At 40, There's Never Been a Tech Company Quite Like Apple (qz.com)
Mike Murphy, reporting for Quartz: Forty years ago today, two college dropouts decided to start selling cobbled-together computers out of a garage in California because they couldn't afford the ones on the market. They had an intricate wood-cut logo, not much money or manpower, and their first computer only sold about 175 units. But in the years between then and now, Apple has become one of the most valuable companies in the world, spurring revolutions in how we communicate, use computers, listen to music, and to a lesser extent, tell the time. [...] Some critics think that Apple is boring now, setting itself up to iterate on its successes and lock customers into their services with products that are very good, but nothing they haven't really seen before. This is a solid business strategy that will provide strong returns for years to come, but not those eye-popping leaps we've seen before. Here's a video Apple published recently showcasing 40 of its most remarkable products.
That term has always been meaningless when it comes to entrepreneurs. What could they possibly learn from academia? They have the idea, they have the motivation.
Will apple change a 30% fee for any toll usages will there cars on top of the tolls?
HP was also started by two guys in a garage selling simple oscillators. HP was ruined by some crusty ratbag.
IBM started selling meat scales and grinders. It's currently being ruined . . . by some crusty ratbag.
And Yahoo . . . oh, never mind.
The moral of the story? Keep your resume up to date. When the crusty ratbag is appointed as the CEO . . . bail . . . as fast as you can . . . it's turtles, all the way down.
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!