Steve Jobs passing is very sad and has affected me more than I thought it would. He was and still will be in many regards the gold standard on which innovators in the world of technology will be measured. He has had an effect on many aspects of the world we live in today. You can see the ripple effects of what two guys and some ICs in a garage did so long ago. You can see his influence not only in the technology we use today but in corporate culture, media, art and social interaction. He was a man of passion and conviction. That is why he succeeded. He was unyielding to what he thought was the right way to do something. This may have cause many to think that he was a "Jerk" or "Hard to work with", but it was those passions for doing it right that made him and Apple a success. I am not trying to say that it was all swings and roundabouts, but if you were watching you could see that as Steve grew up so did Apple. In the end I think he got mostly right. Apple please keep Steve's legacy going. Still keep innovating and don't be afraid to take chances. I wish the best for Steve's family. Steve you will be missed. God's speed. On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 4:23 AM, Tayeb Meftah <tayeb.meftah@gmail.com> wrote:
If no Steve à blind man can not use iPhone
Envoyé de mon iPhone
Le 6 oct. 2011 à 03:33, "Aaron C. de Bruyn" <aaron@heyaaron.com> a écrit :
I remember the first 'real' program I wrote waay back in 1985 on an Apple IIe. It was a very simple reminder program that would show me my todo list for the day.
Wonder if they'll be holding an iPhone-camera-flash-bulb vigil outside the Apple stores. ;)
-A
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 17:42, Ryan Finnesey <rfinnesey@gmail.com> wrote:
Sad day for all. He will be missed
-----Original Message----- From: Alex Rubenstein [mailto:alex@corp.nac.net] Sent: Wednesday, October 05, 2011 8:15 PM To: 'NANOG list' Subject: Steve Jobs has died
Not entirely on-list-topic, but still relevant.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20116336-37/apple-co-founder-chairman-stev
e-jobs-dies/?tag=cnetRiver