Steve Jobs And Jeff Bezos Meet The Segway
deadwood writes "Ever wanted to know what Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos really thought about the Segway the first time he saw it? At the Harvard Business School site, there's an excerpt from the new book 'Code Name Ginger', giving a recounting of the Apple and Amazon bosses' first impressions of the device. Steve Jobs' gut reaction, quoted in the article: 'I think it sucks!'"
Was that when they saw the demo model, or when they saw the retail pricetag for the thing that won't go faster than a brisk walk.
Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
Dean Kamen took a big chance inviting Jeff Bezos, he's lucky Bezos didn't run out and try to patent the idea.
Mike
Let's hope they rode it better than you-know-who.
The coolest voice ever.
"People will build cities around it...to say how much it sucks!"
(I agree with Jobs, btw.)
sulli
RTFJ.
I won't argue the above remark. Without a doubt it is the truth.
<rant>
But man can he act like an arrogant prick!
I love the products his company makes, and I respect his opinions, but the man needs some serious lessons in humility and respect for others. Servant leadership, lead by serving and showing others, not just by blasting them for being wrong.
</rant>
Okay then.
Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).
this week i reach 1,000 miles on the segway ht. i really like mine.
the segway ht fits my travel needs pretty well, i don't think it's for everyone-- but it's worked out okay for me. i run, walk, ride a bike, take cars but most of my travel is via a segway...i wrote it up, here's the travel log so far:
http://www.bookofseg.com/100days/
it didn't replace walking, i walk, cycle and jog. the segway replaced my car. i don't think it can do that for everyone, but it did for me.
steve jobs said "i think [the design] sucks. its shape is not innovative, it's not elegant and it doesnâ(TM)t feel anthropomorphic". it's very functional and the desgin (in my opinion) is good for version 1 of a product, i'm looking forward to the new models which are smaller, lighter with greater range.
cheers,
pt
They think something about an object, great for them. What's next? Uproar in the slashdot community because Steve Jobs farted? This is supposed to be a new site (or at least that's what I keep telling myself), not some sort of weird online tabloid for the geek culture.
Hate me!
I saw a picture of Bush kind of in midair above one of them lying on the ground...
A close friend of Jobs overheard him say:
"This is just like a Windows PC. It moves rather slowly, and at any moment you might get dumped off"
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
Having had a number of investor meetings in my time, the PITA investor is rarely achieves anything useful other than making you feel like shit, and giving themselves an ego boost.
There is no excuse for bad manners in any setting, and in that context I would have probably told Jobs as much.
you probably saw this
http://www.gothamist.com/archive/002674.php
Disco Stu was talkin' to you.
Because it looks like they're liquidating their software company. Hehehehehe
Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
Yeah, I would imagine after the slap on the wrist M$ got, Steve Jobs thinks he sucks too.
Who are you? The new #2 Who is #1? You are #617565. I am not a number, I am a free man! Muhahaha.
'It think it sucks!'
I'm impressed. I didn't realize the thing was both sentient, and self-loathing.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/030 613/168/4ds7k.html 0 612/170/4dnhg.html
:)
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/03
I hear those things are a bitch to ride.
saying "Yeah it sucks man!!!"
/. Personnaly, I am excited, but as an AC will undoubtedly tell me soon, who cares what I think.
Maybe its not the greatest thing ever (I don't know, never seen one in person), but for a brand new product that is not a ripoff I think its doing pretty well. How great was MacOs 1.0 compared to OSX? Not very good at all, but its a starting point, the initial idea is out there, and basically it works. Now its time to expand and make it better.
Everyone is always ranting on here about how nothing is innovative anymore, and that all of these laws stifle innovation, and when something that is actually innovative finally comes out, here come the naysayers. I guess I should expect this from
Great Linux Site
Steve Jobs, not Steve Case.
The Tools Of Ignorance wanna be a tool?
Errr, Steve Jobs is the head of Apple...
Not the idea itself.
98% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
/. where you got these numbers.
Please tell
-Amalcon
The Roomba sucks, Steve--The Segway blows...
"My God...It's full of ads!" -Fry, about the Internet, Futurama
Mr. Jobs doesn't like it because it's not "iSegway". It needs to have nice shapely plastic bumpers that are see-through, so you can see the nice engine doing it's thing. And the gyros need to light up when they work. When the iSegway stops it also needs to play a very warm "DING" tune, something that's fuzzy and nice like "You've Got Mail", but maybe more like "You've just stopped".
It's all about looks, people.
Never noticed this happening before.. There is a typo on the article synapsis on the front page, but not on the article page itself (ie if you click Read More).
:-\
From the front page:
Steve Jobs' gut reaction, quoted in the article: 'It think it sucks!'"
From the article page:
Steve Jobs' gut reaction, quoted in the article: 'I think it sucks!'"
Is someone really manually retyping these twice?
I hope, if so, that Slashdot has at least employed a Cadre of Elite Geese to do this... Oh yea it says right here that they have.
THE MAGIC WORDS ARE SQUEAMISH OSSIFRAGE
After a while, Steve gets up and starts to look around. He looks at the framed dollar bill on the wall and notes that the bar opened in 1987 (long after his Macintosh computer came out.
He goes over to the windows, and verifies that they can be opened and closed, and also minimized (with the use of shades). Next, he looks behind a table and finds a mouse. It is only after he finds the trashcan behind the bar that he decides to sue the bar owner for infringment of his GUI patents.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
I also think it sucks, it's overpriced, of questionable use and using one on a pavement/sidewalk is just asking for accidents.
Technically superb, but as a long term product I'm not so sure. It just brings laziness to an all time high.
Steve Jobs is right. It looks like a medical device more than a consumer product. Who wants to drive a Popemobile when they can drive a Ferrari?
Jeff Bezos tries to patent a method of riding the segway where the rider does not fall off.
There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
:wq
IT SUCKS. Someone needs to shoot the person who made those pieces of crap. First off, they don't have anything to make them visible in the evening hours (reflectors/lights). Combine that with being totally quiet and you have an accident waiting to happen. I almost got run over by one of them on the way to the bar the other day. I went to step out from the sidewalk on to the street and one comes zooming out in front of me. It's large footprint made every car that had to pass it move into the oncoming lane of traffic (totally in the oncoming lane if the segway had to pass a parked car). I understand that it has some cool technology, but they are an annoyance to the drivers and pedestrians that have to deal with them.
when all is said and done, weren't the problems actually legitimate stumbling blocks for Ginger?
people haven't bought them, they were overpriced, and they don't look that impressive.
it's a $X,000 scooter, at least that's what it looks like.
a Viper is just another really big engine, but put it in the right body....
The trailers of mass destruction are not bio weapons producers. They were for production of hydrogen for balloons.
Really, you should get "well-informed" from something else than Fox Propaganda.
Conclusive proof that sometimes even a blind squirrel gets a nut.
Oh, another thing . . . Ginger, IT, Segway? Who named this thing, anyway? J.R.R. Tolkien? Is Ginger the Westron and Segway the Sindarin?
