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VANITY: My Journey Through the Computer Age, and The Passing of Steve Jobs
10/6/2011 | Myself

Posted on 10/05/2011 9:57:56 PM PDT by rlmorel

Steve Jobs is dead.

I just got home and saw the news, it compelled me to write this.

I wrote this because I have used an Apple product nearly every day since 1987, and those products have impacted my life in a variety of ways, almost all of them good.

Steve Jobs was one of those people who seemed like he would be around forever to me. I don't spend much time pondering the passing of many public figures. It's not my style, and I understand all too well that in the end, our time here on this earth is simply dust, a single fraction of a heartbeat in time.

But I think I'll make an exception for Steve Jobs. This is how his products personally affected me.

I had worked on a Digital Equipment PDP-11 when I was in the Navy back in the 70s, and after I got out and went to college, I took a course on programming. Computers weren't things that I was completely conversant with, but they weren't completely mysterious to me either.

In 1986 I was living at my brothers house, and I noticed that there had been a large square bag sitting in the corner of the room for about a week. When I asked about it, he said it was a computer he had borrowed it from my sister, who had purchased it but wasn't using it. It turned out that he didn't need to use it, so was just sitting there. I called my sister, and asked her if I could play around with it. She said “Sure, I'm not using it… use it for as long as you want.”

Funny, I remember that summer night very well. There wasn't much going on, so I had time to burn, time to be curious. I unzipped the bag, and pulled all the components out. There were no instructions or manuals, so I just looked at these things and thought “Okay. This keyboard has a wire coming out of it, it probably plugs into the back of this component, and yeah, this connector looks like that…” and I would plug it in. There was a rectangular device which I found out later was a SCSI drive, and it was insanely expensive. But I also found out that it was 20 MB of storage, which was equivalent to a whole boatload of floppies, so I knew that was a good thing.

I plugged it in and looked at it before I powered it up. The sun had gone down, and it was getting dark in the room. I felt on the back of the box for the rocker switch, and turned it on.

The computer “bonged” at me, a single echoing note. And then that little screen lit up with a small, square, odd smiley face in the middle of it, and I watched a series of inscrutable symbols march along the bottom of the screen. In that darkened room, with that device that didn't belong to me, of which I knew nothing about, my real love affair with technology and computers began.

So here I am, hunched over in a chair, looking at this device that has no instructions, trying to figure out what it's all about. There was a symbol of some kind of by itself on the screen, and I found that if I moved the mouse, a pointer moved with it. So far so good. I put the pointer over the symbol on the screen and clicked the mouse. Nothing happened, except that the symbol was somehow changed in appearance. So I clicked it again, nothing happened. I clicked a couple of times in a row, and all of a sudden the symbolic object on the screen expanded, and now there was a white square that had a bar across the top with some fine horizontal lines.

You get the idea.

I sat there for a couple of hours just tinkering with the thing. Eventually I found my way to the applications and opened up MacPaint. It seems so childish now, but at the time, that was making all kinds of synapses fire in my brain. I imagine that I did what nearly everybody else did who got their hands on a program like that for the 1st time. You know, making all kinds shapes, filling them with every imaginable pattern, dragging them around on top of each other, and so on.

Within a short period of time, I was compelled to go out and buy my own computer. It was interesting, my sister offered to let me have the computer and use it for as long as I wanted, but there was something about using it while it belonged to somebody else. It's almost as if either I felt guilty for taking it away from somebody else, or after enjoying using it so much, I worried that she would ask for it back.

So I went out and bought myself a Mac SE. I had so much fun with that thing. I worked at a hospital, and I hilariously toted that big square bag into work with me so I could do work stuff on the computer. I was doing all of our procedure manuals, I was making nice good looking documents for our vascular lab, all kinds of stuff. Here I am now, nearly 25 years later, and every once in a while if I am sitting around after work with some of my coworkers, someone will recall watching me bring that bag in, wondering what the heck it was. And someone else will exclaim that they couldn't believe at the time some of the things I was able to do on that dinky square box with that miniature screen.

