Steve Jobs: Redefining The CEO 224
conq writes "BusinessWeek has a nice piece on how Steve Jobs is redefining the job of being a CEO. From the story: 'Just over a decade ago, Steve Jobs was considered washed-up, a has-been whose singular achievement was co-founding Apple Computer back in the 1970s. Now, given the astounding success of Apple and Pixar, he's setting a new bar for how to manage a Digital Age corporation.'"
Who is going to top him? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:4, Funny)
The only way I think it would be possible for him to raise the bar higher would be to sing "It's Raining Men" on stage at the next Macworld Conference.
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:2)
Indeed, one of the facts of life is that everyone gets topped by somebody who is better, or by somebody who will take it to the next level.
Yeah [softlab.ntua.gr].
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:4, Insightful)
Or the next somebody who is roughly as good as you are, once your legend starts getting torn down.
Remember, Jobs was huge before he was torn down as being a has-been, before being built up again to who he is now. His legend will fade... We like to tear down our heroes.
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:5, Insightful)
Jobs will definately surpass Bill Gates in the history books simply because his story is so much more dramatic. Found the first personal computer company that goes beyond the simple needs of the hobbyist, get fired by the guy he hired to manage the business, start a competing business that goes nowhere, start another business that breathes new life into a 100 year old art form, get begged to come back to the company that fired you, see both businesses take off beyond all possible dreams. What did Bill Gates do? Bluff his way into buying an operating system early in the game and copy copy copy then leverage market position to unfairly damage new comers and competitors. Don't get me wrong, Bill Gates had a great idea at the right time but I doubt he'd be anything more then a footnote if he had to do it twice in his life.
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:2, Interesting)
Jobs on the other hand was
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:3, Insightful)
1) He moved hard into PCs early
2) He licensed freely and openly
3) He didn't use copy protection but rather went for a moral and legal attacks on piracy
4) He almost tried to be the cheapest software in his quality class, and started price wars as a core business technique
5) He aimed his products at non hobbiests and non professionals having a vision of "a computer on every
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:2)
Re:Who is going to top him? (Score:3, Funny)
A new bar? (Score:5, Funny)
literally [apple.com].
Behind the Cover podcast (Score:5, Interesting)
This is a "piece"? (Score:4, Insightful)
This is just a short, non-interesting slideshow.
No news here - move along.
Re:This is a "piece"? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This is a "piece"? (Score:4, Informative)
The actual article is here:
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_06 /b3970001.htm [businessweek.com]
Re:yes it is (Score:2)
The French have been trying to make up for him ever since.
Re:yes it is (Score:2)
Or Benjamin Franklin's:
Please forgive the length of this letter; I haven't the time to be brief.
This sums it up for me (Score:5, Insightful)
"Other CEOs may focus on finance or sales. Jobs spends most of his time trying to come up with the next blockbuster product."
He's not there for the money, he's there to change the world. Well, at least, he succeeds in making us believe he's not after the money... Of course, MacOS X is not open source (yet?!), he's running a corporation after all!
I remember his quote: "Being the richest man in the cemetery doesn't matter to me. Going to bed at night saying we've done something wonderful, that's what matters to me"
I don't think a majority of CEO can honestly say this nowadays.
Source of the quote (Score:2)
Re:Source of the quote (Score:2, Informative)
Thanks, added now (Score:2)
Re:This sums it up for me (Score:5, Insightful)
He's a founder. Look what happened when John Sculley came in in the early 90's. We got the Newton, which I liked, and still like, a lot. But we also got to see the American MBA in action.
The type of accounting and business strategy that for-hire CEO's and CFO's are trained with tells them that everything is about increasing shareholder value in the short-to-mid term (ie, no more than 2-5 years). They are unconcerned with providing value to employees or customers, unless doing so will assist them with goal #1. Even if they think they are working for the long-term success of the company, all the tools they have to put things in perspective are centered around the short-term stock value.
When Jobs came back to Apple, it was like he was the spurned father called to the hospital when his child was morbidly ill or injured. This company is his baby, and he wants to see it succeed in the long term. He wants products that his customers will slowly come to believe they can't live without, not some flash-in-the-pan fad with the latest buzzwords attached.
A lot of Silicon Valley CEO's are founders and have this fatherly instinct. They don't get press because they weren't ousted and then called back to fix things. Neither do the CEO's who weren't called back as their companies went to the chopping block.