-Peter
He just thinks it sucks because it isn't in a gel-color. I've seen some of these things before, and they're pretty cool. You can easily take them right into a building and have no control problems after a bit of practice (though whether the building allows this is separate entirely). They can actually go pretty fast if you put it full tilt. Not worth the price tag by any means, but I certainly wouldn't say it "sucks."
-Amalcon
Same about the design. Now I know why Apple's computers are so good; Jobs knows what will sell, and doesn't market (Ok, forget the cube) what won't. Seems he's a smart business guy, whereas Dean is...an engineer.
Makes sense why the Segway has, well, failed to put it bluntly.
And for everyone thinking Jobs says the Segway sucks, you need to RTFA. He was talking about the design; he said the segway itself was "incredibly innovative".
The general public could buy it just this spring. That's after two years of hype beyond hype.
In all that time it appears the product hasn't changed at all. Didn't they learn anything from their private trials in that time? It would appear that all of the original criticisms leveled against it are still valid.
Seems like another potentially brilliant idea torpedoed by corporate culture.
obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
Well, Al Gore is on the Apple baord of directors, and IIRC, Steve Jobs contributed to his 2000 election.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
Jobs said the design sucked. Who knows what it looked like back then? He's talking about the shape, the way it looks. I'd say the Segway looks pretty cool right now. Chances are that what Kamen put together out of cardboard boxes was a crude prototype. They probably did get a design firm involved to finalize the shape and appearance of the device. Jobs is right, a good industrial design firm can produce devices that look like works of art.
"Really, you should get "well-informed" from something else than Fox Propaganda."
Fox News is the most factual, being centrist and concerned with accuracy. It is but one of many sources of information (along with BBC, NPR, AlJazeera, CNN, Deutsche-Welle), but it is one of the most accurate.
"They were for production of hydrogen for balloons."
Yes, I know. The Saddam Zeppelin Program.
Steve Jobs is referring to the appearance of the Segway. The article summary misquotes this quite deceptively.
What has *science* done?!? -- Dr. Weird (ATHF)
At least GWB wouldn't be in violation of it then...
I used to have a sig, but I set it free and it never came back.
how much more can i qualify my post? i don't work with or for segway / amazon in any way at all ever, it's on my site all over the place.
Before I get modded flamebait, please realize I am serious here.
This whole story (and everything that preceeded it) smells to high heaven of: hype
The segway is a product for consumers to buy -- if they want it bad enough to pay that price for it. That's it. That's the story.
The rest of everything else, with respect to this "story" is fluff. I don't give a crap what Jobs thinks of it. I don't care what Bezos has to say about the issue. And I certainly don't give a fuck what Dean (the creator) has to say about the matter.
Why is this thing being shoved down our throats so hard? Yea, we saw it. It's a remarkable piece of engineering -- but I don't think I'll redesign my driveway around it quite yet.
...a skinny Marvin, the depressed andriod?
Do not read this sig.
At least you didn't mistake him for Ballmer.
I found the meaning of life the other day, but I had write-only access.
-----
Jobs: Will it come with Firewire?
Dean: Um... Firewire? Why would it--?
Jobs: Will it come with Firewire? Will it?
Dean: I don't understand what you're--
Jobs: You really ought to license Firewire from us and slap a logo on this thing and that's all there is to it.
Dean: But what on earth would people want--?
Jobs: Why would they not want the the most reliable, insanely fast connectivity solution built in to this revolutionary device? How will they sync their Palms and iPods to this? Have you thought about that?
Dean: That's ridiculous. I don't--
Jobs: Okay. Nevermind. This sucks.
------
--Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
Partly, explained Tim, because giving our code to someone else would be a great risk. Not a good reason, in Jobs's view, because the code could easily be reverse-engineered. No it couldn't, said Tim. Could, said Jobs.
That was pretty funny to me. Is this a guy who's been bitten by the reverse-engineering phenomenon before, do you think?
And people wonder why Apple gets testy about Aqua themes... I'd be testy to, if I was the victim of one of the biggest UI ripoffs in history. (I'm not sayin' he's right.. I'm just sayin'.)
If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
Its interesting to get unfiltered Steveness like this. For those decrying his rudeness... where have you been? He has been like this from the beginning.
The important thing is he was giving them the unvarnished truth. His insightfulness was genuine- he saw directly to the heart of the issues.
The insiders were obviously much too close to things, too sure of themselves. They had insulated themselves for too long- they would have benefitted much more if they had brought outsiders like Jobs and Bezos' much earlier in the process.
His rejection of the pleasantries and Powerpoint crap was the essential "Don't waste my time" of someone who actually values their time. He has two companies to run- he doesn't need to waste time watching somneone click through a stupid time-wasting presentation.
I am not like him at all- much too polite in real life. But he sure as hell makes sure things happen and he makes real products that people will pay premium dollars for. They should have paid even closer attention to what he said than they did.
Thanks Steve! Now I have a whole new goal for when I present my next project pitch to the captains and commanders I work with!
"Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
http://www.woz.org/seg/ - Steve Wozniak, the *brains* behind Apple, seems a lot more Segway enamoured.
Seriously, this guy pops up everytime there's a segway article.
How much do they pay you? Please tell me they pay you.
-- taking over the world, we are.
i'm surprised by jobs' comments but i shouldn't be. his hardlined stance and staunch trenching of ideas is exactlly why he was fired in the 80s but his reaction toward the segway screams what he's doing at apple. after reading the article, doesn't it suggest that he is more of a force at Apple in pushing the UI, business strategy, product/manufacturing strategy than anyone else? Its clear that Jobs respects designers ("They'll give you stuff that will make you shit in your pants...") and it seems like Jobs hands ideas off to designers to give him something he doesn't know he wants (iMac, iPod UI, translucent plastics).
considering everything that went wrong with the Segway launch (how many people have ACTUALLY seen a ginger in person?) its possible to say that Jobs was partially right. the article talks about the ginger but it screams the way Jobs thinks and approaches a problem. the launch of ginger is interesting but give me a book about Jobs rants from the past 8 years and I'll shell out for that. Not to mention the Pixar vs Disney negotiations... (Disney is going to get ownned)
just ranting...
doesn't it make you wonder about WWDC being Apple's internal code for 'We Will Delight Crowds'?
It was that article from yesterday about AOL execs and their unstable henchmen that put Case on the brain, methinks.
Ballmer can only be mistaken for a gorilla.
"Only a moron could fall off a segway."
--jeff++
ipv6 is my vpn
That BETTER get a +5 Funny.
Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
If it sucked, shouldn't the code name have been Monica instead of Ginger?
Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)
http://www.lawrenceperson.com/
His daughter pushed him.
Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
Apparently a lot of unemployed java programmers have moderator access here. Sorry to hear that guys. No offense.
Perhaps you are right. I'd be much more interested in what he said about the original Imac and the many iterations IT had before being produced rather than this non-starter of a promotional news story.
i don't get paid anything, i don't work with or for segway in any way (read my site) i'm just someone who bought a segway and writes about my experiences with it.
it does seem i'm the only person who has a segway that reads slashot and is willing to post (and get all sorts of nasty comments and insults). have at it.
Tim Adams gets up to talk:"Okay, I want to thank everybody for the presentation on 'Ginger'."