To this day, more than a few people will claim that I inspired them to buy a computer. I readily admit that hearing that brings a smile to my face.

Over the years, I became familiar with a wide range of programs. I had a copy of Adobe Illustrator, and I learned how to use that program without a manual. I'm telling you now, that is a hard thing to do. Nowadays, it wouldn't be hard at all, because so many programs use those kinds of tools now, and those kinds of methods of manipulating vectors. But back then, it was a real mind bender to me. I spent a lot of time in bookstores looking for books that might tell me something I could use. As I went into the 90s, computer books became a lot more common, and I ended up buying a lot of those books. My crowning achievement was a large poster that I made in Adobe Illustrator for my wife of our cat wearing a Christmas hat. I still have that file, and I open it now and marvel that I did this entire thing on this little teeny tiny 8 inch screen of that Mac SE. I find it humorously ironic that, given that the Internet is chock full of Cat pictures and such, you would nearly think the Internet was made solely for such things, it was such a proud achievement for me, taking me weeks to complete.

As the years went by, I purchased a steady parade of Apple products. For me, one of the most groundbreaking things was the introduction of the Apple Newton. At the time, I was working in nuclear medicine, and one of the things that was problematic for me were the sequences of manipulations we were required to perform on studies so that the physicians were able to interpret those studies appropriately. These sequences of manipulations, applying such things as Fourier filters (with different parameters) and the order in which the steps were applied images and so on became very hard to keep track of because they changed from day to day at the whim of the physician.

I had one of those small rectangular leather bound notebooks that I carried habitually in my back pocket, and was constantly pulling it out to refer to it. The problem was, as things changed, I had to scratch things out or erase them, and write the new ones in. Eventually, the little leather bound notebook became unreadable and completely full, with notes written horizontally and vertically along the edge of pages, things blacked out and so on. And to top it all off, it became nearly impossible to find just the right note, because as we all remember, you had to use your brain to remember where in the notebook that particular piece of information was in order to access it.

When the Newton came out, I purchased one immediately without hesitation. That product got a bad reputation from some people, but it was revolutionary for me. One of the things that was absolutely perfect about it was its “soup” memory that was completely searchable. I discovered the concept of keywords on my own, and began tagging everything that I put into it.

And I put everything into it.

When the updated Newton came out, I got some money and got that one immediately. At the time, you could buy a little tiny folding keyboard, and I purchased one of those. It was around this time that I was promoted, and they put me in charge of the IT functions in my radiology department. I left direct patient care behind, and dedicated myself to the fusion of information technologies and medical imaging. In the middle 90s, it was also a tough time financially for some aspects of medicine, and we were no exception. Here I was, given the job description of “managing everything they came in or out of the walls”, and they couldn't afford to buy me a desktop PC. So I went to meetings with my Apple Newton and folding keyboard, and I would take notes on it. Every once in a while I will go to a meeting now, and someone who's been there a while will say “I remember when you used to come to those meetings and set up your little computer and take all the notes for the meeting…”

For my desktops, I had PCs at work, but at home I used Macs. I used that Mac SE From 1987 To 1994. After that, I saved up my money to buy the best Mac that was available at the time, and I bought a Mac 9600. I got a lot use out of the 9600, but I will tell you this: there has never been a computer before or since that was more tortuous to have to replace or install memory on. It was absolutely, bloody brutal. Apple has since designed some really nice stuff, but there was nothing nice about opening up that box, I assure you.

It was around this time that I understood 2 things… how terrible computers had the capability to be operationally, and how the Macintosh operating system was getting close to crossing over from a pleasurable computing experience to the operationally terrible computing experience.

