Uncovering the Ego of Steve Jobs: The Truth Behind Apple's Success | Wired

  • Thread starter Thread starter Dagenais
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Jobs
AI Thread Summary
Steve Jobs, a pivotal figure in Apple's rise, had a complex relationship with the Macintosh, initially disliking the concept before later taking control of the project. While he is often credited with Apple's innovations, there are claims that he did not invent many of the ideas attributed to him. The discussion contrasts Jobs with Bill Gates, suggesting both have engaged in questionable business practices, yet Gates is perceived as more adept at maintaining a positive public image. Jobs is characterized as bitter, particularly regarding Gates' success with Microsoft, which Jobs has publicly criticized. Notably, during a keynote at Macworld, Jobs made disparaging remarks about Microsoft after they presented their Office software, highlighting his contentious attitude toward competitors.
Dagenais
Messages
289
Reaction score
4
Steve Jobs, credited for the upbringing of Apple and almost all its inventions, may be twisted.

He didn't like the idea of the Macintosh, and in fact, hated it. He drove brilliant designers away, and when he found out that the Macintosh was a great idea...he took over the project.

He didn't invent it, he only took credit for it. Amazing how some Mac heads will say that Bill Gates takes too much credit:

http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,61795,00.html


A must read.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Computer science news on Phys.org
Well, there is a saying out there something to the effect of "There is no such thing as an honest millionaire."

Both Gates and Jobs have done there equal share of dirty business. Regardless if it were not for the two of them I have no doubt in my mind we'd probably just now be getting super nintendo's.

Now, I don't know how involved Gates is with the software writing, it seems he's never done much in that department. But if not for his drive way back when, along with Job, and both of their cronies, we'd probably not be having this discussion right now.
 
I hear Bill Gates is a pretty good Boss.

I hear the opposite about Steve Jobs.

As far as media goes, Gates looks like the nicer person. Jobs continues to launch campaigns and attacks on his company and products (now he targets Sonicblue), but Gates never retaliates.
 
Steve Jobs has got to be the world's bitterest billionaire. He really resents that Gates "beat" him with with an inferior product by using marketing techniques. Maybe he's right; maybe he's wrong, but I would be happy to be a billionaire who was second best at something...anything.

Njorl
 
Bill Gates is just more clever. He hides his bitterness. He sees his enemies' bitterness and uses it against them. In the current market, it pays to make your company look sparkling clean. It doesn't matter what the company does, only what the public sees.
 
Yeah, Jobs is bitter.

Did anyone see the keynote speech @ macworld?

After Microsoft employees went up to present to Apple their new Office - yes, contradicts itself...Microsoft haters using Microsoft.

Anyways, after the presentation, Jobs made some wisecracks about Microsoft just as the Microsoft employees were leaving.

Oh yeah...that's smart. They present at your meeting, offer a extremely popular program on both platforms, and you mock them.

...And he's a billionaire?

:wink:
 
Thread 'Urgent: Physically repair - or bypass - power button on Asus laptop'
Asus Vivobook S14 flip. The power button is wrecked. Unable to turn it on AT ALL. We can get into how and why it got wrecked later, but suffice to say a kitchen knife was involved: These buttons do want to NOT come off, not like other lappies, where they can snap in and out. And they sure don't go back on. So, in the absence of a longer-term solution that might involve a replacement, is there any way I can activate the power button, like with a paperclip or wire or something? It looks...
I came across a video regarding the use of AI/ML to work through complex datasets to determine complicated protein structures. It is a promising and beneficial use of AI/ML. AlphaFold - The Most Useful Thing AI Has Ever Done https://www.ebi.ac.uk/training/online/courses/alphafold/an-introductory-guide-to-its-strengths-and-limitations/what-is-alphafold/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlphaFold https://deepmind.google/about/ Edit/update: The AlphaFold article in Nature John Jumper...

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
3K
Replies
7
Views
3K
Replies
7
Views
4K
Replies
8
Views
5K
Replies
7
Views
3K
Replies
9
Views
4K
Back
Top