Watch Steve Jobs Demo the Mac, In 1984
VentureBeat is one of the many outlets featuring recently surfaced video of Steve Jobs doing an early demo of the Macintosh, 30 years ago. I remember first seeing one of these Macs in 1984 at a tiny computer store in bustling downtown Westminster, Maryland, and mostly hogging it while other customers (or, I should say, actual customers) tapped their feet impatiently.
...Steve Jobs take credit for other people's work in this video, just like always.
How about a demo of Jay Miner demoing the Amiga 1000?
The same could be said for Adolf Hitler.
I'm really nostalgic for the days when Silicon Valley was an innovative hotbed when some sharp brash kid could not only make it big, but provide a product that has some value.
Now, Silicon Valley is a bunch of whiny bitches who are trying to get ever cheaper labor for their social media/advertising app/user-data pimping service in order to market crap to a population in a downward spiral of their living standard.
+1 for you. Some sort of "30 year celebration" nonsense. What, 30 years ago jobs visited PARC "borrowed" all the ideas and did a better job marketing it then Xerox did?
Isnt this the same company now filing lawsuits over rounded corners after plagiarizing others for years? What about Jobs "themonuclear war" against android, spending "every last cent of apples money" which is actually the SHAREHOLDERS not his to spend? Good thing Xerox/Braun and others didnt do the same to Apple. I guess when you are rich/powerful you get to make rules to prevent others from doing what you did?
One of my fav's
http://visual.ly/braun-or-appl...
So please apple fans tell us about how "innovative" the products are when they are lifted from the 60's.
If Jobs were wanting to wholly take credit would he have wanted everyone's signatures embossed on the inside of the case? I don't think so.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
There's no denying the Mac was a game-changer, but it's also important to note that when it was released it cost $5600 in today's dollars - Adding a printer pushed you well north of the $6000 mark.
No wonder nobody I knew had one.