I had my 1st desktop PC at work, and I found it to be eminently usable for what I needed it for, with one glaring exception: it crashed. It was running Windows 95, and it crashed…constantly. I got so accustomed to having it freeze up, have to reboot it, redo all my work and get back to where I was, but I stopped even feeling as though was problematic. I liken it to the old frog in the hot water parable which addresses the concept of getting so used to something that even when it gets terrible, you're so used to it that you just don't realize it.

One day, after my computer had crashed 5 or 6 times before lunch, it suddenly occurred to me that I had no idea how much time I was losing due to computer crashes. I had a stopwatch, so I kept it next to my computer for the next week or so, and I timed it every time the computer would crash, starting at at the point where I realized it was frozen, and ending at the point where I was back to where I had been before the computer crashed.

Over the course of that week, averaged out, it was taking me approximately 15 min. of wasted time every time the computer crashed. And the computer was crashing between 5 and 10 times a day. I was appalled at that, but when I extrapolated out (using some wild ass guesses, nothing really scientific) to the entire American workforce over a year, it came out to some kind of ridiculous number that almost made me fall on the floor. It was the waste, the sheer waste of man-hours. It was then that I realized just how inefficient computers could make people.

But my Macintosh was not immune. As a power user, I had so much software installed, and so many extensions loading at startup that was taking an inordinate amount of time start up the computer, but even worse, the operating system (which had previously seemed rock stable in comparison to the Windows systems I was using at work) became unstable as well. To my annoyance, I found myself becoming completely familiar with special programs that were used to manage extensions, and I found myself developing an unnerving amount of trivial knowledge about all of these extensions, which ones couldn't be used with other ones, which ones were going to make your system unstable and so on.

For the last few years of the 90s, the operating system was nowhere near as enjoyable to use as it had been. It was clear to me that the operating system was being pushed far beyond it's capability to reliably handle its tasks. I began to watch with increasing interest Apples attempts to move to a more modern operating system.

When Apple moved forward and introduced OS X, that was it. That operating system delivered the reliability, power and stability that I wanted in a computer. I remember when I installed it for the first-time I just had to go out and see just how well it handled multitasking… I launched every single application that I had, and began opening image files and playing movies until the movies begin to stutter and things slowed down. It was great. I was one of those people who was willing to give up some of the interface niceties that I had used and become used to over the course of a decade or so, in order to get a powerful and reliable operating system. I have been thrilled with it ever since.

But it hasn't just been the Apple products I used on the desktop that I enjoyed, and that changed my life, it has been the ones I carry my pocket that have made a more profound difference for me.

I had a pretty good-sized music collection, and when CDs came out, I jumped on them before anybody else that I knew. I went to a high-end music store, and they were playing some classical music on a brand-new CD player, and I was blown away. I was fresh out of the Navy, and was working in a nursing home part-time while I went to college. I began to buy as many CDs as I could, and it was funny how at the time it was very difficult to find more than just a few titles, but even when titles came out but I wasn't all that interested in, I bought them for variety. To my damaged ears, the music was just unbelievable. So I amassed a nice collection, but over the next 20 years, I listened to music less and less. I didn't have time. I was working my tail off, and socializing with friends, and being able to relax and pop in a CD just wasn't happening for me. I eventually became somewhat alienated from my music, and stopped listening for the most part.

I forgot just how much I loved my music.

When the iPod came out, I bought one immediately. I came home, took my entire CD collection and stacked it all around my computer area. I began digitizing my music. Every time I would even walk by the room, I would walk over and insert a CD to digitize it. As I recall, it took me several weeks.

But it changed my life in a most pleasurable way. I found my music again. I was able to take my music everywhere with me, and still do. Even more enjoyable was the fact that I was able to access all of my music, and much of my music had become inaccessible to me simply because I couldn't see it. For a long time I was just listening to the same music for convenience, instead of digging through my collection. After my music had been digitized, I realized all the music that had been hiding in the shadows all those years. It reopened my eyes.

