Typical nerd who hasn't done shit but has strong opinions about some tech n programming language.
@doc-holliday-3 күн бұрын
steve jobs was a massive pos that stole credit for other peoples ideas and was by all accounts a toxic scumbag as a boss. Apple is also a terrible product in large that costs more and does less than its major competitors and sells solely based off dimwits brand recognition... But ill atleast give him credit for sitting here and taking hard open questions and actually giving them thought out answers and not just political BS. We need to drag more coporate CEOs over the coals like this and force them to answer hard questions and not let them take curated softball questions from "journalists" that they give favors, products and money to lick their ass.
@rachfayee4 күн бұрын
I wish Steve Jobs was still alive
@speedking72248 күн бұрын
This man was awesome. Anyone with confidence in his abilities is considered a jerk in todays PC world...
@IsaacGutierrez-ot6im10 күн бұрын
So is Steve Jobs a sociopath or a psychopath?
@daltonbuchholz50614 күн бұрын
Psychopath Too much charisma and forethought You normally don’t attribute either of those to people with meth addictions that steal car radios (sociopaths)
@georgeburdine566013 күн бұрын
Thank goodness for cancer,and took this piece of work out.
@user-gw1os2lb3j12 күн бұрын
damn.
@petermj109811 күн бұрын
Jobs chose not to get his cancer treated. He could have survived if he got treatment but he never got treatment.
@moneytalkwithoz13 күн бұрын
I don't own apple products, I dislike them, but I love Steve Jobs. Tim Cook should watch this on replay, again and again.
@donaldjohnson-ow3kq15 күн бұрын
Focusing on the personal device experience instead of trying to be the equivalent of an automated office platform was the right decision. It would be interesting to have asked Jobs if he learned from Xerox's experience 20 years earlier from trying and failing to implement it, or from the mini computer experiments that eventually fizzled out and were replaced by PCs.
@jackfreni260618 күн бұрын
Can someone find out what year this was? Just for context
@bhawinipandey14 күн бұрын
1997
@nigellacson521622 күн бұрын
Lol
@blackhoundrise843127 күн бұрын
I don’t understand the Java question and the “you clearly don’t know you’re talking about”, but I saw how a person can opt to avoid conflicting and not let criticism affect them.
@nurc027 күн бұрын
With laser printer example he kind of contradicts his point of not starting with technology and figuring out a way to sell it to customer that he made earlier. Nevertheless, I still admire the skill to be calm and defuse uncomfortable situation.
@Nerinav1985Ай бұрын
He read his favourite book Autobiography of a Yogi every night before bedtime. That is his source of inspiration and energy
@danielduckqАй бұрын
Is that Gabe Newell?
@KB13-hc6ktАй бұрын
Don’t make him cry😢
@iambetterthanuАй бұрын
Translation: profits come first, always. His first minute of silence was conjuring up some lawyerly way to package "walled garden" into a digestible concept, and sell it. He polished that turd to a shine.
@IRK-pd7lcАй бұрын
He had me when he jousted the stool
@afridgetoofar1818Ай бұрын
Ashton Kutcher was a great CEO.
@A-ROD-oe8wl2 ай бұрын
Steve jobs said a lot with out saying anything & thats when admitting that the guy was right probably would've been huge if i it were today but it didn't matter especially now they make a software/ hardware updates & it's over took your idea from the comment sections & thats that
@camolive37272 ай бұрын
Apple under Steve Jobs: “What incredible benefits can we give to the customer?” Apple after Steve Jobs: “What incredible profits can we milk from the customer despite a complete lack of benefit?”
@Wassup-DocАй бұрын
This !
@joshjacobson98462 ай бұрын
Imagine it’s 2024 and you’re the dude who thought he was doing something by dunking on Java.
@japanboy314152 ай бұрын
Typical software engineering code monkey who lives off one ticket to the next lmfao
@jeffmoore86073 ай бұрын
You could see for a split second he wanted to murder that man.
@rutuja12293 ай бұрын
00:10 Mr. Jobs discussed his lack of knowledge on Java and open doc. 01:05 Affecting change is difficult. 01:54 Start with customer experience and work backwards to technology 02:36 Let's sit with engineers to figure out our technology and marketing strategy. 03:13 Apple's first laser printer was an awesome technology with easy usability 03:50 Apple's team is working hard 04:23 Support the team in making mistakes and decisions along the way. 04:50 Supporting Apple in the market
@user-si1oy7fg5c3 ай бұрын
Somebody send this to the GenAI bro's 2:35
@Hassan_Nader3 ай бұрын
You get there Mr. Jobs.. And all of us too.. Thank you 🙏🏻🙏🏻 R.I.P
@mahlonkapule73043 ай бұрын
apple is now making hundreds of billions of dollars a year and they have more employees than 75% of american companies do. I think his vision for apple has gone far beyond anything he ever thought it would, in less than 20 years of his death
@jfish0323 ай бұрын
"And I've got the scar tissue to prove it" was a brilliant line. Also, "Start with the customer experience and work backwards" and implying mistakes are a necessary byproduct of progress. All gold
@poppycock311854 ай бұрын
If more people (including me) took time to think about their next actions/words while responding to idiots then the world would probably be a better place.😂 Sometimes it is very difficult though and the act now/think later alarm kicks in and takes over.