Steve Jobs:"Tim, what's the first rule of the 'Ginger' club"
Tim Adams (confused):"What?"
Steve Jobs:"We don't talk about 'Ginger'." (punch)
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
I thought it was Jobs (hint, hint PARC) who built his business on other people's innovations.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
More specifically, with sources:
0 0. html
http://www.observer.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4691603,
The 'mobile germ warfare labs' were, in fact, hydrogen producers for artillery balloons. Sold to Iraq by the UK. Oops.
What's the betting this gets zero play time in the US media?
Meet the Megway
It only makes sense if you read the article.
One out of two RICH geeks didn't like it, so our hatred toward segway is, what, justified?
Jobs seems to like the idea of people shitting in their pants. He mentions this twice in the article. I wish he did this on his keynotes.
"10.3 is so awesome that the shit in your pants will be a cushion for the total experience you will have with piles"
or he can flat out say
"yea IE for OS X sucks, thats why we made safari, now shit in your pants"
ok i suck
My mind is revolting against itself! Who or what am I supposed to like?
P.S. Please, someone, tell me what I can do on a Segway that I cannot do on a bicycle.
We all stand on the shoulders of giants. Anyone who owns a business not built on other people's innovations isn't likely to be selling anything of worth...
"Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies."
somehow your comment with the recent pictures of GW Bush riding a segway ('riding' ... huhuhuhuhuh) made me laugh out loud...
>>> "Heh. Yeah, and Apple has what percent of market share?"
You can't visit a popular technology-oriented discussion board these days without hearing the oft-misconceived phrase, "Apple has 5% of the market and Windows has 95%.
There are two things wrong with this statement, the first being that if Apple has five, Windows must have 95. We as users of alternative operating systems know this not to be the case. Of course, a considerable number of desktop PCs do not bear the Windows logo.
The second problem is the implication that "market-share" can be used interchangeably with "installed-base." When most people use the word "market-share", what they really mean is "installed-base."
For example, while Apple's Macintosh market-share may be 3 percent, its installed-base is approximately 10 to 12 percent of the computing industry, a figure that's roughly similar to that of Linux based PCs.
When these figures are coupled with the remaining alternative operating systems on the market, Windows installed-base works out to be somewhere in the way of 80 percent -- a far cry from the 95 figure that is often touted.
So how does market-share play into the picture you ask?
Market-share is determined by quarterly or annual sales figures. The problem with market-share statistics is that it implies that all computers retain the same level of usability over time. It assumes that once a computer is sold, it will retain its productivity status for as long as its parts continue to function.
Unfortunately, usability statistics and replacement purchasing habits of consumers vary significantly between platforms thus causing the market-share figure to look skewed.
Linux users (for example) are known to keep aging computer hardware useful long after it was left for dead by its former Windows using owner. The open source community consistently manages to squeeze every last ounce of processing power from even the most aged hardware available.
Similarly, Mac users are known to keep their computers as primary productivity tools until the gears fall off. This is really a testament to the quality that Apple incorporated into its hardware and software over the years.
Unfortunately, the incorporation of quality into these platform's coding efforts will only fuel the notion that they are far less popular as what they are as long as market-share is the most commonly used gauge to determine platform popularity.
Because the Linux operating system's distribution model isn't tied directly to sales, it will never get a truly accurate gauge as long as market-share is touted over installed-base.
Apple on the other hand, may be in a better situation for the foreseeable future.
As we all know, the troubled economy has caused desktop PC purchases to fall to an all time low. This fact may actually work to Apple's advantage.
Everything Apple has been working toward pivots on the release of OS X running on next generation hardware.
Apple is scheduled to release next generation professional hardware in the coming weeks. The release of this hardware, when coupled with Apple's Panther operating system starts the completion of Steve Jobs' rebuilding of Apple.
It's this combination, which the computer using populace has been waiting for, many of which have said that they've been holding back their computer purchases for Apple to get the time table right.
This sudden sales windfall will occur in parallel with the PC industry's slow sales rate, which means that as long as the semi-misleading market-share statistic continues to be touted; Apple's percentage will likely jump from its current 3 percent status to double-digit growth, (somewhere in the 12 percent range) in as few as 6-9 months.
Remember, marketshare for any given company is calculated in relation to the sales of its competators. This will cause Apple's market share to make an even larger spike considering the fact that each individual PC manufacturer's sales wont be there to counter Apple's.
Of course, if the technology spinmeisters try to turn the table and tout installed-base (as they should have all along), Apple's current 12 percent status is covered there too.
Segway in the park
i think the jackass riding it is part of some kind of guerrilla marketing ploy.
When I read the account of the meeting, my impression of Steve Jobs was similar to that of what I have received of other effective senior executives of large companies.
1. He is a very quick study and he came in prepared. It was a bit strange that he had notes written on his hand but he knew what he wanted to say.
2. He had an agenda. He clearly didn't like the design and had issues with the lack of an introduction plan and the idea to manufacture on their own.
3. He's been around the block and part of his questions and statements are really tests to see how well everybody is prepared. I'm sure if anybody knows how quickly something could be copied, it would be Jobs.
4. It's interesting to me to hear that people think that he is an arrogant prick - I guess I've worked with a lot of them over the years.
From my experience with this type of executive (as well as my own experiences over the years), what I walked away from this article is that Kamen and the company that he produced aren't in the league they need to be for the product to be a success. They clearly weren't prepared for businessmen of the calibre Bezos and Jobs.
This article probably explains to me why the Segway hasn't been a great success - instead of Kamen, who's a great product idea man, they needed some kind of arrogant prick like Jobs to control the project.
myke
Mimetics Inc. Twitter
..if they made them available with bright colors.
That gray color is just too industrial and utilitarian.
It has all of the excitement of a 1950's government office desk.
Yellow and red, and chrome if you wanted it.
But not acid green or pink, well maybe in japan.
Offering mix and match color parts would also be more fun.
For five grand, you should be able to get a unique color scheme.
Brighter colors would also be safer. Non-integrated ighting is also a problem.
Those little velcro flashlights they sell on the site as options are a lame hack.
Then by that token we certainly shouldn't give a fuck about some troll who wants to yell about how much he doesn't give a fuck. Fair enough?
If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
fair enough, i thought having that on my site all over the place and on the link i posted was enough-- i'll make sure to add that on any future posts.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
it does seem i'm the only person who has a segway that reads slashot and is willing to post (and get all sorts of nasty comments and insults). have at it
Probably because your posts are one-dimensional. You have (apparantly) never posted on anything that wasn't Segway related.
And you expect people to not think you're a shill?
Ever wanted to know what Steve Jobs and Jeff Bezos really thought about the Segway the first time he saw it?
Uh... no. I can honestly say this never crossed my mind. Early on in life I found I could form my own opinoins, which made me depend far less on the opinions of non-experts in a field who have the only qualification of being rich.
If someone knows that the head of R&D at GM thought, or the Secretary of Transportation, I'd be much more interested.
