Comment R.I.P. (Score 1) 104
Better that it should read "U.S. commerce R.I.P. No one will use our products again."
But that would mean one of those scrolly signs and a big-ass battery.
Better that it should read "U.S. commerce R.I.P. No one will use our products again."
But that would mean one of those scrolly signs and a big-ass battery.
Could it have been the state of capacitive touch-screens at the time, and the failure to recognize the leaps those devices made since the release of the iPad.
It's possible they tested bleeding edge tech, and at the time the displays really weren't up to snuff yet for a smaller form factor.
I'm just speculating. Maybe someone who knows will reply. Touch has gotten a lot better, very quickly in my opinion.
Jobs made one good decision. His genius was in co-opting the music distribution business, when the traditional publishers had refused to budge on their outdated business models. He even served them a little DRM sandwich, knowing full well that the approach was doomed. Apple's entire success is based upon the well-established success of popular music, built by others, and the hidebound, half-witted way traditional music publishing approached it. The iPod was the gateway device. It lead directly to the iPhone's success, and through a superior iTunes performance, helped as a wedge to get people to buy Apple's overpriced computers. Without the iPod, iLife doesn't happen. Without its strength amongst actual musicians, and the knowledge that came from dealing with them, Apple's turnaround doesn't happen.
As an analogy, he's Bill Gates and IBM. He provided a market solution for a huge market someone else built, when the traditional industries were too inflexible to read the obvious writing on the wall. Just like IBM, and the PC clone revolution. And he was the only one with the insight to pursue it.
Was it genius? You decide. I think what he did was to beat out Microsoft, which actually believed in DRM solutions for content. They too, were affected by the music industry's stupid assumptions about the distribution of content in a digital age, and the ability to control it. Jobs realized DRM was doomed from the get-go.
He also got lucky with the timing, as mp3 players went from 32MB affairs to 2GB+ devices. Without that leap, the iPod would have been doomed.
Jobs knew music aficionados and producers (the real creative talent, not publishers) and acted upon that knowledge. He got lucky with the timing. That's about all he did. In my mind, everything else is fluff. Especially the bits about his brilliance in design. They're not very big shoes to fill.
I really want to see the new Blues Brothers movie that comes from this, where they combine the Illinois Nazi scene with the police chase, all set in Indiana!
Better yet, I want to see Elwood get one of these on police surplus.
I had a green bar LPT printout of Super Star Trek in mf-ing FORTRAN that ran on a Prime minicomputer. I went to sleep studying that stack of paper.
Later on I got a C=64.
Modular grid based electronic sets, too. The kind where you could make your own radio by plugging in component cubes. I don't know what you'd actually call them so I made up a name.
This reminds me of the CAN SPAM act. Can our congress do nothing to control the smoke filled room policy making? I'm disgusted.
I think that statement would get through legal.
Bring on the "right way." Please.
- Your Personal Injury Attorney
Osmos? That was a fascinating game based on fluid dynamics and orbits.
Windows XP: Zombie Edition lives! IT'S ALIVE!
Either that or it's only "mostly dead" and MS is giving it a miracle pill.
This is exactly the way "Force Feedback" products got thrown to the wolves. I hope it isn't a similar ending for VR headsets. This stuff has been tried for over a decade.
Without life, Biology itself would be impossible.