Originally posted by whodean
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The guy brought you cool gadgets and phones with shiny buttons.
Jobs was integral with IT history, he is personally responsible for revolutionizing GUIs, his contribution led to huge productivity improvements in many industries. He was indeed a genius.Atlanta, GA
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Apparently whodean wants me to be a patent attorney.
All I said was that tech patents are a dime a dozen (I even have one that I think is pretty stupid) and that whoever the boss is ALWAYS tacks his name onto the patent so that he gets credit. It's not very hard to see that Jobs could easily have tacked his name onto hundreds of patents that were created by employees in his company, whether they were really his idea or not.
The main thrust of what I'm saying is, listing the number of patents a person has tells you exactly zero about them or their level of innovation, because if you are in charge, you can easily manipulate things so that your name is on whichever patents your company gets. What are the employees going to do, complain?
As for the personal stuff, Jobs is hardly the only asshole to be successful at business. I just find it amusing to see everyone lionizing a guy that pretty much everyone who was involved in his life said was at best a childish jerk and at worst a complete and utter dick.
I laugh when people talk about how much he "changed the world". As if computers, smart phones, and MP3 players, and basically the entire internet wouldn't exist without Apple. Apple is a brand, and if they weren't around, some other brand would step up and fill the "luxury tech" niche. Would they be as good as Apple? Probably not, but people's lives would hardly be altered in any perceivable way. In fact, during a good chunk of the tech revolution, Apple was a bit player, and before they figured out how to sell overpriced MP3 players as the Walkman of the 90's they were on the edge of bankruptcy.
Celebrate the man as a great marketer and businessman if you want. But all of these odes to how he changed the world and is some awesome person just crack me up.Last edited by Jamie H; October 10, 2011, 10:56 AM.
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Jobs was an innovator and visionary. He was a showman and an arrogant ass as well, but that shouldn't take away from his genius.
I know I am very happy for the products he brought to us. And after being a Mac-hater and Windows-apologist for years, switching from Windows to Mac was the best decision I ever made.
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Originally posted by Jamie H View PostAll I said was that tech patents are a dime a dozen (I even have one that I think is pretty stupid) and that whoever the boss is ALWAYS tacks his name onto the patent so that he gets credit.
Jobs has 317 to his name (among Apple's thousands), wonder what Ballmer, Gates, or Google’s co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin have?
In fact, during a good chunk of the tech revolution, Apple was a bit playerNEW YORK — Steve Jobs had no formal schooling in engineering, yet he’s listed as the inventor or co-inventor on more than 300 U.S. patents. These are some of the significant products th…
Sour grapes dude.Last edited by whodean; October 10, 2011, 12:34 PM.Atlanta, GA
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They're really reaching with the NeXT and the iMac. In between Windows 95 and the first iPod, Apple was wholly irrelevant. They benefitted tremendously from the fact that the mp3 player market was populated by terrible terrible manufacturers who couldn't get basic features right.
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Originally posted by whodean View PostHmm, if Jamie knows what the hell he's posting about then I wonder why CEOs at Apple's competitors don't have patents?
Jobs has 317 to his name (among Apple's thousands), wonder what Ballmer, Gates, or Google?s co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin have?
NEW YORK — Steve Jobs had no formal schooling in engineering, yet he’s listed as the inventor or co-inventor on more than 300 U.S. patents. These are some of the significant products th…
Sour grapes dude.
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Originally posted by Hannibal View PostThey're really reaching with the NeXT and the iMac. In between Windows 95 and the first iPod, Apple was wholly irrelevant.
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I've got to give Apple a ton of credit for the iPod and the iPhone. I know that the iPad is popular, but I'm not sold on it yet. But both the iPod and the iPhone were huge steps forward in their field. Especially the iPod. I resisted buying an iPod for about five years and I tried at least five or six other brands of mp3 player. They all sucked horribly. Every last one of 'em. I still use iPod's exclusively although their durability is basically shite. I go through about one per year and the last few have been essentially free since I get the 3-year extended warranty every time.
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Eh. I'll have to take your word for it, but...who cares? The devil's so much in the details that implementation means everything. It's one thing if you get people to buy a shitty product by marketing the hell out of it (e.g. the Nintendo Wii, Microsoft's gaming consoles, etc), but there's something to be said for making it better by making it extremely easy and/or fun to use.Last edited by Hannibal; October 10, 2011, 01:38 PM.
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