(Of course, I'd also probably stop answering rhetorical questions in news posts and collecting the resulting Troll Karma)
Thank you for the Award. It is kind of tricky. Depending on the "mood o' the mod", the posts will either go to a +5 Funny or -1 Troll. There does not seem to be anything in between, and there is nothing in such a message to determine if it will go +5 or -1.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
The cat's been let out of the bag and people are going to buy a book about the development of a scooter?
.25 Mach. Well, not me really, but a ton of other people did:)
This product has been the biggest letdown since the year 2000. I waited, white-knuckled and anxious, for way too long in hopes that I'd be able to zip across the countryside 40 feet in the air and at
The segway is an excellent example of what happens when you don't give out enough details concerning a product and act in extreme secrecy all to protect your whiz-bang idea of a $5000 scooter.....or SCO unix source code...
The participants in that secret meeting continue to rave about IT. "If enough people see the machine you wonâ(TM)t have to convince them to architect cities around it. Itâ(TM)ll just happen," said Jobs.
Source
beware the jabberwock, my son! the jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
Seeing as how I am the only apple user, and one of three programmers, for a company that writes software for use under .NET, I'd have to say that everything you said in your conceit is absolutely untrue. I am able to access everything on the networks and use every program I need to use. My PC is not twice as fast as the laptop nor is it twice as expensive...the laptop is slower, but only when you don't take into account my workflow, which is significantly faster on the laptop. And because my mac apps don't crash, I never lose time RETYPING things like that hottie Ellen Feiss.
And your conceit fails to account for the fact that the auto world DOES exactly what you said it does. The Ford F-150 is twice the price and slower than the Focus ZX. "But you can't compare the two...they're used for different things!" Aha. Now you're getting it, my little troll.
Hey freaks: now you're ju
"Only a moron could fall off a segway."
They were right.
some people only post about redhat, some only post about other things that interest them like macs. i thought i was uniquely qualified to post about something i use each day, but maybe not. when the subject comes up should i only post negative things? i've had a postive experience...i don't think my handful of comments vs. the thousands of "that thing sucks" is going to change the world.
Job's comments were spot-on. He was blunt and rude so that they would listen to his points and they were really lucky to get advice from someone with Job's experience, and they should have listened instead of getting irritated and trying to get back to their meeting agenda. Agendas should be used to help start a discussion, not to stop it!
The account made the Segway people sound like amateurs who suddenly found themselves playing in the major leagues. Jobs was doing them a favor by playing the role of a grizzled old coach and being very blunt in trying to talk them out of doing some stupid things.
I wish I could get Steve Jobs to stay up all night thinking about my new product! They should've listened more to what he had to say.
There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
What a horrible analogy. Have you ever used a Mac? How do you know it's 2x slower than the competition?
I use Macs in my recording studio. They're much faster and more reliable than P4s with Windows 2k or XP. I'm not going to waste time debating whether a Mac is faster than a Linux machine because I can't run the software I need on Linux. When I can run Logic Platinum and ProTools natively on a Linux machine, I'll... oh, nevermind. That would never happen anyways.
Common sense is not so common.
While I found Jobs' stlye too caustic, I have to agree with most of his insights. Yes, maybe it took Kamen 9 years to find his components. However, it would have taken a whole lot less tome to find/create them if he had a complete, working design from which to reverse engineer, which all his competitors now have.
How many products today can you think of that have some marvel of engineering as a barrier to competition? It's execution quality, features and marketing that makes people like Sony, Mercedes, Microsoft etc. the product leaders that they are.
The real danger to the Segway, is if they got everything right except the usage model. That is, someone copies the basic technology but refines it to suit the way people really want to use it: e.g., what the Palm did to the Newton.
Does it hurt to hear them lying? Was this the only world you had?
I think you meant to post this pic: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/2989000. stm
but I couldn't get the pic from your link. Maybe it was /.'d
I went to battle MC Escher but drew a blank
I agree. It is a La-Z-Boy on wheels. The height of suburban culture. Geez, they even SUV'ed roller skates...
The following was related to me by my co-worker Eric, who was the first American employed at Apple Japan:
Shortly after Eric arrived in Japan in the early 80's, he accompanied Steve Jobs on a visit to Canon. Cannon recently introduced a desktop copier which intrigued Steve Jobs. At the meeting Steve Jobs challenged the Canon execs and engineers to design a smaller laser printer the same way they were able to shrink the size of a copier.
In those days a laser printer was about the size of a washing machine or a large business copy machine. The only laser printers available were floor models only; nothing you could put on a desktop.
One year later Steve Jobs was invited back to Canon in Japan to see the results of his challenge. Eric went with Steve, a female translator who worked for Apple Japan, and a Japanese manager working for Apple. Steve Jobs and Eric were the only Americans there at the meeting, and only the Apple employees spoke English; none of the Canon people did. All communication from Steve Jobs to the Canon people were done via the translator.
When they got to Canon, a roomful of proud, beaming Canon engineers and managers presented Steve Jobs with their 'minaturized' laser printer - no longer the size of an American washing machine, just perhaps the size of a Japanese washing machine. Just the same it was not the desktop model that Steve Jobs envisioned.
When the interpreter relayed the question from the Canon folks asking what he thought of the their new laser printer, she really squirmed when Jobs said "Tell them it is a piece of shit!"
...when are we going to start redesigning cities, again?
It's a great book!
The Hollywood summary would go something like: "Soul of a New Machine" meets "Citizen Kane".
I read an advanced reader copy and really enjoyed it. Much more than I expected. Before I read the Introduction I was in eye-rolling mode "Another paeon to Dean Kamen". Fortunatly it isn't. It shows his good traits and his weakeness.
It is an intereting view of how an engineering team moves from a good idea to research project to production mode. And how a smart, guy with vision can get in the way of this.
Dean Kamen comes off as a rather souless, monomanical patriach with a serious control issue. I would have like to have heard more about him out of work hours.
Steve Jobs (and Bezos and Doerr) all make interesting cameo apperances. The "shit your pants" meeting in the excerpt is the most hilarious part of the book.
Steve Kemper is a good writer and an interesting speaker too.
Strongly recommended.
It's called balance -- he's the only person on Slashdot who managed to buy one of the damn things. Might as well listen -- it's the equivalent of actually reading the article.....
Together, we will drive the rats from the tundra.
You can't even get easily verifiable details about
cars right. What makes you think we would believe
anything that you might have to say about computing?
Sure you can compare the two. A cheap crappy undersized american car is going to serve the same basic function as a truck: passenger room for 2 with some additional cargo space.
Except the truck is not going to feel like a steel coffin. It will also be overpowered so as to handle it's expected maximum load.
The F-150 is NOT twice the price of a Focus. It will also leave the Focus in the dust. Both will handle like a flying brick at any decent speed.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
Just had a SegWay rolling around the backyard a few hours ago. Turned out to be the Public Service of NH (the electric company) meter reader. Since many of the meters are wired for radio, she just glides within range of the meter, grabs the reading, and then takes off for the next building.
She absolutely loves the device. Says she gets about 2 hours from the battery depending on how much rough terrain she goes over (you should see our sidewalks) and has a spare set for up to 4 hours total travel.
The Segway itself is shared with a nearby town for their meter readings.