But even more so, there is another aspect of the iPod that has changed my life. I used to read ferociously. When my wife and I would go on vacation, I would bring between 5 and 10 books with me. I've always loved reading, I read Moby Dick when I was 8 years old, and thought that was the coolest book ever. Even though I consistently failed at math, and wasn't able to even add fractions when I graduated from high school, I had good linguistic skills. (I fixed my lousy math skills in the Navy, due in large part to a great guy, a civilian contractor working for Detroit Diesel Allison who came on our last cruise and tutored me in math. Jerry Wouters, if you are still alive and out there, know that you made a difference, a huge difference, in my life. God bless you.)

But over the years, my eyesight has got worse, and worse. I began to read less and less, to the point where I couldn't read anything for more than 15 min. without my eyes beginning to burn and water. After I had the iPod, I discovered audio books. It not only changed my life in a good way because I can make up for some of that lost reading, now that hour-long commute that I have everyday to and from work is (can I actually seriously say this with a straight face) fun. Yup… fun. I hate to even admit this, but there are times when I pull into my driveway, and I sit in the car for 5 min. to listen a little bit more… :-)

And last but not least, is the iPhone. My whole adult life, I have been an early adopter of technology. It has been wonderful for me, and improved my life in substantial ways. Don't get me wrong, there are few things they can give me the same kick as pulling off a mountain road to watch the sun go down, or seeing a blazing shooting Star at night. But technology has allowed me to leverage parts of my life and make them fuller and more enjoyable in many cases. That said, cell phone technology was not for me. I was not the least bit interested in having a phone all the time and I was one of the last people of anybody I knew to purchase a cell phone. Neither my wife nor I had the least bit of interest in that technology.

Kind of funny, considering I have been on call nearly constantly (it seems) for the past 25 years or so. But being so much of a Luddite when it came to cell phones gave me an interesting perspective that many people may have missed out on. I actually paid attention I got to watch the demise of the pay phone. Pay telephones were something that I was intimately familiar with. Beginning when I was in the military (and I know there are many of you out there who understand completely what I'm saying here) pay telephones became an integral part of my life. All the rolls of quarters, the constant clink clink clink of having to add them as you spoke long-distance, and the frustration of trying to finish conversation with a loved one as your time ran out and you had no more money!

But even more curious, was the odd relationship that I had with pay telephones. Working in the field the medicine, I was on the hook constantly, and had to be available to call people back or drive in to the hospital at a moments notice. When I drove to and from work, I knew where nearly every single pay telephone was in a 30 mile radius. I laugh when I think about it.

I've always suspected that the primitive Neanderthal men who trudged through that rugged landscape had to know it every moment the exact location and distance of any tree that could be climbed. I am sure that they probably utilized much the same synaptic pathways to store the location of those trees that I used to store the location of all the pay telephones.

But as I eschewed the use of cell phones, it became apparent that the landscape of pay telephones was becoming alarmingly barren with each passing day. Then one day, I was paged on my way home. I sped my car so the closest pay telephone, jumped out and found… a blank area with a wire hanging out. I jumped back in my car and spent the next phone, jumped out and found the phone unusable because someone had jammed something into the coin slot. Now, as time was ticking, I motored relentlessly to a gas station where I knew there was a phone, because I had used it a few days before. Jumping out of the car, I grabbed the phone and… there was a high-pitched tone emanating from it. I jiggled the receiver up and down, then out of frustration, slammed the handset in the receiver.

To my chagrin, the handset broke in half. I was appalled… I knew what they made those things out of, and they were nearly indestructible. I'll bet that if you tried to break one deliberately, you would be unable to. Worse, as I stood there with half the phone in my hand, I gazed at a sticker on the phone directly in front of me that promised $10,000 fine to anyone vandalizing the phone. In disgust, I looked up to see the gas station videocamera gazing unblinkingly down at me. Great.

