Hard News: Thanks, Steve. For everything.
168 Responses
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Goodbye Mr Chips...
I’ve never, in my entire life, used an Apple product. Ever.
Though it wouldn't surprise me if you have used a device, or program, that was the way it was in response to an Apple innovation, IIRC at least one of the Windows updates was very similar to the Mac desktop environment, and so on...
They raised the bar virtually every step of the way... -
Rich Lock, in reply to
Though it wouldn’t surprise me if you have used a device, or program, that was the way it was in response to an Apple innovation
No doubt. I've not not used Apple because of some sort of philosophical objection. But I wass thinking about it this morning and I've never used an Apple desktop or Macbook, and I've never owned an iPod, IPad, or IPhone.
But I am something of a late-adopter...
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Jackie Clark, in reply to
Oh my love - my tall, lovely, English love. I feel only sadness for you. :)
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Mark Cubey, in reply to
Actually, Apple mice in general. I can’t recall a good one, and some of them were/are basically unusable. I use a Microsoft one!
So do I. And a Magic Mouse. But mostly with Apple kit these days my primary interface is with the fingers... (so much so that I'm having all sorts of issues with my new Kindle. But I digress....)
It's the mid-80s, and the first Apple I use is an Apple II, writing green text on a black screen doing work for the visionary Sue May at OnFILM. I'd worked on Linotype and Compugraphic typsetters (input all the typsetting code as you go, no memory, print out galleys and if there was a mistake, do it again) and so the Apple II was revelatory.
My flatmate bought a DOS PC, and I got to play on that, but then a friend suggested going into business doing a thing called desktop publishing so I bought a Mac 512KE. We loan financed an SE20 (massive 20mb hard drive) for $18k, but the work it generated soon paid it off and the rest is history... proving on the way to the design companies, ad agencies, typesetters etc that their scoffing naysaying about how these Apples would never replace REAL design tools was flat out wrong. Heh.
I wish I still had the SE30 that for so long was my favourite machine: sturdy, luggable, fast and able to do whole magazines inside the box. Freehand 3. Pagemaker 4. Greyscale. Those were the days.
Now I'm at work, on a PC (sigh), having just talked to designer Tony Parker about the Best Design Awards, which he'll be reporting on for the programme tomorrow morning (there'll be a minute's silence at the Awards tonight's for Steve...)and wondering if the 4S stands for "for Steve", if they kept the design of the new phone the same so that a revised design could come out from a post-Steve company and keep the faith... and thinking how much one visionary leader can do to enrich the lives of many, like my kids, whose love for the laptop, the Mini, the phone, the iPad and (even more) the Pixar catalogue, is wholehearted.
It's been a great quarter century. Thanks, Steve.
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
Boxing on...
I wish I still had the SE30 that for so long was my favourite machine: sturdy, luggable, fast and able to do whole magazines inside the box. Freehand 3. Pagemaker 4. Greyscale. Those were the days.
+1
My entry point, too - a revelation!
(I still have my waxer though...)Mr C I must say that you did some damn fine work
on that machine (and beyond)... -
James Butler, in reply to
fscking buttons on the fscking mice
Since OS X is Unix, if you want to fsck, you can just open a terminal and type “fsck”. Why does it need to be a button on the mouse?
Actually, Apple mice in general. I can’t recall a good one, and some of them were/are basically unusable. I use a Microsoft one!
Microsoft mice, and (some of) their keyboards, are about the only MS products I would happily pay money for. They’re never the best on the market, but they’re comfy, cheap and sufficiently well made.
Unless the industry changes drastically in the future (and the odds are that it will, I guess) I don’t imagine I’ll ever buy another Apple product – the iPod Touch I own is a great piece of kit, but the iOS ecosystem is too limited for my taste. But I’m happy to accept that I’m a small demographic, and Steve’s genius was tailoring technology to enhance the experience of the large demographic, rather than expecting people to tailor their thoughts and actions to the technology. Other tech companies are slowly learning that lesson.
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I would say a good 95% + of the music I have made has been made using Mac computers. Not that this has always been a healthy relationship (Mac have been very good at making sure their new software doesn't like protools until digidesign fix a whole bunch of things).
I once signed a record deal which included a Macbook Pro. I ran this little bastard into the ground.
...I wonder is Jobs used a mouse with 'right click'? Maybe in the afterlife (the special afterlife reserved for the super rich) they have mac mice with two buttons!