As amazing as it is to watch someone actually working on one of these things, it was even more amazing to see her go up to a house and step off the SegWay in order to do a manual reading. Watching the SegWay balance by itself takes you right back to all those basic feedback control experiments from college. --R
"Users can use the funky squiggly key if they want an alternate method."
The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
Here's the original usenet post from April 2001
Does news get any older than this?
After reading the article, I think the original quote must have been "Welcome to Segwayville - population, zero."
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
"Ironically, this is not far from the truth."
Thus the comment that it was a revlolutionary product that looked mundane.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
We all stand on the shoulders of giants.
... and Bezos has the patent on shoulder pads.
Tuus crepidae innexilis sunt.
They might have done some tweaks but the Segway we see now looks awfully plain I think...
Yet some ideas were listened to. They have demos of the Segway going on every day at "technology centers" in DisneyLand and DisneyWorld (Epcot). I think the internal designers were just too into the design they came up with.
Another poster noted how they aren't really well lit for evening travel (so that others can see them). Sounds like they should have talked to the same place that designed the keyboard on the 17" Powerbook!
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Maybe it is the tone of your posts, they sound like marketting to me.
"Ever since I got my segway, I sold my car, my wife, my dog, I lost weight, and won the lotto."
Apologies if you really are sincere.
-- taking over the world, we are.
Learn to argue. They have classes in forensics at most community colleges and learning annexes, but here's a quick synopsis: You pick a side and defend it. You don't prove the other side right with your examples.
But thanks.
Hey freaks: now you're ju
I never knew how much I had in common with Steve Jobs.
:)
My blog
yep.
you can email me, call me, look at my personal journal of technology or my segway owner journal. i put it all out there to share with folks good and bad, have at it. insult me, poke me, it's all fine. i write books about mobile devices and rich media, i work for the company that did bmwfilms, i live in seattle, wa. i use a segway but do not work for them in any way or get paid to do anything involving the segway, never have. i love reading slashdot, it's been my home page for years, i subscribe to support them, i have an imac, an ipod, xp machines, a linux box, nokia 3650, a pocket pc phone...and a bunch of other devices i write programs for or write articles about.
i'm a nerd.
cheers,
pt
I don't seem to remember the iMac being a marginalized piece of hardware nobody bought. I remember it being a top seller for three years. I remember seeing it EVERYWHERE. I remember it single handedly saving Apple's hardware market and spawning more innovation than anything since, well, the Apple II.
People who didn't buy it because they needed a floppy drive would probably have found another reason not to buy it. A month of using the iMac was enough to sever your ties to the 3.5 forever.
Hey freaks: now you're ju
Steve Jobs heard about the work going on at PARC and offered 100 000 Apple shares in exchange for a demonstration of their work. Some of the PARC people (notably Adele Goldberg) were very unhappy to show Apple what they were doing, but Xerox said 'do it.'
They did it.
Jobs saw the Smalltalk environment, the mouse, pop-up windows, pull-down menus and the rest. So yes, he saw the inspiration for Macintosh windowing, but the Mac interface and the Xerox interfaces are different beasts entirely.
Oh and Xerox did very nicely out of those shares.
Best wishes,
Mike.
>>Apologies if you really are sincere. i was able to get rid of my car and did lose weight. that's a good thing. the segway was *one* of the reasons. read my site, you'll see why, or not. i'm happy about it.
the wife and dog are still here (i walk with both of them each night, with my feet).
i don't play the lotto, i'm pretty good at math.
cheers,
pt
Ok the Segway is cool for its technology but it isn't fast enough. Until there's a speed mod, I'm going for an old-fashioned gas scooter like this one that can hit 50 mph.
"Hey geek boy, I'll race you for pink slips!"
--- I'm Green Hornet's sidekick not Inspector Clouseau's!
This thing was obviously designed by a single dude.
The first PC to have ANY success in the market was the Apple II. It crushed the competition.
http://www.blinkenlights.com/pc.shtml
Dumbass coward.
Hey freaks: now you're ju
"100% of the market share in the 1900s"
Huh? There were always other companies selling cars during this period. Oldsmobile is the first one that comes to mind (R E Olds even had the assembly line before Ford).
In 1905, for example, the Olds Curved Dash Runabout sold 6,500 units.
Ford sold 10,000 Model T's in in the first year of production (1909). Those two figures are very close to each other: 6,500 vs 100,000 (just comparing 2 years). I'm not even counting the many other companies operating at the time.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
Actually, Jobs LOVED it and begged to be involved in the project. The "it sucks" quote came after he had been familiar with the device for months, and was referring specifically to the aesthetic design of the latest version that the team was working on, not the Segway in general.
Nothing quite like being ignored! I have to agree that they were lucky to have the opinion of somebody who actually has sold a few products. Woz was a great engineer, but selling is unfortunately the litmus test.
In any case, I think that Jobs' intense questioning proves that he really was engaged with the product; he treated it just as he would anything Apple designed, and insisted that it hold to the same rigorous standards. That his fears turned out to be well-founded suggests that, no matter how his worries were couched (he does seem to have a penchant for incontinence as metaphor, doesn't he?), his call for a solid business plan, a real launch strategy, and the tripartite mantra of "innovation, elegant and anthropomorphism" would have been well-heeded.
"Freedom is kind of a hobby with me, and I have disposable income that I'll spend to find out how to get people more."
That actaully makes sense if he likes the Segway enough to make a website about it. Posting about it again and again is free karma.
And the l33t shall inherit the 34r7h.
Totally. I've actually seen the Alto. It's a monstrous beast compared to the original Mac.
And yes, Xerox did excellently on those shares. I think the Alto was the only development at Xerox which actually turned a 200% ROI.
Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
Remember the jargon from way back when? A PC was a different thing entirely than an Apple (I blame IBM and their IBM PC).
Or at least where I lived if you told an Apple user they had a PC they'd go ballistic.
The key to the enjoyment of pop music is to replace any instance of "love" with "C.H.U.D."
PC == Personal Computer. That page is a list of Personal Computers. Only one of them is made by IBM.
The market has kind of loosened up their terms so as not to confuse each others terms, but make no mistake -- "Personal Computers" have nothing to do with hardware or the company that designed their microinstructions, and everything to do with the fact that they are Computers which are Personal (e.g., not timesharing machines or mainframes or terminals). They are self enclosed machines which require no external mechanism to execute software and programs.
Just because IBM called its machine Personal Computer does not mean anything else is suddenly some different class of machine. I call my cat "Cat," doesn't mean he's the only one.
Hey freaks: now you're ju
Perhaps if you made the occasional post regarding Microsoft's terrible plague on society or how your children couldn't eat solid foods until you discovered Linux your posts would carry more influence and credibility. Or you could put up a website detailing how you case-modded your Seqway to include transparent panels and flashing neon lights. Your choice.
--
mcp.kaaos
It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
There's a new kind of troll about. Read the above comment (cut 'n' pasted), and notice this line
"I think it sucks Cowboyneal's Dick!" said Jobs.
Somehow I don't think that that is in the original.
Fellowship 9/11
- floppy is one of the least expensive *AND* the most useless devices for last 5 years in the desktop world. Who need it, if are all networked?