It was at that point that I knew I had to purchase a cell phone. But I had been holding off even thinking about it, because I vowed that I would not carry around both a cell phone and an iPod. It was fortunate for me, that right around that time, the iPhone was released. I purchased it, and now I have 2 or 3 old iPods that are just sitting around doing nothing. It's great… music, phone, Internet all on one thing that I stick in my shirt pocket. Even better, with a cellular data plan, I was able to actually remote desktop into my work computer and provide support. Good God. All that in my shirt pocket.

We have arrived.

This is my techno-story. And I suspect there are hundreds of thousands if not millions of people who have traveled that same road that I have, and arrived at the same kind of destination. That in itself is not all that remarkable, it's wonderful that so many have done so.

What I find remarkable, is that it was the vision of this one man who had a hand in all of it. There is no doubt that Steve Jobs was not only NOT the only one who had a hand in this, but that he irrefutably stood on the shoulders of many others. But what is remarkable is that Steve Jobs saw this. He was a technological visionary who saw a reality, a reality where people used massively complex technological devices with the same dispassion that they use a hair dryer. Or better yet… a toaster.

When you see people using an iPod, they generally aren't holding it in their hand in front of their face, twisting it from side to side and looking at it in a puzzled fashion trying to figure out what to do.

What's remarkable is that when you see someone using iPod, it is nearly unconscious. They are simply using it. Like sticking slices of bread in the toaster and mashing the button down.

When I made the decision to buy an iPhone, my first cell phone, I went down to the nearest Apple Store to actually look at one. As I walked into the Apple Store (another “vision” of a techno-reality by Steve Jobs) they had a table set up with 10 iPhones on it. What I saw astounded me in a very basic way. Before I walked up to use one, I stood back for about 10 min. and just watched the people gathered around the table holding this new technology in their hands.

What amazed me was watching the looks on their faces as they explored this complicated device without the benefit of a manual or a sales representative standing by their side. As these people handled this device, they would reach out with their hand or finger and do something. I could not see what was happening on the phones. But looking at the faces of those people told me everything.

Their faces all had semi-neutral looks on them, with just the faintest hint of a furrowed brow. Not furrowed in puzzlement or frustration, but rather, furrowed in concentration. Then, out of the blue, their eyes would open up wide, their faces would light up, and a hint of a smile would enter their face. It was clear as the blue sky… these people had light bulbs of pleasure and discovery going off in their brain. For these people, this was a device that did something the way that they thought it should. How about that?

That is what made Steve Jobs a special person in the world of technology. He understood what many people wanted in technology. And his gift was not only understanding that, but driving people who work for him to produce products that filled that desire.

Some people like to say that is simply marketing, pure and simple. But it isn't.

The real talent of Steve Jobs was the fusion of understanding people's needs, engineering products to meet that need, and marketing those products via slick commercials and accessible stores manned by enthusiastic employees. Like many people, I often denigrate marketing. But marketing was one of the key reasons that Apple products were so successful, and responsible for the widespread introduction of various technologies and concepts into everyday lives. Everybody knows some aspect of technology that was invented, thought of, or even introduced by somebody or some company other than Apple that never made it until Apple introduced it into the market.

The way I see it, a technology that is not accepted is no different from a book that is not read or a painting that is not seen. It doesn't make any difference if someone designs the ultimate artificial heart that would change medical history, if it never makes it inside a human's chest. So, in that light, I would encourage people not to discount the importance of the marketing angle.

That is my journey through the technology landscape of the personal computer age. In my case, it was largely illuminated by the lights placed on that landscape by Steve Jobs and Apple Computer as I progressed through it. For me, it has been a hugely entertaining and productive ride.

I have a friend whose grandfather is 105 years old. When I saw him recently, I can only marvel at him. The things he has seen with his eyes astound me, from horse-drawn carriages to jets. But those of us younger than him have also been here for part of that ride, and have borne witness to the computer age. We have lived through historic times in many ways, and the advent and acceptance of the personal computer it's just one of them. In the future, accounts of this time in this revolution will undoubtedly feature Steve Jobs. And we were here to see him work. It has been a privilege.

