“I don’t think of my life as a career. I do stuff. I respond to stuff. That’s not a career – it’s a life!”
– Steve Jobs
via Quote Vadis
“I don’t think of my life as a career. I do stuff. I respond to stuff. That’s not a career – it’s a life!”
– Steve Jobs
via Quote Vadis
Steve Jobs, the pioneer of the computer as a jail made cool, designed to sever fools from their freedom, has died.
– Richard Stallman writes in his blog.
█████ █ █ ███ █ ██ █████ █ █ █ ██ █ ██ ██ █████ █ ████ [Redacted because my response wasn’t the dignified thing to say.]
In the ‘70s:
“Market research is what you do when your product isn’t any good.”
“Every significant invention must be startling, unexpected, and must come into a world that is not prepared for it. If the world were prepared for it, it would not be much of an invention.”
– Edward H. Land, co-founder of Polaroid
Land studied at Harvard but dropped out later on. He hired artists and asked them to learn science before working for him. No wonder that he was the role model for someone who changed everything, again and again:
“The man is a national treasure. I don’t understand why people like that can’t be held up as models: This is the most incredible thing to be — not an astronaut, not a football player — but this.”
– Steve Jobs
via New York Times.
In the 18th episode of season 1 in How I Met Your Mother, Ted Mosby teaches his kids (and us) that nothing good ever happens after 2AM. There are greater chances of screwing up. I should’ve listened. Now I’ve paid the price.
Without taking any backups – I can’t find any of my past backups either! – of my blog, I tried out some radical experimentation within WordPress. The end result: I lost everything I had written and stored in here forever. Gone without any hope of replacing them.
I shouldn’t be too concerned though. The writing was shit. Things begin anew now. I feel the lightness of being a beginner again1. And that can only mean good things.
Even Steve Jobs Used Slide Decks
This quote has become fairly popular after it was featured in a post by PresentationZen. If you think there is reason enough to ban slide decks altogether, I’d say no.
I too, like most white-collared workers, have been subjected to one too many sleep-inducing presentations with wordy slide decks that never seemed to end. But are we right in blaming PowerPoint? Isn’t it just a tool that is harmful when it falls into the wrong hands? Shouldn’t we be blaming poor presenters instead?
The hypocrisy of Steve’s statement is evident when you realize that he loved using slides:
Yes, the very same person who appears to be blaming slide decks was irritated when he was not allowed to use them.
Of course, there is a difference between Steve’s slide deck and the common office meeting slide deck. Steve’s were always beautiful and often narrated a story. A successful presentation is nothing but a story well told. And slides can help you in the storytelling process if you use it right.
By blaming “PowerPoint”, Steve is just poking fun at a product developed by Apple’s competitor, Microsoft. He could just as well have mentioned Keynote (or simply ‘slides’) but he didn’t. He phrased his words in a way that people would identify with and, at the same time, show Apple’s competitors in a poor light.
That was the genius of Steve Jobs. And everyone fell for it.
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Posted in Commentary
Tagged Apple, Steve Jobs