Newtons Bit
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2007
- Messages
- 10,049
Oh. I thought this was a statement about the world economy.
I'm sad to hear about Steve though...
I'm sad to hear about Steve though...
The first truly "personal" computer.
It killed laptops.
Are you trying to say that the iPad was the first handheld device of its kind? Or just that you don't think the ones before it were any good.
As much as I despise the cult of Apple today, there was a time when Mac users were widely ridiculed. If it weren't for Steve Jobs and the wonderful machines he created I'm not sure I would have developed more than a cursory interest in computing and software engineering. It may be small in the scheme of things but he impacted at least one person's life in a significant way.

He was one of the big ones in the PC field, and was great at getting talent and marketing. His work ethic and reality distortion field are legendary. It's sad to see his actual accomplishments pissed on by haters and fanboy hyperbole alike. And traditionally, I'm one of his haters, but credit where credit is due.
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He surely didn't revolutionize the way I "see the world", he just made my work easier and faster.
The biggest revolutions are the one you don't realize are happening until long after they are over.
Then why do people state this as fact today?
I'll grant him that.
For that alone, well done.
You can hate Apple fanboys for fawning all over Steve Jobs and his every word.
You can hate The Cult of Apple and everything Apple stands for.
You can hate on Steve Jobs all you want to.
What you can't do is deny the impact that Jobs has had on everything from the way your computers work (PC or Mac), the way you consume media, the design of your personal electronics, the movies you and your kids watch together, etc. Not to mention the fact that he led Apple from the brink of collapse to one of the largest companies in the world. Unless you are Amish or a Luddite, you have been impacted by Steve Jobs' work.
He was (one of, anyway) our generation's Edison, IMO. His influence will be felt for sometime to come whether you like it or not.
RIP Steve Jobs.
If nothing else, he was a masterful marketer.
Off the top of my head, after a bunch of beers:
- Leonardo DaVinci
- Ben Franklin
- Alexander Graham Bell
- Thomas Edison
- The Wright Brothers
- Henry Ford
- David Sarnoff
- Thomas Watson
- Steve Jobs
He belongs on the list. Period.
No.
Hype, pretentiousness, and Apple are roughly synonyms.
I've been around since well before the PC or Apple II or whatever the tech du jour is, was a commonplace.
I've seen this whole game played out from move 1. Hell, move 0.
Mind you, "get them while they are young" was part of his Schtick, as he tried to infiltrate schools with Apple products. Were you alive and aware in those days? I was.
The term "wanker" is what Brits call folks imbued with such qualities as Apple caters to.
In a word or two, Apple fanbois, and the above, match to near perfection.
Still a gadget.
Darwin revolutionized the way we see the world.
I suspect that the BBC obit will undergo a bit of revision once they get around to doing some fact checking.
The year between diagnosis and surgery was mostly spent consulting with medical experts to determine the best treatment plan. The specific type of cancer he had was a rare form that is not as aggressive as most pancreatic cancers. This allowed him the time to plan more carefully. Alternative therapies were never a serious consideration. Diet and such were investigated to improve survivability of intervention, whether surgical or chemical.
Not that I'm misty-eyed or anything, but he shall be missed.
No more "One more thing…"