God bless you Steve Jobs, and Godspeed.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: apple; chat; stevejobs; tribute; vanity
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To: RightOnline

Most of you people who keep mouthing this “rip off from Xerox” line have never, ever seen, much less USED a D*machine from Xerox.

I have. My wife used to work at Xerox, porting their s/w to Sun workstations and Unix.

Neither one of us think that the Xerox interface is remotely as clean or well thought out as Apple’s. Yes, the D machines were the first integrated GUI system, but there were very important differences. For example, Xerox D machines had 3-button mice.

Why? Their equivalent of the Finder didn’t use more than two. Why three?

Because their SmallTalk environment used three.

How many people here have programmed in SmallTalk-80? Probably not many. I’ve hacked around in it and while it is an elegant language, there’s nothing therein that I didn’t already have in Lisp, really.

Anyone who has shipped a product knows that there’s a whole lot of stuff that has to be done between having a great idea and a great product. Xerox has never been willing or able to do that work.


41 posted on 10/06/2011 6:39:24 AM PDT by NVDave
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To: CORedneck

I have thought about it, but that is between him and God now. I hope he was saved.


42 posted on 10/06/2011 6:50:46 AM PDT by rlmorel (9/11: Aggression is attracted to weakness like sharks are to blood, and we were weak. We still are.)
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To: rlmorel; Swordmaker; randita
Thanks much rimorel, for your beautifully written epitaph. We all have our own Apple Mac stories. Mine also go back to the mid 80's and I was the first in a large Fortune 500 company to get a Mac instead of a PC. For those now under 30 years old in age, it was a time before email, or internet, or smart phones. There was no software for word processing or even spreadsheets. Just a box on the desk for typing and some info exchange between computers in the company. Soon there was a mouse, then communication to those in the company, and even messaging to others in the outside world!
I was fortunate to be able to get new Macs almost every year for that first decade when they were introduced. The old ones were brought home and my son began using my SE when he was two years old. He grew up on them and clicking a mouse with KidPix. He is now into complex programing.

When I left that company I was forced to go over to the dark side and PC's. It was actually a good time to learn the Microsoft world, as some years did lag in the Apple universe. So for a decade I got into new and different software and got up to speed with MS Office, etc. Oh, and I learned how to defrag and update anti-virus software and the other list of computer drudgery.

Then in 2007 I returned to Mac in a big way, with a new MacBook Pro, large LCD screen, and an iPod Touch. Now iPhones that keep my family in touch and informed!

It has been a wonderful return to the best tech devices created for the common folk and all thanks to the man who passed on yesterday. May Steve Jobs RIP. I will pray for his salvation and hope he found Christ before he died. He did a lot of good for many, including me, and also taught me how to listen to, and appreciate, music again.

Thanks again for your post and experiences. Also gratitude to Swordmaker for regularly keeping us up to date on the latest news re: Macs here on Free Republic and his diligence in "the positive."

43 posted on 10/06/2011 6:52:38 AM PDT by vox_freedom (America is being tested as never before in its history. May God help us.)
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To: rlmorel

Just another greedy evil rich person who made us all richer and more prosperous whether we ever used an Apple product or not. Created more jobs directly and indirectly than all politicians combined.


44 posted on 10/06/2011 7:00:30 AM PDT by all the best
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To: NVDave

You sorta miss the point, but never mind.


45 posted on 10/06/2011 7:02:08 AM PDT by RightOnline
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To: rlmorel

Excellent vanity. Thanks.


46 posted on 10/06/2011 7:15:34 AM PDT by Siena Dreaming
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To: rlmorel
Thanks, rlmorel.

You brought back some memories -- nice and not so -- of my travels with technology.

A couple hours a day wasted on computer crashes. Imagine that.

R.I.P. Steve Jobs.