If you oust the original founders of the company, it's almost always a death sentence. Apple's board was right to call Jobs back to the helm. But don't think it's something special about Jobs. It's what any company founder should do, and what most would do, because they actually believe in what they're doing.
Jasin NataelRe:This sums it up for me (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you've hit the nail on the head, though maybe even more literally than you realize. Jobs is a CEO who has a passion for what he does. He, unlike so many of todays CEO's, managers, and even business/corporation owners, truly thinks to himself, "we have the best thing since sliced bread"; the only difference between Jobs and all
Re:This sums it up for me (Score:2)
Jaguars are Fords
Re:This sums it up for me (Score:2)
Their solution? To announce that every Ford worker that drives a non-Ford product now has to park in the outermost parking lot, thus providing an "incentive" for th
Re:This sums it up for me (Score:2)
So all you have to do is keep the founders at the helm and they will be as successful as Steve Jobs has been?
Jobs is what a CEO ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Most CEOs are just middle managers who got promoted to the top spot; either from within or were hired from another company. But the thing is, what makes a good middle manager (attention to detail, thinking about finances, day to day stuff) is exactly what makes a poor CEO. To be a great CEO, you need to think about strategy, where your market is going, where there is new markets, ner tech, etc... - Which is exactly what Jobs does. Saying he's "trying to come up with the next blockbuster product." is over-simplifying what he does.
It's sad that corps have this mentality that you have to work your way up through the ranks before becoming a CEO. But the problem is, what gets you promoted on the lower levels actually hurts you as a CEO. (There's a reason why the average CEO job lasts less then 2 years - they fired.) If Jobs were concentrating an each department's finances and other details, he would have missed the boat on these new products.
Gates on the other hand, is not a visionary. He is a follower (which can pay off big), but look at MS's strategy: throw money at anything new. Apple on the other hand creates something new.
I think my point is made and I don't want to turn /. into a MBA class! :-(
Re:This sums it up for me (Score:2)
But if you're not looking to stay ahead, then somebody will pass you by. Just look at Japanese auto industry compared to the American one. Heck, Sony and the IPod.
Cutting 'low profit' services can also harm you, as it erodes options and 'brand loyalty'. If I can't get the servi
Disney (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Fundamentally the same strategy as before (Score:5, Insightful)
To be sure, Apple is a unique presence in the world of digital media, but the slideshow picture they put alongside this caption was that of an iMac. As far as computers go, total control of the platform is not a new idea. It is, in fact, the oldest one. That type of solution stretches back as far as the room-sized big iron of the '60s and before, but it was most publicly visible, I think, during the '80s, when several companies were vying for dominance of the personal computer market. Commodore, Atari, Apple, IBM - they all had their own little universes where you bought their hardware, ran their OS, and dealt with their disk format. Each company dreamed of taking over with its own end-to-end solution, but that didn't happen. It can be argued that the market is simply too large for any one company to hope for dominance of that kind.
Re:Fundamentally the same strategy as before (Score:2, Redundant)
Steve Jobs (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Steve Jobs (Score:3, Interesting)
Steve Jobs is not Bill Gates or Michael Dell. If the battle is about price he loses.
What would you ask Steve? (Score:4, Interesting)
when 1 page could have been enough (Score:4, Insightful)
It's scaring readers away. I am not waiting for your page to load, and I am not clicking multiple times to read a single article.
And while I am at it. Since the invention of tabs, will everyone please stop using links that insist on opening in a new window. I have one window, perhaps two with multiple tabs. And new links are opened in their own tab. But, noooo, sites still insist links are opened in a new window.
Want to keep me as a return visitor? STOP ANNOYING ME. Stop dictating how I can access your data, if you want me to see it.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:when 1 page could have been enough (Score:2)
If it the article is broken up into too many partes, I just open the print version. Usually it's devoted of ads. So I someone thought they could shove more ads through our throats by splitting it up: it aint working
Re:when 1 page could have been enough (Score:2)
Invidual vision trumps rule by committee (Score:3, Insightful)
Entertainments companies in particular are hurt by focus groups and rule by committee. Disney turned out a better product when Walt was still around. Turner Entertainment faired much better under Ted, than under Time Warner/AOL.
Re:Invidual vision trumps rule by committee (Score:2)
Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2)
Re:Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2)
Running all that stuff is a full time job, and the current management doesn't do that good a job of it.
Re:Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2)
Re:Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2)
Re:Will Jobs stay with Apple? (Score:2)
"He'd always be a poor second - a fucking poor second - to Ballmer in that role."