- iMac is one of the most expensive *AND* the most useless devices (for that price!) for last 5 years in the desktop world. Do you really want to pay so much money for such few functions when you cannot add new functions?
Having said that, I love Apple PowerBooks and G4 PowerMacs (towers). First one - for their battery life (it's reaally long). Second one - for a good hardware design (it's really optimal combination of extensibility, power, and price).Less is more !
I was a dork, put on a helmet, and tried a Segway. The thing really is incredible . It's almost like flying. You have the strangest sensation of "willing" yourself in a direction of movement (that is, it's like walking but without the muscle movement), and it only takes about 30 seconds to get the hang of it pretty much completely. I've heard learning to ride it up and down hills is trickier, because you have to unlearn your body's balancing act and let the machine do its. I would buy one if I didn't live out in the sticks and was a 15 minute drive from anywhere. In fact, I might buy one if I can find dog-friendly housing closer into the city; I'd much rather take a segway around town than a car.
Don't give a fuck. I don't care. But, I do take issue with your troll comment. I wasn't trying to be a troll. Simply stating that this was a BS story.
My original point, if you read my post, was that this is a non-story. We might as well be asking Ken Lay what he thinks about the global energy markets and this new energy product called "trading". While he may have some expertise and thoughts on the matter, what he says is really not all that important to the success/failure of the product. The same is true here. Who cares what a couple of techo-celebs have to say about a product that has miles and miles to go before it even shows up on peoples radars....
Having interest in such matters is exactly the definition of hype.
If I understand you properly, you step on it "soon enough," it does the right thing. But wait "too long," step on it and you take a tumble? All because there isn't a pressure sensor that says "Gee, somebody is standing on the platform!"
Bizarre.
Vern Loucks, who had been quietly watching the fireworks up to this point, said, "You mean Gob Click Tong. He's not a king, he's the prime minister. I can get us in to see him if we want to do that," he added.
Speaking as a Singaporean: the Prime Minister's name is Goh Chok Tong.
Yeesh.
Interestingly, Apple's relationship with Smalltalk didn't end with the well known adoption of the mouse, windows, and so forth.
Squeak is a modern Smalltalk-like environment created by a research team at Apple. Disney took up the mantle when Apple decided they didn't want to develop it further. And now the project is on its own. But it's an interesting footnote to the relation of Apple and Smalltalk that not many people know about.
I saw the Segway at DisneyWorld, and would love to play with one. Except for security guards at large campuses (educational, corporate, or entertaining), I could not think of a market for them. But ptorrone looked at his life, the Segway, and saw a good fit.
I live in the suburbs: the usual trip is 30 minutes at 50mph, except for buying groceries, and the Segway does not have a trunk. (We were discussing adding a trailer the last time the Segway was mentioned on Slashdot.)
These things would be very dangerous in the city. Are they classified as weapons in NYC yet?
Are they meant for use on sidewalks or roads? I live at the border where sidewalks disappear. Any farther from the city and there are none. Where is the market? Is it just for people who live a few miles from work? Does the culture in Seattle allow for Segways to become the dominant form of travel?
---
As far as teasing ptorrone, he fit a Segway into his life, and his life is better for it. From his website, it also saves money. Maybe someday he will save enough to buy a keyboard with a SHIFT key.
(I assume anybody who does not capitalize correctly is either a foreigner or an employee of MICROSOFT. Germans have their own rules, which leads to interesting variable and function names. MS let everything be uppercase for BASIC and DOS. Then when the standards for HTML were all uppercase, MS insisted that everything be lowercase. Since ptorrone never types an uppercase character and lives in Seattle, I assume he works for MS and started after 1996. It is better to assume they are different than to assume they are stupid.)
I spend my life entertaining my brain.
Disclaimer: I do not have a Zaurus and do not remember if I ever saw one in real life.
Polyphonic means able to play more than one note at a time. A flute is monophonic. A piano is polyphonic. A device claiming to be polyphonic can play chords, or have a drum beat, a bass line, and a melody.
The Nokia cell phones I've owned and my current Motorola V60 had monophonic ringers. The V60 has the ability to write music on the phone, but it is difficult to write songs with just a melody line using the cheesy tone. If it was polyphonic, or had another tone, it would be much better for composing while on the road.
I spend my life entertaining my brain.
What I love about the way brandido wrote it was:
But that isn't true. He had seen Ginger a day earlier and had time to reflect on the whole thing. He thought it was solid, but lacked a look that people would be drawn to. The quote should have had this additional thought added to it But instead he wanted to go for the shock value. Somehow this appearing on
It is human nature to take shortcuts in thinking.
I remember when the Segway was introduced, and it was sooo ugly, awkward and stupid. The first thought in my head was that everyone would look like an ass when riding one. It's as if the only market they could think of was grandmas and dweebs.
It's as if they didn't even try to think about what the balancing tech could do for them, but immediately went to the "make sure no-one can get hurt" phase of design. Of course, there's already been one dweeb caught taking a spill.
Read, L
Damn, Steve Jobs was on top of things here. He hit the nail on the head and could be considered be 100% right about what he said. Just some of the things he thought:I have to admit - his last point is very good, they had a very narrow market at the start, which alone let it get slammed. From the article:Think about it. Why is one of the biggest reasons that the Segway is slammed? No one has gotten on one. Hell, I would guess very few of us have seen one in person. I saw one briefly, but didn't get a good look at it. I have heard the "It sucks, it sucks", but I don't see a lot of people out there who have used one that could give a solid review of it. There is a little scooter place in the shopping center near my place that does all they can to get their scooters seen. Just from watching people ride them, I have a better feel for what those scooters can do than a Segway.
RonB
It is human nature to take shortcuts in thinking.
He like to say "shit in his pants" a lot, doesn't he?
forget it.
But still not smart enough â" he shouldâ(TM)ve ported NeXTStep to Intel architecture and become a software-only company.
Umm... They DID.
Supposedly Jobs parks his Jag diagonally across multiple spaces when he drives to Apple. (In some tellings of the story, he regularly blocks handicap spots.)
As the story goes, one day he returns to his car to find a note on it: Park Different
This story may not be true, but if it isn't, it SHOULD be.
IYO, how does the Seg compare to a cheaper, more conventional electric scooter? The little ones available for $200.
Jobs: Are you a virgin?
Mike Markkula [Apple chairman]: Steve, c'mon.
Brewster: What? no!
Jobs: How old were you when you first got laid?
Markkula: Steve...leave him alone.
Jobs: I asked you a question!
Brewster [squirming]: My wife and I have been married for...
Jobs: I didn't ask you about your wife. You're still a virgin. You just think you're not. You don't fit in here. Why have you been wasting our time?
Apart from ACAD and some games, kindly give an example or two.
Your "fact" was never really true to begin with, but in the OS X era, just about anything you want to do on a Mac that there isn't a Mac program for, there's probably a UNIX or Linux program out there that will run on the Mac and work just fine. In fact, when you combine all that UNIX/Linux code out there with all the OS X apps, there's probably more software available to an OS X user than there is to a Windows-only zealot.