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A common complaint about Apple’s release process is that it’s pretty ruthless about not supporting older versions of software or hardware. Microsoft, being generally more corporate-friendly, go to extremes to keep supporting older versions. Typing this on a corporate Windows XP PC using IE6 I’m inclined to go with Apple’s approach. Especially when PAS renders like this.
ETA: LOL, ie6 failed to attach file and edit-window crashes browser. iPhone to the rescue.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
Since OS X is Unix, if you want to fsck, you can just open a terminal and type “fsck”. Why does it need to be a button on the mouse?
I used "fscking" as a humorous alternative to "fucking". But you probably knew that ...
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I've been trying to write an ode, inspired by this one. But I just can't get a rhyme for "one-button mouse". Can anyone help?
I do have the lines:
with Mac, iPad and iPhone my life is replete
He rescued my life from <end>, <home> and <delete> -
James Butler, in reply to
ETA: LOL, ie6 failed to attach file and edit-window crashes browser. iPhone to the rescue.
You can't attach a file with an iPhone, either...
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Rich Lock, in reply to
I feel only sadness for you. :)
Well, having just been to the rather harrowing world press photo exhibition, I'm not really inclined to lose any sleep on my own behalf by white whining.
Besides which it just occured to me that I've seen all three 'toy story' films, 'finding nemo', 'the incredibles', 'wall-e', and 'up', so maybe that counts?
Anyway, last day of the exhibition is Sunday. so I'd urge everyone to go if they haven't already. But you'll probably need a stiff drink afterwards.
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James Butler, in reply to
I used “fscking” as a humorous alternative to “fucking”. But you probably knew that …
That’s the joke.
ETA: Was meant to be animated. Oh well.
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Martin Lindberg, in reply to
You can't attach a file with an iPhone, either...
No, but I could edit the post so that's a bonus. Will try from home later on my Mac ;-)
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BTW I'm in the SF Bay Area at the moment - the media, in particular the NPR stations seem to be all Steve all the time today, it's a bit like a president died
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My meter’s running…
But I just can’t get a rhyme for “one-button mouse”. Can anyone help?
That one-button mouse is a drag
when clicking, and rolling in passes
it makes the pressing business a fag,
indeed, the cursor the networking classesthat’s all I’ve got…
though “un-buttoned blouse” comes to mind
and 'souse' and 'dowse' and 'louse'or perhaps
clicking gaily with a one-button mouse
gets Arts and Letters Daily (sans Dutton) in-house(well odes do allow irregular meter)
here’s hoping such
drollery re scrollery
is a fitting corollary……and you’d think with Steve Jobs’ connections to Pixar and therefore Disney it would have been de rigueur not to have embraced the classic "two button mouse”
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Steve Reeves, in reply to
The use of a one-button mouse
Requires a display of some nouse...
In fact, the "nouse" is the "nose mouse", as in nose-activated, too... -
Sacha, in reply to
Especially when PAS renders like this.
I can verify it looks damn fine on the free-to-use HP tablets down at their 'Wintergarden' demo dome at the far end of Wynyard Quarter's main drag (shared with Kokako coffee). Encouraged the HP reps to use this as a great example of a media-optimised local site. <waves>
And Wynyard is as amazing as everyone says (though I didn't sample the expensive eateries). If you're in Auckland, do head on down sometime.
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It feels like Friday. I heard this guy on National Radio the other night, and went looking for him. Very impressive.
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Rich of Observationz, in reply to
...if you are to create
a stylish
'do not touch the exhibits'
sign for the New Dowse... -
chris, in reply to
Oh well. From helping to install the Apple 11e computers in our school in 1981
irrational.
platitudes.
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Consider it the way you might consider the funeral of a member of your own family
That’s hardly appropriate. I didn’t call him an asshole. He seemed more troubled than anything else.
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Merger of the Occupy Wall Street movement and Steve Jobs
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JacksonP, in reply to
Oh well. From helping to install the Apple 11e computers in our school in 1981
irrational.
You mean anachronistic? Yes, I installed the Apple ][e two years before it was released. We were ahead of our time in rural New Zealand.
It was thirty years ago, and my mind was clouded by grief. Give me a break already. Have to consult the Oracle to get my story straight. Although few are as happy as Larry.
You know, we live in a very egalitarian world. We don’t like heroes. And Steve is one of these heroic guys whose accomplishments are of such epic proportions, and it gnaws away at our egalitarian sense of the world.
Larry Ellison.
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Sacha, in reply to
we all owe him
platitudes.would you please just take direction from this blog's owner about what tone is appropriate. no one thinks you're smart or funny.
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