Riight. Checked Microsoft's stock chart lately? It hasn't broken 30 in almost four years and the 5 year max is about 36.
Ballmer? You have to be kidding. (Score:2)
And if you dont believe me, take it from someone [blogspot.com] who works at Microsoft.
The only reason he has his job is because he was Bill Gates poker buddy at Harvard.
Re:Jobs will stay with Apple (Score:2)
I could see it. Disney vault is exactly the kind of thing that consummers (parents) might be willing to pay for hardware to get access to. Give away the movies more than 20 years old, to get a lock to TV.
I can think of many scenerios like that. Jobs has vision beyond "more of the same".
Being a knowledgable CEO is "redefining"? (Score:5, Insightful)
A CEO who thoroughly knows his business redefines what a CEO is? This merely highlights the disease that has infected much of corporate America, namely that you don't have to know shit about your business or product, all you have to know is how to manage people, whatever that means.
This is about as effective as the idea that you don't have to know jack about math, or physics, or history in order to teach them; all you have to be is a good teacher, whatever the hell that means.
News Flash: Intelligence, experience, knowledge and motivation are far more important in running a company than an MBA. Steve Jobs illustrates this. News at 11.
Re:Being a knowledgable CEO is "redefining"? (Score:4, Interesting)
Another shining example of where solid, technical management has proven to be spectacularly successful: Admiral Hyman G. Rickover. He is single-handedly responsible for building the United States Nuclear Navy, and he did it by getting his hands dirty, looking for and finding the devil in the details, and sweating the small stuff. (okay, I admit, there was a strong cadre of very smart engineers and scientists behind him, but they would never have been so successful without him) In 1982, he gave a great speech [govleaders.org] about how to do a job right, and how to manage it properly.
He eschewed fancy management techiniques, deriding them as smoke and mirrors. Simply requiring his subordinates to understand their jobs and holding them responsible, for everything.
Rickover could never make it today; he was too much of an irascible fellow. I don't think anyone enjoyed working for him WHILE they were working for him. But, then again, couldn't the same be said of Steve Jobs 1? By that I mean the head of Apple Computer from 1976 to 1984. What of those stories where people would get on an elevator with him and be fired by the time the elevator stopped? Or throwing engineers against the wall for falling asleep in front of their computers at 11 pm?
Teh Jobs has come a long way, and has found another management "front" that allows him to be head of a successful company again. Kudos to him.
Also keep in mind that Steve Jobs *almost died* from some form of pancreatic cancer a year ago.
Art (Score:4, Insightful)
So Jobs has been an industrial designer producing tools mostly used by graphic designers, who of course are sensitive to good industrial design. That's worked. More recently he's gone into the music/fashion accessories business - also one which melds easily with design, and also one where to top lines always come from a single designer's vision rather than committee. And with Pixar, as the good-looking but shallow-on-info slide show says, he knew enough about "creatives" to keep the teams small and together.
None of this should be taken to imply that Jobs' success illustrates the right approach for industries in which design is not properly the central focus. For instance, Carter was famously a micro-managing president. Look how that worked out. The Soviet economy was micro-managed from the top (and they even started out as a culture with some very good designers). Results? Nada. The hard-earned lesson that micro-managing is bad still applies across most of the spectrum. Jobs is just fortunate to be in one of the few niches where the generalization fails.
Re:Art (Score:2)
You make it sound like it is just a fluke that Jobs is doing what he's doing right now. Everything that Jobs has done seem to point to the idea that Job knows very well what he is good at and, unlike other businessmen less smart or smarter than him, focuses his attention at only things he wants to be focused on. Witness the way upon returning to the company, he ditched some of Apple's product lines and there way no indi
Micromanagers (Score:3, Interesting)
For instance, Carter was famously a micro-managing president. Look how that worked out. The Soviet economy was micro-managed from the top (and they even started out as a culture with some very good designers). Results? Nada.
The two examples of which you spoke aren't very fair, to say the least. Carter didn't fail as a president because he tried to micromanage (in fact, that's one thing I really appreciate about him), he failed because he did not find his legs in Washington, and couldn't communicate with
Re:Micromanagers (Score:2)
As for Trotsky, he was the one who transformed the Red Army from a ragtag bunch into an efficient fighting machine with the same top down structure as any other modern army. He had special units created to gun down people ("the workers", remember them?) retreating. The only reason people have sympathy fo
Is Steve Jobs really the best CEO? (Score:5, Insightful)
Larry Ellison (Oracle) has been around longer (without leaving the company at least)
Eric Schmidt's company (Google) gets an article on Slashdot every few hours
Steve Balmer's company (Microsoft) sells more Operating Systems
I guess to Jobs credit he founded a very successful company, then left and it tanked and came back and it became a great company again, but I just don't think that there's no question about him being number one as this article has implied.