@Fj8282haha4 ай бұрын
Humble, practical and down to earth
@Fj8282haha4 ай бұрын
Legend
@Marcus_Berger17014 ай бұрын
I love you i love you i love you Steve! You were my inspiration, my star, my hope for the world. You were the most intelligent and creative and beloved being on earth. What a wonderful human being and what a loss for the entire world. Steve you are my god! 🌞
@thecianinator4 ай бұрын
But what was he doing for the last seven years though
@cilliankeane51654 ай бұрын
Lol
@user-ce5cy8wv9g4 ай бұрын
Any furniture repair tech knows to use blocks in the rocker springs to keep them in place while you change out the base. That way you don't have to pry the springs up to realign the screw holes, they'll already be in alignment.
@berneyesser12914 ай бұрын
Good video. One thing I’d like to add is that those extra small parts that you said wasn’t needed, actually are. They go in the center hole of the brackets that have the springs. They keep the chair from rocking too far back and tipping over. The round swivel plate reduces the center of gravity and if you go as far back as you can do with a traditional base, it will tip backwards. Each bolt is comprised of two sections and when installed they have probably an inch of play that still allows the rocker to rock back but limits how far it will go so it doesn’t tip over. If you rock back hard enough though, it will tip even with these bolts. I used to work at a furniture store and have installed hundreds of these swivel bases. Also what works good to keep the springs in position when you remove the base is to cut a 2x2 into 1/4” long pieces. Then you can slide them in before you take off the standard base. You might have to build up the width of the 2x2=which is actually 1 1/2 x 1 1/2 with some duct tape strips and wrap them around one side. That will increase the height of your blocks and that will keep the holes pretty much where you need them.
@AcidHouse994 ай бұрын
Watch and learn fellas. Watch and learn from the best.
@jaypaint48554 ай бұрын
Well, I guess as a Gen Zer I can say I’ve never heard of OpenDoc, so it’s safe to say who ended up being right 😂
@callmekk144 ай бұрын
"Some mistakes are being made along the way , that's good !! because atleast some decisions are being made along the way " - Steve jobs
@stephenharriman19744 ай бұрын
Anyone notice how he swallowed and sat down very quickly after the question 🤣 Got brave for 10 seconds then ran for the hills. Well handled Steve , swat that fly away 🦁
@saulmendoza16525 ай бұрын
Java is dead!!!
@sherbournesubwaymess5 ай бұрын
The guy asking the question is David Easter then Director of Technologies at Virtus Corporation. He was a major supporter of OpenDoc/working with other vendors on this new technology. When Jobs axed OpenDoc, David obviously was p.o'd. It would be interesting today to get David's side of this question, along with what he thinks of where Apple went under Jobs with Mac OSX/iOS/AppStore/etc. People strangely forget...but Apple was DYING during this time with only a few months cash left in the bank. Jobs slashed/burned a ton of R&D and put the entire company's focus on the original iMac to try and stabilize finances. The biggest problem with OpenDoc: There's no 'short' way to describe what it is, what it does and how it works...except that it can do a few cool things, but features you rely on like the FILE tab is gone. I briefly used OpenDoc in the 90s, I thought it was really cool to 'drag/drop' everything into a document, but I immediately saw the limitations vs using standalone apps like Photoshop/Word.
@deeznutsliam52135 ай бұрын
Rip 🪦
@Molandria5 ай бұрын
Merry Christmas 2023 :D Jingle Bells!!! (Kick)
@UpInFlam3z5 ай бұрын
You guys sent me a DVD way back in the day. I originally discovered this on Newgrounds and remember having to download each episode on dialup and watch them with QuickTime. I remember how excited I was when part 2 finally came out. Rewatching Vendetta has become a Christmas tradition for my sister and me. Thanks for many years of holiday memories and for resharing this film in upscaled, HD glory.
@Henryk62035 ай бұрын
But I think that like he needs to know what he’s talking about it as well. 4:22
@Henryk62035 ай бұрын
I love, How he basically Rip the guy to shreds in one single blow 3:20.
@neurmayaacademy6 ай бұрын
Think Defferent
@samlobo12346 ай бұрын
What is high quality? He dodged that question, sounding more like a politician rather than businessman
@pizzatime74336 ай бұрын
I wonder if that guy who answered that question is still alive