Sorry to anyone who reads my previous post for not using page breaks. I should've previewed. Here it is again since I screwed it up the first time like a lemur.
>a completely different world where the face of corporations are forever changed.
That's funny because I really *******like******* how Apple has affected our world, corporation or not. I appreciate their involvement in music, art, and all that other stuff I love.
>Creating a community feeling isn't about making people feel warm and fuzzy about their purchase
I believe the "community feeling" comes from the positive experience the people gather from the product. Also the fact that when someone uses a Mac, it's often a deliberate choice and not just because it's what everyone else uses. I don't think it's necessary for Apple to try to create a so-called community feeling.
>a completely different world where the face of corporations are forever changed.
That's funny because I really *******like******* how Apple has affected our world, corporation or not. I appreciate their involvement in music, art, and all that other stuff I love.
>Creating a community feeling isn't about making people feel warm and fuzzy about their purchase
I believe the "community feeling" comes from the positive experience the people gather from the product. Also the fact that when someone uses a Mac, it's often a deliberate choice and not just because it's what everyone else uses. I don't think it's necessary for Apple to try to create a so-called community feeling.
I thought of it differently. When I first saw the page, I was listening to Five Years by David Bowie and became panicked. It seems sort of weird to acknowledge something net-related as finite just like our bodies and planet are and blah blah blah. And you have to be there in time to see it die which, for some reason, affects me in some way.
Their explanation seems contradictory to how I feel about it, though.
And art is relative. No matter how much you hate it, it can be art if someone deems it so. But it can be determined whether or not it's just spin art. So people should stop doing what they're doing, being armchair artists and whatnot.
You should be in a Switch ad. A lot of people seem to miss the point that something can be both powerful and simple.
I believe the 20th Anniversary Mac had a built in LCD. And that was, like, a bunch of years ago.
Sorry to anyone who reads my previous post for not using page breaks. I should've previewed. Here it is again since I screwed it up the first time like a lemur.
>a completely different world where the face of corporations are forever changed.
That's funny because I really *******like******* how Apple has affected our world, corporation or not. I appreciate their involvement in music, art, and all that other stuff I love.
>Creating a community feeling isn't about making people feel warm and fuzzy about their purchase
I believe the "community feeling" comes from the positive experience the people gather from the product. Also the fact that when someone uses a Mac, it's often a deliberate choice and not just because it's what everyone else uses. I don't think it's necessary for Apple to try to create a so-called community feeling.
>a completely different world where the face of corporations are forever changed. That's funny because I really *******like******* how Apple has affected our world, corporation or not. I appreciate their involvement in music, art, and all that other stuff I love. >Creating a community feeling isn't about making people feel warm and fuzzy about their purchase I believe the "community feeling" comes from the positive experience the people gather from the product. Also the fact that when someone uses a Mac, it's often a deliberate choice and not just because it's what everyone else uses. I don't think it's necessary for Apple to try to create a so-called community feeling.
I thought of it differently. When I first saw the page, I was listening to Five Years by David Bowie and became panicked. It seems sort of weird to acknowledge something net-related as finite just like our bodies and planet are and blah blah blah. And you have to be there in time to see it die which, for some reason, affects me in some way. Their explanation seems contradictory to how I feel about it, though. And art is relative. No matter how much you hate it, it can be art if someone deems it so. But it can be determined whether or not it's just spin art. So people should stop doing what they're doing, being armchair artists and whatnot.