ste­ve-jobs-links vom 25.08.2011

felix schwenzel

  then­ext­web.com: A front row seat to Ste­ve Jobs’ care­er
ro­bert sco­ble über ste­ve jobs: 

It was at the iMac launch whe­re he was show­ing off the mo­dern line that is on my desk to­day “look at the me­tal on the back, isn’t it beau­tiful?” he told me. It was.

  dar­ing­fi­re­ball.net: Re­si­gned
john gru­ber über ste­ve jobs:

 Jobs’s grea­test crea­ti­on isn’t any Ap­ple pro­duct. It is Ap­ple its­elf.

  wir­res.net: sur­fen mit dem zei­ge­fin­ger
ste­ve jobs über tech­no­lo­gie (1984):

Tech­no­lo­gy is not­hing. What’s im­portant is that you have a faith in peo­p­le, that they’re ba­si­cal­ly good and smart, and if you give them tools, they’ll do won­derful things with them. It’s not the tools that you have faith in — tools are just tools. They work, or they don’t work. It’s peo­p­le you have faith in or not. Yeah, sure, I’m still op­ti­mi­stic I mean, I get pes­si­mi­stic so­me­ti­mes but not for long.

  zeit.de: Wahn­sinn mit Me­tho­de
kai bier­mann über ste­ve jobs:

Wenn Gates und Zu­cker­berg tat­säch­lich die Sym­bo­le für die Ra­che der Nerds an der Ge­sell­schaft sind, als die sie oft be­zeich­net wer­den, dann ist Ste­ve Jobs die Ra­che der Aus­stei­ger und Quer­köp­fe.

  plus.goog­le.com: Sa­scha Lobo: Mein schöns­tes Er­leb­nis mit Ste­ve Jobs
sa­scha lobo schreibt ei­nen goo­gle­plus-ein­trag über eine email die er mal schrob:

Im Früh­som­mer 2010 be­schloss ich, Jobs eine Mail zu schi­cken.

  blogs.reu­ters.com: My iX­pe­ri­en­ces with Ste­ve Jobs
es­ther dys­on über ste­ve jobs:

At a la­ter PC Fo­rum, he could not at­tend or left ear­ly be­cau­se he was be­ing in­ter­view­ed by Lar­ry King. This was the mid-80s; the ri­val­ry bet­ween him and al­most ever­yo­ne in the in­dus­try was bit­ter. He and Ap­ple were con­side­red ar­ro­gant lo­n­ers; they didn’t play nice­ly with others. […]
No­ne­thel­ess, a num­ber of us gathe­red in a ho­tel suite to watch the show, and as he tal­ked with Lar­ry King, the mood in the room ch­an­ged. Ste­ve was no lon­ger our com­pe­ti­tor in­si­de our mar­ket; he was one of us in a big­ger, ali­en world, ex­plai­ning our im­ma­tu­re litt­le in­dus­try and pro­ducts to a much broa­der pu­blic than we could reach on our own. We chee­red as he ex­plai­ned the ef­fect per­so­nal com­pu­ters could have on peo­p­le’s li­ves in elo­quent, simp­le terms, spea­king for all of us.

/via bo­ing­bo­ing.net