Re:Is Steve Jobs really the best CEO? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is Steve Jobs really the best CEO? (Score:2)
Re:Is Steve Jobs really the best CEO? (Score:2, Insightful)
Apple is a $16B+ company (Score:2)
eBay's market cap is slightly higher at the moment, and Google's is in the stratosphere (does it really deserve to be valued more than IBM??)
Having said that, eBay and Google are more profitable, and Google is growing revenue faster. Apple's current 60%+ quarterly growth needs a new hit product to sustain.
Re:Is Steve Jobs really the best CEO? (Score:2)
Not sure, the reason I mentioned Balmer is because his company makes the most money.
If I'm not mistaken, Bill still has a lot to do with Microsoft, so Balmer is effectively sharing the job of CEO.
Bill Gates is Chairman and Cheif Software architect, but yes he's the founder and very influential at MSFT
Re: Are humans the dominant species on Earth? (Score:2)
It's great to be right (Score:2, Insightful)
Jobs certainly has the ability to judge what will make something become a unique product. Wonder if he will have the
hero worship (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is it steve jobs that is responsible for all the success of apple?
why was it hitler that was responsible for nazi germany?
Why do humans always have to make everything about one person?
This is retarded. Companies are people and teams. Not people. Countries are people. Not presidents. Parties. Committees. As soon as people stop making decisions this way maybe we'll start making some progress.
Role Models. . . (Score:5, Insightful)
Because most people in their lives simply manage to get to work on time, do as they are instructed, and pay their taxes. This behavior pattern does not inspire much of anything to the casual on-looker.
Having a "vision" isn't uncommon. Uncommon, however, is the person who is brave and strong and skilled enough to go about realizing it.
Many people strive to be so capable, and thus they look up to those who have managed it. Role models are what they are for this reason, or so I think.
-FL
How naive are you? (Score:2, Insightful)
"why are people so obsessed with rewarding single people with success of organizations? Why is it steve jobs that is responsible for all the success of apple? why was it hitler that was responsible for nazi germany? Why do humans always have to make everything about one person? This is retarded. Companies are people and teams. Not people. Countries are people. Not presidents. Parties. Committees. As soon as people stop making decisions this way maybe we'll start making some progress."
Here's a news f
Re:How naive are you? (Score:2)
Michael: "Leader - Ship. The word "ship" is hidden in the word "leadership." As its derivation. So, if this office is in fact a ship, as its leader, I am the Captain."
(puts Captain's hat on)
"But ... we're all in the same boat. Teamwork! Now, on this ship which is the office, what is the sales department? Anyone?"
Daryl: "How about the sales department is the sails?"
Michael: "Yes, Daryl. the sales department makes sales. Good. Let me just exp
Re:hero worship (Score:2)
Perhaps it's because organizations almost invariably distribute rewards in proportion to responsibility. Higher positions within companies are almost always associated with greater accountability for success and failure. The official fiction is that the lower ranks are always working as hard as possible, and that the actual value of the work is determined by the decisions of the higher-ups. Hence, the success or failure
Measure the man by his basic beliefs. . . (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't come up with cool sayings like that unless you're right into it. (Or unless you have a great PR department, which I don't believe was the case).
My impression of Jobs is that he's simply entertaining his mania. --He sees possible futures where technology becomes an idealized, humanity-altering version of itself, and he's simply trying to realize this vision by following and then occupying what seem to him the obvious and inevitable steps.
Is he angling to go head-to-head with Microsoft? I doubt it. Guys like Jobs find reward and adrenalin rushes, etc., through realizing creative vision. Competition and the dark 'joy' of destroying competitors, and the 'joy' of collecting all the money in the world pale in comparison. Jobs is entirely capable of 'losing' to Gates, because winning and losing are of little importance when one's goal is merely to shape and advance. (Even if shaping and advancing mean being a control-freak, which is typical for people like Jobs. Nobody else can see it right or therefore do it right, so why muck about depending on others?)
Time for a little more metaphysical etymology. . .