47 posted on 10/06/2011 7:18:05 AM PDT by Tribune7 (If you demand perfection you will wind up with leftist Democrats)
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To: rlmorel

Bump


48 posted on 10/06/2011 7:18:28 AM PDT by BuddaBudd
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To: rlmorel

Remembered the date of that first fair, April 1977.
If I ever get to Mass I am going to that museum.
Yea, was an interesting time in the Valley.
My husband had just started working at HP, Feb 1976.
He and bunch of his friends started a PC club,they wanted to be the first to build personal computers from the ground up. I think we spent $2,000 over the next year and it had 87 megs of memory.
Very exciting.
We were just talking last night about when we got our first over the counter PC, and how we were able to send bulletin board messages over the “net”, then came CompuServe.
There was a game we used to play called life. Every time you played to had to type in pages of code.
And we have progressed from that to my husband and his work pals can go out to lunch and monitor their equipment from their iphones directing operations as necessary.
(We still have our first Sinclare, out in the garage)


49 posted on 10/06/2011 7:23:16 AM PDT by svcw (Those who are easily shocked... should be shocked more often. - Mae West)
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To: all the best; RightOnline; Swordmaker
Photobucket

50 posted on 10/06/2011 7:37:38 AM PDT by vox_freedom (America is being tested as never before in its history. May God help us.)
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To: rlmorel

Best Vanity Ever.

This should be published. I honestly kept thinking: “I must have read the author wrong, because this can’t possibly be a vanity. It must be from Wired, or WSJ, or NYT Magazine, or The New Yorker.”

But I couldn’t pull myself away from it to double check until I finished reading every word.


51 posted on 10/06/2011 7:45:11 AM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Author of BullionBible.com - Makes You a Precious Metal Expert, Guaranteed.)
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To: rlmorel

My journey was similar to yours and the time frame was the same. I started with a machine, The Classic, I think, with the 20 MB external drive running OS 6. I well remember the extensions managing bit and the transition for OS 8 to OS 9 to OS X. I also remember Hypercard which was so simple it made programmers of us all. What ever happened to that?

It is easy to forget that the Mac was the easiest to use word processor at the time and that MacPaint was revolutionary. Wang was a very successful company selling a machine that was strictly a word processor. Apple put them put of business. Word processing had a bigger impact on the success of Apple than most people realize. That and not having to be a semi programmer/computer guru were the keys. Yes, DOS required some programming skills and many didn’t care to learn it.


52 posted on 10/06/2011 7:48:25 AM PDT by Mind-numbed Robot
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To: rlmorel

Thank you for such a wonderful post.

We will all miss him......


53 posted on 10/06/2011 7:55:32 AM PDT by Gator113
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To: rlmorel
bump
54 posted on 10/06/2011 8:04:10 AM PDT by ßuddaßudd (7 days - 7 ways a Guero y Guay Lao << >> with a floating, shifting, ever changing)
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To: rlmorel

Yours was a well done post. While I don’t own any Apple products beyond an iPad I bought for my wife, (who doesn’t let me use it - grin), there is no doubt in my mind that Steve Jobs made a tremendous mark on technology. His vision and eye for design will be missed in this world. As someone else upthread mentioned, we’re all richer for his success even if we haven’t personally been customers of his.


55 posted on 10/06/2011 8:41:25 AM PDT by zeugma (Those of us who work for a living are outnumbered by those who vote for a living.)
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To: rlmorel

Thank you for sharing your Apple journey. This is probably one of the best vanity posts I have ever seen on FR....a great way to honor a man that was on the cutting edge of technology.....


56 posted on 10/06/2011 9:12:30 AM PDT by Kimmers (Pray more and shoot straight.........)
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To: rlmorel

Well done. Thanks for posting.

RIP Steve Jobs.


57 posted on 10/06/2011 9:13:47 AM PDT by Liberty Valance (Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
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To: rlmorel

Things are as they have been with me, not too good. Thank you for your response. You were quite fortunate to have the man your father was, and I’m sure I don’t even have to tell you that.

