Originally posted by WM Wolverine
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Additionally, the forum gets a "bounty" for various offers at Amazon.com. For instance, if you sign up for a 30 day free trial of Amazon Prime, the forum will earn $3. Same if you buy a Prime membership for someone else as a gift! Trying out or purchasing an Audible membership will earn the forum a few bucks. And creating an Amazon Business account will send a $15 commission our way.
If you have an Amazon Echo, you need a free trial of Amazon Music!! We will earn $3 and it's free to you!
Your personal information is completely private, I only get a list of items that were ordered/shipped via the link, no names or locations or anything. This does not cost you anything extra and it helps offset the operating costs of this forum, which include our hosting fees and the yearly registration and licensing fees.
Stay safe and well and thank you for your participation in the Forum and for your support!! --Deborah
Here is the link:
Click here to shop at Amazon.com
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Originally posted by WM Wolverine View PostSteve Jobs was great at polishing products and marketing/'branding' his products to be extremely desirable regardless of its performance next to another that performed every bit as good.
That being said, Edison is accused of stealing a lot of his ideas from Nikola Tesla. For example, it is said that Tesla invented AC power, which is the way that all power gets to your house. The DC power Edison used could only travel about a mile and was very dangerous to use.
Most times the history books fail to get the whole story. Those who promote themselves the best usually end up with all the credit.
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Steve Jobs personally held 313 patents, far and away more than any other CEO, he was a revolutionary marketing AND inventive genius.
Mr. Jobs appears as the principal inventor or as one inventor among several on 313 Apple patents. Most are design patents that cover the look and feel of a product, rather than utility patents, which may cover a technical innovation like a software algorithm or computer chip.
Still, the number of patents is far larger than those granted to most other technology company chiefs, including those whose technical breakthroughs and inventions were instrumental to their companies’ success. Only nine Microsoft patents carry the name of Bill Gates, a co-founder of the company who was its chief executive for more than two decades before stepping down in 2000. And little more than a dozen Google patents carry the names of the co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, according to a search of the United States Patent and Trademark Office Web site.
“That’s Steve,” said Mitchell Kapor, a veteran Silicon Valley technologist and investor who founded the Lotus Development Corporation in 1982. “He has an eye and a genius for design that cuts across disciplines. He was never formally schooled, but he has always had that sensibility.”Last edited by whodean; October 9, 2011, 07:12 PM.Atlanta, GA
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Hello, the guy in charge can force his name to be added to any patent his company creates, especially if he is an egomaniac.
Patents mean nothing. Hell even I have my name on a tech patent. They hand those things out like candy. Of course, my bosses name is on the patent too even though he had nothing to do with it. Like I said, the guy in charge can put his name on anything.
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A genius at getting people to grossly overpay for mediocre stuff that looked pretty, yes. Like I said, the guy was a master of marketing. Jobs was style over substance, and his stuff appealed to people who are always looking to prove to everyone else how much "better" they are. Same people who think having a crazy-expensive car makes you awesome. If you view your technology devices as status symbols, then yeah, you probably think Jobs is a genius. If you actually use them to get large amounts of work done (and aren't in graphical design) then you probably feel a bit differently.
There was a day when Apple was actually about having the best tech (back in the 80's), but those days ended a long long time ago. Jobs figured out that he didn't need to create the best tech, and actually, doing so was too costly and difficult. He figured out it was much easier to convince people that they were inferior if they didn't own HIS tech, regardless of how good/bad/mediocre it was.Last edited by Jamie H; October 9, 2011, 11:26 PM.
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You're also talking about a man who fathered a child and then spent the next two years in court denying paternity (including signing a sworn statement that he was unable to father children), letting his child spend the entire time on welfare despite his millions. All to avoid paying child support.
The man was a first-class asshole.
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I asked him "Do you have any proof or is it just blind irrationality?" and he posted about Jobs being a bad daddy.
I don't care if he was a "good person", my statement was that he was a genius...he was and the world is a much different, much better place today for him.
I'm not going to go any further into this, but Jamie has blind hated for all things Apple.Atlanta, GA
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Jobs might have been a complete asshole (I've heard that from more people than Jamie), but that's just the way life is. Sometimes, successful businessmen are just miserable human beings.
Originally posted by Jamie H View PostA genius at getting people to grossly overpay for mediocre stuff that looked pretty, yes. Like I said, the guy was a master of marketing. Jobs was style over substance, and his stuff appealed to people who are always looking to prove to everyone else how much "better" they are. Same people who think having a crazy-expensive car makes you awesome. If you view your technology devices as status symbols, then yeah, you probably think Jobs is a genius. If you actually use them to get large amounts of work done (and aren't in graphical design) then you probably feel a bit differently.
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It seems like Jobs' main contribution to humanity was taking several pre-existing technologies and combining them into one gadget that could do it all. I don't see how that's genius and revolutionary on the order of an Edison. And as noted, Edison was ruthless about putting down the competition. Gates has been labeled as ruthless but for whatever reason, Jobs escapes that tag.
He was a brilliant marketer and knew how to pitch an endless parade of slight upgrades and modifications and could convince you that you were a failure as a person if you got left behind. And a cultish following ate up every word he spoke.
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