"Gates" - Not quite the same as a door; doors can be opened and closed by regular individuals. A gate implies a door which is watched and controlled by somebody else, one which is designed to limit and control the flow of that which enters and exits. Bill exerts control over the flow of information.
"Jobs" - Tasks which need doing. Steve follows the work toward his peculiar vision, and then does it, no matter how ludicrous it may appear.
--His moves will at first seem irrational to the sharks, (and frustrated board members), because he likes to invest and play rather than invest and reap. But then when the circumstances are right and creativity blossoms, he suddenly seems like a genius.
My only trouble is that he's embraced the idea that people don't like to think outside certain boundaries and want to be coddled, which may well be true. This bothers me, because while he's out there changing the world, I have to live in it. --And I do not like to be coddled or to have somebody else do my thinking for me.
Candy-coated buttons piss me off. Complexity does not scare me.
-FL
Re:Measure the man by his basic beliefs. . . (Score:3, Funny)
Where can the r
Re:Measure the man by his basic beliefs. . . (Score:2)
Unnecessary complexity in a UI bothers me especially if what is exposed is all that there is. With OS X, the UI is simple and elegant and lets you get the job done. It is designed (or at least UAT) by a CEO, for CEO's and the average Joe.
This makes it easy to use for everybody with a limited amount of learning. The people with the most trouble adjusting are switchers from windows which I can attest to being a switcher myself.
In OSX, the po
Re:Measure the man by his basic beliefs. . . (Score:2)
Celebrity CEO Death Match! (Score:2, Funny)
Here's the twist: Bill would have to answer questions about Apple, and Steve would have to answer questions about Microsoft. They are both keen competitors, I think many would be surpised at how much they knew about each other's business. And to avoid bruised egos, both charities would "win" with a large prize at the end. Wouldn't that be cool?
How about that RDF? (Score:2)
The metoo's are clustered around adoringly because he hasn't said BOOGA WOOGA this week...
Same success formula at Google. (Score:4, Insightful)
"Jobs has believed that small teams of top talent will outperform better-funded big ones. He has used the same approach at Pixar, where creative chief John Lasseter has led the way in creating blockbusters like Toy Story and Finding Nemo. Jobs also outsources far more selectively than his rivals. He'd rather have all his creatives working together than save a few bucks by outsourcing such work overseas."
I work designing telecom software and I see the opposite. Software personal here are hired and managed like cattle. They throw bodies at problems and the cheaper the bodies, the better(we are currently ramping India and China labs while downsizing Texas labs). They create a process that is aimed at the lowest common denominator and that is the result it has, lowest common denominator performance.
If you want to be the best, you hire the best and remove obstacles from their path, and demand their best.
I have occasionally had the priviledege to work in an environment that empowered the talented employees and encouraged them to do great things. It is amazing. But those days are gone now.
Some have an almost accusatory tone when referring to Jobs micromanaging. I think of it as taking a direct interest in the quality and showing it. Encouraging his people to do great things.
I would rather be encouraged by a perfectionist wanting great things, than the mindless hordes of management graduates with decks of powerpoint slides and MS project plans indicating when every piece is projected to be done by the headcount. Mindlessly they shuffle bodies around when reality doesn't line up to projections.
Building leading technology will always be a least partially like producing great art. It will be the domain of creative driven talent, not commodity bodies monitored in MS project plan.
An yet he won't give me an autograph. (Score:2, Funny)
Is this the digital age? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is this the digital age? (Score:2)
Too much credit to Jobs for Pixar? (Score:3, Insightful)
One could argue that a large part of Pixar's success has been Job's willingness to stay out of day-to-day operations and concentrate on the business side.
Nothing has been re-defined - just re-inforced. (Score:4, Insightful)
Most CEO's these days are nothing more than managers - they worry about the bottom line, their idea of raising profits is limited to cost cutting, and basically spend their time looking back at the last quarters results (to see where they can cut more costs) than looking forward.
So no, I don't think Steve Jobs is 'redefining' the CEO role - I think he's merely showing up how crap most CEOs actually are.
focus, focus, focus (Score:2, Interesting)
For some reason, that always seems to disappoint people. They wanted some sort of magic, focusing on any bright shiny slogan or technology associated with the current project. People expect CEO's to put on a great show, it is practically a job definition (no pun intended) these days.
Most CEO's ar
Really? (Score:2)
There have been a number of articles and interviews over the years stating that he has temper tantrums at his employees. I saw one video interview where he admitted it and said he did not have a problem with it as his people knew they were good.