I’ve been thinking all night about Steve Jobs and the phenomenal influence he has had over our lives, without having invented a light bulb. It’s enough to compare him to his former partner, to realize that there was something special there. A designer in a highly evolved industry who had no formal training or apprenticeship in design. Forget his marketing prowess, that’s what Larry Ellison is about, and little more beyond that. Oracle can survive without supersalesman Ellison, can Apple survive without Jobs? Did he leave behind enough of his spirit, as Henry Ford did, I believe, in his company? (Compare Ford of today, or heck, of 30 years ago to GM of today or 30 years ago!)

I also remembered people I worked with who had this kind of special spark that Jobs did, the sense of the aesthetic, and judging from the anecdotes about Jobs, I think they would behave exactly as he did in regards to product design, had they reached his position or been given the opportunity. But they were, like so many of us, stuck in these bureaucratic corporate environments where creativity was to be suppressed and even penalized, and, man, I am talking not about toothpaste manufacturing but about the very computer industry. So I think that luck too played some role in Steve Jobs’ success. No way would he have succeeded as a salaryman at a computer company that wasn’t his from the start!

Be all that as it may, I read a lot, newspapers, magazines and bumperstickers, everywhere, and in my judgment, your post could easily pass the muster at a decent print publication, such as the weekend WSJ or even the New Yorker, it’s that good.


58 posted on 10/06/2011 9:38:16 AM PDT by Revolting cat! (Let us prey!)
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To: rlmorel
Very good post. I was very much a PC-user and actually vowed never to use an Apple product until around the time the iPod started gaining widespread acceptance in the 2003-2004 period. As a music fanatic, I could no longer resist the notion of carrying all my music around with me in my pocket. I had owned a couple of competing MP3 players up to that time (a Samsung and a Rio) but was very disappointed with the limitations of those products and their clumsy interface to add music.

I discovered the iPod in much the same way you discovered the Macintosh. A co-worker of mine, who had recently bought a newer iPod, let me borrow his original iPod for a trip I was going on. Even though I had to listen to his music (that version iPod would only work on a Mac), it only took me about 30 seconds to realize I must own one for myself.

Fortunately the newer iPods were PC-compatible and I can still remember taking home my first iPod - a 40GB model that had no problem sucking the thousands of digital music files I already had on my PC into it. I was hooked from day one and as with yourself, I started re-discovering music in my collection that I had long forgotten about.

I should comment also on the way that Apple packages their products. My first iPod was so carefully packaged that I immediately became obsessed with cleaning it of all fingerprints so that it would always have the same pristine appearance of when it first came out of the box. The packaging for Apple products is so perfect that I was never able to throw it away. In the back of my closet are still the original boxes that all my iPods, iPhones and MacBook Pro came in.

This is a contrast to how most electronics products are packaged - in that horrendous hard plastic packaging that require knife and scissors to open (with potential injury to both yourself and product).

So over the course of the past 7 years, I have gradually replaced all my PC-based products with Apple products and have become convinced of the superiority of the OSX operating system over Windows and iOS over Windows Mobile (which is a joke, by the way).

With respect to Steve Jobs, it is sad to see him pass on. He has been very ill for a number of years now and it just goes to show that wealthy and successful people know what they are talking about when they say they will happily trade in all their millions for good health.

I've read some biographies on Steve Jobs over the past few years and in general was never that impressed with him as a person. However, as a businessman, a perfectionist and a visionary, he had no peer. It is a rare thing for all those traits to come together in one person and for those who worked at Apple since the early days, it must have been one hell of a ride.

59 posted on 10/06/2011 10:34:25 AM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: SamAdams76

Someone once said that there are a hundred moments of truth that lead to Meeting and Exceeding the Customer’s Expectations...


60 posted on 10/06/2011 8:01:36 PM PDT by tubebender (She was only a whiskey maker, but I loved her still.)
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