Tag Archives: Steve Jobs

Even Steve Jobs Used Slide Decks

Peo­ple who know what they are talk­ing about don’t need PowerPoint.”

— Steve Jobs quoted in Wal­ter Isaacson’s mem­oir Steve Jobs.

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:

We had one rule that really both­ered him: We never allowed slides, which were his main pre­sen­ta­tion tool.

One year, about an hour before his appear­ance, I was informed that he was back­stage prepar­ing dozens of slides, even though I had reminded him a week ear­lier of the no-slides pol­icy. I asked two of his top aides to tell him he couldn’t use the slides, but they each said they couldn’t do it, that I had to. So, I went back­stage and told him the slides were out. Famously prickly, he could have stormed out, refused to go on. And he did try to argue with me.”

— Walt Moss­berg in The Steve Jobs I Knew

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.

Life vs Career

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

How to be an insensitive prick

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.]

Edward H. Land

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.

D’oh!

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.


  1. That’s what Steve said about how he felt after being fired from Apple.