I have a Windows PC, and these days it only gets switched on when I want to play Neverwinter Nights for a couple hours. I also have a couple Linux boxen which sit untouched in my closet running Apache, Postgres, and a few other server apps (which I could just do on a Mac, but I had a couple old x86 machines lying around, so I put them to good use.)
Everything else I do: programming, editing media content, browsing, arguing on slashdot, exchanging e-mail, word processing, doing my taxes, administrating my web server, audio recording, etc., I do with either my Mac tower or my iBook. Everything.
Information wants to be anthropomorphized.
We use capitalization to improve the efficiency with which we communicate. Perhaps you might get more attention paid to your website if you did the same.
Yup.
Linux users (for example) are known to keep aging computer hardware useful long after it was left for dead by its former Windows using owner. The open source community consistently manages to squeeze every last ounce of processing power from even the most aged hardware available.
The fastest machines in my house are two PII-400 boxen being used as primary workstation and server running RH9. They do everything I want them to do. And BTW, they were given to me for free. The other server is a P233 on an AT motherboard.
Similarly, Mac users are known to keep their computers as primary productivity tools until the gears fall off.
Right again, but even better. 1 - iMac 333, 1 - iMac 233, 1 - 8500, 1 - 7600, 1 - PB1400c-166, 1 - PB165c, and, recently acquired from the fine dumpster outside my apartment, a 6100-66/DOS all in working shape and useful in one way or another. Oh yeah, a pair of 6100-66's loaned to friends.
The only MS stuff in the house is a Compaq EVO laptop from work running W2K.
I'd say thay pretty well supports oscast's argument of market-share vs. installed-base. And I'm sure there are many here who could provide similar stats. The real question is - how can we be counted?
War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. - George Orwell or George Bush?
I love how every Mac user brings up Windows crashing. That is so old. Sure Windows 98 and ME crashed like there was no tomorrow, but then again OS 8 and 9 were just about as stable as their comparable MS products. As far as applications are concerned, they are dependant on the company creating them. I would say that companies like Adobe who make programs for both Mac and Windows don't crash on either platform. I run XP and I have never seen it blue screen. The only apps that really crash on my system are the beta downloads that I sometimes run. (Mozilla 1.4B crashes often.)
SIGFAULT
I own a tivo and I proselytize it to anyone who will listen. It's truly a great product. I own no stock in tivo, am not employed by them and stand to make no profit from my efforts. I just like the damn things. I think they're wonderful and that others just might love them as much as I do.
/. readers would jump all over that price point and you'd see them ridden and promoted everywhere. Hell there might be enough critical mass to oppose local well-meaning but obstructionist officials who attempt to limit their use.
Besides, there's nothing wrong with a Segway that a US $500.00 price tag wouldn't fix. You know damn well that a *significant* percentage of
Or, on the downside, maybe 'dubya' is so pissed at having fallen off of one in public view that there will be a federal law prohibiting their use everywhere in the US, Afghanistan, Iraq and other US possessions. We'll just have to watch how that cookie crumbles.
War is Peace. Freedom is Slavery. Ignorance is Strength. - George Orwell or George Bush?
Anyone geek would love to have a segway, even if it's just for a few days.
You just dump on this guy because he's got one, and he likes it. And YOU DON'T.
Hey, I like my Canon 1D, my Canon GL2, and a bunch of other cool stuff I have; if you were talking about that, I'd tell you in spades how great it was.
The guy is an honest gadget freak, and it's interesting to find out how he uses it.
So stop putting him down.
Maybe it wasn't a review -- it was a warning! People once planned cities around cars, and look where it got us. A Segway-centric city will have narrower sidewalks, a too-large-for-ordinary-pedestrian scale, and lots of rich and middle-class people zooming past the poor.
Steve might've said both things without being contradictory: these things suck, and they've the potential to screw up our cities, and just after we started to rediscover our wonderful downtowns. Steve was warning us. We should listen.
AC is wrong.
The term microcomputer was coined to refer to a computer based on a "cpu on a chip". For example, when Data General implemented a Nova 3 on a chip (the MicroNova), the machine was called a microcomputer instead of a minicomputer.
The term "personal" was used to refer to non-shared systems well before the IBM PC. Here's a famous example from 1974.
Kamen's previous product, the iBot self-balancing wheelchair, is more useful. That actually meets a need. The Segway is more like the junk in the Sharper Image catalog.
I've seen two Segways in Silicon Valley. One was in front of the Walgreens on University Avenue, with the owner trying to figure out some place to park the thing so he could go in the store. The other was being driven in downtown San Jose by a guy using it to pick up girls. (Didn't work.) A bicycle is far more useful.
As for the book, it ends too soon and was published too late. Kamen kicked the author out in 2001, and the book effectively ends there. But it didn't come out until recently. It doesn't address the post-launch debacle.
I've used every Mac OS and every Windows OS and all I can say is the Mac OS, including 8 and 9, which were always more stable than 2K orâ"shudderâ"ME, has performed every time while Windows has always failed me. XP BSODs less, that's is true, but OSX has run flawlessly all the time, every time. I have work to do, I don't have time for Windows to puke up some random error or get pissed off because I hooked up the wrong camera to it. Windows has not lost my trust too many times, while my Macs have always worked.
Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
"I could go on and on here, but the point is, I don't think you know what you are talking about. I have been using computers now for over two decades and have watched the industry evolve.
/. posts that reply to mine. I feel I said what I wanted to say and other people will say what they've got to say. However, you not only replied to my reply, you had a lot to say about me as well and it was all wrong.
I'm bored with this now....."
I would bow to your superior intelect and experience, but it just doesn't exist. I don't normaly reply to
To set the record straight...
I do use OS X almost everyday, I'm using it right now on my iBook, hence my name iFlynn.
I'm not new to computers, I've been using them as long as you, over 20 years. My first computer was a TRS 80 with extended color BASIC, silver with a chicklet keyboard.
I don't think you actually read my post, and that's why you completely missed my point. Look at your comment on the one button mouse... you imply that I didn't know multi-button mice are supported when my whole point is that they are supported yet Apple can't admit that they should have implimented them a long time ago by shipping them now.
I stand by what I said in my post, Apple innovation is smoke and mirrors, just as your reply. Look at your list, over half the things in your list you credit Apple as innovating simply because they used someone elses product!
The worst example in your list is by far the first GUI. I'm pretty sure everyone here knows the whole story, you're not really fooling anyone with that one. You should have said they were the first to steal the idea of a GUI controlled by a mouse from Xerox, everyone would agree with that. Perhaps Apple's greatest innovation is how to steal a product and market it as their own.
A lot of your examples don't even make sense. Built in sound with the Mac? Have you ever heard of a Commodore 64?
Talk about bored, your list of great Apple innovations is not only tired, it proves my point. Apple's only real innovation is marketing other peoples' products as their own.
But man can he act like an arrogant prick!
That's part of his Buddhist background -- he's adopting a Zen Buddhism training technique where the master (Jobs) brutally assaults the student, and sees if the student can defend himself adequately. It's normally done with ideas (the student presents a view to the master for approval/analysis), but Jobs reportedly does this often with business dealings. The Second Coming of Steve Jobs includes anecdotes of several such meetings, including one where he reduced a new gal from an ad agency to tears -- but she ultimately defended her ideas against him, and he gave her the account.
