as simple as possible, with just one button, was pretty important.”
So was what Jobs took from Xerox the idea of the mouse? Not quite, because Xerox never owned the idea of the mouse. The PARC researchers got it from the computer scientist Douglas Engelbart, at Stanford Research Institute, fifteen minutes away on the other side of the university campus. Engelbart dreamed up the idea of moving the cursor around the screen with a stand-alone mechanical “animal” back in the mid- nineteen-sixties. His mouse was a bulky, rectangular affair, with what looked like steel roller-skate wheels. If you lined up Engelbart’s mouse, Xerox’s mouse, and Apple’s mouse, you would not see the serial reproduction of an object. You would see the evolution of a concept.
The same is true of the graphical user interface that so captured Jobs’s imagination. Xerox PARC’s innovation had been to replace the traditional computer command line with onscreen icons. But when you clicked on an icon you got a pop-up menu: this was the intermediary between the user’s intention and the computer’s response. Jobs’s software team took the graphical interface a giant step further. It emphasized “direct manipulation.” If you wanted to make a window bigger, you just pulled on its corner and made it bigger; if you wanted to move a window across the screen, you just grabbed it and moved it. The Apple designers also invented the menu bar, the pull-down menu, and the trash can—all features that radically simplified the original Xerox PARC idea.
The difference between direct and indirect manipulation—between three buttons and one button, three hundred dollars and fifteen dollars, and a roller ball supported by ball bearings and a free-rolling ball—is not trivial. It is the difference between something intended for experts, which is what Xerox PARC had in mind, and something that’s appropriate for a mass audience, which is what Apple had in mind. PARC was building a personal computer. Apple wanted to build a popular computer.
Babbage?
That kind of leadership can be a good (maybe for consumers) or bad (perhaps for employees) thing, but the reality of it is that Xerox' and Engelbart's and Raskin's ideas would have been a long time coming if not for Apple and Jobs.
Never mind the cult of personality - I'm into the cult of easy, the cult of plug-n-play. Apple products pretty much taught me how to use them. My first computer was a Mac because it was compatible with everything at work. Everything worked great.
In a way it's a handicap because now nothing on a PC seems intuitive to me, and PCs are more common in my new field and in the world at large.
PCs make me feel dumb. Macs made me feel smart. In a way that feeling is the product. And my reverence doesn't have anything to do with Jobs, I just like feeling smart.
Seven or eight years ago, the news broke that Steve Jobs had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, but considering it a private matter, he delayed in informing Apple’s board, and Apple’s board delayed in informing the shareholders. So what. The only delay that really mattered was that Steve, it turned out, had been treating his pancreatic cancer with a special diet [UPDATE] prescribed by the alternative medicine promoter Dr. Dean Ornish.
Awhat - "all their flagship products" - Ive wasn't around for the Apple in the garage, the Apple II, or the original Mac in '84. And while he's an excellent industrial designer, he can't and hasn't been doing it all. (Hint - there's industrial design and hardware engineering and software engineering to start).
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So, is it possible, even likely, that Jobs compromised his chances of survival? Yes. Is it definite that he did? No, it's not, at least it's not anywhere as definite as Dunning makes it sound. In fact, based on statistics alone, it's unlikely that a mere nine months took Jobs "from the high end to the low end of the survival rate," as Dunning puts it. That's just not how insulinomas usually behave from a biological standpoint. They're too indolent, and that's not even taking into account issues of lead time bias and other confounding factors that would make comparisons of operating early versus operating later not as straightforward as one might think.
Ethan Thane Athen said:I'd say it's more like crediting George Martin for the songs of the Beatles. And frankly George Martin deserves a reasonable chunk of that credit.
Funnily enough, that's the other analogy that was in my mind.
Except that the pancreatic cancer Jobs had was a rare form which has a much higher survival rate, given real treatment.51st percentile of survival in after diagnosis of pancreas cancer is 6 MONTHS. 9 years is phenomenal. If anything, it says the alternative treatments helped.