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I cannot believe this is real. (It is. Slashdot says so.)




(Source: cafehayek.com)




Steve Jobs Didn’t

  • Steve Jobs did not create products. He created an organization that predictably and reliably created emotionally resonant products.
  • Steve Jobs did not make movies. He made a company that predictably and reliably made blockbusters.
  • Steve Jobs did not wrest market share from competitors. He created new markets that attracted and sustained competitors.
  • Steve Jobs did not design anything. He gave others the freedom to think about what jobs products are hired to do.
  • Steve Jobs did not re-engineer processes. He brought engineering processes to works of creativity and the creative process to engineering.
  • Steve Jobs did not develop new management theories. He showed by example that innovation can be managed.
  • Steve Jobs was not a visionary. He put the dots together and saw where they led.
  • Steve Jobs was not a futurist. He just built the future one piece at a time.
  • Steve Jobs did not distort reality. He spoke what he believed would become reality at a time when those beliefs seemed far fetched.
  • Steve Jobs was not charismatic. He spoke from the heart compelling others to follow him.
  • Steve Jobs was not a gifted orator. He spoke plainly.
  • Steve Jobs was not a magician. He practiced, a lot.

He had taste.
He was curious.
He was patient.
He was foolish.
He was hungry.

These things many others can do. Maybe you can.

Horace Dediu



Damn Straight.





Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool I’ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life. Because almost everything — all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure — these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.

– Steve Jobs

In Memoriam of Steve Jobs

When my Grandfather died our family did an interesting grieving exercise in which each of us defined my Grandfather with a single word. When I heard today that Steve Jobs had died I immediately thought back to this exercise and the word that would fit Steve best. I think I found it:

Quality

I’ve experienced it first hand. My first apple computer was a PowerBook G3 Wallstreet (series 1). I bought it in 1998, just a year after Steve had resumed work for Apple as CEO (it was the first laptop released since his return). I was fourteen years old and my PowerBook and I were inseperable. I grew up on that computer and it taught me valuable life lessons. I attribute a lot of my positive qualities to the hacker ethic that I learned on that computer. 

Fun fact: if I had invested the cost of the computer (approximately $3000 including a low end $600 CD burner) in Apple stock, I would be a cool $103,000 richer today. The laptop now resides in my water-heater closet with a dead battery and some 10 year old linux distro on it. I don’t regret it. I’m happy to be on the user’s side of Apple’s success because it embodies something important. I’ve owned dozens and dozens of Apple products. I’ve never been dissapointed and I’m happy to have contributed to their massive Wall Street success.

Apple’s success is meaningful and deserves metaphysical exploration. If you could boil down the model for success into just a few sentences, what would it be? I believe that Grant Huhn put it nicely (as quoted by John Gruber):

Apple is doing, and has been doing, things much different than any company — in any industry — for at least the past ten years. Apple’s products and operation are vastly superior. Many people have recognized this all along. Some people will never recognize it.

It’s just now the numbers confirm it.

When I read this for the first time it struck me as true, obvious, and I didn’t think I’d think twice about it. But it stuck with me. What ultimately struck me was the contrast drawn to other companies; no other company in the history of the world has had the same kind of success with a quality-first business model.

Stereotypical Big Business consists of diehard, cutthroat, undercut-your-competitors and squeeze-your-customers-for-all-they’re-worth practices. We see this everyday and we know there is something fundamentally wrong with it. Under Steve Job’s leadership Apple bucked this trend and created quality products that are built to serve their customers.

The kicker is that Steve made it work. Eight of the top nine most valuable (by market cap) businesses in the world are either banks or oil companies. Deep down inside, all of us know these companies are evil. Steve’s Apple tops the list. And quality got them there.

There are few words as profound or meaningful as quality and Steve embodied it. He brought it to Big Business in a way that has never been seen before, and our society needed it desperately. We are all better off for emphasized quality and we owe Steve Jobs a great deal of gratitude.



photojojo:

We’ll miss you, Steve.

Charis Tsevis created mosaic portraits of Steve Jobs using many images of the Apple CEO’s innovations.

Mosaic Portraits of Steve Jobs

via Good


Via Photojojo!

Rest in peace Steve Jobs. I can confidently say that you’ve changed my life for the better.


Quote of the Day

Engadget regarding the new iOS 5 Reminders:

Location-aware, though, which will bug you when you’re near what you need to do.


Least Sandpiper by Jesse Hodges (dubloons)) on 500px.com


More Terns In Flight by Jesse Hodges (dubloons)) on 500px.com


Hummingbird Feeding 3 by Jesse Hodges (dubloons)) on 500px.com


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