The rationale for this technique is that if your idea/invention/proposal/etc. is bulletproof, you can deflect all of his arguments and fight back in the process. If you crumple under his attack, then your proposal was flawed and needs rework. It's brutal, yes, especially if you're used to the "polite" way of doing business. But damn effective.
--R.J.
Electric-Escape.net
Steve Jobs is a billionaire and you're posting on slashdot. I'm going to venture a guess that he couldn't give a shit about your advice. He's obviously been successful without it.
Jobs thinks he's smarter then everyone else and it shows. Anyway, there's nothing wrong with stating an opinion, even if it hurts someone else's feelings. The real important things are things like not holding grudges and not fucking people over because you can.
Anyway, If you've seen my posts on slashdot you'll know I'm definitely not an apple fan jobs groupie or anything like that. I'm just pointing out that Jobs has achieved a lot in this world while being a 'dick'.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
And because my mac apps don't crash
You mean, the mac apps you use? I could write a mac app that crashed, and there are lots of applications on windows I have never seen crash, dispite frequent use.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
I've seen win2k crash like, three or four times in the past few years on my computer. Which is hardly a paragon of well-put-togetherness.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
I don't normaly reply to /. posts that reply to mine.
Hmmmm. I see.
I'm using it right now on my iBook, hence my name iFlynn.
Right. I thought it had more to do with Isil. Yes?
Look. It's apparent we differ on perspectives. I offered examples and evidence to back my claim of innovation. All I would ask of my colleagues and those I communicate with is the same.
Best,
Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
Hint, Hint PARC took a lot of these ideas from Douglas Englebart of Stanford Research Institute. Sad, but true. Xerox PARC was amazing, but Douglas Englebart was more so by an order of magnitude.
How about at The Linux Counter project?
1. Color with the Apple ][
Of course, the apple II was the first PC with video support. Obviously it's going to be the first with color
4. The first GUI in a PC with the Lisa then the Macintosh.
Of course, they were only the first to market. They didn't invent it by a longshot.
6. The first to have networking built in to their computers with Appletalk.
You mean a built in networking stack or what? Appletalk is software, not hardware. This unqualified statement really dosn't make much sense.
7. Built in sound with the Macintosh
BEEP BEEP BEEP goes the IBM PC
12. Drag and drop application installation.
As opposed to what, double-click installation? apt-get installation? Frankly that sounds like more work then windows or some linux distributions.
13. Built in speech in the OS.
Oh yeah, that really gets used a lot.
17. First with a multimedia application platform with Quicktime.
Now what does THAT mean? "multimedia application platform" is an incredibly nebulous term. The Amiga had multimedia support way before the mac.
19. First to ship CD-ROM drives in PC's
Do you have any evidence of this. I kinda doubt it's true
20. First to ship integrated DSP's in PC's
What do you even mean by this? What benifit does this DSP have for the machine.
21. First with the PDA with the Newton.
Yes.
22. First with handwriting recognition with Newton.
no.
23. Invented Firewire.
no.
24. First to standardize on USB
You mean the USB that Intel came up with? There were plenty of PCs that had usb. 26. First with systemwide support of anti-aliased fonts in OS X.
OS X? Sorry, windows supported this back with win 98.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Like a kickstand, rollbar and maybe the all to elusive 3rd wheel so you _can't_ fall over... are they so cheap that they can't afford the 3rd wheel or so idealistic that they don't want it... reminds me of what Steve Jobs said about the first Mac...
"Who wants a color monitor anyways?"
Who doesn't enjoy falling on their face anyways?
Here's the idea, if it starts to fall over, it stops on a protruding _anything_.... *sigh* even a 5 year could figure out how to stop the impending storm of lawsuits from flat faces of drunk segway cruisers...
Perhaps you could explain to me why you don't think apple computers are slower then other types of computers. Will you show my the results for one single photoshop filter from 2 years ago? Or will you tell me how RISC is just so much faster then CISC.
Or maybe you will tell me how slower cars really are better then faster ones?
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
IT BURRRRNS!
Hmmm.
If PARC actually made them work, truely implemented them for the first time, then I'd say PARC is equally amazing.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
The apple II was a personal computer
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
On the contrary Mr. AC, I watch Fox. It's the best way to get the right-wing perspective. I will freely state that I am not centrist. I am far to the left and reside with the small category of people that value freedom. That real kind of freedom that doesn't bow to invasion of privasy even if privasy isn't technically included in the constitution. I do not think the constituion is the end-all either. It is a flawed piece of work and the founding fathers knew that. It would be great if "modern people" understood that as well, instead of just blabbering about nutcases whenever they disagree with something.
(Sponsored by cheeseSource for President 2012)
Well, it looks like how you view the world always depends on your experience. I know that my XP box, and the two other ones that are around me daily, don't blue screen, ever. I have seen the Macs that I use somewhat at school lock up a lot. I'll admit that I've only seen OS X do it a few times, but OS 8 or 9 was really bad. I'm guessing that if we both used Mac OS and Windows daily, then we would probably see eye to eye on stability.
SIGFAULT
That's really not fair, because school computers are always screwed up no matter what the operating system is. PCs end up schizoid when students delete or fiddle with .exe and extentions.
As for stability, I use both XP and OSX daily doing very similar tasks (Word processing, email, some specialized programs, Adobe's stuff, etc.) and XP BSODs every week. OSX has not crashed once in the same amount of time. Not once. (Since November of 2001)
I totally agree with about experience, some people tell me their Macs are constantly troublsome and most people tell me their PCs are continuously in the reboot cycle, so for the most part I tend to think its the user.
If you don't have an OSX box, play with one seriouslyâ"and not someone else's system that been all fuglied like a school computer or one at CompUSA. If I used that as a measure for PCs then well I'd still never buy one.
Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
By the way, Dubya is an asshat. You are not supposed to be able to fall off a Segway. Reminds me of Ford falling down stairs.
How ya like dat?
think "grassroots campaign" meets "corporate guerrila marketing tactics"
I agree with your ideas, but there is an adapter, looking much like your bicycle basket, that is available for the Segway. Not that it helps much.
-bZj
.sig
Yes, but as we have recently learned from SCO's CEO, once you license something to someone and they hire hundreds of brilliant people to work on it and spend millions of dollars on R&D improving it over the course of a decade, you still get to claim that it was all your idea and that you should get credit for everything. Or, as in the case of Xerox, people who don't like you can claim that it was all your idea.
... I would have slammed you for that.
Assuming the above, you had the right idea but the wrong attitude and that should have been pointed out to you.
IANAL but write like a drunk one.
You aren't using your feet for anything, why not foot buttons?
It the "freedom" that it provides. You aren't using your other fingers and they will always be on your mouse when you use it.
It just seems silly that when there are so many things to do with an object that they would still keep with one mouse button. I'm not saying that 3/4/5 mouse buttons are useful but one easy alternate method of selecting is a good thing.
The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
bring it on big boy.