He has accomplished a lot as a CEO, but other CEOs have had similar accomplishments to his and they have done so while behaving like adults.
Correction (Score:2)
he's setting a new bar for promoting a Digital Age corporation.
NeXT did reach a level of stardom. (Score:5, Interesting)
Indeed, if you went into nearly any modern engineering firm or research lab around 1991 or so, you'd often hear about how many of the employees there wanted even just access to a NeXT system, if they couldn't have one for themselves. Often times the price of such a system was quite prohibitive, but those who did have access were often far more productive than their peers.
Oh, I don't know about that (Score:2)
Re:NeXT did reach a level of stardom. (Score:5, Informative)
Taft
Re: (Score:2)
Re:NeXT did reach a level of stardom. (Score:2)
A more recent example of Jobs "designing" software would be Keynote which he beta tested for nearly a year before it was released to the public. If software is easy enough for a CEO to use, then it is going to be easy
Re:NeXT did reach a level of stardom. (Score:2)
Not really. Apple bought Next to get its hands on OpenStep.
NeXTStep -> OpenStep -> Rhapsody -> OSX
Re:NeXT did reach a level of stardom. (Score:2)
Yeah, thanks for stating the obvious.
Re:NeXT did reach a level of stardom. (Score:2)
Jobs is the one that allows people to take risks. That forces the pieces to fit together. That doesn't take the easy way out and expects the consummer to follow along. NeXT was innovative because of Jobs.
Re:Drugs (Score:2)
I wonder which bit of the copy he wrote - was it the 'Think' or the 'Different'?
Losers. . . (Score:5, Interesting)
He's a bigger loser than he was a decade ago.
Loser? When you're not in the game to 'win', losing only means not being able to continue playing.
One of my favorite personality types is the one which pisses off guys like you by not caring about winning or losing in the boring conventional terms so many people think hold validity. Creativity is everything. Greed is a disease. --This, I believe, is a Universal truth which shapes our reality, and once you figure it out, you can fly.
There's a reason why a fellow who has only 'conquered' 3% of the computer market is such a recognized name. It's because he's learned one of the key secrets of life; how to have fun while everybody else is agonizing over which way the ball is being kicked.
Who would you enjoy meeting more at a party? --A boring conservative money-getter, or a 'loser' who isn't scared to dream and get excited about it? All my friends are technically 'losers', but they live happily, without fear or want, and they light up the world. All the money-getters I've met, by contrast, are like pre-fab appliances with 2-dimensional social skills. These are the 'winners'. Hmm.
-FL
Re:Losers. . . (Score:2)
Hm. I generally only rag on people about poor spelling and grammar, etc., when I cannot understand what it is they are trying to say.
Sounds to me rather like you don't have anything intelligent to respond with to what I was putting forth. --But rather than admit this to me (or yourself), you prefer to sink to making unrelated attacks which border on the physically threatening. This behavior is sadly typical of the conservative mind-set.
Re: top three percent -- best of everything (Score:2)
'the top 3 percent' -- exactly -- as cringley said it in 'the best revenge [pbs.org]'.
When Gates speaks about winning he means WINNING, the whole enchilada, mastery of the universe. At this point in his career, every thought that comes out of Bill Gates' mind is grandly strategic. Steve Jobs, on the other hand, thinks solely in terms of tactics, not strategy. His wins are today, tomorrow, next week, next quarter. He revels in every little chance to push people around and make things the way he wants them to be. He ca
Singular, indeed. (Score:4, Insightful)
Indeed, Jobs says with pride that Pixar has made the tough call to stop production at some point on every one of its movies to fix a problem with a storyline or character. "Quality is more important than quantity, and in the end, it's a better financial decision anyway," Jobs told BusinessWeek last year. "One home run is much better than two doubles," he said, explaining that then there's only one marketing and production budget rather than two.
This is a profound statement of commitment and speaks volumes not only about Pixar's approach to technology, but Apple's as well. Apple's focus on Mac OS X and a high quality experience with all of its hardware--from iMac to Powerbook to Powermac to iPod nano to iPod video--is the product of a singular mind. We've all heard about Jobs' influence on all aspects of product development and what strikes me is how the above quote resembles Apple's notorious commitment to a single-button mouse. It's almost as if a one-button mouse is a metaphor in hardware for the singular attention Jobs, (hence) Apple, and Pixar devote to its products.
I hope we see a new Disney come out of this merger more than we see a new Pixar.